Christopher J. Stephens
Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer at Sealed Air
Thank you, Ted, and good morning, everyone. Let's start on Slide nine to review our quarterly net sales growth by segment and by region. In the second quarter, net sales totaled $1.3 billion, up 15% as reported, up 11% in constant dollars. Food was up 6% in constant dollars versus last year, and protective increased 20%. EMEA and the Americas were both up double digits: EMEA up 16%; and the Americas up 13%. APAC was flat versus last year with a modest decline in volumes, offset by favorable price. On Slide 10, you see organic sales volume and pricing trends by segment and by region. In the second quarter, overall volume growth was up 9% on favorable price of 3%. Let's start with volumes. Food volumes were up 4%; with the Americas, up 7%; and EMEA up 2%. This was offset by a 3% decline in APAC, largely related to Australia herd rebuilding. Protective volumes were up 15%; with the Americas, up 13%; and EMEA up 36%, while APAC had a modest decline. Q2 price was favorable 3%. You can see that Protective had 5% in favorable pricing, and Food was 1% due to timing of pricing actions and formula pass-throughs. We have implemented several price increases and expect 2021 price realization to be $275 million. On Slide 11, we present our consolidated sales and adjusted EBITDA walks. Having already discussed sales, let me comment on our adjusted EBITDA performance in Q2. We delivered adjusted EBITDA of $263 million, up 1% compared to last year, and margins of 19.8%, down 280 basis points, reflecting the impact of the current inflationary environment and supply chain disruptions. We are leveraging our higher volumes at 40% as we experienced a more favorable product mix. Despite favorable pricing in the quarter, you can see how higher input costs weighed on our EBITDA performance with an unfavorable price/cost spread of $36 million. Operational costs increased approximately $13 million relative to last year. This increase reflects investments to support growth, inflation on labor and indirect material costs as well as the normalization of spend in the quarter. This was partially offset by $13 million in Reinvent SEE productivity benefits. We expect our price/cost spread to improve sequentially in the third quarter. However, we do not expect to see positive price/cost spread until Q4. Adjusted EPS in Q2 was $0.79 compared to $0.76 in Q2 2020. Our adjusted tax rate was 25.6%, reflecting a more favorable mix of foreign earnings. Our weighted average diluted shares outstanding in the quarter were 153 million. We exited the quarter with 150 million shares outstanding. Turning to Slide 12. Here, we provide an update on Reinvent SEE.
We have achieved $28 million of benefits in the first half of the year and remain on track to realize approximately $65 million in 2021. Our commercial work stream is accelerating innovation and driving new customer wins in core and adjacent markets. Turning to segment results on Slide 13, starting with Food. In Q2, Food net sales of $737 million were up 6% on a constant dollar basis. Cryovac Barrier Bags and pouches returned to growth, increasing approximately 10% and accounting for nearly 50% of the segment sales. This growth reflects the beginning of food service recovery relative to last year when protein plants and restaurants, sporting events and other large venues were shut down. Sales in case-ready and roll stock retail applications, which accounts for just over 40% of segment sales, were down low single digits as supply disruptions impacted our results. In addition, this is against the backdrop of tough comps given the surge in demand from shutdowns a year ago. Equipment parts and sales -- and service sales, which accounts for 8% of the segment, were up nearly 40% in the quarter. We are experiencing increased demand for our automated solutions as our customers around the world invest in their processing plants to upgrade aged equipment and drive productivity. Adjusted EBITDA in Food of $158 million in Q2 declined 6% compared to last year with margins at 21.5%, down 360 basis points. This decline was related to elevated input costs, supply disruptions and the timing of pricing actions. On Slide 14, we highlight Protective segment results. In constant dollars, net sales increased 20% to $592 million. Industrial was up approximately 30% relative to last year when automobile and general manufacturers were forced to temporarily shut down their operations. Fulfillment, which is largely driven by e-commerce growth, was up approximately 10% on a global basis, led by double-digit growth in automated equipment, inflatable solutions, paper and temperature assurance. We leveraged our broad portfolio and global scale to meet increased demand despite ongoing supply issues, such as industry-related chip shortages out of Asia. The $30 million investments in capacity that Ted referenced earlier will help us meet increased customer demands for automation equipment. As a reminder, approximately 55% of our Protective sales are derived from industrial end markets and the remaining 45% from fulfillment and e-commerce. Adjusted EBITDA of $107 million increased 17% from Q2 with margins at 18.1%, down 100 basis points versus last year. Higher sales and productivity gains helped mitigate higher input and supply disruption costs. Now let's turn to free cash flow on Slide 15. In the first half of 2021, we generated $102 million of free cash flow. Relative to the same period last year, higher earnings and lower restructuring payments were offset by higher employee-related costs and capex investments to support growth and innovation.
On Slide 16, we outline our capital allocation strategy. We will maintain a strong balance sheet while driving attractive returns on invested capital and supporting profitable growth initiatives. In addition, we have a healthy acquisition pipeline that aligns with our growth strategy. On this slide, I want to highlight our growth investments. We are focusing our capex on breakthrough processes, automation, digital and sustainability. With SEE Ventures, we have invested approximately $40 million in early-stage disruptive technologies and business models that are expected to accelerate our strategy and innovation efforts. As it relates to returning capital to shareholders, in Q2, we were an active buyer of our stock. We repurchased 6.1 million shares for $299 million during the first six months of 2021, reflecting confidence in our vision, strategy and execution. And as Ted noted, today, we announced a new $1 billion share repurchase program, continuing our commitment to return value to shareholders. This new program has no expiration date and replaces the previous authorization. During the second quarter, we also announced an increase to our quarterly cash dividend of 25%. Let's turn to Slide 17 to review our updated 2021 outlook. We are raising our net sales guidance, reflecting strong first half sales performance and outlook for the remainder of the year. For net sales, we estimate $5.4 billion to $5.5 billion or 10% to 12% as-reported growth and 8% to 10% in constant dollars compared to our previously provided $5.25 billion to $5.35 billion range. At the midpoint, the $150 million increase in constant dollar sales largely reflects additional pricing. We continue to anticipate adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $1.12 billion to $1.15 billion. On a reported basis, adjusted EBITDA is expected to grow 7% to 9%. Higher sales are expected to help offset increased material and supply disruption costs. Given the timing of pricing actions, we anticipate a modest sequential improvement in EBITDA in Q3 with a more meaningful improvement in Q4. We are raising our 2021 outlook for adjusted EPS to $3.45 to $3.60, and we continue to expect a 45-55 first half, second half percentage split. Our outlook assumes 153 million average shares outstanding, one million reduction from our prior guidance, given share repurchases in the first half, and an adjusted effective tax rate of approximately 26%. And lastly, our free cash flow outlook continues to be $520 million to $570 million. There is no change to our outlook for 2021 capex of approximately $210 million and Reinvent SEE restructuring and associated payments of approximately $40 million. As you can see on the slide, we wanted to provide a few variables as it relates to our 2021 guidance range. The low end of our range would assume the magnitude and duration of material inflation and supply chain headwinds persist longer than anticipated and a slower pace of food service recovery. The high end implies market and geographic share gains; continued strength in automation, industrials, e-commerce and food; and overperformance of our SEE Operating Engine. With that, let me now pass the call back to Ted for closing remarks. Ted?