Douglas J. Cahill
Thanks, Michael. Good morning, everyone. I will begin today's call going through a few highlights for the quarter where our results were in line with our expectations and then give an update on our full-year guidance which we're maintaining at our previous levels. After that, I'll give a quick overview of Hillman, touch on our traditional hardware channel, and then provide some additional color on the quarter before I turn it over to Rocky to provide more details on our business. Net sales in the second quarter of 2023 declined 3.6% to $380 million from a year ago quarter. Total volumes were off about 6% and we saw 1% headwind from unfavorable FX in our Canadian business. These were partially offset by 3% lift from price. Top line was below our expectations due to volume softness across the board and [indiscernible] in particular but we expect a stronger second half, particularly as less challenging prior year comps, new business wins, and we are confident we'll see top line growth to 2023, which I will get to in a moment. Adjusted EBITDA in the quarter totaled $58 million which came in line with our expectations. Despite the latter top line for the quarter, we did a nice job controlling cost and maximizing operational efficiencies. This was a strong accomplishment given the high cost of goods still flowing through our income statement during April and May as we work down inventories dating back to the record high container cost from the summer of 2022. We are now sitting on the right side of the power curve and maintain our belief that adjusted EBITDA generated during the second half of 2023 will grow 20% over the second half of 2022. Free cash flow in the quarter totaled $65 million bringing the year-to-date total to $78 million ahead of our expectations. Our supply chain team did an excellent job managing down our inventory, which combined with our tight cash management resulted in a meaningful working capital benefit. We have used our free cash flow to pay down debt, which has reduced our leverage profile, which we will get to more in a moment. As a result of our healthy results during the second quarter and our line of sight to new business coming online in the second half, we are reiterating our full-year guidance expectations across all three metrics. This includes net sales to be between $1.45 billion to $1.55 billion, adjusted EBITDA to be between $215 million to $235 million and free cash flow to be between $125 million to $145 million. I would now like to give a little background on Hillman to reiterate what makes us a world class partner for our customers. As one of the largest providers of hardware products and solutions in North America, our extensive range of products cater to the needs of the pickup truck pro, as well as the DIYers. Giving them the right products for repair, remodel, and maintenance projects, which makes up the vast majority of our sales demand. Since our founding in 1964, we have achieved remarkable success, experiencing top line growth of 58 out of 59 years. This record is due to large part to the consistency of demand in both up and down economic cycles in repair, remodel and maintenance markets that we serve. This track record is also due to our competitive moat, which sets us above our competitors and consists of three main differentiators. One, our 1100 member in-store sales and service team, which delivers best in class service to our customers. Two, our ability to get the right products to the right place at the right time at scale with our store direct model. Our team cost effectively sources over 112,000 SKUs and distributes them to over 40,000 individual locations. In total, approximately 75% of our shipments are delivered store direct. And three, 90% of our revenue comes from brands that we own, meaning we could maintain control over innovation, marketing, production and distribution, which allows us to quickly adapt to meet the needs of our customers and our end users. We are embedded with our customers who view us as partners critical to the success of their business. We help them overcome labor, complexity and supply chain challenges, and all important high margin traffic generating product categories we offer. Our customers range from mass retailers to big box home improvement centers to national, regional, and locally independently owned hardware stores. I'd like to demonstrate how our moats cures our position and ingrained us with our customers, in particular in our traditional hardware channel, which makes up 23% of our business, and we believe has a total market size of nearly $700 million per year. Today, Ace, True Value, Do-It-Best and the independent hardware stores make up the 12,000 stores in this channel that we service. We provide multiple hardware categories for these customers, including nails and screws, core and specialty fastener products, solid and hollow wall anchors, picture hanging hardware, letters, numbers, and signs, threaded rod, tapes and metal sheets, key duplication services, nice sharpening services, and protective gloves, just to name a few. Our faster installations suit, these customers are typically 72 to 96 feet long, and can stretch as long as 200 feet in some stores. These hardware stores typically carry 15,000 Hillman SKUs which account for more than 15% of the items purchased at those stores. Our sales and service team cover these hardware stores across the country. These reps work hand in hand with the owners and store management. They are in store writing orders, managing inventory and promos, organizing and cleaning displays, managing Hillman, products in the aisle, and servicing kiosks. You can see how Hillman is embedded with these hardware store customers, and we continue to take great care of them during time when other suppliers continue to struggle meeting the expectations of their customers. For example, we converted about 150 stores from our competition last year. The traditional hardware stores thrive by differentiating itself by offering high levels of customer service and advice for every kind of home maintenance, repair, remodeled products at stores conveniently located in their customers neighborhoods. Our commitment to customer service really reflects that of these small business owners. As the independent hardware stores have won market share and expanded their footprints, we have grown right alongside them and are excited to continue to grow with them in the future. Now let’s move to our top line results for the quarter. Net sales for Q2 2023 were impacted by lighter volumes resulting from a reported 8% decline in foot traffic at home improvement centers versus the year ago period. Despite foot traffic declines, our top line results continue to illustrate the resilient demand driven by our diverse product offerings that serve repair, remodel, and maintenance projects. This is evidenced by our hardware solutions being up nearly 4% in the first half of the year, while we anticipate full-year top line growth in HS between 4% and 5%. Impacting our results were four days of shipping delays and June across our business outside of our kiosk following a ransomware attack that affected our IT systems. Over the course of the following week, we restored production and shipping at all of our facilities and normal operation activities resumed. As a reminder, we've been in the process of moving our distribution hub from Rialto, California to Kansas City over the last several months and the cyber incident added a bit of disruption to the move. While some of our short-term service levels are being impacted, we believe these will not impede our second half results and the issue will be cleared up by the end of September. Further, we believe the move to Kansas City will result in efficiencies and cost savings as soon as Q4 this year. Let me frame up the second half of the year in terms of tailwinds we expect to see and how those will help us hit our sales goal. First, we have sizable new business wins coming online in the second half of the year with two of our top five customers. Two, we will additionally launch numerous small wins and rollouts across our vast customer base. Three, some sales have shifted from second quarter to later in the year to the aforementioned shipping delays. Four, the promotional calendar for the second half of the year is locked and loaded for our protective solutions business. We expect sales to pick up as a result. Ex-COVID sales, we expect our full year PS results to be roughly comparable to 2022. And lastly, the comparable period during the second half of the year gets a bit easier as last year our customers were focused on destocking, particularly in the PS business, and our sales were impacted as a result. With that, let's move to our balance sheet. A regular topic of discussion with investors has been our strategic investment in inventory during 2021-2022 as lead times from Asia went from 120 days to 250 days. We had to make a tough decision to lever up to ensure we continue to take care of our customers or watch our fill rates fall. The investment in inventory ensure we took care of our customers during a challenging supply chain environment, we delivered when some of our competition could not. Our fill rates averaged more than 90% during 2021, 96% during 2022, and approximately 96% on average for the first six months of 2023. We believe our performance over the last three years has continued to help separate us from the competition and has resulted in our numerous new business wins. A result of this investment was that our leverage inventory on hand increased through 2021 in the first half of 2022 at the peak during the summer of 2022, we carried about $180 million more than normal. Since that peak, our supply chain is normalized and our inventories have been reduced by a $145 million including $38 million during the first quarter and $21 million during the second quarter of this year. The result has been a meaningful working capital benefit, healthy free cash flow and subsequent reduction in debt, which we expect to continue throughout the year. At quarter end, we were still carrying nearly $40 million more inventory than normal. So we still have some working capital benefits ahead of us. We believe it's very realistic that we reduce inventory, but at least an additional $15 million or a total of approximately $75 million for 2023. This would put us near our normalized inventory run rate at the end of this year. Now turning to price and cost. Just 2020, we've seen a $225 million of cost inflation, which we have passed onto our customers on a dollar-for-dollar basis through multiple price increases, the last of which went into effect in the fall of 2022. These costs break down were approximately $120 million of transportation and shipping, $90 million of commodities and $15 million of labor. Of the $120 million of transportation and shipping about $80 million of that is related to ocean containers. Over the past few quarters, we've seen ocean container costs come down, which will be a tailwind for us in the second half of the year and into 2024. Additionally, we continue to see volatility in the steel market and have seen steel prices come down recently. Typically, costs related to raw materials like steel can take between 9 and 12 months to flow through our income statement. That consists of a 150 days of lead time to source the material, make the product and ship it to the U.S., and our inventory turns in about four to six months. All that said, some costs are not going away like labor costs. Others remain stubbornly high like outbound freight, including less than truckload delivery costs, for example. We will focus on productivity gains to help offset these costs just like our customers continue to do. Hillman's in-store service team and direct store delivery model continue to be on trend helping our customers minimize these two pressure points. Our cost of goods sold for the quarter were improved over the peak last quarter, but still high on a historical basis indicating we have further room for improvement. The sequential 150 basis point improvement in gross margin percentage during Q2 reflects the benefit of lower container cost that we paid last fall following the historical high paid last summer. Touching on markets before I turn it to Rocky. Our volume, has held up well given the slow pace of the U.S. home spending this year. Our business is over 90% repair, remodel, and maintenance, a less cyclical strategy of home spending. And even within R&R, our products are historically more insulated than other R&R categories because they're smaller ticket items, easy to use, and have generally broad based applications for multiple projects around the home. This plus the macro benefits of an aging housing stock and broad accessibility of our products provides a structurally sound long-term outlook we think for our business. Based on construction that was completed during the early to mid-1990s, we will see over 1.5 million new homes turned 20 years old next year, and over 1.6 million new homes turned 20 in 2025. As homes age, homeowners spend to repair, remodel, and maintain their homes and our business been. As I've discussed, starting in the second half of this year, our businesses set the benefit from several solid tailwinds. These coupled with our organic growth plans and market share gains, improvements in our inventory and leverage. And the consistent performance of this company throughout all cycles will lead us to an even more exciting future for Hillman. We are successfully and profitably executing our growth strategy, generating strong cash flow, and we're staying disciplined with capital to create shareholder value. We expect that to continue as we go into the rest of the year. With that, let me turn it over to Rocky.