NYSE:WMS Advanced Drainage Systems Q2 2024 Earnings Report $104.88 -0.81 (-0.77%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$107.47 +2.59 (+2.47%) As of 05:07 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Advanced Drainage Systems EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.71Consensus EPS $1.53Beat/MissBeat by +$0.18One Year Ago EPSN/AAdvanced Drainage Systems Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$780.22 millionExpected Revenue$776.36 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$3.86 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AAdvanced Drainage Systems Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date11/2/2023TimeN/AConference Call DateThursday, November 2, 2023Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsAdvanced Drainage Systems' Q4 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 15, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 10:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Advanced Drainage Systems Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 2, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Advanced Drainage Systems' 2nd Quarter of Fiscal Year 20 24 Results Conference Call. My name is Christina, and I will be your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. Thank you. Operator00:00:29I would now like to turn the presentation over to your host for today's call, Mr. Mike Higgins, Vice President of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations. Speaker 100:00:40Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us. Here today, I have Scott Barber, our President and CEO and Scott Cottrill, our CFO. I would also like to remind you that we will discuss forward Statements actual results may differ materially from those forward looking statements because of various factors, including those discussed in our press release and the risk factors identified in our Form 10 ks filed with the SEC. While we may update forward looking statements in the future, we disclaim any obligation To do so, you should not place undue reliance on these forward looking statements, all of which speak only as of today. Speaker 100:01:18Lastly, the press release we issued earlier this morning is posted on the Investor Relations section of our website. A copy of the release has We will make a replay of this conference call available via webcast on the company website. I'll now turn the call over to Scott Parker. Speaker 200:01:38Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. Thank you all for joining us on today's call. As a pure play water company Focused on stormwater in the legacy ADS business and on-site septic wastewater infiltrator, We play a crucial role in developing sustainable water management solutions to protect and manage water, the world's most precious resource, Safeguarding our environment and communities. Over the last several years, we have been experiencing a secular trend whereby large scale water related climate events are increasing in frequency, duration and intensity. What was once a 100 year storm event is now happening far more often. Speaker 200:02:23In the second quarter alone, we saw severe storms and flooding impact Eastern half of the United States as well as the hurricane in the Southeast. These severe water events caused 1,000,000,000 of dollars in physical damage and asset destruction, while also displacing people and disrupting businesses, degrading quality of life in communities. Stormwater infrastructure in the United States is often inadequate to accommodate such large quantities of water in very short time periods, which poses a critical challenge as these events become more common. At ADS, we engineer solutions to mitigate the impact Of these water related climate events for the millions of people affected, building resilient communities in the face of changing weather patterns, Whether it be flood mitigation, nitrogen removal, water quality improvement or water conservation, We remain focused on the ADS brand promise. Our reason is water by providing clean management water management solutions to communities delivering unparalleled service to customers. Speaker 200:03:36The secular trend of larger and more frequent water events Combined with the success of our conversion strategy gives us confidence in the future of ADS and the investments we are making in the business to drive growth and profitability over the long term. This morning, we announced the construction of a new manufacturing facility in Lake Wales, Florida, which will break ground in 2024. Florida is the 2nd largest state for overall construction spending and remains a priority state for the company. Built on a 100 acre plot of land, this new state of the art facility It is designed for the future workforce promoting safety, efficient flow of materials and traffic and incorporating the most advanced automation technology for manufacturing corrugated thermoplastic pipe. This facility will complement the 2 existing manufacturing facilities we have located in Winter Garden and Sebring, Helping the company to meet current and future customer demand and giving us the flexibility to expand as we continue to penetrate this market through our conversion strategy and superior go to market execution. Speaker 200:04:51Since the Florida DOT approved the use Of corrugated thermoplastic pipe for stormwater in 2014, we have executed well on conversion and growth, Increasing the ADS pipe sales in the state by over 6 times. The Lake Wales investment will help us further penetrate the attractive Florida market as well as open capacity in the Southeastern United States where there are large and attractive markets like Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia. This Florida playbook is also the foundation for our conversion strategy in Texas, where we intend to capitalize On the November 2022 Texas DOT approval of corrugated thermoplastic pipes for use in infrastructure projects, Accelerating the growth in this important market. Similar to Florida, the public approval in Texas comes on the back of an already strong business foundation And we expect this to serve as a force multiplier for conversion and growth over time. We are also investing in an engineering and technology center In Hilliard, Ohio, which will be the world's most advanced stormwater engineering, research and development facility. Speaker 200:06:05Construction is well underway and remains on track for completion in 2024. This facility will bring product design, material science In manufacturing technology under one roof, which will increase our pace of innovation and importantly, help us incorporate more recycled material into our products. This facility plays a key role in enabling ADS to meet our goal to consume £1,000,000,000 of recycled material annually by fiscal 2,032. In September, we issued the fiscal 2023 sustainability report, And I encourage you to go to our website to read it. There's a lot of important information in this report on the progress we have made on the sustainability front. Speaker 200:06:50This report also aligns to the United Nations' sustainable development goals as ADS became a signatory to the UN Global Compact in August. Now moving to the 2nd quarter results. We saw better than expected performance in the Infiltrator business and Allied Products portfolio Continue in the Q2 despite domestic demand headwinds from higher interest rates, credit tightening and economic uncertainty. Demand and pricing for the ADS pipe portfolio continued to perform in line with expectations. While non residential and residential marketness weakness continued in the 2nd quarter, infrastructure activity remained consistent overall And we are starting to see pickup on locally funded projects such as those at the municipal and county level as well in airport activity. Speaker 200:07:45From a margin perspective, we once again demonstrated the resilience of the business model through the 180 basis point expansion and adjusted EBITDA margin to 31.6 percent despite a lower demand environment. This marks the 7th quarter in a row of year over year margin expansion. The margin performance this quarter reflected We benefited from sales mix and previous investments in the business, including automation, more efficient production lines and tooling, Effective management of price cost and continuous improvement within the operations. Transportation costs are trending favorably, But the slow demand environment is resulting in higher manufacturing costs driven by under absorption of fixed costs as well as an increase in manufacturing engineering personnel that execute the capital investments. This morning, we updated our guidance to reflect the better than expected demand and margin performance in the Infiltrator business and Allied Products portfolio in the first half of the year. Speaker 200:08:53Demand and price for the Pipe business remained unchanged from previous guidance And we expect demand in the second half of the year to remain consistent with the plan we laid out in May. We will continue to pursue growth opportunities Through new products, attractive markets and partnerships, building out our portfolio and executing well so we can service customers' needs and enable communities to solve their stormwater and on-site septic wastewater issues. One thing is certain, the demand for stormwater and on-site septic wastewater products will persist and the secular tailwinds for water management will only increase. In summary, we had a solid first half of fiscal twenty twenty four. We feel confident in our ability to deliver on our commitments this year, Expanding margins despite the slow demand environment. Speaker 200:09:46ADS's value proposition, solutions package, Conversion strategy and unique sustainability position in water and recycling remain highly relevant And we are committed to being a leader in sustainable water management solutions. We will continue to manage cost and production, But importantly, we are managing this business for the eventual recovery in the residential and non residential end markets where we look to continue to gain share due to superior products, capabilities and commitment to service at both ADS and Infiltrator. With that, I will turn the call over to Scott Cottrill to further discuss our financial results. Speaker 300:10:27Thank you, Scott. In the Q2, we reported revenue of $780,000,000 a decrease of 12%, primarily due to lower volume. Adjusted EBITDA was $246,000,000 a decrease of 6%. We were able to partially offset the decrease in sales volume with favorable price cost management. The team has done an excellent job managing pricing on a local basis and results in the Q2 were in line with expectations. Speaker 300:10:56Material costs were favorable year over year in the quarter, though we expect price cost favorability to flat now in the second half of the year. In addition, this quarter we continued to see higher manufacturing costs year over year, primarily due to lower absorption of fixed costs as well as the increased investments we have made in engineering, quality and safety. On Slide 8, we present free cash flow. We generated $376,000,000 of free cash flow in the first half of fiscal twenty twenty four, compared to $361,000,000 in the prior year, an increase of 4%. Year to date, working capital management has resulted in better conversion of adjusted EBITDA to cash flow from operations. Speaker 300:11:42Capital spending increased 9% to $83,000,000 in the first half of fiscal twenty twenty four As we continue to make investments to increase automation, grow manufacturing and recycling capacity and increase productivity, as well as build our new world class engineering and technology center here in Hilliard, Ohio. Our first priority for capital Employment remains investing organically in the business, which we view as the lowest risk, highest return use of capital. We continue to expect to spend between $200,000,000 $225,000,000 on capital expenditures this year, inclusive of this year's initial spending for the new manufacturing facility in Florida announced earlier today. Our second priority is acquisitions that are close to the core, while being open to adjacencies that will provide for future platforms for consistent growth as well as expansion of our addressable markets. 3rd, we will continue to buy back shares under the current share repurchase program. Speaker 300:12:44In the first half of the year, we repurchased 1,000,000 shares for approximately $102,000,000 leaving $316,000,000 remaining under the existing authorization at the end of the Q2. Year to date adjusted earnings per diluted share decreased 6% to $3.78 Importantly, the share buyback program has resulted in 7% fewer shares outstanding compared to last year, partially offsetting the impact of lower net income on earnings per share. And lastly, we remain committed to the quarterly dividend Paid to shareholders of $0.14 per quarter, a 17% increase versus last year. Moving on to Slide 9, we present our updated fiscal 2024 guidance ranges. We raised the bottom of the revenue guidance, which is now expected to be between 2.7 $1,000,000,000 $2,800,000,000 We also increased the adjusted EBITDA guidance, which is now expected to be in the range of $800,000,000 to $850,000,000 Today's updated guidance is driven by the better than Our second half sales expectations remain unchanged and we continue to expect revenue to be roughly flat down 10% on a year over year basis. Speaker 300:14:05We expect normal seasonal patterns with 55% to 60% of revenue coming in the first half of this year and 40% to 45% coming in the second half. We believe the implied second half margins in our revised guidance are prudent given the challenging end market demand that we have been discussing throughout the year due to the higher interest rate environment as well as tighter lending standards. The revised guidance also includes the impact of accelerating certain customer service and order management initiatives into the second half of this year, given our better than expected results year to date, further strengthening our position as a supplier of choice both now and into the future. We remain focused on executing on our plan and investing in the business for long term growth, margin expansion and free cash flow generation. With that, I will open the call for questions. Speaker 300:14:58Operator, please open the line. Operator00:15:02Thank you. Your first question comes from the line of Michael Halloran with Baird. Your line is open. Speaker 400:15:22Hey, good morning, everybody. You've got Pez on for Mike. Quick one for you. If we take a look at your residential performance, can we maybe parse out what you're seeing across Legacy Pipe and Infiltrator, I know that you said Infiltrator is performing a little bit ahead of expectations. But can you maybe parse out What you're seeing from a fundamental demand perspective given that they sit a little bit different places in the build cycle? Speaker 200:15:50Yes. This is Scott Barber. So we would tell you that Infiltrator is stronger Dan, in that latter half of the build cycle, and I think they're benefiting from Kind of completions of homes, catching up with starts here over the last 6 months, let's say, because they've had a very strong first half relative The expectations and I think we've probably got the right mix geographically and home type there. On the front end, that land acquisition piece that where the pipe business plays is weaker For sure. And we really haven't seen that pickup. Speaker 200:16:34In addition, in that residential, I think Mike Higgins is buried to multifamily, which has not been very good either. So we're really pleased with how the infiltrator business has unfolded this year, And they've done a great job of managing their costs, being ready for this better than expected demand. They're still down year over year, but it's a lot better than we thought it was going to be. And I was there we were there 2 weeks ago. And many of you went to the Building 7 where we have the new equipment and automation and it was just awesome How that facility is performing. Speaker 400:17:18Yes. Thank you. That's super helpful color. Maybe digging a little bit deeper on the automation investments. Can you maybe remind us the varying degrees of automation across the different facilities? Speaker 400:17:28How much room there is to go? And maybe kind of remind us on some of the level of sophistication Just so we can get into maybe the opportunity set? Speaker 200:17:36Yes, there's a long way to go. And if you think about Just Infiltrator, I mean our most Building 7, what do we have 3 or 4 buildings down there that are doing production, a couple of buildings doing material handling In warehousing, but kind of really 2 of those facilities are really automated. The Building 7 that you all saw highly, highly automated, not quite as much in the other building. And then the initial building That we have down there not very automated at all. And then through our pipe factories, big, big network. Speaker 200:18:15We have Some good automation projects really in flight, well in flight and operating, I would call it 3 facilities You know with the Maxi Coiler and then the other 2 with the end of line automation, so there's a long way to go there. We announced today the Lake Wales. We will use our best ideas, the way we're thinking about things For the future in that facility, from an automation standpoint, because we believe that that's the Manufacturing workforce of the future and this will dictate really how much you can make Or the pounds that you can produce in those kind of facilities will be your level of automation, because you're not going to be able to get the labor that you once were able to get in many of these communities? Speaker 100:19:08Hey, Paz, this is Mike Higgins. I think another way to think about it is, it's still pretty immature on the ADS side. So lots of opportunity to go there, much broader network. And then on the infiltrator campus, where maybe the kind of heavy lift initial kind of automation is in place in a lot of spots And their focus has moved to, okay, how can we automate further the downstream activities to mitigate those challenges around hiring And then also to eliminate tasks that might provide a safety risk and make those roles and those jobs a lot safer. Speaker 200:19:48I don't think we're near Don to be replaced. Speaker 400:19:52Yes, fair, fair. I'll leave it there and pass it on. Speaker 200:19:57All right. Operator00:20:01And your next question comes from the line of Matthew Bouley with Barclays. Your line is open. Speaker 500:20:07Hey, good morning, everyone. Thank you for taking the questions. So maybe picking up on where Scott, see left off at the end of the prepared remarks around the margins in the second half. I think you're guiding to something like 25% EBITDA margins in the second half after you did 34% in Speaker 600:20:25the first half. So obviously that's Speaker 500:20:28a bit of a larger first half The second half margin decline that is normal for ADS. So, I think you mentioned there might be Some accelerating investments that you're looking at, perhaps building in some conservatism. Maybe just kind of touch on the bridge there and sort of what would lead to That larger than normal decline into the second half. Thank you. Speaker 300:20:51Yes, Matt, Scott here. You nailed 2 of the biggest ones, right? It's Being prudent with our end market guidance given kind of the what we see out there. I think on the gross margin side of the house, you'll Kind of see relatively flat performance as you look at the guide to what we're used to seeing in that 1H2H degradation. The SG and A piece of this that talks to the investments we're making in engineering, customer service, Order execution, we are taking advantage of a better than expected year to pull some of those investments forward. Speaker 300:21:28So those will come through SG and A. So You will see some of that headwind on a margin deterioration. You are absolutely correct. That 1H2H degradation is greater than what we normally historically experience. And those are the 3 key drivers of that. Speaker 500:21:46Got it. Okay, that's perfect. Thank you for that. And secondly, price cost, obviously, was positive again in the quarter. I wanted to pick up on some of your comments that you said a few times that price is performing in line with expectations. Speaker 500:22:02So just kind of wanted to unpack a little That a little bit. What were those expectations? How is price performing within that price cost bucket? And are you finding opportunities to perhaps utilize price adjustments in any regions to perhaps win conversion to your products? Thank you. Speaker 300:22:24Yes, I mean it's a local game as we keep talking Matt and as you know. So The team has done a great job. We've talked about holding on to the majority, vast majority of the pricing that we've gotten into the market over the last couple of years. A lot of drivers for why ADS is able to do that. But what we're seeing is absolutely a realization of what we talked about. Speaker 300:22:45We never talked about holding on to all of it. Obviously, need to be aware of competitive environments, geographical issues, All those items come into play. But we talked about holding on to the vast majority. We are holding on to the vast majority. That will continue. Speaker 300:23:03And obviously, we've got the nice resin being lower on a year over year basis, which is As you saw in our EBITDA bridge that we provide, it gives us a nice little acceleration of our performance both on the margin as well as the EBITDA growth. Speaker 500:23:20Great. All right, guys. Good luck. Speaker 300:23:23Thanks, Matt. Operator00:23:27And your next question comes from the line of Garik Shmois with Loop Capital. Your line is open. Speaker 700:23:33Hi, thanks for taking my question. Just higher level, just wondering on the non res side, how bidding on projects and how your backlog Was tracking over the course of the quarter. Speaker 100:23:49Yes. So, I Had a little bit of a hard time hearing you there, Garik, but I think you talked about kind of backlog and project activity in the non residential end markets. I would say, steady, right? It's a challenging non residential end market. There's pockets of different types of projects that we've seen pretty good activity on. Speaker 100:24:14But I would say kind of the backlog is steady. Order activity through the quarter was good. We didn't see it deteriorate further. But with that said, we still have another 6 months of the year that's left and I think everybody is well aware of the challenges that exist around non residential with higher interest rates, tightening credit standards and just general concern About kind of strength of the economy moving forward. But I think we feel good with where we are in that space. Speaker 100:24:50Obviously, it's again very local and very geographic. So you see kind of pockets of strength and pockets of resilience and then you see pockets that Might be a little weaker, but it was encouraging that some of the geographies we saw weaker in the Q1, specifically some of the states out west Have seen improved performance as we moved through Q2. Speaker 700:25:12Great. Thanks for that. Just wanted to follow-up On the plans to add capacity in Florida, I was wondering if you could provide a little bit more detail around how much incremental capacity does that Represent, is it going to be displacing any older capacity or is this all purely incremental? And then just maybe just the timing Around the project, just given some of the macro headwinds and recognizing it's going to take some time for the facility to come online, but just curious as So, why Speaker 200:25:45now? So, this is Scott Barbour. A couple of things. 1, it will not displace existing facilities. We have 2 really high performing facilities in Winter Garden, Florida and Seabane, Florida that are doing a super job servicing that market, which is still A very, very strong market for us across all of our segments. Speaker 200:26:08So it is truly incremental capacity for us In that state, particularly around the work that is going really fast in the DOT work and the residential work And our polypropylene pipe, which is our highest performing tip of the spear pipe. We're not going to Disclosed kind of number of lines or how many pounds we're going to make or anything like that. At this point, we're going to break ground Early next year, we're closing on the property now. We've been working on this for some time And we had to move through the different stages of kind of getting prepared to announce it. We're very excited about this. Speaker 200:26:54We need it in this region. It's a very strong region for us as we've been talking about for I've been here 6 years now and I think we've been talking about this since the very beginning of how important the crescent is or that Southeast United States in these priority states and we've done a great job of growing there. We were 6 times larger In Florida than we were 10 years ago when we got the massive approval for Our pipe products to be installed in public works down there. And so we've done a good job in our existing facilities Meeting that demand, but we know that's going to get better because we still understand we have room to grow in terms of penetration. Speaker 300:27:41And I Speaker 200:27:41would expect this capacity to start to come online in 20 25 calendar 2025. Speaker 700:27:49Understood. Thanks for all that and I'll pass it on. Speaker 200:28:03So sometimes you have to invest now in periods like this, which we are doing to be ready For when these markets recover. As the market recovers, it's too late. And I just we were talking about Infiltrator A little earlier, right after we bought Infiltrator in 2019, we approved within weeks. I think it was $40,000,000 or $60,000,000 Of capital, a lot of capital, which was all incremental. People were worried about the residential market and all that kind of stuff And we needed that capacity over the last 2 or 3 years. Speaker 200:28:41And now that capacity is going full bore at great cost. And that's the performance you see there. So I just bring that up because, yes, times are a little uncertain, there's no doubt about it. But we have the capacity to continue to invest this capital to be ready for that upturn. And I think that's what one of the nice characteristics about the company As we've been able to develop this really good cash flow and can go deploy that capital. Speaker 200:29:08So as we think about this Florida investment, This infiltrator investment we made right after the acquisition is kind of how we're thinking about it. To be ready for the upturn, to be ready For these next legs of penetration gain to be ready for these next legs of market upturn. So Go ahead with the question, please. Operator00:29:33And your next question comes from the line of Joe Alsmaier from Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Speaker 600:29:40Hey, everybody. Thanks for taking the question. I'd like to talk about long term profitability In the context of the EBITDA bridge that we're seeing today, hearing you talk about Sort of net neutral price costs in the back half seems to me like probably the positives and negatives have reduced in magnitude, meaning you're Likely getting less deflation as we move through here, but there's also not a major giveback on price. And so moving into next year, We shouldn't really assume that that changes much necessarily. And then on the investment side, in manufacturing, the under absorption there, That seems to me like something that part of that is temporary as part of this investment, but also if the end markets are improving, you would get Better incrementals on volume through that manufacturing line. Speaker 600:30:34So I'm just trying to model how you would get back down To 28% to 29% long term EBITDA margins, when in a year like this you're guiding to nearly 30% at the high end? Speaker 300:30:48Hey, Joe, Scott here. So we're not going to get into talking fiscal 2025 or longer. I will tell you though, the performance that we've had in the year to date through the 1st 6 months absolutely exceeding our expectations as Scott talked about During the prepared remarks, the EBITDA bridge is presented and shown for a reason, right? It shows you all the key drivers that we have. And as you look at that, you're right in looking at your assumption. Speaker 300:31:19Management's got our own view of it and we'll share that when the time is right. But what does that volume picture look like as we turn the corner in the next year? Price cost, this company does I don't know if anybody does a better job And managing price cost than what ADS does. So we'll continue to look at that. And anything that you assume on the volume side that Comes back whenever you assume it in the cycle or year, then you get some really nice fixed cost absorption that comes to that manufacturing line. Speaker 300:31:49And we'll always manage our SG and A costs to make sure that we're being competitive. Scott's point, it's getting the capacity where it needs to be during kind of A downturn, it's also getting more efficient, more competitive when we come out of it as well, which is what you heard us talk about related to customer service, Order execution and so forth. So again, not going to get into 25%. We did at the Investor Day give 28% to 29% margins As kind of a 3 year look as to where at the end of fiscal 2025 we expect to get, we'll obviously update that guide as we come out with guide Related to next year in the May timeframe like we always do. But again, doesn't stop us from executing And delivering as much as we can based on the environment that's in front of us. Speaker 600:32:38Yes. Yes, I agree with you on the price cost. I think the numbers don't lie there. Maybe then back to fiscal 2024, what maybe is included at the high end of the sales Range for residential, we've heard the builders talking about development spend. Just wondering what your assumptions are within your guide there for when you might See that if it's not in fiscal 2024, is it the early part of 2025 because it seems like all signs point to increased Speaker 100:33:12I think with regards to the residential, this Kind of move or the positive optimism that the builders have been talking about further development, that's probably an FY 'twenty five Impact for us, that's not going to happen in FY 2024. As they kind of ramp and start to develop more land for More communities, more subdivisions, we would expect to see that sometime in the next fiscal year, but not really counting on any of that for FY 'twenty four. Speaker 300:33:43Yes, I think that goes back to Scott's comment, what we're seeing at infiltrate on the completion side. A lot of focus right now on Getting caught up for some of the backlog from the starts over the last couple of years and focusing on completions right now is what we're seeing versus land acquisition, land development End starts. Speaker 600:34:02All very encouraging. Thanks everyone. Operator00:34:09Your next question comes from the line of John Lovallo with UBS. Your line is open. Speaker 800:34:15Good morning, guys. Thank you for taking my questions. First one on free cash flow conversion. From EBITDA, it's running at around 70%, 71%, I think year to date, which is solid. I mean, how are you thinking about cash flow conversion in the second half of the year? Speaker 800:34:30And then As we move out into next year, how should we be thinking about sort of the incremental CapEx from some of these initiatives that you guys announced today? Speaker 300:34:40Yes. Well, cash flow from operations is absolutely where we start when we look at it. Obviously, it starts with But working capital management is the big driver there, John. And so I would say right now as we look at it, we target a 20% working cap as part of sales as a percent of sales. We'll continue to look at that right now. Speaker 300:35:00We're sub-eighteen percent year to date. So Again, we'll look at that and see where we need to be. We like where we're at inventory wise given this lower demand environment. We've done a great job Looking at our variable costs, getting our labor where it needs to be, getting our inventories where it needs to be. So I think we've done a really good job of getting ourselves where we needed to be and you see that coming through the working capital, right? Speaker 300:35:28The receivables come off, the inventory is a great driver, a big driver of that working capital improvement in cash year over year. So Those are the key drivers in that. I would say right now we focus more on the free cash flow to EBITDA From a conversion perspective and we always kind of target a 50% or greater is the way we look at it. That ties to your next part of your question on the CapEx side, dollars 200,000,000 to $225,000,000 this year does include the Engineering Technology Center. It does include some initial Spending on the Lake Wales, Florida manufacturing facility, you'll see more of the Lake Wales facility obviously coming in fiscal 2025. Speaker 300:36:12But we've consistently been talking about the fact that this heightened level of CapEx versus what we've previously spent It's going to be around for at least the next couple of years as we use the balance sheet, as we use our leverage, and liquidity To focus on what we believe is the lowest risk, highest return use of that capital, it's on our footprint, it's on productivity, It's also in innovation and that's at Engineering Technology Center. So again, you'll see elevated CapEx spend. It will kind of toggle a little bit toward the Lake Wales facility from a magnitude mix perspective, but you'll see a lot still in that productivity, Engineering and Innovation side of the house as well. Speaker 800:36:56That's good color. I appreciate it. And then I guess maybe zoning in here on the non resi business, Curious what you're seeing in sort of that core low rise horizontal type projects. Are those still pretty soft? And then I guess conversely On the institutional business or the non spec side of the non resi side, is that still pretty solid? Speaker 100:37:19Yes. Hey, John, Mike Higgins. Yes, what you said is true. So things that are kind of as we said, kind of more speculative in nature, I think, remain challenged, and you see things getting pushed to the right, institutional, which we would consider Schools and other educational facilities and hospitals and things of that nature. I would say that's been pretty resilient and that's because a lot of that Funding that typically goes to build those projects is more stable, right? Speaker 100:37:52It's tax based, it's bond based. So I think we've seen that become very resilient. And then again, things that are we described as built for purpose, our Engineering and Technology Center, Things that are financed off people's balance sheets and they're not going to the market for financing, those continue to move forward. But again, the bulk of what we sell into is in that kind of general purpose commercial property. So, as we've said before around some of these mega projects, We do see activity. Speaker 100:38:24We're bidding. We're identifying projects, chasing specifications, Shipping product on several of those right now. Speaker 200:38:32Right now? Speaker 100:38:33Yes. But also, there's been news, Obviously, out there that some of these announced projects or investments are being paused and getting pushed to the right. So, I still like we say, it's there we're battling through the non res market, right. We're doing what we need to do and that's kind of be present In market, have good project knowledge, get products specified and take market share Traditional materials, so we still feel we're kind of performing better than market when you look at our results, but It remains a battle out there day to day on the non residential side. Speaker 200:39:13I would say particularly in the Allied Products. Yes. Where which John have a very this is Scott Barbour, Have a very high focus on the non residential job pursuit in market for us. And we know how much the market is down and we're having really great performance both sales, profitability, order rate in our Allied products. So I think that's kind of the power of the go to market that we have. Speaker 200:39:42It's really manifesting itself there. Speaker 800:39:50Got it. Thank you, guys. Appreciate the color. Operator00:40:03And your next question comes from the line of Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc Capital Markets Bank. Your line is open. Speaker 900:40:11Hey, good morning guys. This is David Tarantino on for Jeff. Maybe to be Clear on some of the pricing commentary, it seems like it's coming in line. Can we dig into the gross margins and pipe a little bit? It seems like it took Little bit more of a step back relative to the balance of the businesses. Speaker 900:40:29Is there anything to call out in the quarter maybe moving forward? Speaker 300:40:34No, not really. I mean, life was very much in line with what we thought coming into it. Price cost dynamic is laid out. We talked about the Q1 coming out a little bit better than what we had expected. Q2 Largely in line. Speaker 300:40:53So really nothing unusual, a little bit of timing of some of the costs In phasing, but there's nothing in there at all related to any kind of trends or anything there that we're concerned about at all. Speaker 900:41:09Great. And then maybe switching gears on just on infrastructure, obviously Smaller part of the business today, but it appears you guys have somewhat of renewed focus here. Can you maybe give us an update on what you're seeing flow from The recent stimulus packages, I mean, it seems like much of this is yet to show through yet. Speaker 100:41:32Yes. Hey, David, Mike Higgins. Like we said in the prepared comments, I think we're starting to see some activity around that. I think what we're seeing is more kind of At the local level, so think about counties or cities. We've seen good activity around airport projects as well. Speaker 100:41:51These things take time, right, to get the government has to get the infrastructure in place to So kind of handle requests, disperse money, that money then has to get to these local agencies. They have to then prioritize projects they want to do, Get those projects to market, to bid, get awarded and construction to start. So I think we've said this many times, This infrastructure bill is a long term thing and you're not necessarily for us, we believe you're not going to see 1 year or a Specific year has seen this huge boom or huge impact, but when you look back on it after 5, 7, 10 years, cumulatively, It will add up to something significant. Speaker 900:42:35Great. Thank you. Operator00:42:40And your next question comes from Trey Grooms with Stephens Inc. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:42:47Hey, good morning. This is actually Noah Murkowski on for Trey and thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 200:42:53First, Speaker 1000:42:54I wanted to Good morning. I wanted to follow-up on a question that was asked earlier on, I guess thinking about sort of leverage on volume growth. How should we be thinking about incremental margins in a scenario where you do have volume growth and maybe price cost is neutral? Speaker 300:43:15Yes. The best way to start or think about that as we talk about incremental margins from volume alone being in that 30% to 40% range, I think that's still kind of a good rule of thumb for right now. Obviously, as a starting point like anything else, You then have to take a step back and what's your assumption around pricing resin and some of the cost drivers. But again, 30% to 40% is what I would tell you to start with. Speaker 1000:43:43Got it. That sounds good. Speaker 300:43:44And again, the other thing I'll lay on top of that is, Again, it's a rule of thumb and it's a starting point, but you got to be really careful when you look at kind of the segments, The timing, especially when you're looking at volume coming on or volume coming off, because that can sway that one way or the other as well. So again, Start with 30% to 40% and then toggle it as you go. Speaker 1000:44:10Understand. And then for my follow-up, As we look at the sort of end markets in the back half of the year, this year you've had both non res and res down, But residential has been less severe and the comps get easier in the back half. So would you expect that Dynamic to reverse where maybe non res outperforms res even though they're probably or possibly both down? Speaker 500:44:39Well, I think Speaker 100:44:39what you see with the res kind of performance is the strength of that infiltrator business in the first half of the year. I think, yes, you're right. The comps should be easier in the back half of the year. I think, I don't want to speculate by the end market, but I think what you've seen kind of Q1 and then look at Q2, There might be some compression there, but I don't think it's going to be significant. Speaker 300:45:11Yes. And the other color or context I would give you is our guide assumes flat to down 10%. And so I think That would be the takeaway after being down 13% in the first half. So that assumes that the comps get a little bit easier as we go. And again, res and non res are 85% of the business. Speaker 300:45:31So, those would be the key drivers. Speaker 1000:45:35All right. That all makes sense. Thanks for taking my questions and good luck with the rest of the year. Thanks. Operator00:45:44And there are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the call back over to Scott Barber. Speaker 200:45:50Okay. Thank you very much and we appreciate the questions. I look forward to the follow ups today. We felt very good about the quarter, feel good about raising our guidance. I think we're being prudent in how we're looking at the rest of the year. Speaker 200:46:06We announced a big investment today. I think we've been kind of foreshadowing this in the capital spending we've been talking about in this level for the next couple of years. We're very excited about that, very excited about what's going on for us in the Southeast and in Florida, in particular, in Texas. And we continue to look for the long term and when these markets recover and be ready for that. So with that, we'll sign off. Speaker 200:46:33We appreciate it. You all have a great day. Bye bye. Operator00:46:40And this concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAdvanced Drainage Systems Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Advanced Drainage Systems Earnings HeadlinesAdvanced Drainage Systems to Announce Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2025 Results on May 15, 2025April 15 at 4:30 PM | businesswire.comAdvanced Drainage Systems (NYSE:WMS) Sets New 1-Year Low on Analyst DowngradeApril 11, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comAltucher: Turn $900 into $108,000 in just 12 months?We are entering the final Trump Bump of our lives. But the biggest returns will not be in the stock market.April 15, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)KeyCorp Issues Pessimistic Forecast for Advanced Drainage Systems (NYSE:WMS) Stock PriceApril 10, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comAdvanced Drainage price target lowered to $135 from $180 at KeyBancApril 9, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comBarclays Cuts Advanced Drainage Systems (NYSE:WMS) Price Target to $130.00April 9, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comSee More Advanced Drainage Systems Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Advanced Drainage Systems? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Advanced Drainage Systems and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Advanced Drainage SystemsAdvanced Drainage Systems (NYSE:WMS) designs, manufactures, and markets thermoplastic corrugated pipes and related water management products in North America and internationally. The company operates through Pipe, International, Infiltrator, and Allied Products & Other segments. It offers single, double, and triple wall corrugated polypropylene and polyethylene pipes; plastic leachfield chambers and systems; EZflow synthetic aggregate bundles; wastewater purification through mechanical aeration wastewater for residential and commercial systems; septic tanks and accessories; combined treatment and dispersal systems, including advanced enviro-septic and advanced treatment leachfield systems; and allied products, including storm retention/detention and septic chambers, polyvinyl chloride drainage structures, fittings, and water quality filters and separators. The company also purchases and distributes construction fabrics and other geosynthetic products for soil stabilization, reinforcement, filtration, separation, erosion control, and sub-surface drainage, as well as drainage grates and other products. In addition, it provides PVC hubs, rubber sleeves, and stainless-steel bands. The company offers its products for non-residential, residential, agriculture, and infrastructure applications through a network of distribution centers. Advanced Drainage Systems, Inc. incorporated in 1966 and is headquartered in Hilliard, Ohio.View Advanced Drainage Systems ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Analysts Boosted United Airlines Stock Ahead of EarningsLamb Weston Stock Rises, Earnings Provide Calm Amidst ChaosIntuitive Machines Gains After Earnings Beat, NASA Missions AheadCintas Delivers Earnings Beat, Signals More Growth AheadNike Stock Dips on Earnings: Analysts Weigh in on What’s NextAfter Massive Post Earnings Fall, Does Hope Remain for MongoDB?Semtech Rallies on Earnings Beat—Is There More Upside? 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Advanced Drainage Systems' 2nd Quarter of Fiscal Year 20 24 Results Conference Call. My name is Christina, and I will be your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session. Thank you. Operator00:00:29I would now like to turn the presentation over to your host for today's call, Mr. Mike Higgins, Vice President of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations. Speaker 100:00:40Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us. Here today, I have Scott Barber, our President and CEO and Scott Cottrill, our CFO. I would also like to remind you that we will discuss forward Statements actual results may differ materially from those forward looking statements because of various factors, including those discussed in our press release and the risk factors identified in our Form 10 ks filed with the SEC. While we may update forward looking statements in the future, we disclaim any obligation To do so, you should not place undue reliance on these forward looking statements, all of which speak only as of today. Speaker 100:01:18Lastly, the press release we issued earlier this morning is posted on the Investor Relations section of our website. A copy of the release has We will make a replay of this conference call available via webcast on the company website. I'll now turn the call over to Scott Parker. Speaker 200:01:38Thank you, Mike, and good morning, everyone. Thank you all for joining us on today's call. As a pure play water company Focused on stormwater in the legacy ADS business and on-site septic wastewater infiltrator, We play a crucial role in developing sustainable water management solutions to protect and manage water, the world's most precious resource, Safeguarding our environment and communities. Over the last several years, we have been experiencing a secular trend whereby large scale water related climate events are increasing in frequency, duration and intensity. What was once a 100 year storm event is now happening far more often. Speaker 200:02:23In the second quarter alone, we saw severe storms and flooding impact Eastern half of the United States as well as the hurricane in the Southeast. These severe water events caused 1,000,000,000 of dollars in physical damage and asset destruction, while also displacing people and disrupting businesses, degrading quality of life in communities. Stormwater infrastructure in the United States is often inadequate to accommodate such large quantities of water in very short time periods, which poses a critical challenge as these events become more common. At ADS, we engineer solutions to mitigate the impact Of these water related climate events for the millions of people affected, building resilient communities in the face of changing weather patterns, Whether it be flood mitigation, nitrogen removal, water quality improvement or water conservation, We remain focused on the ADS brand promise. Our reason is water by providing clean management water management solutions to communities delivering unparalleled service to customers. Speaker 200:03:36The secular trend of larger and more frequent water events Combined with the success of our conversion strategy gives us confidence in the future of ADS and the investments we are making in the business to drive growth and profitability over the long term. This morning, we announced the construction of a new manufacturing facility in Lake Wales, Florida, which will break ground in 2024. Florida is the 2nd largest state for overall construction spending and remains a priority state for the company. Built on a 100 acre plot of land, this new state of the art facility It is designed for the future workforce promoting safety, efficient flow of materials and traffic and incorporating the most advanced automation technology for manufacturing corrugated thermoplastic pipe. This facility will complement the 2 existing manufacturing facilities we have located in Winter Garden and Sebring, Helping the company to meet current and future customer demand and giving us the flexibility to expand as we continue to penetrate this market through our conversion strategy and superior go to market execution. Speaker 200:04:51Since the Florida DOT approved the use Of corrugated thermoplastic pipe for stormwater in 2014, we have executed well on conversion and growth, Increasing the ADS pipe sales in the state by over 6 times. The Lake Wales investment will help us further penetrate the attractive Florida market as well as open capacity in the Southeastern United States where there are large and attractive markets like Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia. This Florida playbook is also the foundation for our conversion strategy in Texas, where we intend to capitalize On the November 2022 Texas DOT approval of corrugated thermoplastic pipes for use in infrastructure projects, Accelerating the growth in this important market. Similar to Florida, the public approval in Texas comes on the back of an already strong business foundation And we expect this to serve as a force multiplier for conversion and growth over time. We are also investing in an engineering and technology center In Hilliard, Ohio, which will be the world's most advanced stormwater engineering, research and development facility. Speaker 200:06:05Construction is well underway and remains on track for completion in 2024. This facility will bring product design, material science In manufacturing technology under one roof, which will increase our pace of innovation and importantly, help us incorporate more recycled material into our products. This facility plays a key role in enabling ADS to meet our goal to consume £1,000,000,000 of recycled material annually by fiscal 2,032. In September, we issued the fiscal 2023 sustainability report, And I encourage you to go to our website to read it. There's a lot of important information in this report on the progress we have made on the sustainability front. Speaker 200:06:50This report also aligns to the United Nations' sustainable development goals as ADS became a signatory to the UN Global Compact in August. Now moving to the 2nd quarter results. We saw better than expected performance in the Infiltrator business and Allied Products portfolio Continue in the Q2 despite domestic demand headwinds from higher interest rates, credit tightening and economic uncertainty. Demand and pricing for the ADS pipe portfolio continued to perform in line with expectations. While non residential and residential marketness weakness continued in the 2nd quarter, infrastructure activity remained consistent overall And we are starting to see pickup on locally funded projects such as those at the municipal and county level as well in airport activity. Speaker 200:07:45From a margin perspective, we once again demonstrated the resilience of the business model through the 180 basis point expansion and adjusted EBITDA margin to 31.6 percent despite a lower demand environment. This marks the 7th quarter in a row of year over year margin expansion. The margin performance this quarter reflected We benefited from sales mix and previous investments in the business, including automation, more efficient production lines and tooling, Effective management of price cost and continuous improvement within the operations. Transportation costs are trending favorably, But the slow demand environment is resulting in higher manufacturing costs driven by under absorption of fixed costs as well as an increase in manufacturing engineering personnel that execute the capital investments. This morning, we updated our guidance to reflect the better than expected demand and margin performance in the Infiltrator business and Allied Products portfolio in the first half of the year. Speaker 200:08:53Demand and price for the Pipe business remained unchanged from previous guidance And we expect demand in the second half of the year to remain consistent with the plan we laid out in May. We will continue to pursue growth opportunities Through new products, attractive markets and partnerships, building out our portfolio and executing well so we can service customers' needs and enable communities to solve their stormwater and on-site septic wastewater issues. One thing is certain, the demand for stormwater and on-site septic wastewater products will persist and the secular tailwinds for water management will only increase. In summary, we had a solid first half of fiscal twenty twenty four. We feel confident in our ability to deliver on our commitments this year, Expanding margins despite the slow demand environment. Speaker 200:09:46ADS's value proposition, solutions package, Conversion strategy and unique sustainability position in water and recycling remain highly relevant And we are committed to being a leader in sustainable water management solutions. We will continue to manage cost and production, But importantly, we are managing this business for the eventual recovery in the residential and non residential end markets where we look to continue to gain share due to superior products, capabilities and commitment to service at both ADS and Infiltrator. With that, I will turn the call over to Scott Cottrill to further discuss our financial results. Speaker 300:10:27Thank you, Scott. In the Q2, we reported revenue of $780,000,000 a decrease of 12%, primarily due to lower volume. Adjusted EBITDA was $246,000,000 a decrease of 6%. We were able to partially offset the decrease in sales volume with favorable price cost management. The team has done an excellent job managing pricing on a local basis and results in the Q2 were in line with expectations. Speaker 300:10:56Material costs were favorable year over year in the quarter, though we expect price cost favorability to flat now in the second half of the year. In addition, this quarter we continued to see higher manufacturing costs year over year, primarily due to lower absorption of fixed costs as well as the increased investments we have made in engineering, quality and safety. On Slide 8, we present free cash flow. We generated $376,000,000 of free cash flow in the first half of fiscal twenty twenty four, compared to $361,000,000 in the prior year, an increase of 4%. Year to date, working capital management has resulted in better conversion of adjusted EBITDA to cash flow from operations. Speaker 300:11:42Capital spending increased 9% to $83,000,000 in the first half of fiscal twenty twenty four As we continue to make investments to increase automation, grow manufacturing and recycling capacity and increase productivity, as well as build our new world class engineering and technology center here in Hilliard, Ohio. Our first priority for capital Employment remains investing organically in the business, which we view as the lowest risk, highest return use of capital. We continue to expect to spend between $200,000,000 $225,000,000 on capital expenditures this year, inclusive of this year's initial spending for the new manufacturing facility in Florida announced earlier today. Our second priority is acquisitions that are close to the core, while being open to adjacencies that will provide for future platforms for consistent growth as well as expansion of our addressable markets. 3rd, we will continue to buy back shares under the current share repurchase program. Speaker 300:12:44In the first half of the year, we repurchased 1,000,000 shares for approximately $102,000,000 leaving $316,000,000 remaining under the existing authorization at the end of the Q2. Year to date adjusted earnings per diluted share decreased 6% to $3.78 Importantly, the share buyback program has resulted in 7% fewer shares outstanding compared to last year, partially offsetting the impact of lower net income on earnings per share. And lastly, we remain committed to the quarterly dividend Paid to shareholders of $0.14 per quarter, a 17% increase versus last year. Moving on to Slide 9, we present our updated fiscal 2024 guidance ranges. We raised the bottom of the revenue guidance, which is now expected to be between 2.7 $1,000,000,000 $2,800,000,000 We also increased the adjusted EBITDA guidance, which is now expected to be in the range of $800,000,000 to $850,000,000 Today's updated guidance is driven by the better than Our second half sales expectations remain unchanged and we continue to expect revenue to be roughly flat down 10% on a year over year basis. Speaker 300:14:05We expect normal seasonal patterns with 55% to 60% of revenue coming in the first half of this year and 40% to 45% coming in the second half. We believe the implied second half margins in our revised guidance are prudent given the challenging end market demand that we have been discussing throughout the year due to the higher interest rate environment as well as tighter lending standards. The revised guidance also includes the impact of accelerating certain customer service and order management initiatives into the second half of this year, given our better than expected results year to date, further strengthening our position as a supplier of choice both now and into the future. We remain focused on executing on our plan and investing in the business for long term growth, margin expansion and free cash flow generation. With that, I will open the call for questions. Speaker 300:14:58Operator, please open the line. Operator00:15:02Thank you. Your first question comes from the line of Michael Halloran with Baird. Your line is open. Speaker 400:15:22Hey, good morning, everybody. You've got Pez on for Mike. Quick one for you. If we take a look at your residential performance, can we maybe parse out what you're seeing across Legacy Pipe and Infiltrator, I know that you said Infiltrator is performing a little bit ahead of expectations. But can you maybe parse out What you're seeing from a fundamental demand perspective given that they sit a little bit different places in the build cycle? Speaker 200:15:50Yes. This is Scott Barber. So we would tell you that Infiltrator is stronger Dan, in that latter half of the build cycle, and I think they're benefiting from Kind of completions of homes, catching up with starts here over the last 6 months, let's say, because they've had a very strong first half relative The expectations and I think we've probably got the right mix geographically and home type there. On the front end, that land acquisition piece that where the pipe business plays is weaker For sure. And we really haven't seen that pickup. Speaker 200:16:34In addition, in that residential, I think Mike Higgins is buried to multifamily, which has not been very good either. So we're really pleased with how the infiltrator business has unfolded this year, And they've done a great job of managing their costs, being ready for this better than expected demand. They're still down year over year, but it's a lot better than we thought it was going to be. And I was there we were there 2 weeks ago. And many of you went to the Building 7 where we have the new equipment and automation and it was just awesome How that facility is performing. Speaker 400:17:18Yes. Thank you. That's super helpful color. Maybe digging a little bit deeper on the automation investments. Can you maybe remind us the varying degrees of automation across the different facilities? Speaker 400:17:28How much room there is to go? And maybe kind of remind us on some of the level of sophistication Just so we can get into maybe the opportunity set? Speaker 200:17:36Yes, there's a long way to go. And if you think about Just Infiltrator, I mean our most Building 7, what do we have 3 or 4 buildings down there that are doing production, a couple of buildings doing material handling In warehousing, but kind of really 2 of those facilities are really automated. The Building 7 that you all saw highly, highly automated, not quite as much in the other building. And then the initial building That we have down there not very automated at all. And then through our pipe factories, big, big network. Speaker 200:18:15We have Some good automation projects really in flight, well in flight and operating, I would call it 3 facilities You know with the Maxi Coiler and then the other 2 with the end of line automation, so there's a long way to go there. We announced today the Lake Wales. We will use our best ideas, the way we're thinking about things For the future in that facility, from an automation standpoint, because we believe that that's the Manufacturing workforce of the future and this will dictate really how much you can make Or the pounds that you can produce in those kind of facilities will be your level of automation, because you're not going to be able to get the labor that you once were able to get in many of these communities? Speaker 100:19:08Hey, Paz, this is Mike Higgins. I think another way to think about it is, it's still pretty immature on the ADS side. So lots of opportunity to go there, much broader network. And then on the infiltrator campus, where maybe the kind of heavy lift initial kind of automation is in place in a lot of spots And their focus has moved to, okay, how can we automate further the downstream activities to mitigate those challenges around hiring And then also to eliminate tasks that might provide a safety risk and make those roles and those jobs a lot safer. Speaker 200:19:48I don't think we're near Don to be replaced. Speaker 400:19:52Yes, fair, fair. I'll leave it there and pass it on. Speaker 200:19:57All right. Operator00:20:01And your next question comes from the line of Matthew Bouley with Barclays. Your line is open. Speaker 500:20:07Hey, good morning, everyone. Thank you for taking the questions. So maybe picking up on where Scott, see left off at the end of the prepared remarks around the margins in the second half. I think you're guiding to something like 25% EBITDA margins in the second half after you did 34% in Speaker 600:20:25the first half. So obviously that's Speaker 500:20:28a bit of a larger first half The second half margin decline that is normal for ADS. So, I think you mentioned there might be Some accelerating investments that you're looking at, perhaps building in some conservatism. Maybe just kind of touch on the bridge there and sort of what would lead to That larger than normal decline into the second half. Thank you. Speaker 300:20:51Yes, Matt, Scott here. You nailed 2 of the biggest ones, right? It's Being prudent with our end market guidance given kind of the what we see out there. I think on the gross margin side of the house, you'll Kind of see relatively flat performance as you look at the guide to what we're used to seeing in that 1H2H degradation. The SG and A piece of this that talks to the investments we're making in engineering, customer service, Order execution, we are taking advantage of a better than expected year to pull some of those investments forward. Speaker 300:21:28So those will come through SG and A. So You will see some of that headwind on a margin deterioration. You are absolutely correct. That 1H2H degradation is greater than what we normally historically experience. And those are the 3 key drivers of that. Speaker 500:21:46Got it. Okay, that's perfect. Thank you for that. And secondly, price cost, obviously, was positive again in the quarter. I wanted to pick up on some of your comments that you said a few times that price is performing in line with expectations. Speaker 500:22:02So just kind of wanted to unpack a little That a little bit. What were those expectations? How is price performing within that price cost bucket? And are you finding opportunities to perhaps utilize price adjustments in any regions to perhaps win conversion to your products? Thank you. Speaker 300:22:24Yes, I mean it's a local game as we keep talking Matt and as you know. So The team has done a great job. We've talked about holding on to the majority, vast majority of the pricing that we've gotten into the market over the last couple of years. A lot of drivers for why ADS is able to do that. But what we're seeing is absolutely a realization of what we talked about. Speaker 300:22:45We never talked about holding on to all of it. Obviously, need to be aware of competitive environments, geographical issues, All those items come into play. But we talked about holding on to the vast majority. We are holding on to the vast majority. That will continue. Speaker 300:23:03And obviously, we've got the nice resin being lower on a year over year basis, which is As you saw in our EBITDA bridge that we provide, it gives us a nice little acceleration of our performance both on the margin as well as the EBITDA growth. Speaker 500:23:20Great. All right, guys. Good luck. Speaker 300:23:23Thanks, Matt. Operator00:23:27And your next question comes from the line of Garik Shmois with Loop Capital. Your line is open. Speaker 700:23:33Hi, thanks for taking my question. Just higher level, just wondering on the non res side, how bidding on projects and how your backlog Was tracking over the course of the quarter. Speaker 100:23:49Yes. So, I Had a little bit of a hard time hearing you there, Garik, but I think you talked about kind of backlog and project activity in the non residential end markets. I would say, steady, right? It's a challenging non residential end market. There's pockets of different types of projects that we've seen pretty good activity on. Speaker 100:24:14But I would say kind of the backlog is steady. Order activity through the quarter was good. We didn't see it deteriorate further. But with that said, we still have another 6 months of the year that's left and I think everybody is well aware of the challenges that exist around non residential with higher interest rates, tightening credit standards and just general concern About kind of strength of the economy moving forward. But I think we feel good with where we are in that space. Speaker 100:24:50Obviously, it's again very local and very geographic. So you see kind of pockets of strength and pockets of resilience and then you see pockets that Might be a little weaker, but it was encouraging that some of the geographies we saw weaker in the Q1, specifically some of the states out west Have seen improved performance as we moved through Q2. Speaker 700:25:12Great. Thanks for that. Just wanted to follow-up On the plans to add capacity in Florida, I was wondering if you could provide a little bit more detail around how much incremental capacity does that Represent, is it going to be displacing any older capacity or is this all purely incremental? And then just maybe just the timing Around the project, just given some of the macro headwinds and recognizing it's going to take some time for the facility to come online, but just curious as So, why Speaker 200:25:45now? So, this is Scott Barbour. A couple of things. 1, it will not displace existing facilities. We have 2 really high performing facilities in Winter Garden, Florida and Seabane, Florida that are doing a super job servicing that market, which is still A very, very strong market for us across all of our segments. Speaker 200:26:08So it is truly incremental capacity for us In that state, particularly around the work that is going really fast in the DOT work and the residential work And our polypropylene pipe, which is our highest performing tip of the spear pipe. We're not going to Disclosed kind of number of lines or how many pounds we're going to make or anything like that. At this point, we're going to break ground Early next year, we're closing on the property now. We've been working on this for some time And we had to move through the different stages of kind of getting prepared to announce it. We're very excited about this. Speaker 200:26:54We need it in this region. It's a very strong region for us as we've been talking about for I've been here 6 years now and I think we've been talking about this since the very beginning of how important the crescent is or that Southeast United States in these priority states and we've done a great job of growing there. We were 6 times larger In Florida than we were 10 years ago when we got the massive approval for Our pipe products to be installed in public works down there. And so we've done a good job in our existing facilities Meeting that demand, but we know that's going to get better because we still understand we have room to grow in terms of penetration. Speaker 300:27:41And I Speaker 200:27:41would expect this capacity to start to come online in 20 25 calendar 2025. Speaker 700:27:49Understood. Thanks for all that and I'll pass it on. Speaker 200:28:03So sometimes you have to invest now in periods like this, which we are doing to be ready For when these markets recover. As the market recovers, it's too late. And I just we were talking about Infiltrator A little earlier, right after we bought Infiltrator in 2019, we approved within weeks. I think it was $40,000,000 or $60,000,000 Of capital, a lot of capital, which was all incremental. People were worried about the residential market and all that kind of stuff And we needed that capacity over the last 2 or 3 years. Speaker 200:28:41And now that capacity is going full bore at great cost. And that's the performance you see there. So I just bring that up because, yes, times are a little uncertain, there's no doubt about it. But we have the capacity to continue to invest this capital to be ready for that upturn. And I think that's what one of the nice characteristics about the company As we've been able to develop this really good cash flow and can go deploy that capital. Speaker 200:29:08So as we think about this Florida investment, This infiltrator investment we made right after the acquisition is kind of how we're thinking about it. To be ready for the upturn, to be ready For these next legs of penetration gain to be ready for these next legs of market upturn. So Go ahead with the question, please. Operator00:29:33And your next question comes from the line of Joe Alsmaier from Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Speaker 600:29:40Hey, everybody. Thanks for taking the question. I'd like to talk about long term profitability In the context of the EBITDA bridge that we're seeing today, hearing you talk about Sort of net neutral price costs in the back half seems to me like probably the positives and negatives have reduced in magnitude, meaning you're Likely getting less deflation as we move through here, but there's also not a major giveback on price. And so moving into next year, We shouldn't really assume that that changes much necessarily. And then on the investment side, in manufacturing, the under absorption there, That seems to me like something that part of that is temporary as part of this investment, but also if the end markets are improving, you would get Better incrementals on volume through that manufacturing line. Speaker 600:30:34So I'm just trying to model how you would get back down To 28% to 29% long term EBITDA margins, when in a year like this you're guiding to nearly 30% at the high end? Speaker 300:30:48Hey, Joe, Scott here. So we're not going to get into talking fiscal 2025 or longer. I will tell you though, the performance that we've had in the year to date through the 1st 6 months absolutely exceeding our expectations as Scott talked about During the prepared remarks, the EBITDA bridge is presented and shown for a reason, right? It shows you all the key drivers that we have. And as you look at that, you're right in looking at your assumption. Speaker 300:31:19Management's got our own view of it and we'll share that when the time is right. But what does that volume picture look like as we turn the corner in the next year? Price cost, this company does I don't know if anybody does a better job And managing price cost than what ADS does. So we'll continue to look at that. And anything that you assume on the volume side that Comes back whenever you assume it in the cycle or year, then you get some really nice fixed cost absorption that comes to that manufacturing line. Speaker 300:31:49And we'll always manage our SG and A costs to make sure that we're being competitive. Scott's point, it's getting the capacity where it needs to be during kind of A downturn, it's also getting more efficient, more competitive when we come out of it as well, which is what you heard us talk about related to customer service, Order execution and so forth. So again, not going to get into 25%. We did at the Investor Day give 28% to 29% margins As kind of a 3 year look as to where at the end of fiscal 2025 we expect to get, we'll obviously update that guide as we come out with guide Related to next year in the May timeframe like we always do. But again, doesn't stop us from executing And delivering as much as we can based on the environment that's in front of us. Speaker 600:32:38Yes. Yes, I agree with you on the price cost. I think the numbers don't lie there. Maybe then back to fiscal 2024, what maybe is included at the high end of the sales Range for residential, we've heard the builders talking about development spend. Just wondering what your assumptions are within your guide there for when you might See that if it's not in fiscal 2024, is it the early part of 2025 because it seems like all signs point to increased Speaker 100:33:12I think with regards to the residential, this Kind of move or the positive optimism that the builders have been talking about further development, that's probably an FY 'twenty five Impact for us, that's not going to happen in FY 2024. As they kind of ramp and start to develop more land for More communities, more subdivisions, we would expect to see that sometime in the next fiscal year, but not really counting on any of that for FY 'twenty four. Speaker 300:33:43Yes, I think that goes back to Scott's comment, what we're seeing at infiltrate on the completion side. A lot of focus right now on Getting caught up for some of the backlog from the starts over the last couple of years and focusing on completions right now is what we're seeing versus land acquisition, land development End starts. Speaker 600:34:02All very encouraging. Thanks everyone. Operator00:34:09Your next question comes from the line of John Lovallo with UBS. Your line is open. Speaker 800:34:15Good morning, guys. Thank you for taking my questions. First one on free cash flow conversion. From EBITDA, it's running at around 70%, 71%, I think year to date, which is solid. I mean, how are you thinking about cash flow conversion in the second half of the year? Speaker 800:34:30And then As we move out into next year, how should we be thinking about sort of the incremental CapEx from some of these initiatives that you guys announced today? Speaker 300:34:40Yes. Well, cash flow from operations is absolutely where we start when we look at it. Obviously, it starts with But working capital management is the big driver there, John. And so I would say right now as we look at it, we target a 20% working cap as part of sales as a percent of sales. We'll continue to look at that right now. Speaker 300:35:00We're sub-eighteen percent year to date. So Again, we'll look at that and see where we need to be. We like where we're at inventory wise given this lower demand environment. We've done a great job Looking at our variable costs, getting our labor where it needs to be, getting our inventories where it needs to be. So I think we've done a really good job of getting ourselves where we needed to be and you see that coming through the working capital, right? Speaker 300:35:28The receivables come off, the inventory is a great driver, a big driver of that working capital improvement in cash year over year. So Those are the key drivers in that. I would say right now we focus more on the free cash flow to EBITDA From a conversion perspective and we always kind of target a 50% or greater is the way we look at it. That ties to your next part of your question on the CapEx side, dollars 200,000,000 to $225,000,000 this year does include the Engineering Technology Center. It does include some initial Spending on the Lake Wales, Florida manufacturing facility, you'll see more of the Lake Wales facility obviously coming in fiscal 2025. Speaker 300:36:12But we've consistently been talking about the fact that this heightened level of CapEx versus what we've previously spent It's going to be around for at least the next couple of years as we use the balance sheet, as we use our leverage, and liquidity To focus on what we believe is the lowest risk, highest return use of that capital, it's on our footprint, it's on productivity, It's also in innovation and that's at Engineering Technology Center. So again, you'll see elevated CapEx spend. It will kind of toggle a little bit toward the Lake Wales facility from a magnitude mix perspective, but you'll see a lot still in that productivity, Engineering and Innovation side of the house as well. Speaker 800:36:56That's good color. I appreciate it. And then I guess maybe zoning in here on the non resi business, Curious what you're seeing in sort of that core low rise horizontal type projects. Are those still pretty soft? And then I guess conversely On the institutional business or the non spec side of the non resi side, is that still pretty solid? Speaker 100:37:19Yes. Hey, John, Mike Higgins. Yes, what you said is true. So things that are kind of as we said, kind of more speculative in nature, I think, remain challenged, and you see things getting pushed to the right, institutional, which we would consider Schools and other educational facilities and hospitals and things of that nature. I would say that's been pretty resilient and that's because a lot of that Funding that typically goes to build those projects is more stable, right? Speaker 100:37:52It's tax based, it's bond based. So I think we've seen that become very resilient. And then again, things that are we described as built for purpose, our Engineering and Technology Center, Things that are financed off people's balance sheets and they're not going to the market for financing, those continue to move forward. But again, the bulk of what we sell into is in that kind of general purpose commercial property. So, as we've said before around some of these mega projects, We do see activity. Speaker 100:38:24We're bidding. We're identifying projects, chasing specifications, Shipping product on several of those right now. Speaker 200:38:32Right now? Speaker 100:38:33Yes. But also, there's been news, Obviously, out there that some of these announced projects or investments are being paused and getting pushed to the right. So, I still like we say, it's there we're battling through the non res market, right. We're doing what we need to do and that's kind of be present In market, have good project knowledge, get products specified and take market share Traditional materials, so we still feel we're kind of performing better than market when you look at our results, but It remains a battle out there day to day on the non residential side. Speaker 200:39:13I would say particularly in the Allied Products. Yes. Where which John have a very this is Scott Barbour, Have a very high focus on the non residential job pursuit in market for us. And we know how much the market is down and we're having really great performance both sales, profitability, order rate in our Allied products. So I think that's kind of the power of the go to market that we have. Speaker 200:39:42It's really manifesting itself there. Speaker 800:39:50Got it. Thank you, guys. Appreciate the color. Operator00:40:03And your next question comes from the line of Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc Capital Markets Bank. Your line is open. Speaker 900:40:11Hey, good morning guys. This is David Tarantino on for Jeff. Maybe to be Clear on some of the pricing commentary, it seems like it's coming in line. Can we dig into the gross margins and pipe a little bit? It seems like it took Little bit more of a step back relative to the balance of the businesses. Speaker 900:40:29Is there anything to call out in the quarter maybe moving forward? Speaker 300:40:34No, not really. I mean, life was very much in line with what we thought coming into it. Price cost dynamic is laid out. We talked about the Q1 coming out a little bit better than what we had expected. Q2 Largely in line. Speaker 300:40:53So really nothing unusual, a little bit of timing of some of the costs In phasing, but there's nothing in there at all related to any kind of trends or anything there that we're concerned about at all. Speaker 900:41:09Great. And then maybe switching gears on just on infrastructure, obviously Smaller part of the business today, but it appears you guys have somewhat of renewed focus here. Can you maybe give us an update on what you're seeing flow from The recent stimulus packages, I mean, it seems like much of this is yet to show through yet. Speaker 100:41:32Yes. Hey, David, Mike Higgins. Like we said in the prepared comments, I think we're starting to see some activity around that. I think what we're seeing is more kind of At the local level, so think about counties or cities. We've seen good activity around airport projects as well. Speaker 100:41:51These things take time, right, to get the government has to get the infrastructure in place to So kind of handle requests, disperse money, that money then has to get to these local agencies. They have to then prioritize projects they want to do, Get those projects to market, to bid, get awarded and construction to start. So I think we've said this many times, This infrastructure bill is a long term thing and you're not necessarily for us, we believe you're not going to see 1 year or a Specific year has seen this huge boom or huge impact, but when you look back on it after 5, 7, 10 years, cumulatively, It will add up to something significant. Speaker 900:42:35Great. Thank you. Operator00:42:40And your next question comes from Trey Grooms with Stephens Inc. Your line is open. Speaker 1000:42:47Hey, good morning. This is actually Noah Murkowski on for Trey and thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 200:42:53First, Speaker 1000:42:54I wanted to Good morning. I wanted to follow-up on a question that was asked earlier on, I guess thinking about sort of leverage on volume growth. How should we be thinking about incremental margins in a scenario where you do have volume growth and maybe price cost is neutral? Speaker 300:43:15Yes. The best way to start or think about that as we talk about incremental margins from volume alone being in that 30% to 40% range, I think that's still kind of a good rule of thumb for right now. Obviously, as a starting point like anything else, You then have to take a step back and what's your assumption around pricing resin and some of the cost drivers. But again, 30% to 40% is what I would tell you to start with. Speaker 1000:43:43Got it. That sounds good. Speaker 300:43:44And again, the other thing I'll lay on top of that is, Again, it's a rule of thumb and it's a starting point, but you got to be really careful when you look at kind of the segments, The timing, especially when you're looking at volume coming on or volume coming off, because that can sway that one way or the other as well. So again, Start with 30% to 40% and then toggle it as you go. Speaker 1000:44:10Understand. And then for my follow-up, As we look at the sort of end markets in the back half of the year, this year you've had both non res and res down, But residential has been less severe and the comps get easier in the back half. So would you expect that Dynamic to reverse where maybe non res outperforms res even though they're probably or possibly both down? Speaker 500:44:39Well, I think Speaker 100:44:39what you see with the res kind of performance is the strength of that infiltrator business in the first half of the year. I think, yes, you're right. The comps should be easier in the back half of the year. I think, I don't want to speculate by the end market, but I think what you've seen kind of Q1 and then look at Q2, There might be some compression there, but I don't think it's going to be significant. Speaker 300:45:11Yes. And the other color or context I would give you is our guide assumes flat to down 10%. And so I think That would be the takeaway after being down 13% in the first half. So that assumes that the comps get a little bit easier as we go. And again, res and non res are 85% of the business. Speaker 300:45:31So, those would be the key drivers. Speaker 1000:45:35All right. That all makes sense. Thanks for taking my questions and good luck with the rest of the year. Thanks. Operator00:45:44And there are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the call back over to Scott Barber. Speaker 200:45:50Okay. Thank you very much and we appreciate the questions. I look forward to the follow ups today. We felt very good about the quarter, feel good about raising our guidance. I think we're being prudent in how we're looking at the rest of the year. Speaker 200:46:06We announced a big investment today. I think we've been kind of foreshadowing this in the capital spending we've been talking about in this level for the next couple of years. We're very excited about that, very excited about what's going on for us in the Southeast and in Florida, in particular, in Texas. And we continue to look for the long term and when these markets recover and be ready for that. So with that, we'll sign off. Speaker 200:46:33We appreciate it. You all have a great day. Bye bye. Operator00:46:40And this concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by