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EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2017 - Q1
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Executives

Maximillian Marcy - Director, Investor Relations and International Finance Jim Owens - President and Chief Executive Officer John Corkrean - Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.

Analysts

Eric Petrie - Citi David Begleiter - Deutsche Bank Rosemarie Morbelli - Gabelli & Company Mike Harrison - Seaport Global Securities Christopher Perrella - Bloomberg Intelligence.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. And welcome to the H.B. Fuller First Quarter 2017 Investor Conference Call. This event has been scheduled for one hour. Today's conference call is being webcast live and will also be archived on the Company's Web site for future listening.

At this time, I will turn the meeting over to our host, Director, Investor Relations and International Finance, Mr. Maximillian Marcy. Sir, you may begin..

Maximillian Marcy

Good morning. And welcome to our fiscal year 2017 first quarter earnings call. We have two speakers today, Jim Owens, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and John Corkrean, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. As always after our prepared remarks, we will have plenty of time to take your questions.

Let me also remind you that comments made by me or others representing H.B. Fuller may contain forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Our SEC filings contain additional information about factors that could cause actual results to differ from management's expectations.

These filings can be found in the Investor Relations section of our corporate Web site at hbfuller.com. Also, please note that our comments may include references to non-GAAP financial measures. These results should not be confused with the GAAP numbers in yesterday's earnings release or with the GAAP numbers we’ll report on our Form 10-Q.

We believe that a discussion of these measures is useful to investors because it assists in understanding our operating performance and our operating segments, as well as the comparability of results. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the nearest GAAP measure is provided in the earnings release our Company issued last night.

With that, I’ll turn the call over to Jim Owens..

Jim Owens

Thanks Max. And thank you everyone for joining us today. Our first quarter started up strong as we delivered profit performance better than expected and in line with our strategic plan. We delivered 10% constant currency growth with strong growth across almost all our businesses.

We also completed the strategic acquisition of Wisdom Worldwide Adhesives, which added a little less than 2 percentage points to our growth rate for the quarter. I will talk in a bit more detail about Wisdom in a few minutes. And in the face of raw material increases, we also delivered solid gross margin profit performance.

The strong revenue growth and margin management contributed to adjusted earnings per share growing $0.48 in the first quarter, a 12% improvement versus the prior year.

As we move through the remainder of the year, we aim to deliver performance consistent with our 2017 guidance and the goals in our 2020 plan, as we expand margins, deliver revenue growth and meet our cash flow targets.

We have three areas of focus as we enter the second quarter; first will be the managed margins by delivering price increases and raw material on product substitutions; next, we will return construction products to double-digit EBITDA margin on positive revenue, since we have now nearly completed our facility combination in Illinois; and lastly, we will continue to drive solid double-digit volume growth in engineering adhesives in Asia Pacific, and we’ll continue to drive sustainable growth in our Americas segment.

Thus far, we are delivering on our performance metrics and we expect 2017 to be a successful year as we move toward our 2020 revenue and EBITDA margin targets. On January 27th, we purchased the Industrial Adhesives business of Wisdom Worldwide Adhesives, a provider of adhesives for the packaging, paper converting and assembly markets.

For 140 years, Wisdom had been privately owned and operated by five consecutive generations of the Wisdom family. The Wisdom business generated revenue of approximately $100 million in fiscal 2016 with EBITDA margins of about 11%.

The business we purchased for $123 million, and is expected to generate annual run-rate synergies of approximately $6 million starting in 2018, which would make the purchase price multiple equal to approximately 7 times Wisdom's fiscal 2016 EBITDA on a post synergy basis.

Wisdom’s highly successful go-to-market strategy is based on a focused product line, ultra fast delivery and virtual service. This will complement H.B. Fuller's full value go to market solutions. This acquisition is strengthening our leading position within the America's adhesive business. The combination of H.B.

Fuller and Wisdom also provides significant cost synergy opportunities, primarily related for raw material sourcing. This acquisition will enhance and strengthen the delivery of our 2020 strategic plan commitments. So far the integration is going very well and we are very happy to welcome the Wisdom associates to the H.B. Fuller family.

Before I walk through the segment performance, I want to quickly mention that we will be providing some more disclosure related to our revenue performance. We had historically included the impact of product mix and small acquisition in our volume calculations.

Going forward, in order to provide more clarity and to help explain the many factors that drive our performance, we will begin splitting volume into three components volume, mix and acquisitions. We will continue to separate price and FX as well. The chart currently being displayed lays out all of those components by segment.

Let me now walk through the segment performance in the fiscal year. First, in the Americas segment as we committed, the volume trends continue to improve. Organic volume grew 7% in the quarter. In addition, we completed the acquisition of Wisdom Worldwide Adhesives in the final month of the quarter.

Wisdom business added an additional 4 percentage points to growth on top of volume. Mix is negative 4% and pricing was slightly negative versus prior year, but improved versus fourth quarter. Overall, we are quite pleased with our very good constant currency revenue performance for the quarter.

Raw material costs increased in the fourth quarter, and we announced price increases, some of which impacted the quarter but most of which will come into effect later in the second quarter.

The effective management of pricing and operational efficiencies help to offset the negative impact of higher raw materials and the lower margins of the Wisdom business, driving a solid EBITDA margin performance of 15% in the quarter.

We have maintained a watchful eye over discretionary expenses and expect our recent pricing initiatives and Wisdom synergy activity to bring EBITDA margin back above 17% in the second half the year.

Our construction products business deliver a stronger performance and trend with sales declining by about 5% in the first quarter versus the prior year, an improvement versus the fourth quarter of 2016. We expect to begin delivering positive revenue growth in the second half of the year as our facilities again operate at targeted output levels.

Pricing and contribution margins remained strong, which help to deliver better EBITDA margin performance of 8%, an improvement of 60% basis points versus the prior year.

The startup costs associated with our newly renovated facility in Aurora, Illinois, are primarily behind us and we will return to our historic profitability profile on the second half of the 2017 fiscal year with EBITDA margins back to double-digit range.

Moving now to our EIMEA segment, we delivered constant currency growth of over 9%, primarily driven by volume in emerging markets. Our solid operational improvements made during the prior year fiscal year enabled growth, particularly in durable assembly, which was impacted most by our prior transformation and site rationalization initiatives.

We anticipate moderate single-digit growth for the remainder of the year in EIMEA. From a profitability perspective, we improved adjusted EBITDA margin by 40 basis points versus the prior year's first quarter to 10.5%. The elements of the improvement were broad-based; volume growth, margin management and better supply-chain efficiency.

We expect EBITDA margin to improve slightly for the remainder of 2017 as our cost reduction efforts in operations and SG&A take effect. In addition, we are increasing prices to offset recent raw material increases. Now turning to the Asia-Pacific segment, we grew organic volume by 18% in the first quarter, offset by negative mix in pricing.

The volume growth came primarily from China. The negative currency impact and a positive acquisition impact from Advanced Adhesives resulted in total revenue growth of over 16% for the quarter. We are very pleased with our revenue performance and expect to maintain this solid momentum for the remainder of the year.

Adjusted EBITDA was up 5% in this segment, but EBITDA margin was down slightly versus the prior year. This reflects the higher raw material costs, which impacted Asia in advance of other geographies and was offset somewhat by volume leverage on fixed discretionary expenses.

For the remainder of the year, we expect modest margin expansion as price increases offset raw material cost increases. In engineering adhesives, we continue to show strong growth with organic growth up 24% versus the prior year's fourth quarter. This was led by good growth in Tonsan and our electronics business.

The Cyberbond acquisition contributed another 6 percentage points to revenue growth, offsetting the negative impact from foreign exchange. Overall, we delivered revenue growth of over 25%. We expect to continue our strong volume growth trend in the 2017 fiscal year and are targeting 15% growth for the year in line with our long-term targets.

Our engineering adhesives adjusted EBITDA dollars increased by 28% as margin improved slightly in the first quarter to about 10.2%. Raw material costs were slightly higher than the prior year, but the strong revenue growth help to drive fixed cost leverage, contributing to the EBITDA margin improvement.

As we move through the year, we expect continued year-over-year improvements in EBITDA. Overall, it was a positive quarter for H.B. Fuller and in line with our strategic plan to grow in emerging markets in Engineering Adhesives, while maintaining strong margin performance in our core European and Americas businesses.

With that, I'll turn the call over to John..

John Corkrean Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Jim. Jim provided some key highlights of the first quarter results, so I’ll provide some additional financial details. Organic volume grew nearly 9% versus last year's first quarter, four of five segments delivered positive growth led by Engineering Adhesives in Asia-Pacific.

Combination of acquisitions and mix added another percent of revenue growth. The impact of product pricing was less of a negative factor on our results in recent period. For the quarter, the year-on-year impact of price was potentially flat as we begun to increase prices in line with raw material inflation.

We have also raised prices in the emerging markets, mainly Turkey and Egypt to offset currency movements in those countries. We expect pricing to become positive overall as the year progresses. Overall, constant currency revenue increased 10% in the first quarter with a little more than 3% of growth coming from acquisitions.

Adjusted gross profit margins declined by 80 basis points versus last year, reflecting raw material costs and slightly lower year-on-year pricing; while operational efficiencies offset some of the decline.

Adjusted selling, general and administrative expenses increased approximately 5% in the first quarter, reflecting the impact of acquisitions and higher year-on-year variable compensation.

SG&A declined as a percentage of revenue versus the prior year as we have kept a watchful eye on discretionary expenses and taken restructuring actions globally as we announced in December to ensure that we're able to continue to invest strategically in higher growth market segments; net result -- adjusted diluted earnings per share of $0.48 for the first quarter up 12% versus the prior year.

With that, let me now turn to our guidance for the 2017 fiscal year. Foreign currency continues to be volatile. Based on our current foreign exchange rates, we expect OpEx to negatively impact 2017 revenue growth by about 3% in line with the impact in the first quarter.

We expect constant currency growth of approximately 8% for the year on a comparable 52 week basis. The Wisdom acquisition accounts were approximately 4 percentage points of the constant currency growth. As a reminder, our fourth quarter of 2016 included an extra week.

This will reduce net revenue growth by about 2% for the 2017 fiscal year and reduce the fourth quarter of 2017 net revenue growth rate by 7 to 8% compared to 2016. Therefore, full year net revenue growth should be approximately 3% versus the 2016 fiscal year.

We now expect full year EBITDA of approximately $300 million, which equates to approximately 14% EBITDA margin. Cash flow from operations is expected to be about $200 million, driven by higher operating income and some improvements in working capital management, offset by restructuring related costs.

Capital expenditures are expected to be approximately $60 million for the year. The most significant capital project this year will be the implementation of SAP in our Latin America business. For the full year, we are maintaining our full year EPS guidance range at between $2.57 and $2.77.

This represents about 10% growth at the midpoint versus a comparable 52 week 2016 fiscal year. With that, I'll turn the call back to Jim Owens to wrap us up..

Jim Owens

Thanks, John. We started off the year strong and we made good progress in the first quarter against the three key initiatives we outlined for this year; delivering growth in Americas, driving exceptional volume growth in Engineering Adhesives; and a return to historical operational levels in construction products.

Our 2020 plan has us growing the top line, improving EBITDA margins to 17%, and effectively investing the free cash flow generated by the business. In this quarter, we continued to drive sizeable growth in Engineering Adhesives in Asia-Pacific segment as a strategic priority. And we delivered organic volume growth in most businesses.

We successfully completed the synergistic acquisition of Wisdom Adhesives, and profitability remains strong with improvements in construction products, EIMEA and Engineering Adhesives.

We expect to continue this strong performance through the remainder of this year to drive sales growth, offset raw material increases for strategic pricing initiatives and deliver on our cost savings initiatives.

With each passing quarter, we gain confidence in our long term targets and gather momentum as we continue to improve our operational performance. This is the end of our prepared remarks. So now we look forward to answering your questions..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And we’ll take our first question from Eric Petrie with Citi..

Eric Petrie

I just wanted to talk about the strong growth that you showed in Engineering Adhesives and Asia.

Are you seeing better trends than expected in China and emerging markets?.

Jim Owens

I would say for the quarter, probably. I mean I think we expected strong growth in emerging market as part of our strategic initiative, but China was positive for us. I think in Engineering Adhesives, in particular, it’s a relatively to the size of the market, it’s a smaller business.

And we're doing really nice wins in engineering and electronics, good growth Tonsan in China, but also Tonsan products coming out of China. And I will get some of these synergies that we expect out of Cyberbond products into China.

So, I would say it's a positive environment we’re working in, but most of the growth which is that size growth, is because of the wins that we’re creating in the market..

Eric Petrie

Secondly, just talking about pricing and raw materials; obviously, we seen inflationary cost in first half and you're pricing may be just lagged by quarter and should be realized in 2Q.

What is your outlook for second half?.

Jim Owens

For raw material prices, yes [multiple speaker] so as you point out, most of our price increase is going to come in the second quarter; some of it starts the quarter, some of its mid- April, some of its May. So we’ll see a full effect of that by Q3.

As far as raw materials in second half of the year, most of the predictions are for things to flatten out. And my experience in this business is we continue to see a little bit of inflation after these things, but our current view is that this is going to flatten out the second half of the year. We’re starting to see a little of that already in Asia.

Asia took a big spike early and is starting to flatten out. Certainly, that go down, but we see flattening the second half of the year, is our current view with us being prepared if things continue to accelerate the prices more if necessary..

Operator

And next is David Begleiter with Deutsche Bank..

David Begleiter

Jim looking at the cadence of our quarterly earnings for rest of the year, how would you look at Q2 progressing on a year-over-year basis with a benefit of these price increases heading here?.

Jim Owens

I would say and John maybe can be more specific than I will. So, I’ll turn it to him. But I would say Q2 is still little challenged from a year-over-year standpoint, because our increases aren’t going into effect first day at quarter. So, a lot of them are effective mid-April, some of them are 1st of May, which is the third month of our quarter.

So I would say, we’ll have some continued challenges. Now with that said, we did a pretty good job this quarter of managing those challenges. We’ve got the cost savings initiatives we put in place. We’ve got the volume growth. So, I'm expecting a solid Q2 but really stronger performance for second half the year.

We obviously have the benefit of construction products really kick it in the second half of the year. So that’s the way we see the progression solid quarter in Q2. And lot of this volume that we're generating really stronger performance second half of the year.

John, do you want to add to that?.

John Corkrean Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes, I would concur I think based on the way rise are coming on in Jim’s comment, they will hit pretty hard in Q2, and we will get pricing. But as the indication is there is a level in pricing to be fully implemented. By the end of Q2, we’ll see better growth in the second half than we were in Q2..

Jim Owens

And John you still expect gross margin to be down quarter-over-quarter in Q2, but maybe a lower lesser rate than in Q1?.

John Corkrean Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes, I would say they are going to be down similarly probably in Q2 to what we saw in Q1..

Operator

The next question is from Rosemarie Morbelli with Gabelli & Company..

Rosemarie Morbelli

I was wondering if you could give us a little more detail on that on the strong volume growth that you experienced in the first quarter.

And do you think that there was some inventory build-up of some of your customers in anticipation of higher prices?.

Jim Owens

So I would have to go segment-by-segment. Certainly, in Asia and Engineering Adhesives, we don’t see a big build-up related to higher prices. And the prices hit pretty hard. They hit early in the quarter, and there is lot of wins in the market. So I don’t think we have any of that there.

It's always a question in Europe and North America whether you have much of that. Generally speaking, customers don’t bulk up on adhesives they really can't drive their performance by increasing their order. So we don’t typically see and we don’t think we've seen here a big impact related to inventory build.

As I said the growth in Engineering Adhesives were wins in electronics, Tonsan solid growth and then Tonsan outside of China; so a lot of good market share gains there. Asia-Pacific positive momentum in our hygiene business and across all of our segments as the teams invested in some good innovative approaches to have a win in our Asia business.

In Europe, it's mostly emerging markets. So it's solid performance by our team in India, our team in Asia, our team in Turkey, that's driven that. And then the Americas it's a broad based approach. We don’t have any win that face in Latin America, so we’re able to grow again in Latin America.

And in the U.S., the team has got good operating systems, good operating performance with all the problems that we had to deal with that we’re restricting our ability to grow are behind us. So, they’re able to go out and win in the market along with positive environment, I would say it's crazy positive in the U.S. and positive environment in the U.S..

Rosemarie Morbelli

And just a second question if I may. If I look while you focus on the adjusted EBITDA, looking at your segment operating margin, I mean they are all substantially at least lower than last year. And if I look at all of those segments, this quarter you have 5.2% margin versus 8.5% last year.

So, we have the impact from raw materials, we have the impacts from mix. But I was wondering if there was anything else.

And if you could quantify the difference -- the different pieces that hit the margin?.

John Corkrean Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Rosemarie, as you look at that you’re looking at numbers that include impact of restructuring charges. So, the operating margins at the segment level are not going to be nearly as helpful as looking at the adjusted EBITDA margins, which are on the same page but further down.

And you can see that in EIMEA construction products and engineering adhesives, we all saw margin expansion in all three of those. And that's the more -- that's the better metric to look at..

Jim Owens

And you’ll probably see similar trends in operating margins in those, because we don't have a big shift with DNA there. So, I think the specific areas where we have year-over-year margin decline, one would be Asia.

And as I mentioned that raw material is hitting before our price increases hit, so that's the big driver of the Asia margin; and those price increases are being implemented.

And it's a similar story although a little different in the Americas where we have this year-over-year effect where prices had continued to move down last year, they're moving up now.

So you a cumulative effect of the four quarters there as the -- and you have a little bit of a dilution effect of Wisdom, which is lower margin than our core Americas business.

So those are the two that were down, both on an operating margin and EBITDA margin, and mostly driven by raw, which we're recovering and a little bit of the Wisdom dilution there..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And we'll go next to Mike Harrison with Seaport Global Securities..

Mike Harrison

I wanted to thank you guys for starting to break out mix and acquisition contribution separately. That's very helpful..

Jim Owens

We’re all trying to help you Mike, I know John really wants to build transparency in all seriousness for investors, so appreciate that..

Mike Harrison

Makes it much easier to model, but the second -- this is the second quarter in a row now where you’ve called out negative mix impacting your revenue.

And I was just curious, is that a function of some of the reformulations that you're working on in inflationary raw material environment, or are there some other drivers there? Just curious how much longer we should expect mix to be a drag on revenue growth..

Jim Owens

I would say most of that that's what it is, and that's a phenomena that exist in our business actually, Mike, at some parts of our business where we're trying to reformulate. And I think I'd look at it as a lower revenue at the same margin phenomenon.

So when we introduced a new product that's a negative mix, but we do it in a way that protects our margins as we reformulate..

Mike Harrison

And then turning to the Americas business, I was just hoping that you could break out where the strength in the volumes is coming from. You referenced that Latin America is no longer a drag.

But is this finally starting to see some regaining of lost share in the packaging space? And also curious whether there were any timing issues, I guess on the heels of the question about inventory build potentially going up right now..

Jim Owens

So I mentioned Latin America, and specifically broadly across the Americas, hygiene. So Latin America is generally a positive hygiene story. And that was a good situation for us. Our durable assembly business was solid in the Americas this quarter, so that business has got a very good strong team that's winning in the market.

And then I’d tell packaging, not a huge uptick but certainly not a drag for us this quarter. So, I think that's one of the things we've had good growth in a couple of areas in packaging is being working against us. Packaging was finally positive again this quarter, and that would summarize it..

Mike Harrison

And then last question I had is just on the Engineering Adhesives business. The guidance for 15% growth in volumes for the full year would be well below where you were for the first quarter.

So just hoping to understand when you're expecting to see those growth rates moderate? And I guess the implication is that there is a quarter in there that’s well below that 15% target.

What would be driving that?.

Jim Owens

John and I, was just talking about this morning. We're predicting I guess on average to be 12% for the rest of the year, which is closer to our strategic target of 15%. Do we want to see more than that; certainly. But I think it’s a good moderate target. There is not one quarter that’s dragging that number down.

I would say we’re very optimistic about where that business is headed in terms of overall performance..

Operator

And the next question is from Christopher Perrella with Bloomberg Intelligence..

Christopher Perrella

In terms of your leverage after the Wisdom deal, its sitting about 2.4 adjusted EBITDA, net debt in EBITDA.

Just remind me, do you have a range and how would you characterize the pipeline of acquisitions that you’re working on?.

John Corkrean Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

I’ll talk about the range. I'll let Jim come on pipeline. So we tend to look at growth that the EBITDA as the metric as it's consistent with the way the rating agencies look at and the way that our covenants are designed in the private placement. And post acquisition, we’re about 2.9 times, I think, we ended last year at about 2.5 times.

And so that’s above our long-term target, but we're comfortable with that because we know that that will come down over time as we use cash flow to pay down debt..

Jim Owens

As far as the acquisition pipeline, it's positive. I think for us it’s a matter of -- as you point out, we try and moderate. We don’t want to become over leverage, so doing the right deals at the right time, both from a capital deployment but also a human resource deployment.

So last year, we did Cyberbond and Engineering Adhesives; Advances Adhesives, which was a synergistic deal; one was a growth opportunity and the other was synergy related. And we have the human capital to do those. We've team in America is focused on making certain Wisdom is a big success.

So we wouldn’t likely see another deal like that in the Americas. But if there was a synergistic opportunity in another region or a growth opportunities related to engineering Adhesives, we’d certainly pursue those; and we exist I think in this space. The highly fragmented space we’re $2 billion in a $40 billion market segment.

So there are opportunities and we pick the ones that we think are really a good fit for us, and go on find the way to pursue them..

Christopher Perrella

Are you seeing a lot of bids on these acquisitions, or is it fragmented in an offset to it's a low competition for these deals?.

Jim Owens

Chris, our strategy is to be the buyer of choice for people who want to sell their adhesive business. So I think we have a good reputation to market in terms of how we manage these situations. We have the right relationships with the right people that we target.

So we want to be an acquirer of choice, because of how we operate, both in terms of how we negotiate and how we integrate these deals; and I think that’s worked out pretty well with us.

And I think evidence by the fact that 140 fifth generation family-owned company decided they wanted to sell their business to us rather than other alternatives they might have had..

Operator

[Operator Instructions]..

Jim Owens

So thanks everyone for your time today. Thanks for your continued support of our Company and our strategy..

Operator

Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This does conclude today's H.B. Fuller's conference call. You may now disconnect..

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