Quad/Graphics, Inc.
Q3 2022 Earnings Call Transcript
Published:
- Operator:
- Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Quad's Third Quarter Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note today's event is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the conference call over to Claire Ho, Quad's Director of Corporate Communications. Claire, please go ahead.
- Claire Ho:
- Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. With me today are Joel Quadracci, Quad's Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Tony Staniak, Quad's Chief Financial Officer. Joel will lead off today's call with a business update, and Tony will follow with a summary of Quad's third quarter 2022 financial results, followed by Q&A. I would like to remind everyone that this call is being webcast, and forward-looking statements are subject to safe harbor provisions as outlined in our quarterly news release and in today's slide presentation on Slide 2. Quad's financial results are prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. However, this presentation also contains non-GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted diluted earnings per share, free cash flow, net debt and debt leverage ratio. We have included in the slide presentation reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to GAAP financial measures. Finally, a replay of the call and the slide presentation will be available on the Investors section of quad.com shortly after our call concludes today. I will now hand over the call to Joel.
- Joel Quadracci:
- Thank you, Claire, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to report that in the third quarter, we delivered better-than-expected net sales of $830 million, an 18% increase. This was the sixth consecutive quarter of sales growth for Quad and reflects continued print segment share gains, increased pricing in response to inflationary cost pressures, and increased sales in our international locations. Our focus as a marketing experience company is driving segment share gains and new client wins. And as a result, we are raising our full year net sales guidance range from 3% to 7% growth to 8% to 10% growth. We've also narrowed our other guidance within the previously provided ranges to reflect our results through the first 9 months of the year, which Tony will cover later in the call. I am pleased to share that the proactive investments we made in labor, inventory and equipment during the first half of 2022 are paying off now during our seasonally high production period. As a result, we achieved higher adjusted EBITDA in the third quarter on both a year-over-year and sequential basis. Notably, we are positioned to achieve higher year-over-year earnings in the fourth quarter as well. Despite ongoing challenges from macroeconomic headwinds, we continue to monitor and take action to mitigate inflationary cost pressures and supply chain constraints, including an inflationary offsetting price increase that will become effective January 1, 2023. Overall, we remain nimble and ready to adjust our operations as necessary to enhance our financial strength while continuing to serve our clients well. Slide 4 shows how we continue to diversify our revenue into higher value and higher-margin offerings. On a year-to-date basis, this helped us grow net sales by 14% when excluding the impact of the QuadExpress divestiture. Net sales grew in our targeted print and international segments, while large-scale print decreased as a percentage of total net sales due to expected organic declines, primarily in retail inserts. The increase in our international segment is primarily driven by stronger sales in Latin America. For example, Mexico sales have been bolstered by higher exports into the U.S. and Mexico is proving to be a high-quality, low-cost alternative to Asia. Turning to Slide 5. We are proud of the effectiveness of our business strategy to sustain our leadership in commercial printing while also transforming into a marketing experience or MX company. The world's best brands increasingly recognize the unique value we provide through our holistic, multichannel, through-the-line marketing solutions. As an MX company, we guide brands through every effort intended to drive in action, from consumer awareness and trust to brand preference and purchase. We will continue to give our clients a more streamlined, flexible and frictionless way to go to market and reach consumers while enhancing our competitive position to drive profitable growth. On Slide 6, we highlighted our 3 key competitive advantages
- Anthony Staniak:
- Thanks, Joel, and good morning, everyone. Slide 12 provides a snapshot of our third quarter 2022 financial results. As Joel highlighted, we continue to be pleased with our consistent net sales growth. Compared to 2021 and excluding divestitures, we achieved 9% growth in the first quarter of 2022, 14% growth in the second quarter and 18% growth in the third quarter. This now represents 6 consecutive quarters of year-over-year net sales growth going back to the second quarter of 2021. In addition, the proactive investments we made during the first half of the year in hiring and training labor proved effective during the third quarter, driving strong operational performance, very high client satisfaction with on-time deliveries and increased adjusted EBITDA from the prior year. We expect adjusted EBITDA growth in the fourth quarter also. We are closely monitoring the economy and will remain disciplined with our capital allocation. Our primary focus heading into the fourth quarter remains debt reduction. While our debt leverage ratio increased to 3.07x as of September 30, 2022, I want to remind our audience that the third quarter is traditionally our annual high point for working capital. Thus, we believe that with the seasonally strong fourth quarter free cash flow we have projected, we will achieve the year-end debt leverage guidance of approximately 2.25x. We also repurchased 3.1 million shares of Class A common stock, which represents more than 5% of Quad's outstanding shares for $10 million year-to-date. We will continue to pursue opportunities with our share repurchase program at times in the future. Net sales were $830 million in the third quarter, up 18% from 2021. On a year-to-date basis, net sales were $2.3 billion, up 11% from 2021. After excluding the 2021 QuadExpress divestiture, net sales increased 14% for the 9-month period compared to the same period in 2021. Net sales growth was achieved due to print segment share gains, increased pricing in response to inflationary pressures and increased sales in our international locations. We will continue to be nimble with our pricing to mitigate the negative impacts of supply chain disruption and cost inflation. Adjusted EBITDA was $69 million in the third quarter of 2022 as compared to $55 million in the third quarter of 2021 when excluding a $13 million nonrecurring gain from a property insurance claim in 2021. The adjusted EBITDA increase of over 25% was driven by continued sales growth and proactive investments made in labor, inventory and equipment during the first half of 2022, to increase production efficiency in the second half of 2022 during our seasonally higher production period. On a year-to-date basis, adjusted EBITDA was $173 million in 2022 as compared to $201 million in 2021. The decline in the year-to-date period was primarily due to cost inflation, investments made in hiring and training labor in the first half of the year, the negative impact of supply chain disruptions on our productivity and a $13 million gain from a property insurance claim in 2021, which were partially offset by increased earnings from net sales growth. Adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.32 in the third quarter of 2022, a 78% increase compared to $0.18 in the third quarter of 2021. This increase was primarily due to increased recurring earnings and was also benefited by our recent stock buybacks. Year-to-date, adjusted diluted earnings per share was $0.49, consistent with $0.50 in the same period last year. Free cash flow decreased $60 million to negative $80 million for the first 9 months of 2022, primarily due to higher working capital driven by inflationary cost increases, supply chain disruption and higher net sales. We also invested $50 million year-to-date in capital expenditures, consistent with our long-term automation strategy. We will continue to invest in our business to seize opportunities including accelerating our growth, winning additional segment share and/or reducing our costs. As a reminder, the company historically generates the majority of its free cash flow in the fourth quarter of the year. Slide 13 includes a summary of our debt capital structure. Net debt increased by $91 million to $715 million at September 30, 2022, as compared to $624 million as of December 31, 2021. And the debt leverage ratio increased 68 basis points to 3.07x at the end of the third quarter. The increase in net debt and the debt leverage ratio was primarily due to the investment in working capital in preparation for our peak production season. When removing the impact of seasonality, over the past 12 months, net debt decreased $84 million, representing a reduction of over 10% in our net debt. Our long-term target leverage range is 2 to 2.5x, and with the expected seasonally strong fourth quarter cash flow, we continue to believe we will achieve the midpoint of 2.25x by the end of the year. During the third quarter, we maintained our strong liquidity with up to $245 million of availability under our revolving credit agreement and $14 million of cash on hand. Our nearest significant debt maturity is $88 million occurring in January 2024, and the vast majority of the debt maturities are not due until late 2026. Our 2022 guidance has been updated as shown on Slide 14. Our annual net sales growth range, which was originally 3% to 7% growth, is now projected to increase to 8% to 10% growth. As we are now 3/4 of the way through the year, we are also narrowing our other guidance ranges. All of the following updated guidance is within the ranges we previously provided. The adjusted EBITDA guidance range is $235 million to $255 million. Free cash flow guidance range is $70 million to $90 million. And year-end debt leverage guidance is unchanged at approximately 2.25x. Our financial objectives include accelerating our business as a marketing experience company to fuel net sales growth, driving profitability through sales growth, effective cost management and productivity improvements, maintaining a strong balance sheet with a primary focus on reducing debt through the generation of strong free cash flow as well as a balanced approach to capital allocation, including pursuing opportunities to return capital to shareholders through stock buybacks or dividends. These efforts will further strengthen our balance sheet and liquidity, enhancing our financial flexibility to accelerate and scale our strategy as a marketing experience company while driving shareholder value. With that, I'd like to turn the call back to Claire for questions.
- A - Claire Ho:
- Thank you, Tony. Because we compiled questions in advance of today's call, we will not ask for callers to enter the queue. Thank you to everyone who submitted a question. We have 4 questions that were submitted. Our first question relates to industry and segment trends and asks you highlighted print segment share gains and increased international sales as 2 contributors to strong sales growth. Can you provide some additional commentary on those areas and also comment on any trends you're seeing across the other industries and segments you operate in?
- Joel Quadracci:
- Yes, Claire. Thank you for the question. Yes, international sales, as I said in the script, was a good contributor. Again, what we're seeing in our Mexican operations, especially, and we think we'll spread into the other areas in South America, is that it's a great strong alternative to a lot of printed products that were typically supplied out of Asia. And so we're seeing that market increase dramatically and really help us kind of change the product mix. But then if you look at sort of our core product lines that we talk about in print, so people can understand where is decline and where is growth, we always look at large-scale print as being made up of retail inserts and publications. Retail inserts for the quarter were off about 20%, which has been expected. We've consistently talked about the expectation of continued decline as people kind of shift away from a product that is distributed through the newspapers to the consumer as newspaper circulation has come down. But even in that, you have to bifurcate retail inserts into sort of big box retail versus grocery. Grocery tends to be a little bit more stable. But all in all, that decline, we expect to continue. But keep in mind, we're doing a lot of other products and services for retailers. And so as they sort of see the decline in retail, they still need to get to the consumer. And so that's where we have an uptick in efforts with direct mail sales or we're doing a lot of in-store signage that continues to grow. And so it's an area that's important to us in terms of the retail clients because oftentimes, there are ones who really can benefit from our products and services to drive their sales. Publications is another area that we've seen regular decline and expect more and it was off about 15% in the quarter. But about 6% of that decline was made up of a sort of rejiggering of some portfolios due to change in ownership, with one client making up the bulk of it. So you saw some titles like InStyle and Martha Stewart and shape and parents that were around for a long time, suddenly ceased production. And then on top of that, pressure on the advertising climate. But publications, we believe, for the long term, will continue to play a role, but we know how to manage it. When you flip to a targeted print, which is catalog direct mail packaging and in-store, it's a different story, whereas in catalog, the catalog books that we do, we are actually up 10% in the quarter and number of pages up over 3%. Much of that was from organic growth from some of our customers who have grown with us, but also segment share gains that we've had throughout the year. On the direct mail side, the industry was off about 11% in the quarter, which sometimes could be a sort of a bellwether for a slowing economy. Our DM volume was actually off only about 1%, but the revenue from that volume was up 18% because of inflationary cost increases, increased paper sales as well as product mix to more complicated targeted direct mail. And on the packaging side, we were up over 15% for the quarter, which is an interesting story as well because we started to look at our -- the products that we produce and where can we add the most value, and our platform is best aimed towards and that's where we started doing some higher-end COVID test from what happened with the pandemic. And we've been very successful at creating a whole new relationship there, and we expect to expand into other types of kits in the future but continue on with COVID test because they're not -- disappear anytime soon. And that sort of -- we used that as an opportunity to get out of some product lines like pasta boxes that are very low margin and really shouldn't be holding up the capacity when we can create value in other marketplaces. And so then in-store, the final one, was up 19% in the quarter. And that's from new client wins and bringing in segment share in that area. So when you look at it, again, we look at large scale and targeted print a little bit differently. We have to offset the decline that happens at large scale, but we've done that through the same relationships and new relationships in the targeted print. And then on top of that, you look at clients we're bringing in on the agency solutions side and many of these other clients were expanding into the agency solutions side for us. And so that kind of rounds out what we saw in the quarter.
- Claire Ho:
- Thank you, Joel. Our next question is regarding the current economy and its impact on retail clients. It asks, can you comment on any areas of the business that may be starting to see some impact from the recent economic downturn? How much of your business is tied to retail and apparel customers that are noting slowdowns?
- Joel Quadracci:
- Well, I think it's a mixed bag. We saw retailers grappling with things all year from having too much inventory because of past supply chain, making debts on the wrong -- and ending up with the wrong inventory. But I think one of the noticeable things that we're seeing is just in the fall, kind of a look at a change in how they view Black Friday, which typically drives a lot of volume in a short amount of time. We've seen a lot of retailers sort of announced backing off from that. And so that's one noticeable thing that we've seen. But we're not sure and we're watching to see if that's a trend or a onetime thing. And I think a lot of people are still trying to figure that out. So we're watching everything closely. But I think between the segment share gains that we've been experiencing and our ability to act really quickly, and we have historically shown that, we're prepared for whatever the economy throws at us.
- Claire Ho:
- Our next question is regarding supply chain constraints. It asks, can you provide some commentary on any supply chain constraints you experienced during the quarter? How has Quad positioned itself to ensure it has the necessary paper inventory and labor to fill its peak demand?
- Joel Quadracci:
- Yes. So there's two questions there. One is supply chain and one is labor. And I think the biggest supply chain issue that this industry has been dealing with is paper shortages, and that's because of a disruption in available capacity as some of the capacity has shifted to other parts of the industry in packaging or had shut based on what demand is done. But we ended up navigating it pretty well this year because we were able to buy ahead and work with mills and customers. And that's one of the reasons for increased working capital, but it was to make sure we had the paper to print on. But we also worked with a lot of our clients to manage that. And so I'd say that paper will continue to be something we have to navigate and -- but we're well positioned for it. And then all the other sort of stuff that supply chain -- that people are seeing are being managed. The world is not easy, but it's not as bad as it was. And I think that we're in good shape there. Labor was the other thing we've been talking about. We talked about a lot last year with the low unemployment rate. And what we did based on what we are seeing with where things are at is we started hiring much earlier so that we could really take advantage of the time frame to gear up for the busy season as opposed to starting out at our typical time. And that involved wage increases, but also a very holistic approach to attracting labor as well as retaining labor. And I think that's an important note because in a low unemployment environment, you also have high turnover, and that's a place we're working very hard on. But we're happy to say that in this busy season, we were 700 people short when we were looking at it from last year. And we actually are where we need to be, and we've actually slowed down some of the hiring based on our success. So very, very pleased with that, which has allowed us to get through this busy season with very few hiccups. And I'll tell you, our on-time delivery is like well above where we expected it to be based on those challenges from last year.
- Claire Ho:
- Thank you, Joel. Our last question is regarding stock buybacks. It asks, with the increasing share repurchases you have done as of late, do you anticipate continuing these levels of repurchase activity in the near term? Any additional insight you can provide on how you're thinking about repurchases and your capital allocation priorities going forward?
- Joel Quadracci:
- Yes. Thanks, Claire. As we said last quarter, we're going to pursue opportunities to repurchase shares. We did that recently based on where the share price was. We felt that there was good value there, and it was a compelling use of capital. And we will do that in the future when we feel there is a compelling use of capital. We repurchased over 5% of our outstanding shares. We purchased dilution that had taken place over the years on the equity grants. And again, as part of balanced capital allocation, we will look for opportunities in the future when it makes sense.
- Claire Ho:
- Thank you, Tony. This concludes the Q&A portion of today's call. And now I would like to turn the call back to Joel for closing remarks.
- Joel Quadracci:
- Thank you, Claire, and thank you, everyone, for joining today's call. I just want to close by reiterating my thanks to our employees for their continued hard work, especially during our peak demand for our products and services. I remain very confident in our team and our strategy and in our future as a marketing experience company that helps brands reimagine their marketing to be more streamlined, impactful, flexible and frictionless. With that, thank you again, and have a good day. We look forward to speaking with you next quarter.
- Operator:
- Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude today's conference call. We do thank you for joining. You may now disconnect your lines.
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