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Consumer Cyclical - Auto - Parts - NYSE - US
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$ 573 M
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EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2016 - Q3
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Executives

Jim Janik - CEO Bob McCormick - CFO.

Analysts

Tim Wojs - Baird Mike Shlisky - Seaport Global.

Operator

Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Douglas Dynamics Third Quarter 2016 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session and instructions will be given at that time. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, today’s program is being recorded.

I would now like to introduce your host for today’s program Mr. Bob McCormick, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead..

Bob McCormick

Thank you. Welcome everyone and thank you for joining us on today’s call. Two quick items before we begin. First, please note that some of the information that you will hear during this call will consist of forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as amended.

Such statements express our expectations, anticipations, beliefs, estimates, intentions, plans and forecasts. Because these forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, our actual results could differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements.

For more information regarding such risks and uncertainties, please see the sections titled Risk Factors, Forward-Looking Statements and Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations included in our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the impending updates to these sections in our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q.

Second, this call will involve a discussion of adjusted EBITDA, a non-GAAP financial measure, which under SEC Regulation G, we are required to reconcile with GAAP. Reconciliation of this measure to the closest GAAP financial measure is included in today’s earnings press release, which is available at douglasdynamics.com.

Joining me on the call today is Jim Janik, our Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer. Jim will begin by providing an overview of our performance for the quarter then I will review our financial results before turning it back to Jim to discuss our outlook. After that, we’ll open the call for your questions.

Jim?.

Jim Janik

Thanks, Bob and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. This was a very important quarter in our company’s history and we are pleased with our results both for the third quarter and year-to-date.

Despite the tough comparisons to our record performance in 2015, we achieved strong results in the third quarter, thanks in part to the addition of Dejana. Third quarter 2016 net sales were $123.6 million, adjusted EBITDA was $25.1 million, which produced earnings of $0.32 per diluted share.

Our pre-season for commercial snow and ice-cream products were strong, albeit below the record setting performance we produced last year. We continue to see optimism from dealers despite the lack of snowfall across the country last winter.

As a reminder the 2015 pre-season shipments were more evenly split across the second and third quarter due to the unprecedented new product launch production ramp-up. This resulted in stronger third quarter shipments for 2015, which we did not expect to replicate this year.

For 2016, shipments were more heavily weighted towards the second quarter with an approximate 55-45 split, which is more in line with historical averages and matches our expectations.

Our most recent look at dealer field inventory levels indicated they were marginally higher when taken at the end of September, which is still in line with our expectations. As many of you know, we also track select North American pickup truck sales which we found to positively colligate with PLOW [ph] sales over the long term.

The latest data shows continued positive growth with select North American pickup truck sales increasing 4% year-to-date in 2016 compared to 2015. Overall non-snowfall indicators continue to look positive for our commercial products.

So far 2016 is unfolding better than we imagined at the start of the year, but we still implemented our low snowfall playbook towards the beginning of the year, and they sent our results to date and outlook for the rest of the year, we do not plan on expanding our spending cutbacks in the near term.

Turning to our Henderson business, the team produced a strong third quarter and continues to meet our high expectation. The business is well positioned to meet its 2016 growth targets which is one of the reasons we are able to reaffirm our guidance for the year.

Of course, this was our first quarter including results from the Dejana truck and utility equipment which we acquired in mid July. Adding Dejana has provided us with a new complimentary portfolio of services and products to drive deeper customer relationships and strengthens our geographic footprint.

It really has rounded out our offering and has expanded our capabilities into a full range of commercial work vehicles. It is clear to see how Dejana has been able to product strong growth over the past five years and we see ample opportunities to continue to expand the business in the future.

Our long standing relationship with Dejana as a partner and a top customer has helped produces a smooth transition which we expect to continue in the coming quarters.

Ultimately it’s a big step forward in our long term growth strategy while adding another layer of predictability and stability to our business model as its revenue is not significantly influenced by weather and it’s almost evenly split across all four quarters.

As usual, I would like to highlight a DDMS project example, but this quarter I am going to talk about one of our first projects at Dejana. Although, we only closed the deal in mid-July, we are already implementing DDMS and are seeing good initial results.

We have completed two of four kaizen events recently at our facility in Baltimore, Maryland with a broad team of employees across multiple disciplines. The objective was to increase throughput and velocity to improve customer lead times at upfitting operations for certain truck types.

During the weak long events the team uncovered opportunities to improve safety, reduce waste, improve flow and utilize cost training.

The initial changes so far have included adding more useable floor space by removing excess materials and creating storage solutions, improving work processes and safety precautions and using kitted floor methods to ensure the first parts are available when needed.

The team achieved significant safety improvements as well as efficiency gains and this is really the tip of the iceberg. Implementing DDMS takes time and while we expect to produce improvements from the start the real benefits take hold in the coming years when DDMS mindset becomes ingrained in the culture of each team at each facility.

It is gratifying to see that the Dejana team take up the DDMS ideology and look forward to sharing more of our DDMS success with you in the coming quarters. Turning to capital allocation, it bears repeating that our dividends remains the top priority.

We continue to generate strong cash flows and view our commitment to the dividend as an important components of our investment thesis. As previously announced on September 9th we declared a quarterly cash dividends of $0.235 per share on the company's common stock which was paid on September 30th.

We continually discuss our dividend policy and will typically decide upon any changes at the next Board Meeting which is currently planned for early March. We have found that this is the best time of the year to make an informed decision about capital allocation as we have financial data from the end of the year.

Most of the snow season is complete and we have the best view for our financial position.

Aside from the dividend we're committed to using our excess cash to reduce the company's debt level and pursues strategic acquisitions, while we are focused on the Dejana's transition for the near term and don’t have any deals in the pipeline at the moment we will continue to be opportunistic and open to discussions.

We are continually tracking a range of companies that would be a good strategic fit with our offerings and we’ll pursue logical deals while maintaining our disciplined approach. With that I'll turn the call over to Bob to discuss our financial results in more detail.

Bob?.

Bob McCormick

Thanks, Jim. First things first, as you probably saw in our earnings release we have created two reporting segments. First, the Work Truck Attachment segment which includes our original business focused on manufacturer snow and ice controls attachments.

And Second the Work Truck Solutions segment which resulted from the acquisition of Dejana and includes the upfit of market leading attachments and storage solutions for our commercial work vehicles.

Results from Q3 2016 include the impact of the Dejana acquisition for the period of July 18th, 2016 which was the first business days following the completion of the deal through the end of the quarter. With that said let me walk you through the results. Overall results were positive and in line with our expectations.

For the third quarter of 2016, we generated net sales of $123.6 million, an increase of 2.5% when compared to the record net sales of $120.6 million in the third quarter of last year.

It is worth noting that while the Work Truck Attachment segment shipments to Dejana during the quarter historically would have been recognized as net sales in the quarter of shipment, post-acquisition these sales are now being treated as an inter-company inventory transfer during the period and revenue is being deferred and will be recognized upon shipments to our Work Truck Solutions segment customers.

Additionally, purchase accounting requires we amortize all of the customer order backlog related to the Dejana Work Truck Solutions following the completion of the acquisition. There was also a small inventory write-up, which was fully amortized during the quarter plus certain acquisition related costs.

In total, these items reduce results by approximately $6.2 million on pre-tax income or $0.17 per diluted share. Cost of sales was $86.9 million or 70.3% of sales for the third quarter compared to $79.7 million or 66.1% [ph] of sales in the third quarter of 2015.

The year-over-year increase was driven by an addition of Dejana and commercial products making up a smaller portion of net sales year-over-year. SG&A expenses were $15.8 million for the quarter, compared to prior year SG&A expenses of $12.5 million, as with cost of sales the increase compared to 2015 was primarily due to the Dejana acquisition.

Moving on, third quarter 2016 adjusted EBITDA was $25.1 million compared to $31.1 million in the third quarter of 2015. Finally, consolidated net income was $7.3 million or $0.32 per diluted share for the third quarter of 2016 compared to net income of $15.5 million or $0.68 per diluted share in the same quarter last year.

The effective tax rate for the third quarter of 2016 was 38.5% and the estimated effective tax rate for full year 2016 is expected to be approximately 37%. Now, let’s briefly look at the earnings information for the two segments.

For the third quarter of 2016, the Work Truck Attachment segment recorded revenue of $100.5 million and gross profit of $33.8 million. The segment reported income from operations of $24.1 million.

While in line with internal expectations, results were lower when compared to the same period last year, due to the impact of significantly below average snowfall this past winter, plus difficult comparisons to the record performance in the third quarter of 2015, which was driven by the record launch of 20 new products in 2015 and an influx of pent-up demand.

Also as Jim already mentioned, in 2016 there was a return towards historical shipment patterns producing a 55-45 split between the second and third quarters respectively, which differed from the previous year that saw an even split between the quarters.

This helped drive record results in the second quarter of 2016 and exacerbated the difficult comparisons this quarter. Of note within the Work Truck Attachment segment, and Henderson products continue to perform well and remains on track to produce a strong year, outperforming this excellent 2015 results.

Next the Dejana Work Truck solutions segment, recorded revenue of $27.1 million and gross profit of $5.2 million. The segment did record a $400,000 loss from operations negatively impacted by certain acquisition related costs discussed earlier, which were all in line with initial internal expectations.

Turning now to the balance sheet, we recorded net cash provided from operating activities of $11.2 million during the first nine months of 2016, compared to net cash used from operating activities of $11.9 million in the first nine months last year.

The increase was due to favorable changes in working capital of $23.4 million, mainly accounts receivables. Accounts receivable at the end of the quarter were $120.2 million, an increase of $1.7 million compared to the end of the third quarter of 2015.

This includes the impact of Dejana Work Truck Solutions acquisition which was largely offset by a general decrease to overall sales in the Work Truck Attachment segment.

Capital expenditures for the first nine months of 2016 totaled $7.1 million which includes the recent purchase of the new Illinois upfit facility for Henderson which we mentioned last quarter. Inventory was $71.6 million at the end of the third quarter of 2016 compared to $55.2 million at the end of third quarter of 2015.

The increase in inventory is primarily due to the acquisition of Dejana which was partially offset by a decrease in inventory for the Work Truck Attachment segment related to anticipated lower overall sales in 2016. Total liquidity at the end of the third quarter was approximately $73.6 million, which is in line with our usual seasonal changes.

Given our favorable liquidity position at the end of Q2, we allocated a combination of cash and revolver draw, totaling approximately $50 million to help fund the Dejana acquisition in mid-July. Overall we are pleased with the initial results from the Dejana Work Truck Solutions and our Work Truck Attachment segment continues to perform well.

We firmly believe we are a much stronger company today with a more adverse portfolio products and services. With that I’ll turn the call back over to Jim..

Jim Janik

Thank you Bob. To close I’d like to reiterate our expectations for the remainder of the year. For the first nine months of 2016, our performance slightly exceeded our initial internal expectations and we are well positioned to achieve annual results within the increased guidance ranges we issued last quarter.

As a remainder, we expect to produce 2016 net sales in the range of $395 million to $450 million, net income in the range of $31 million to $40 million and adjusted EBITDA between $77 million and $97 million and earnings per diluted share in the range of $1.36 to $1.79 per share.

This outlook assumes a stable economy and average snowfall levels during the fourth quarter across our core markets. While the structure and focus of the company has change this year and the influence of weather had diminished our fourth quarter will still be impacted by the magnitude, timing and location of snowfall.

In conclusion, we are pleased with the initial results from the Dejana work truck solutions acquisition. Our core business the work truck attachments segment is well positioned for future success and as we look towards the snow season we are well prepared to execute our strategy and expect to produce another year of historically strong results.

We are now ready to take your question.

Operator?.

Operator

[Operator Instruction] Our first question comes from the line of Tim Wojs from Baird. Your question please..

Tim Wojs

The first question I had just related to the revenue guidance and I maybe over reading this but I've just want a clarification.

So if I take the top end of the range and divide it by the bottom end of the range, get about 13% or 14% between there and that's actually a little higher than it's been in the last couple of quarters or last couple of years as you enter Q4.

So is there something that -- is there an implication there or is it just, hey things hasn’t really changed and we're not changing the guidance in the Q4. I'm just wondering if from a visibility perspective anything's really changed or if it’s just something that you want to reiterate guidance just because nothing really has changed..

Jim Janik

Your comments are spot on, nothing has changed and we are just reiterating guidance..

Tim Wojs

Okay, and then when I think about -- Bob, can you talk about, there is something's with like the revenue deferrals and some of the amortization of backlog and the inventory kind of write-ups, can we just kind of walk through the pieces of that, what kind of falls often in Q4 and as you go into 2017 what's more recurring.

Just maybe a little bit more color on those moving pieces and then specifically what is fall, is it the corporate line, is it the Work Truck Solutions segment, how to think about that in the model?.

Bob McCormick

Excellent, couple of different things there. First, let me talk to the interior company sales. Over the course of the calendar year that should really have a net zero impact, but as the shipments ebb and flow from shipments of CSI to Dejana and from them to their customers, quarter-over-quarter we’re going to see a little bit of put and takes.

When you think about how CSIs shipments work, they are shipping a decent amount of products in Q2 and Q3 when there is little retail taking place hence we're going to have some of the inner company inventory or those sales tied up in inventory.

Q4 probably a little bit closer to dealer [ph] shipments in terms of what CSI shipped to Dejana and what they ship to their customers and Q1 is one of what’s obviously the largest favorable impact of not much in CSI shipments to Dejana, but a fair amount of retail taking place there. So those are the puts and takes of it.

But I want to emphasize, over a calendar year it really should have close to a zero impact. .

Tim Wojs

Okay, before I get to the cost, just so I understand. So basically the Dejana numbers and what’s the Work Truck Solutions that's pretty even kind of relative to everything and really the flex point between segments comes in that corporate line..

Jim Janik

Exactly when you look at the revenue and the gross profit in that segment reporting page, that's to almost an entire degree represents these inner company transfers. So that we will be able to pull that from.

I would tell you that of the $0.17 that we've identified as related to the acquisition in terms of Q3 hits $0.07 of that is approximately $0.07 is due to the inter-company inventory movements. The other dime [ph] to get to the next part of your question, the other dime [ph] is related to these other onetime acquisition related cost.

Now the good news there is that those are largely behind us at the end of Q3 and there will be little if any of those onetime charges related to Dejana acquisition in the Q4 and beyond..

Tim Wojs

Okay, and those items will hit the Work Truck Solutions segment?.

Jim Janik

Correct. So your normal intangible amortizations and those kinds of things which aren’t onetime in nature and we don’t call out that will flow through the Work Truck Solutions statements. These hits that I just spoke about the dive in Q3, certainly falls through the Work Truck Solutions segment generated at $400,000 loss from operations..

Tim Wojs

Got you. Okay. And then just the corporate elimination line, the $7.2 million, I guess would that be a loss or negative number there.

How much of that is an elimination versus like a corporate reallocation?.

Jim Janik

That’s almost virtually -- when you look at -- go to the SG&A line, there is a $4.8 million and changes in corporate plus eliminations is almost entirely the corporate expenses.

So you’ve got sales in gross profit is largely the inter-company inventory, the SG&A is largely corporate and then obviously the income -- the $7.2 million is the combination of those two things..

Tim Wojs

Okay. So the gross talk and the revenue will kind of move around with shipments between the segments and then the SG&A is more of a kind of ongoing corporate expense to model for, okay..

Jim Janik

Exactly, exactly..

Tim Wojs

Okay.

And then just as we think about the amortization in the backlog, is that -- how do -- what’s the timeline on that in terms of years, I guess how do we think about the amount as that as kind of recurring?.

Jim Janik

Well, good news there is the amortization of that backlog is entirely complete at the end of Q3..

Tim Wojs

Okay.

So that issue [ph] falls off?.

Jim Janik

It falls off, there is nothing going forward there..

Tim Wojs

Got you. Okay, okay. And then maybe shift -- my last question, just shifting to the core business.

As we think about just the profitability there I mean it’s been a -- the margins has been -- has held up really well over the last couple of quarters, even though volume’s been a little tougher with just the snow season, but how do we think about price cost and maybe the moving variables on profitability into 2017?.

Jim Janik

Well, one of the things that we are very proud of in that CSI part of our Work Truck Attachment segment is that those guys improve margins, based business margins every year regardless of where we are in the snowfall cycle. They’ve done it for a decade plus and there is no reason why that won’t continue into ’17 and even beyond ’17..

Tim Wojs

Okay, okay. Yes you guys did another great job there. So I’ll turn it over. Thanks for the time and let’s hope it snows in a couple of months there..

Jim Janik

Thanks,.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mike Shlisky from Seaport Global. Your question please..

Mike Shlisky

Wanted to follow-up on some of the numbers surrounding Dejana, would you be able to give us in your opinion the -- I these we’ll call it dilution from Dejana in Q3, whether there was accretion or dilution, excluding some of the onetime items. I understand that there was a dime there of onetime items, but we don’t about tax and interest, et cetera.

So it’s kind of all-in, what do you think the impact was to your EPS both before and after unusable items?.

Jim Janik

I guess, I guess what I would say Mike is I’ll give you a more global answer, having cleared the purchase accounting onetime cost we expect Dejana to be accretive to earnings per share in the fourth quarter and for all of 2017. I don’t have the direct math in front of me to take you through the income line on what happened in Q3.

Obviously there was an enough noise there. I would also point out that there while Jim made a commentary which is accurate, that their sales on a quarterly basis are relatively consistent. Therefore the quarter is typically a little stronger than the other quarters.

So we look for some strong performance from them going in the Q4 having the onetime acquisition cost behind us, we are going to see accretion there, we expect that to continue in 2017..

Mike Shlisky

Okay, okay.

And given some of this is some amortization and some intangibles here, it should be cash accretive as well going forward?.

Jim Janik

Absolutely..

Mike Shlisky

Okay. All right. I wanted to turn to Henderson really quickly here as well.

Do you guys said that the company is kind of gaining share this year, I’ve been hearing about some other players in that industry retrenching here in 2016, that it’s getting more challenging to keep that kind of tailwind going into 2017?.

Jim Janik

I think at this particular point anything would be anecdotal our hope is that we are gaining some shares, but I don’t know that I can give you a definitive answer, but part of our strategy is to gain share. So if that’s what you are picking up, that’s good news..

Mike Shlisky

Okay, I’ll follow up offline on that one.

And then I also wanted to ask about the guidance, just want to make sure the guidance before and the guidance today both of them include any onetime items from Dejana, so that has not changed at all?.

Bob McCormick

It does not change. I think what is the only real change here is that most of that onetime purchase accounting stuff turns out to hit us in Q3 versus initially maybe we had thought it might be spend a little bit more evenly versus Q3 and Q4. So there is a larger hit in Q3 which bodes well for our performance going forward..

Mike Shlisky

Okay. And one more one from me, just going back to your opening comments. It sounded like you implied that your low snowfall play book actions were kind of over.

I’m sure -- if I have the slide, but you basically said that you are taking down your cost reductions because you got decent enough orders, is that the way we think about it?.

Jim Janik

No, actually Mike I am glad you asked.

When we finished last year and it was a low snowfall, we decided to put in our low snowfall play book which really allows us to begin the year 2016 being very cautious with expenditures, we have kept that in place throughout the entire year and my comment is been that we don’t anticipate having to even take more cost down.

So we are just going to stay with the same play which already began at the beginning of the year. So changing anything, not taking down, not loosening up, but all I was doing was reiterating that we began at the beginning of last ’16 and we are just -- it’s still in place..

Mike Shlisky

Okay perfect, got you. Thanks guys, thank you so much..

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instruction] And this does conclude the question-and-answer session of today's program. I’d like to hand the program back to Jim Janik for any further remarks..

Jim Janik

Thank you for joining us today and for your continued interest in Douglas Dynamics. We look forward to seeing some of you next week at the Baird conference in Chicago and speaking with you on our fourth quarter earnings call in March 2017, if not or before. Thank you..

Operator

Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Good day..

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