Q2 2023 Acuity Brands Inc Earnings Call

Speaker 1: Good morning and welcome to the Acuity Brands Fiscal 2023 Second Quarter Earnings Call.

Speaker 1: At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode.

Speaker 1: After the speaker's presentation, the company will conduct a question-and-answer session.

Speaker 1: Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded.

Speaker 1: I would now like to hand the conference over to Charlotte McLaughlin, Vice President of Investor Relations. Charlotte, please go ahead.

Speaker 2: Thank you, live.

Speaker 3: Good morning and welcome to the Acuity Brands Fiscal 2023 Second Quarter Earnings course.

Speaker 3: As a reminder, some of our comments today may be forward-looking statements based on our management's beliefs and assumptions, and information currently available to our management at this time. These beliefs are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, many of which may be beyond our control, including those detailed in our periodic SEC filings.

Speaker 3: Please note that our company's actual results may differ materially from those anticipated, and we undertake no obligation to update these results.

Speaker 3: Reconciliations of certain non-GAAP financial metrics with their corresponding GAAP measures are available in our 2023 second quarter earnings release, which is available on the 24th of O' fundamental stock market.

Speaker 3: on our investor relations website at www.investors.acutiebrands.com

Speaker 3: With me this morning is Neil Ash, our Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, who will provide an update on our strategy and our fiscal second quarter highlights, and Karen Holcomb, our Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, who will walk us through our fiscal second quarter financial performance.

Speaker 3: There will be an opportunity for Q&A at the end of this call. For those participating, please limit your remarks to one question and one follow-up. If necessary, we are webcasting today's conference call live.

Speaker 3: Thank you for your interest in Acuity Brands. I will now turn the call over to Neil Ash.

Speaker 4: Thank you, Charlotte. Good morning, and welcome to all of you joining us on this call.

Speaker 4: We delivered solid performance once again in the second quarter of fiscal 23. We grew sales in both our lighting and spaces businesses, expanded adjusted operating profit, and increased adjusted diluted earnings per share.

Speaker 4: We generated strong cash flow from operations and created permanent value for shareholders through share repurchases.

Speaker 4: Both our lighting and spaces businesses delivered solid revenue while improving adjusted operating profit.

Speaker 4: In the Acuity brand, lighting and lighting controls business, our strategy of increasing product vitality and service levels continues to differentiate us in the market.

Speaker 4: A few weeks ago, we hosted our annual sales conference in Atlanta on the 23rd. It was a great event where we brought together our network of independent sales agents to share our strategic vision for ABL and introduce new products.

Speaker 4: I'd like to take a minute to describe our independent sales network. Stated simply, we have the best agency network in the industry.

Speaker 4: To give you an idea of their scope, we have about 80 agents in North America, and they have about 50 employees for the agency.

Speaker 4: In other words, we have over 4,000 local sales and sales support people working for us every day throughout North America.

Speaker 4: While our agents are independent, they exclusively represent us for key controls and do not represent the other Majors.

Speaker 4: They are generally the largest in their market, and we are the most important partner.

Speaker 4: Our partnership works very well with our product's vitality of service efforts. We make products that deserve to be chosen, and our independent sales agents ensure that they are chosen.

Speaker 4: Product vitality is driving success across our portfolio, and during the next 23, we introduced several new products. I want to highlight a couple here.

Speaker 4: The first was the new Endlight Air System input device. This is an indoor controller that can be used in multiple spaces, including offices, commercial, and retail areas.

Speaker 4: The device converts analog outputs to wireless broadcasts to control intelligent luminaires.

Speaker 4: This reduces the need for complex wiring solutions during installation and reduces the associated cost for the customer.

Speaker 4: The second was the InLight Air Arpod Micro.

Speaker 4: This is a battery-powered wall switch that can be used as a traditional wall switch or as a remote, providing control from anywhere within a built space.

Speaker 4: This is a really exciting extension of the technology and an elegant response to our customers' need for flexibility.

Speaker 4: These and other products continue to gain market attention.

Speaker 4: This quarter, several of our architectural lighting brands, Alight, Eureka, and Luminous, won a total of eight Good Design Awards from the Chicago Athenium, which recognizes products and industry leaders in design and manufacturing that have chartered new directions for innovation.

Speaker 4: Now, moving to our intelligence spaces group.

Speaker 4: The Spaces team continued to perform well, delivering another quarter of solid sales and operating profit growth, driven by the continued success of Distec.

Speaker 4: Dis-tech is winning because we have the best digital control solutions in the market.

Speaker 4: Its technology is Open Protocol, which means you can connect our controller to most new or existing systems in a built space.

Speaker 4: giving our customers significant flexibility.

Speaker 4: We are also winning because DisTech goes to market through independent system integrators.

Speaker 4: We are continually curating the highest quality network of SIs in each market in which we compete.

Speaker 4: Our focus is on expanding the addressable market for DisTech, which we have started to do in two ways.

Speaker 4: The first is geographic, as we mentioned last quarter.

Speaker 4: Today, we sell our controls primarily in the U.S., Canada, and France.

Speaker 4: we are expanding our presence in the UK and in the future in Asia.

Speaker 4: As we enter new markets, we are identifying and recruiting the highest quality as our partners.

Speaker 4: Second, we believe that any control that is currently mechanical or analog will become digital over time.

Speaker 4: So we are increasing what we can control and building spaces.

Speaker 4: This will provide us a second vector for continued growth. Finally, I also joined our spaces team at the AR Expo in Atlanta, where hvr professionals gathered to share ideas and showcase technology.

Speaker 4: It was great to hear firsthand from the SIs there how differentiated our DISTEC and ATRIUS products are.

Speaker 4: Now, looking to the rest of fiscal 2023.

Speaker 4: We have been intentional about our product vitality and service efforts, and how we operate the business.

Speaker 4: We have demonstrated our ability to manage price and cost, both in our go-to-market efforts and in our operations.

Speaker 4: Today, we are in greater control of the things we can control than we have ever been.

Speaker 4: As you know, there are meaningful changes in the economic climate.

Speaker 4: During the quarter, we began to see a slowing in the order rate for our project business while we continue to work through our extended backlog.

Speaker 4: We believe that the slower order rate is driven by the lead time compression that we discussed last quarter, and now the changing C&I lending environment.

Speaker 4: At the same time, our contractor select business continues to be strong.

Speaker 4: We will continue our focus on end markets and identifying new ways to grow.

Speaker 4: As we deal with these changing market conditions, our focus is on generating profits and turning those profits into cash.

Speaker 4: We are continuing to manage the price-cost relationship and will continue to generate strong cash flow.

Speaker 4: In closing, we enter the second half of Fiscal 23 with our strategy unchanged.

Speaker 4: We are in control of what we can control and we are confident in our ability to adapt to the changing market conditions and requirements of our customers.

Speaker 4: Now, I'll turn the call over to Karen, who will update you on her second quarter performance. Thank you, Neil. We delivered a solid performance in the second quarter of 2023.

Speaker 5: Sales in both businesses grew, delivering improved adjusted operating profit and margins and adjusted diluted EPS.

Speaker 5: We generated strong cash flow from operations and continued to allocate capital effectively.

Speaker 5: In the second quarter, we generated net sales of $944 million, which was 4% higher than the prior year.

Speaker 5: This was largely due to price, with both the ABL and ISG businesses contributing to the growth during the quarter.

Speaker 5: Operating profit in the second quarter was $112 million and adjusted operating profit increased $10 million to $132 million from the prior year.

Speaker 5: Adjusted operating profit margin improved by 50 basis points over the prior year to 14%.

Speaker 5: The improvement in adjusted operating profit and adjusted operating profit margin was a result of the increase in gross profit performance as we successfully manage price and cost.

Speaker 5: Finally, we continued to grow. Adjusted diluted earnings per share.

Speaker 5: Our diluted earnings per share of $2.57 was an increase of 44 cents or 21% year over year.

Speaker 5: while our adjusted diluted earnings per share of $3.06 increased 49 cents, or 19%, over the prior year.

Speaker 5: The growth in adjusted diluted earnings per share was primarily due to higher operating profit and lower shares outstanding due to the share repurchases.

Speaker 5: Moving to our segment performance review, ABL net sales grew to $891 million, an increase of 3% compared with the prior year.

Speaker 5: This increase was primarily driven by higher year-over-year sales in our independent sales network, the direct sales network, and the retail channel. As NE mentioned, the order rate related to our project business slowed during the quarter. However, our Contractor Select business, targeted at distributors and retailers, continued to grow.

Speaker 5: ABL's operating profit was $124 million, an increase of 6% versus the prior year, with ABL adjusted operating profit at $133 million, an increase of 5% versus the prior year.

Speaker 5: The adjusted operating profit margin was 15%, which was 30 basis points better than last year.

Speaker 5: The improvement resulted from our ability to manage price and cost.

Speaker 5: Now moving to ISG.

Speaker 5: The space segment continued to perform well, with another good quarter of net sales growth and improved adjusted operating profit.

Speaker 5: Sales in the second quarter of 2023 were $58 million, an increase of $8 million or 16% versus the prior year, primarily as a result of the growth in dis-tech.

Speaker 5: During the quarter, both Distech and Atria delivered growth across new and existing customers. Operating profit in the second quarter of 2023 increased to approximately $6 million this quarter, with ISG adjusted operating profit at $11 million. Now, I want to expand on our cash flow performance.

Speaker 5: We generated $306 million of cash flow from operating activities for the first six months of Fiscal 2023, an increase of $179 million over the prior year's first half, driven largely by improvements in working capital.

Speaker 5: Last year, we invested in inventory in order to support our growth, as well as insulate our production facilities from inconsistent supply availability, with the intention of working down that inventory over several quarters, which we have done.

Speaker 5: We are now down 16 inventory days from the peak in February of 2022, and we have brought inventory levels down by over $50 million sequentially from the first quarter of fiscal 2023.

Speaker 5: We also invested $36 million in capital expenditures and $124 million to repurchase approximately seven thousand shares during the first half of fiscal 2020.

Speaker 5: As we said before, our capital allocation priorities remain the same.

Speaker 5: We've invested for growth in our current businesses through R&D and CapEx.

Speaker 5: We've expanded our platform through acquisitions, as evidenced by the purchase of Opttronics in our lighting business.

Speaker 5: We've maintained our dividends and we've created permanent shareholder value through over $1.1 billion of share repurchases since the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020, which was funded by our organic cash flow generation.

Speaker 5: Before I turn the call to the operator for questions, I want to summarize our performance.

Speaker 5: We continue to deliver solid performance in the second quarter of 2023.

Speaker 5: We grew sales in both our lighting and spaces businesses.

Speaker 5: We improved adjusted operating profit and margin and grew adjusted diluted earnings per share.

Speaker 5: We generated strong cash flow from operations and created permanent value for shareholders through share repurchases.

Speaker 5: Our guidance provided for fiscal 2023 remains unchanged and we are continuing to focus on what we can control and position ourselves to quickly adapt to changing market conditions.

Speaker 5: Thank you for joining us today. I will now pass you over to the operator to take your questions.

Speaker 1: Thank you.

Speaker 1: Our first question comes from Tim Wos at Baird.

Speaker 1: from Tim Woes at Baird. Your line is now open.

Speaker 6: Hey guys, good morning.

Speaker 6: Hey guys, good morning. Good morning. Good morning.

Speaker 7: Just on the quarter maybe. Maybe just kind of starting off on the sales side, just wonder if you could maybe add a little bit of color on what you're seeing on the order rate front that you alluded to, and just how those orders may be trending through the quarter, both on a project basis and in distribution. And then, just how do you think we should?

Speaker 7: Maybe think about the back half of the year from a revenue perspective, just given some of the slowing you talked about.

Speaker 4: Yeah, so Karen, why don't I start and you add anything at the end. So a big picture, let's break down kind of the lighting business into several component parts. We'll focus on the projects through C&I and that's where we started to see some of the the softening in the order rate.

Speaker 4: We think that is related to two things, Tim. The first is the compression of the lead times as we started to introduce last quarter. For context, those lead times now are down about, are running currently down about 30% from where they were at the peak, which was in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2022.

Speaker 4: So, as you see those compressing, obviously there's projects that would have been ordered later that have already been ordered. Second, on the distributor side, there's two ways to think about the distributors. The first is where they're managing that project business. So obviously that's correlated to that project.

Speaker 4: So as we look forward, we think the market is presenting us with mixed signals. Obviously there's some economic turmoil. The CNI lending rate, Federal Loan Survey would indicate that there's fairly significant tightening on the CNI side, which gives us pause.

Speaker 4: At the same time, the parts of our business like Contractor Select that are around everyday products are performing really well. So, NetNet, we are, as we said, we're positioned to respond to whatever it delivers us, the market delivers us.

Speaker 4: And as Karen indicated, we feel good with kind of where we are from a current projections perspective.

Speaker 7: Okay, okay. And then just I guess on the margins within the quarter, just wonder if there's a way to kind of break down some of the sequential improvement because normally you'd see kind of a seasonal step down in margins from Q1 to Q2 and so I'm just kind of wondering kind of what drove the step up and

Speaker 7: you know, as you think about seasonality in the back half of the year, I mean, do you see that kind of normal kind of Q3, Q4 kind of margin step up that you've seen historically as well?

Speaker 4: So the margin performance at the growth margin level was delivered by managing price and some increasing favorability on the input cost front. So obviously we've taken a much more strategic approach to pricing we believe. Yeah.

Speaker 4: To take So we can strategically manage price there, and we're starting to, and we're starting to see favorability on the input cost side. So that's, we're obviously very aggressively managing that, and that should be the trend going forward for the rest of the year.

Speaker 7: Okay okay, I'll go back and queue. Thanks for the coin in the time.

Speaker 1: Thanks, our next question comes from Ryan Merkel, with William Blair.

Speaker 8: Your line is now open. Thank you, good morning everyone. Thanks for taking the question first off. Can any of you speak to the risk of channel destocking later this year, and if a channel has too much inventory out there?

Speaker 4: Yeah, so not surprisingly we get this question a lot. So let me kind of break it, as I did in the first question, break it down into its component parts. And specifically now we're talking about the electrical distributors. So there's two parts to their business. There is the project business, which they're staging and storing for delivery.

Speaker 4: The second is the inventory that they buy for resale, which are our contractor select portfolio. We continue to see, you know, as I indicated earlier in the comments, we continue to see strong volume there. So that short lead time, high turns kind of inventory, and that's performing pretty well. Digging in deeper to the channel, which is, which is...

Speaker 4: That they, that they bought earlier, which is destocking, and then a couple of other, a couple of other things. So, net net, if we're talking about the distributors - they are, you know, our Contractor Select portfolio continues to turn over, which would, which would imply that their inventories are.

Speaker 4: Yes, I'll start on. I'll start in Switchge, then Kington. Talk about the infrastructure. So, on the switch here. That's largely what's holding up the stage and store orders. So, the switch here. Lead times continue to be far in excess of what the lighting lead times are, for example.

Speaker 4: So, that's why these projects are kind of inconsistently executing and I believe that the consensus is that that won't improve until kind of later in the calendar year.

Speaker 5: And then on infrastructure, Ryan. As we've said before, we do think this is a place of opportunity for us and we are starting to see some green shoots in the infrastructure projects, but it's still pretty early. We're going to continue to position ourselves for projects to be on project specifications, which will eventually turn into bids and then orders.

Speaker 7: taking my questions. I wanted to start on revenue mix and trying to kind of understand your views on the percent of revenue that's most exposed to credit availability and interest rates. I think about the exposures being roughly 50% kind of new construction 50% renovation.

Speaker 7: I think you're roughly 20% kind of contractor select. And so trying to think as you're talking about some of the projects and what you're seeing in terms of maybe evidence of some slow down in ordering, just what part of the portfolio, what part of the revenue you think is maybe most exposed to some of these slowing trends. Yeah, thanks Joe. The a,

Speaker 4: So the infrastructure government dollar projects are not going to be impacted by this. The educational market impacts are not going to be impacted by this. But some of the others obviously are. We don't have a perfect quantification of that for you.

Speaker 4: And we're not sure that we have a perfect crystal ball on how this is going to play out. So, so the, the, the project, the C&I project business would be the big bucket that would be most impacted by this. And of that business, it's probably half of that business that would be most impacted by this.

Speaker 4: we have a perfect crystal ball on how this is going to play out. So the the project, C&I project business would be the big bucket that would be most impacted by this and of that business it's probably you know half of that business that that would be most impacted by this. Those are just round numbers.

Speaker 7: Got it. Okay. And then can you expand a little bit on costs coming down, you know, and the degree to which that you're seeing that in component costs, how much of that is a supply chain eases there's just, you know, smoother operations and that enables some costs coming down how much of

Speaker 4: very intentional about our managing of input costs going forward. So first of all on the component side, those electronic components, those prices are not changing much. In fact their prices and terms are largely staying the same.

Speaker 4: Beyond that, we've been intentional about what we're sourcing, who we're sourcing it from on all of the other inputs. We feel really good now about our ability to manage those going forward. You highlighted steel. We've improved our steel sourcing fairly significantly. Bye.

Speaker 4: Going forward on the input cost side.

Speaker 9: Thank you.

Speaker 1: Our next question comes from a line of Chris Snyder with UBS. Your line is now open. Your line is now open.

Speaker 4: Thank you. So, prior communication suggested that gross margin would step up in the back half relative to the first half. Is that still the case, just given the higher first-half starting point and then some of the cycle concerns called out in the back half?

Speaker 4: Basically, it started to perform the way we expected it to perform earlier than we expected it to perform that way. So, we're not surprised by these gross margin levels.

Speaker 4: Okay, appreciate that. And then, Neil, I think earlier you kind of called out taking a more strategic approach to pricing. Could you just maybe provide a little bit more color on that? And does this mean essentially a trade off of higher gross margin, maybe at the

Speaker 4: We believe that as the largest player in the industry, we're demonstrating pricing.

Speaker 4: a very important strategic pricing. We compete every day on everyday products with our contractor select portfolio. We think that's working. Obviously it's growing. It's growing in the face of a couple things. One is...

Speaker 4: Asian imports, census data suggests that Asian imports are down over 30%. Obviously we're growing and our portfolio is a portion of those numbers. So it's obviously differentiating. So that relationship is working. We're delivering higher value at the same kind of at a competitive price for both the customers and margin for us.

Speaker 4: And then on the project side, it's this relationship between price and volume. So we're going to be strategic about where we take volume, and we're going to continue to deliver these margin levels.

Speaker 4: I appreciate that. If I could maybe just squeeze one last one in. You know, there's some communication earlier around potential inventory destock. You know, because when I look at the corridor, it seems like volumes were roughly flat year on year, whereas non-res activity has continued to grow quite nicely. Anyway they just.

Speaker 4: every time we've been asked it. The one thing I would just want to make sure that people appreciate is that the, we believe that the lead time compression is part of what the destocking story is. So we don't think that there's a significant, there's not a significant amount of...

Speaker 4: of a hold for sale inventory in the distributors or retailers, or our contractor select portfolio wouldn't be performing as well as it is right now. So these are projects that are in the market or in the distributors.

Speaker 4: Where this is impacting us, we think, the most is on this lead time compression. So that has an impact on the order rate and that's continuing. So we expect that to continue through at least through the 3rd quarter.

Speaker 9: Thank you.

Speaker 1: As a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question at this time, please press Star 1 on your telephone.

Speaker 1: Our next question comes from Jeff Rees-Breg with Vertical Research Partners. Your line is now open.

Speaker 8: Hi, it's Jeff Sprague. That broke up right as she was introducing me. Hopefully that was me. We got you. Yeah, we got you. Okay, thank you. Good morning. I just wanted to come back to just kind of the lending environment, Neil, and not to parse words here, but...

Speaker 8: You know in your opening remarks it actually sounded like you felt the negative impact of lending changing already in the quarter but really it sounds more like you're just flagging it as obviously an issue to be concerned about and the order softening was more this compression of lead times. Can you just kind of clarify that are you actually seeing

Speaker 4: Like tangible evidence of, you know, for lack of a better term, a credit crunch in your end markets. So thanks for the question, Jeff, and the opportunity to clarify and provide as much clarity as possible on this. The Fed C&I loan survey started to turn negative kind of last fall, basically. So, that is clear.

Speaker 4: as the FedCNI loan survey. And that will impact, obviously, the non-governmental pieces of it, so it won't impact education season, but it will have some effect on things going forward with the tightening. And then the second half of that is, and we've said this consistently, is that if there's higher discount rates, there will be less projects.

Speaker 4: So, and I think we're seeing the combination. We are collectively as an industry seeing the combination of these going forward. And that's, it'll be determined. We'll have to see what the Fed does and see how that plays out.

Speaker 8: Yeah, then I guess just kind of coming off that. I just, you know, thinking about your guidance, right?

Speaker 8: what would have to happen to get us to the bottom end of the range, right? I mean if we look at kind of historical first half, second half patterns, right, unless there's an abrupt change in the economic environment, you know, it seems like you're, you know, you're in the upper third of that range, you know, by historical standards. What...

Speaker 8: I don't know if you agree with that, but what do you think would have to happen here to get you to the bottom of that range? Such a wide range was a half a year ago.

Speaker 4: Yeah, I mean, as we said, Jeff, what we're – our intention is not to update the range throughout the year. The – based on our performance for the first half of the year, it would imply for the rest of the year that sales will be harder to achieve, but we're demonstrating that profits are achievable.

Speaker 8: That's the bullet point summary of how we think the rest of the year plays out. Great, and maybe just one quick last one. Just on inventory, your own inventory performance has been notable, right? You brought it down pretty dramatically. It looks like you're kind of near historical averages on days inventory anyhow.

Speaker 8: there I mean is there a lot of additional opportunity in in your view at this point to unlock cash through further inventory liquidations or have we reached some kind of normalized level here.

Speaker 5: I think, Jeff, for the most part, we are at a more normalized level. We're still a little bit heavy on component inventory for electronics, but it's modest compared to the decreases that we've made so far.

Speaker 4: And I'd add to that, we have multiple efforts ongoing to continue to reduce that. So I think we are at historically normal levels and I also believe that we can improve those over time.

Speaker 1: Great. Thanks for the color. Appreciate it. Thank you. And I'm showing no further questions in the queue at this time. I'd like to turn the call back to Neil Ash for any closing remarks.

Speaker 4: We really appreciate you joining us this morning. We're pleased with our performance so far this year. We are in control of what we can't control and we're confident about our ability to deliver no matter the market conditions on our customer requirements. So thank you for spending some time with us.

Speaker 1: This quarter, and we look forward to talking to you again next quarter. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

Speaker 9: I the.

Speaker 9: Thank.

I you.

Q2 2023 Acuity Brands Inc Earnings Call

Demo

Acuity

Earnings

Q2 2023 Acuity Brands Inc Earnings Call

AYI

Tuesday, April 4th, 2023 at 12:00 PM

Transcript

No Transcript Available

No transcript data is available for this event yet. Transcripts typically become available shortly after an earnings call ends.

Want AI-powered analysis? Try AllMind AI →