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Griffon Corp
NYSE:GFF

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Griffon Corp
NYSE:GFF
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Price: 74.25 USD 2.15% Market Closed
Updated: May 10, 2024

Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2021-Q3

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Operator

Thank you for standing by. This is the conference operator. Welcome to the Griffon Corporation Third Quarter Fiscal 2021 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] And the conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Brian Harris, CFO. Please go ahead.

B
Brian Harris
executive

Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. With me on the call is Ron Kramer, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Our call is being recorded and will be available for playback, the details of which are in our press release issued earlier today. As in the past, our comments will include forward-looking statements about the company's performance based on our views of Griffon's businesses and the environments in which they operate. Such statements are subject to inherent risks and uncertainties that can change as the world changes. Please see the cautionary statements in today's press release and in our various Securities and Exchange Commission filings.

Finally, some of today's remarks will adjust for those items that affect comparability between reporting periods. These items are explained in our non-GAAP reconciliations included in our press release or in our investor presentation, which will be available on our website.

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Thanks. Good afternoon, everyone. We're pleased with our third quarter performance, which was slightly above our expectations. Revenue increased 2% over the prior year quarter or 4% excluding the impact of the SEG disposition. Adjusted EBITDA was $76 million, excluding unallocated costs and adjusted EPS was $0.43. We're executing well in a very complex operating environment. I want to spend a minute discussing it before moving to the segments. Demand remained very healthy across our product category, supported by strong housing market, repair and remodel activity and consumer spending. We're currently carrying record levels of backlog in both the CPP and HBP segments due to transportation disruptions and pipe labor availability, which limited our ability to catch up with demand.

We implemented price adjustments and continually worked through efficiency programs to mitigate rapidly rising input costs, and we'll continue to work with our suppliers and customers to implement further price adjustments. Our businesses have proven to be resilient, and we're reiterating our full year guidance. Our AMES strategic initiative that will consolidate operations, increase automation, support e-commerce growth and create a new global data and analytics platform frames by the end of 2023 is on track. We expect this to further improve margins in the years ahead. We reiterate our expectation to realize annual cash savings of $30 million to $35 million and inventory reductions of the same magnitude when the benefits of the initiative are fully realized.

As we navigate through the second year of managing our businesses during the global pandemic, we continue to prioritize protecting our employees, even as restrictions in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia are evolving. We are closely monitoring the situation due to the spread of the COVID-19 Delta variant, and we'll make adjustments as needed to be responsive to government guidelines and to ensure the safety of our employees and customers.

Turning to the segments. In Consumer Professional Products, we saw a robust demand across all geographies and product lines. Shipping delays related to availability of transportation impacted U.S. revenue and EBITDA was impacted by the implementation of price adjustments, which as expected, lagged input cost increases. In the Home & Building Products segment, we continue to see strong demand for both residential and commercial door products. Sales increased from the prior year quarter driven by increased volume and favorable pricing and mix. EBITDA also increased, benefiting from the increased sales, partially offset by the timing of price adjustments versus increasing input costs. In Defense Electronics, Telephonics revenue decreased from the prior year, primarily driven by reduced volume resulting from timing of deliveries on communications and radar systems as well as the divestiture of SEG partially offset by volume increases in Naval and cyber systems.

EBITDA increased over the prior year's actions taken to reduce operating expenses took effect and performance on Naval and cyber system programs improved. Backlog in the quarter was $375 million compared to $341 million at June 30, 2020, excluding SEG with trailing 12-month book-to-bill of 1.1x. We continue to see a bright future for the Telephonics intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance products in the years ahead.

Turning to the balance sheet. We continue to have a solid capital structure with excellent flexibility. We have $221 million in cash and $362 million available on our revolving credit facility, putting us in an excellent position to execute on our organic growth initiatives and to capitalize on an active pipeline of acquisition opportunities while returning cash to shareholders through our quarterly dividends. We've delevered to 2.9x, marking 1.5 turns of improvement over the prior year period. Earlier today, our Board authorized an $0.08 per share dividend payable on September 16, 2021, to shareholders of record on August 19. This marks the 40th consecutive quarterly dividend to shareholders, which has grown at an annualized compound rate of 17% since we initiated it in 2012.

Let me turn it over to Brian, who will take you through some of the financials.

B
Brian Harris
executive

Thank you, Ron. I'll start by highlighting our third quarter consolidated performance. Revenue increased 2% to $647 million or increased 4% when excluding the SEG divestiture. Adjusted EBITDA decreased 7% to $65 million and adjusted EBITDA margin decreased 100 basis points to 10%. Gross profit on a GAAP basis for the quarter was $170 million, increasing 3% compared to the prior year quarter. Excluding restructuring-related charges, gross profit was $171 million, increasing 3.5% compared to the prior year quarter with gross margin increasing 30 basis points to 26.4%.

Third quarter GAAP selling, general and administrative expenses were $126 million compared to $114 million in the prior year quarter. Excluding restructuring-related charges, selling, general and administrative expenses were $122 million or 18.9% of revenue compared to $112 million or 17.7% in the prior year quarter, primarily in marketing expenditures and increased distribution and transportation costs. Third quarter GAAP net income was $17 million or $0.31 per share compared to the prior year period of $22 million or $0.50 per share. Excluding items that affect comparability from both periods, current quarter adjusted net income was $23 million or $0.43 per share compared to the prior year of $26 million or $0.59 per share. Keep in mind, the equity offering in August 2020 impacted current quarter adjusted EBITDA by approximately $0.08.

Corporate and unallocated expenses, excluding depreciation, were $11 million in the quarter, in line with prior year third quarter. Our effective tax rate, excluding items that affect comparability for the quarter was 31.2% and for the year-to-date period was 31.1%. Capital spending was $10 million in the third quarter compared to $12 million in the prior year quarter. Depreciation and amortization totaled $15.8 million compared to $15.5 million in the prior year quarter.

Regarding our balance sheet and liquidity. As of June 30, 2021, we had net debt of $835 million and leverage of 2.9x calculated based on our debt covenants. This is a 1.5 turn reduction from our prior year third quarter and is a 0.5 turn reduction from our 2020 fiscal year-end. As a reminder, Griffon uses cash in the first 6 months of its fiscal year, which will be more than offset by the generation of significant cash flow in the second half. Our cash and equivalents were $221 million and debt outstanding was $1.06 billion. Borrowing availability under the revolving credit facility was $362 million, subject to certain loan covenants.

Regarding our 2021 guidance with our third quarter behind us, we are continuing to see strong demand for products across our portfolio, recovering consumer activity and a strong housing market are contributing to a constructive macro environment and homeowners continue to focus on outdoor living. While we are seeing the expected headwinds from cost inflation, supply chain disruptions and a tight labor market, we are managing through those effects, and we expect in excess of $2.5 billion of revenue and continue to expect $320 million of adjusted EBITDA, excluding unallocated and onetime charges.

Now I'll turn the call back over to Ron.

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Thanks, Brian. As we enter the final quarter of our fiscal year, we are seeing strong demand trends across all of our segments. We continue to successfully manage through this dynamic environment driven by the exceptional dedication, perseverance and performance of our 7,500 employees. Over the last 3 years, since the sale of our Plastics business and the purchase of ClosetMaid and CornellCookson, we fundamentally strengthened Griffon. During this period, our revenue and adjusted EBITDA has increased at a compound annual growth rate of 11% and 20%, respectively. Adjusted earnings per share have grown from $0.67 to $1.91 on a trailing 12-month basis, which is a 42% compound annual growth rate. Most importantly, over this period, we've generated $212 million in free cash flow and reduced our leverage by almost 3 full turns to 2.9x.

We are very pleased with our progress creating long-term shareholder value. We expect significant additional benefits to come as we execute on our strategic initiatives to improve margins and take advantage of our balance sheet firepower to invest in our businesses and capitalize on acquisition opportunities. Our best is yet to come. Operator, we'll take any questions.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Bob Labick with CJS Securities.

B
Bob Labick
analyst

And congratulations on another strong quarter.

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Thanks, Bob.

B
Bob Labick
analyst

So I wanted to start, you touched on this and maybe we could dig in a little further. Raw material and transportation has obviously been a headwind in the near term. And also from your results, you can see you have some nice pricing power. You also -- we also know it lags over time. So maybe just give us a sense of how you see it playing out over the next 6 to 12 months in terms of your margins, your ability and the timing of price increases. How should we think about the margin progression? And when you catch up to the cost inflations that are out there for everybody?

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Well, as we discussed at the end of the second quarter, the pace of increases in raw material costs, freight and labor were going up and our ability to pass along those increases was going to happen with a lag. We are continuing to pass along price increases, and we're continuing to try to mitigate the inflationary trends that are going on for us and across all the economy. And our view is the consumer is strong. The housing market remains strong. The demand in our business has never been stronger. We're going to continue to try to deal with the things that are in our control, trying to be more efficient.

Our AMES initiative, in particular, was always meant to be about a 300 basis point margin improvement story over a multiyear journey that still is in front of us. So we see this as evolutionary for our business, and we're going to continue to find ways to pass along price increases and take costs out of our business in order to improve our margins. Most importantly, we see the demand trends as being strong and in our favor. Brian?

B
Brian Harris
executive

Yes, I would just add to that. The costs after our last call continued to rise and they rose rapidly. So we'll continue to have to pass through price, and we'll still have some price cost pressure into the fourth quarter. We expect -- if the costs -- if the costs stop rising that -- we'll resolve that by early in our next fiscal year.

B
Bob Labick
analyst

Got it. Okay. Great. And then in terms of my follow-up for lack of a better word. In the past, you've obviously had some very nice success with small international tuck-in type acquisitions and medium-sized ones in that regard. You highlighted, obviously, below 3 turns of leverage now. Can you talk about the M&A environment? Because obviously, a lot of asset prices have risen. So are those things out there? Are you still looking in the international market? Or how are you thinking about the M&A environment? And what's the environment like for you?

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Well, the first part is that capital is unlimited and therefore, competition is leading to increasingly higher prices, and that's something that's been happening, and we expect will continue to happen. Our strategy has always been to buy things that we can run better. And we are improving our own businesses and allocating capital and looking at ways to make what we already have incrementally better. And that's the best acquisition that we can make. The pipeline of acquisitions has never been better and yet I'm disappointed this quarter that we don't have anything to announce because there are a lot of processes that ended up with prices that we weren't prepared to pay or values that we didn't think was incrementally better than what we already own.

We're going to continue to look at things as they come along. We continue to believe that our ability to deploy capital is ahead of us. and the significant amount of cash that we have on our balance sheet and heading into our fourth quarter, we'll have even more at fiscal year-end. We're in a very good position to find things to do with our enhanced liquidity. And that will happen over time. We're in no rush.

And until it's clear that we can all be traveling and visiting the way we buy businesses, we like to be able to get under the hood and due diligence at a level that I'm still uncomfortable that the world is opened, where we're really understanding the things that we're looking at buying at the level that we want to. So we're very content to spend our time just getting the margin improvement story, the free cash flow story and the increasing earnings per share story that we've been able to deliver over the next several years.

Operator

The next question comes from Julio Romero with Sidoti & Co.

J
Julio Romero
analyst

One thing that we've seen is some initial signs of slowing in DIY products. And when I think about Griffon's product portfolio, I think about the consumer and professional product segment and plasma-made will be something that sits out to me. So maybe could have some DIY exposure. Can you just talk about how demand is trending in plasma-made and broadly across the CPP segment?

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

We've seen the same commentary. And as we've said to you, we have backlog levels that say just the opposite.

J
Julio Romero
analyst

That's encouraging to hear. Okay. And I guess -- for my follow-up, I guess, in the HBP segment, can you maybe give us an update on how some of the new product launches in that business have been received?

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Sure. Our new product launches continue to perform well. We've come out with several things. Storm defender, entry defender and store defender, which do just what they say. We have a micro-grill product that has performed well in fire suppression -- fire suppression products that the market has received well. So those products and the expansion we made in our Mountain Top facility to supply people with those products has been a good investment. The CornellCookson acquisition is everything continue to believe that the growth of the commercial business and the innovation pipeline in both commercial and in residential, we are in a very, very strong position. I believe this is the first quarter in Clopay's history where trailing 12 months we're over $1 billion in revenue. We're really executing well, and we expect that business to continue to show growth.

Operator

The next question comes from Justin Bergner with G. Research.

J
Justin Bergner
analyst

So just to follow up on the Consumer and Professional Products business. Did the shipping delays put any business at risk? And would the backlog still have been up in at record levels if you had not experienced those shipping delays?

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

So I would say, put the business at risk. We certainly had revenue that got pushed off to a later date by the pressure we had from transportation not being as available as one would like. The demand has been very strong across CPP and across HBP as well. It's hard to say exactly what order patterns because people wouldn't necessarily order more until they got their original product. So I can't fully answer your question. But the baseline is demand has been very strong.

J
Justin Bergner
analyst

Okay. And then just a follow-up on HBP. Why -- are you seeing any deceleration in demand trends there? I mean it doesn't look at? And is there any limitation on your ability to put through price? I imagine that the commodity prices could start impacting demand, but maybe not, just curious your perspective there.

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Sure. The demand has continued to be strong. It has not dropped off. So far, the consumer continues to accept price. It's as simple as that.

Operator

The next question comes from Keith Hughes with Truist Securities.

D
Denys Klimyentyev
analyst

This is Denys Klimyentyev in for Keith Hughes. So the first question I'd like to ask is regarding the HBP pricing. We've seen particularly strong at 13% in the quarter. So just curious if you can share some of the factors behind that and what are some of the drive -- fundamentals driving that pricing strength in that segment? And then for the other question, I'd like to ask in general about the -- just the priorities in terms of capital allocation, particularly if you can give some color as to the cadence of share repurchases going forward and where that falls in the list of priorities?

B
Brian Harris
executive

Sure. So let me start with its pricing and mix that is at 13%, just to be clear. And that's about 50-50 between the 2. And it's a result of us on the pricing side, it's a result of us passing through price to customers to cover rapidly rising input costs. And those input costs are raw materials such as steel, it's labor, it's insurance, it's transportation cost. And we continue to see good demand and good mix in that demand where people continue to buy higher level doors for their homes, and we continue to see a good result of our new product on the commercial side, which are at a higher price and margin. Do you want to take the capital, Ron?

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Sure. We have a $58 million authorization for share repurchases, and we believe our stock is a compelling value. We didn't buy any stock this quarter.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Trey Grooms with Stephens.

T
Trey Grooms
analyst

So I guess just switching gears a little bit here. Ron, you mentioned on the demand front, clearly, still very strong. You mentioned housing, you mentioned R&R and consumer spending that they have all continued to be very, very healthy. And I think commercial, it does drop some business on the HBP side. Can you talk about what you're seeing on commercial specifically as it relates to the HBP business?

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Very strong growth. And my personal expectation is, if we ever get an infrastructure bill, we'll see even more commercial door growth.

B
Brian Harris
executive

Yes, I'll just add to that. We've seen good residential and commercial growth in this quarter -- year-to-date and in the quarter. In this particular quarter, commercial is actually even stronger than residential although they were both -- they both did well.

T
Trey Grooms
analyst

Wow, that's encouraging. And I guess on one other kind of housekeeping a little bit. I'm just trying to understand the mechanics. You mentioned, of course, both CPP and HBP with very strong backlog. And with the shipping delays that we have now, I guess just trying to get my head around how this typically flows through and then transitions into -- or excuse me, translates into revenue. But now with this kind of dynamic we have on the transportation situation, how is that impacting that? And when are you expecting that backlog to kind of start to transition into revenue?

B
Brian Harris
executive

Yes. So the transportation situation is really a global issue. It's not just our issue. Yes, it's hard to say when the backlog will release, the orders keep coming in. We are doing everything we can to mitigate the transportation situation.

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Look, we believe the recovery is still ahead of us. And the bottlenecks that you're seeing in this economy are which transportation is just one of, are going to work themselves through. The timing and the predictability of it, you'll see it clearly across lots of different products and categories where we're doing everything we can to meet our backlog, but the underlying trend that we clearly are saying is demand is strong.

B
Brian Harris
executive

Yes. And I'll just add one little thing to that. Hopefully, as the labor improves that will give more people to help the transportation situation. And hopefully, that will start clearing by the end of the year.

T
Trey Grooms
analyst

Yes. I hope you're right. I hope you're right.

Operator

This concludes the question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Ron Kramer for any closing remarks.

R
Ronald Kramer
executive

Thank you. Stay well, everyone. Bye-bye.

Operator

This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines. Thank you for participating, and have a pleasant day.