Stanley Black & Decker, Inc.
Q2 2009 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    Good morning. My name is Jennifer and I will be your conference operator today. At this time I would like to welcome everyone to the Stanley Works second quarter 2009 results conference call. (Operator Instructions). Thank you. At this time I would like to hand the call over to Ms. White. Please go ahead.
  • Kate White:
    Thank you, Jennifer. Good morning, everyone, this is Kate White, the Director of Investor Relations for the Stanley Works. Thank you all for joining us on the Stanley Works second quarter 2009 conference call this morning. On the call in addition to myself is John Lundgren, Stanley's Chairman and CEO, Jim Loree, Stanley's Executive Vice President and COO and Don Allan, Stanley's Vice President and CFO. I would like to point out that our second quarter earnings release, which was issued this morning and a supplemental presentation, which we will refer to during the call are available on our home page, which is www.stanleyworks.com. This morning John, Jim and Don will review Stanley's second quarter 2009 results and various other topical matters followed by a Q&A session. The entire call is expected to last approximately one hour and a replay of the call will be available at 2
  • John Lundgren:
    Thanks, Kate and good morning everybody. Let me start just with an overview as I think that many of you have said it has been helpful in the past on how we see the state of affairs at Stanley and just some of the highlights from the quarter. We did post GAAP earnings of $0.89 that included a $0.34 gain on the extinguishment of debt, so our normalized EPS from continuing operations was $0.55. You'll recall that the debt to which I'm referring was $103 million of our ETPS instrument that we used to finance the FACOM acquisition in 2006. It was a great opportunity and our treasury department capitalized on that. We also announced a $50 million cost-reduction program due to the steeper than expected unit volume declines in the second quarter and about half of that will be realized during 2009. I think it's important to stay ahead of the curve given the volume softness but I think it's equally important to note that the lion's share of the cuts that were recently implemented were in the areas of G&A and not at the expense of brand support and important future growth initiatives. We are really pleased with our gross margin of 39.9%. It was a record for the Stanley Works, despite the 24% drop in unit volume versus the prior year. Jim and Don are going to provide a walk later showing you how we got there, as well as why we believe we'll stay at or near that level for the second half of the year. Security posted an 8% revenue growth and a 13% profit growth. A lot of that due to acquisition but organic growth fell only 8% in the midst of this environment, which to us further validates our belief that while the segment that security isn't immune from macroeconomic downturns, it's certainly well insulated and it's certainly more resistant than many other businesses. We did see some indications within our CDIY segment with year-over-year sales trends are showing us some signs of improvement. More detail on that in the segment breakup. On Monday, we announced a dividend increase for the 42nd consecutive year, 3.1% to $0.33 per quarter. It's obviously an important element of our total shareholder return. It also reflects our confidence in future cash flow generation, and our ability to achieve our forecasts. We're also quite proud of the fact that it's the longest consecutive annual record of an industrial company traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Our Stanley Fulfillment System and the Processes contained therein remain a top focus for us and the majority of our free cash flow we are going to generate in the second half of the year and that we have generated in the quarter did come from working capital improvements. We think it's a very credible achievement in the current reduced volume environment. We have had a lot of questions running up to the call with respect to free cash flow, our forecast as well as our ability to achieve it. Don is going to provide quite a bit more insight on that towards the end of the presentation, but I think it is important to note up front that three of the last four years, more than two-thirds of Stanley's free cash flow came in the second half of the year. This is not a new phenomenon for Stanley and Don will, I think, help provide more clarity and transparency on our projections. Moving on to worldwide revenues, volume and sales essentially were down everywhere. The market slowdown has affected all regions where a year ago we were able to report growth in every region of the country. The US of course is most important, it represents almost 59% of Stanley's revenues and we were down 14% in total, 20% organically. Europe was most heavily impacted, down 25% organically and 30% in total. The other regions also were down comparably. It is probably important to note, Australia relatively small region but important to Stanley and the impacts of both currency and volume declines did have an impact on our business. Now the US, as I mentioned, is showing, I will say, signs of strength or maybe better said stability. It obviously entered the recession earlier and based on historical precedent, could be expected to emerge earlier. Also just arithmetically we are facing our lower comps in the first and second quarters as we will go through the second half of the year. Moving on to slide five, we don't normally spend a lot of time on this call talking about the macroeconomic environment or things that everyone on this call can read about and read the same documents we do, but, given the extent to which it affects our business in general and our industrial segment in particular, we thought we'd spend a minute on it, as well as include some data that we think is quite revealing in the appendix. The GDP declines accelerated through the first quarter, particularly in Europe, as most countries fell into recession and it particularly affected our CDIY and industrial segments, and that was reflected in our results. We don't have it on this page, but you'll see in the appendix after quarters, of about minus 1.7, 1.8, both the UK and the continental Europe or the Euro zone, GDP was down almost 5%, 4.9% in both cases. The US GDP outlook indicates a continued decline with based on current projections, a slight abatement in the fourth quarter. After mid 2% declines, 3.7% followed by the current projection of minus 1.4 in the fourth quarter. I mention all this, because it's quite consistent with our outlook, for the business in general, the environment in which we are operating, as well as it relates to installations in our security business that Jim's going to talk a lot more about later. Industrial production declines are leveling off. That's the chart that you see at the bottom of this page. As we've talked about on earlier calls, the declines came much later in Europe than in the US. The fall was steeper and sharper, but of late has shown relative stability and I think that's quite clear, just graphically looking at the chart, the left being the UK and the right being continental Europe or essentially the Euro zone. Last but not least, construction project delays have accelerated but the abandoned projects have stabilized. There's a lot of detail, you can look at later on page 26 of our appendix, but again it is consistent with what we're seeing in our security business and as a consequence we're going to spend more time on this call than normal, trying to relate installations to RMR by size of project and type of project and I think that you will find that quite helpful in understanding what's driving our security business and what's contributing to its stability. Let's turn quickly to the results. There is nothing on chart 6 that isn't contained in more detail in the press release. Our GAAP earnings of $0.89 including the $0.34 gain from extinguishing the debt, normalized EPS of $0.55 as I said, operating margins down but still strong given the high level of volume declines and tax rate was actually 100 basis points higher. It's primarily business mix with lower earnings, in foreign countries our blended tax rate obviously increases. Looking quickly at revenues, on the next page, we see first quarter 15% decline followed by a 20% decline in the second quarter. Sources of growth or lack thereof to be more correct, volume down 24% which has been our focus, price held up fairly well. Currency remained a headwind but slightly less than in the first quarter, it was minus 4%, acquisitions contributed 6%; so in total you see revenues down 20%. On the right-hand side I won't spend much time on this because Jim's going to walk you through each segment but the number that jumps off the page is 40% in the industrial segment. We're going to talk to that and how we think that looks going forward. I did mention that at the outset, one of the highlights, certainly of the quarter was gross margin, and the achievement and how we're thinking about that going forward. I am going to pass the baton to Jim who is going to walk us through margin performance and take a look at the segments, and then he is going to turn it over to Don.
  • Jim Loree:
    Okay. Thanks, John. I must say, when I look at long-term trends, I love this chart almost as I love our ten-year cash flow history chart. This is a very positive trend for us with 39.9% gross margin in the second quarter, up a 160 basis points versus the second quarter of '08 where we were at 38.3. As you look at the long-term trend, it clearly is a positive trend and corroborating the theory that our gross margin percent then correlates with the strength and the differentiation of our value propositions. This performance, in particular, this year has been key to avoiding the steep declines in the operating margin rate that we otherwise would have faced in the phase of the volume challenges that we've had that are market-related. We were able to do this while bringing our year-over-year inventories down about $100 million or 17% over the prior year. The real story implied by this chart is the transformation of the company both strategically and with respect to our operational excellence. What this means when you step back from it is that, we are extraordinarily well positioned for operating leverage in any kind of a growth environment. Slow growth environment will be just fine, we'll be able to generate significant operating leverage. As we move to SG&A, I think we've also done a fairly good job of focusing on resizing our SG&A to calibrate with the revenue size implied by the current economic environment. When you look at the 255 and adjust it for the 23 million associated with acquisitions, the expenses are actually down 18% versus the second quarter of '08, just slightly less than our organic revenue decline. So, in a pretty good shape there. We've been able to do this while reinvesting about $20 million annualized in security sales force ads, particularly in the convergent business and in our Major League Baseball brand awareness campaign, which this quarter we've now added Yankee Stadium and the stadium where the Toronto Blue Jays play. So we now have brought our MLB presence up to 10 teams this quarter. Moving on to security, a look at the security segment, a great story. The business now running at an annualized revenue run rate of about $1.6 billion with revenues in the quarter of approximately $390 million or up 8%. Segment profit, up in double digits. The profit rate, not a new record but is certainly an excellent performance at 19%, up 80 basis points over the prior year. Convergent revenues grew 29%, clearly benefiting from acquisitions, including Sonitrol and GDP which added, when taken in combination with some smaller acquisitions, about $50 million of growth in the quarter. The monitoring margins expanded from the continued excellent execution by the team in convergent. The organic recurring monthly revenue was up 9% and the acquisitions brought us some great accretion as well. I'm going to talk in a little bit more detail about the recurring revenue and the revenue picture in convergent, because there is a real story there which I'd like everybody to understand in the face of negative 8% organic growth for the segment, overall segment. I think you'll see that the convergent business is quite healthy as well as the mechanical business. Mechanical business had a 7% revenue decrease which was buffered by what we believe to be some share gains in a really tough market environment, realized good price and kept their cost structure in line, and managed their working capital very well, down $16 million during the or versus the prior second quarter of last year. I want to spend a few moments, as I mentioned, on the improving mix in electronic security. When you just simply look at the organic revenue decline in convergent, it doesn't really tell the whole story. You have to kind of peel a few layers apart here. If we look at the US, and we look at the sub-segments within US convergent, we have large projects, national accounts and core commercial. The installation margins and the recurring revenue content of those particular businesses is correlated in exactly that order. So the large projects are the lowest margin and then the core commercial are of the highest margin. And what you have there are steep organic installation revenue declines, large projects down greater than 30%, national accounts down somewhat greater than 20%, and the core commercial business, down less than 10%. So single digit organic installation revenue decreases in those businesses. And as you can see, the core commercial and the national accounts really represent the bulk of the business. The large projects are really more of a legacy from the prior, pre-HSM Sonitrol business. What's really interesting here when you look at it is the RMR, new RMR sales. So that is the new RMR that was added in the quarter, as a percent of the installation revenue sales is increasing across all three of those segments but it's increasing dramatically in the core commercial which indicates that the sales ads that we've been making and the compensation plan changes that we have made to really focus folks on the core commercial accounts in this environment, as well as the recurring revenue content, are really paying off and obviously the recurring revenue has a much higher gross margin than the installation revenue regardless of the segment. So in effect what you have here is a very, very positive mix change going on which is allowing us to weather this economic storm in good stead. And as you can see at the bottom, the sales force ads, the emphasis on recurring revenue and decreased dependants on the lower margin were cyclical large project business is helping us. We grew our organic recurring monthly revenue by 9% in the quarter despite the 8% organic decline in the overall segment, and that itself is a big reason why the segment profit was up 13%. So that is a great story in my view. As we move to industrial, this is a very, very difficult market situation that our industrial folks are facing. Revenues down 40%, organic revenue down 36%, problems in the markets in both US and Europe. Segment profit down only 56% in the face of a 40% revenue decline, while not great. It certainly is a good story that we're able to contain it to that level. The segment profit coming in at 9.4% is pretty much a low point over the last few years for this particular segment. The industrial channels were definitely down more than the automotive channels, that makes sense when you think about the benefits from the aging car fleet in the United States in particular. We believe that inventory corrections represented about 50% of the overall decline in the segment, and then the just lower production volumes and weak economy in terms of inherent demand really represented the rest. When I say inventory corrections, I'm talking about drastic inventory corrections throughout the supply chain of our customers and the entire industry. The storage business though was kind of consistent and maybe not quite as steep in terms of revenue declines and pretty much on a par sequentially. I think a couple of positive things; we really believe we are maintaining our share in this very difficult market. We have taken aggressive cost actions and we know that, not all of our competitors have done that, which is good. We do feel like the market here is stabilizing, albeit at a very low level, and our cost actions while somewhat delayed due to the concentration of this particular segment in Europe are kicking in, and that we're likely at a trough in this particular quarter in terms of segment profit rate. Finally MAC is doing quite well. Our financing program with GreenSky is intact. We will not have to take any receivables associated with financing onto our balance sheet as a result. So a couple of highlights there, but in general, a pretty tough story in that particular segment. Moving on to Construction & DIY , very encouraged by the profit rate in this segment, coming in at 11.3% on the heels of a 9.5 performance in the first quarter and a 6.4% trough performance in the fourth quarter of last year. So we were pleased with that. I think the cost actions are definitely kicking in. The revenue is stabilizing in this particular segment and even showing some very faint signs of improvement. We won't get euphoric at all, but point of sale is steady to slightly up, inventories at the customer level are stable and organic growth seems to be stabilizing in the kind of minus 20% sort of a range. It was minus 19 in the first quarter, minus 23 in this quarter, but as the quarter went on, it was a slightly better picture sequentially. So, we're feeling good about the stability frankly in this segment. I think we also believe that as we do start to see some signs of improvement in the economy that this will be in all likelihood an early cycle improver in our portfolio. The final thing I'll say here is that the Bostitch integration that we undertook in the earlier part of this year is well underway and on-track and really is a positive for much more positive than just the cost reduction aspect of it as we talked about last quarter. With that I'll turn it over to Don Allan.
  • Don Allan:
    Thanks, Jim. As both John and Jim have mentioned earlier today, we have talked a little bit about our acquisition impact and the positive accretion we're seeing in our margin rate. So here on page 14, you can see that we wanted to give you a quick update on primarily our 2008 acquisitions. What we have here are three acquisitions that we did in 2008 that represent about 85% of the total acquisitions in that year, and in particular there's Sonitrol, Xmark and Generale de Protection. This chart we've shown over the years in various presentations around our integration process and how we drive significant synergy realization through that process. You can see that each one of the acquisitions has a significant accretive impact from where they were on their operating margin percentage before we acquired them. As an example, Sonitrol with 22% operating margin, a very strong operating margin to start with and now it's after the integration process has been complete it's greater than 30%. So some of the key features we thought we'd touch on in our integration process, just as a reminder to all of you, that we go through a very robust processes especially in the first 100 to 180 days and we develop an integration plan actually in advance of the closing of the acquisition that has the target management teams buy-in in essence before we close on the transaction. Then subsequent to that we go through a weekly and monthly senior management pulsing process and many of those acquisitions include John, Jim and myself in those pulsing processes. We've developed some very experienced integration managers primarily over the last five years. They really understand our process and how to drive these benefits. Then last but certainly not least making sure that we do have a native or in-country integration team and that was very critical and a great example of that is for GdeP. So as we move forward to working capital, we feel like we've continued to exhibit good control over our working capital as our working capital dollars decline 21% inline with or slightly better than the revenue decline of 20% which resulted in working capital turns improving from four-eight in the second quarter of last year to 4.9 this year. So if we dissect working capital a little bit and look at the three different pieces, why don't we start with accounts receivable because it's certainly been a terrific story for us especially in the last three or four quarters and we continue to see that in the second quarter of this year, down 29% to about $650 million and well outpacing the decline that we saw on revenue and really what's driving that out performances our focus on delinquencies. As we've mentioned in previous calls we started a robust set of processes around ensuring our delinquencies around A-R are minimized and compared to last year we had about a $70 million decline in delinquencies. Next is inventories, Jim mentioned and John mentioned inventories are down 17% versus last year. What's very impressive as well is that if you look at the first quarter of this year our DSI was 83 days and now we've moved on to 77 days. So we're seeing sequential improvement, which is really the benefits of our SFS processes and primarily in this area would be our sales, operations and planning rhythms that we've put in place over the last few years and they continue to mature and we see the effect of that as we're able to really drive our inventories down very close to being in line with the revenue declines. The one negative at this point is really payables, payables is a user of cash year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter, but you're really seeing the effect of the inventory reduction as well as the expense and CapEx reductions we've been driving toward this is year that are pushing that number down. We expect that to really stabilize through the remainder of the year and the bulk of that decrease is behind us. Moving to free cash flow, which is clearly benefiting from that working capital performance, as we saw positive working capital benefit in the second quarter of $30 million. One item of note here in our free cash flow is that John mentioned the gain on the debt extinguishment, so we have about 27 million of income and the net income line associated with that. Then this other line of $91 million is where that gets backed out. So it's not included in our operating cash flow. Some other things in that other line include reductions in accrued expenses, some derivative settlements as well as restructuring payments that we've made associated with our various cost reduction actions that we started in December of last year. So our performance in general was really driven by working capital, and free cash flow. We feel good based on the second quarter performance that we can achieve our $300 million estimate for this year. I'll walk through that in a little more detail a few pages from now. Shifting to the balance sheet, we continue to feel good about our position on our balance sheet. We've had our debt to cap ratio move down slightly from what it was in the first quarter, down to 46%. Then when we adjust from that for a hybrid equity and debt instruments, it's somewhere between 34% and 37%. So it's close to where we expected it to be for this period of time. As we mentioned in previous calls, we're driving towards an objective of trying to deleverage ourselves by about $200 million this year, and that continues to be an important priority and we've made it, some nice progress so far through six months where we've deleveraged ourselves by about $70 million in that time frame. So we feel like we're on track to achieving those goals at this stage. Focusing on guidance, which is the next page and I want to spend a little bit of time on this page, make sure we understand what's going on here, if you focus on the left side of the page which is EPS, these are changes compared to our last guidance that we've provided in April. The first item is a revised 2009 unit volume outlook. As John mentioned, we believe for the year we're going to be down negative 18% to negative 20% as we saw negative 19% and negative 24% in the first two quarters of this year for unit volume declines. That would be an implied negative 14% to negative 18% in the second half of this year. In essence it represents really the run rate that we're experiencing on unit volume, and it, when you have the easing of the comps in the back half of the year as we were down negative 7% and negative 10% in the third and the fourth quarter of 2008 is why that number gets smaller compared to what experienced in the first half of the year. The impact of each point of a decline, as we mentioned previously, is about $0.20 EPS, so as a result it's a dollar negative EPS to our previous guidance provided. That being said you heard a lot of the good performance we experienced in gross margin rate and with 39.6% in the first quarter and 39.9% in the second quarter. We expect that in the second half of the year we will experience similar rates, probably in the range of 38% to 39% that will drive a margin rate improvement and offset about three quarters of that negative unit volume that we are expecting to experience for the year. That's really the trend that we have seen in the first half of the year. So we are expecting that to continue in the back half of the year as we see those benefits in gross margin. That being said, we felt that there still was a gap to our objectives of achieving $2 and $2.50 EPS that we laid out in April of about $0.25. So we embarked on the new restructuring program that John mentioned earlier that would provide about $25 million of benefit in the back half of the year. A little bit of detail on that, the whole program is $50 million of annualized cost actions that we executed and completed in the month of July. At this stage about 35% of it is headcount related and about 90% of it is associated with SG&A as John mentioned. So that results in a total set of actions of $265 million in 2009. When you combine it with the previous two sets of actions we have done, which commenced in December of 2008. The last item on here that is changing is obviously the gain on the debt extinguishment of $0.34, affects our guidance that we provided previously. So that gives us an end result of $2.34 to $2.84 guidance range, if you adjust for the gain it's consistent with the range that we provided last quarter of $2 and $2.50. All the other factors that around FX and previous cost actions, acquisitions and restructuring charges are consistent with our previous guidance. We believe that the restructuring charges of $45 million is still the appropriate number for this year, as we've seen a little bit of benefit in our European restructuring program at a lower cost, and we are able to utilize that excess to pay for the current actions that we just embarked on. Moving to free cash flow, which is a topic that many of us are interested in. As we mentioned previously on the call, we believe that $300 million in free cash flow is achievable for this year, and it's based on several factors. Let me start with a little bit of historical and analytical information. John had mentioned that three of the last four years, 67% of our free cash flow occurred in the back half of the year. In this particular case, if you assume that the $300 million is achieved, that means we'd achieve about $200 million of free cash flow in the back half of 2009, which would imply about $225 million free cash flow. The other factor to look at is that, our second quarter is also an indicator of the year as well. Our second quarter in the last two years tends to represent about 15% of the total year of free cash flow. So if you take this year's second quarter performance, that would calculate to about $285 million of free cash flow, so that gives you a range of somewhere between 225 and 285. So why do we think we can do above and beyond that to get to $300 million? It's really predicated on that release that we can achieve a 10% working capital turn improvement over last year's performance of 5.9. If you remember in the fourth quarter of last year, we had 5.9 working capital turns. We believe that we can get to 6.5, 6.7 working capital turns, because of the detailed plans that we've put in place in our businesses to ensure that we're driving towards those types of objectives. Each business under the Stanley's fulfillment system processes and rhythms has those plans in place and are being pulsed on a regular basis, and they have to do with transformational lean techniques as well as continued enhancements of our sales and operation planning processes as they mature. Really our ability to increase our dividend was indicative of our belief that we can achieve this $300 million free cash flow. So in summary, we believe that we're well positioned to gain market share as we've done appropriate actions along way to ensure that our cost base is adjusted. We have also made certain key investments along the way that both John and Jim have indicated earlier. Our gross margin success in the first two quarters is very pleasing to us and we believe that we can largely maintain that for the remainder of the year. We continue to be focused on paying down our debt as I mentioned $200 million in 2009 and we feel like we're on track to achieve that so far. Then last but certainly not least, our dedication and focus on SFS. We believe that's a significant source of cash for us and ultimately is a competitive advantage for Stanley. So that concludes our presentation portion of the call.
  • Kate White:
    Jennifer, we'd like to start the Q&A portion of the call right now.
  • Operator:
    (Operator Instructions) Your first question comes from Jim Lucas from Janney Montgomery.
  • James Lucas:
    I wanted to ask a specific question on the industrial side of the business. With the inventory corrections seeking out there, could you maybe give us a little bit more color of what you're seeing in terms of customers just still needing liquidity and using inventory correction for that versus what they're seeing in terms of their ability to get access to credit. And going forward, are inventory levels now to a point where stock outs are potentially occurring or is this just resetting to the new demand levels?
  • John Lundgren:
    Hey, Jim. This is John. I'll start and turn it over to Jim who is going to give you even little more detail. Remember we are talking industrial and we've learned a lot in the last month or so. I would say up until then we would have thought of third of the volume decline was due to destocking. We've done a lot of granular analysis that caused us to raise that estimate to 50%. Importantly a huge portion of that for us is in Europe. It has had a tremendous impact on Facom's volume declines that's where a lot of our updated guidance or updated analysis comes from. Hard to talk about out of stocks in the industrial segment given the B to B short delivery cycles, a lot of it through distribution but I don't know if Jim add even a little more color to that because he has been doing a lot of work on Proto Facom, MAC in particular and as well as some of our storage businesses.
  • Jim Loree:
    Yes, I mean I think the key to the inventory correction phenomenon is really the word of caution on the part of the customers and it derives from both liquidity concerns, concerns about what the ultimate size of the market really is and just overall questions that I think the distributors have in their minds about the business model that they are going to have on a prospective basis and how much volume is really going to be there. Nobody wants to get caught with their pants down on inventory in the chain and what they are finding is they can have where they used to have 20 SKUs on a rack. They can have 20 units of a SKU on a rack they can now have two and order much more frequently. To an extent that's okay because it keeps them liquid and in business. However, at some point in time the overall market's ability to deal with that issue or that situation changes when the demand returns and those SKUs units go off direct faster and we can't replenish them fast enough to meet the end market demands. So I think we're going to see in my estimation we're going to see a fairly significant rebound in terms of this inventory restocking as opposed to destocking. I don't know when that's going to occur. We have incorporated a neutral into our outlook on a prospective basis for the remainder of the year. However, if there were to be some significant restocking that would be a positive.
  • James Lucas:
    So is the key going to be order activity in terms of what you are going to get from a visibility standpoint given that short cycle order what they need as opposed to building out quite a bit that's needed?
  • Jim Lorry:
    I think we're prepared to respond without question despite the fact that our inventories are in really good shape. We are prepared to respond. The Stanley fulfillment system has been instrumental in terms of bringing our lead times down across the various businesses including industrial. So I think visibility to the order patterns is good. I think that what we really need in the chain is some confidence restoration at the customer level and when they start to see signs that demand will recover at some level on a year-over-year basis. I think we'll start to see that restocking occur and we'll be prepared to serve at that time.
  • James Lucas:
    Okay. Final question on this topic. When you look at across the multiple end markets, is this very broad-based? Are you seeing when you say industrial, are there any particular end markets that are jumping out and then with regards to SFS, could you maybe give us a little bit more color of what type of lead time reductions you've experienced?
  • John Lundgren:
    Yes, first of all, Jim, I say it's broad spread. That's why I mentioned it as we look at our industrial segment, in the sense that sub-segments, industrial and automotive tools, industry and automotive repair and, if you will, infrastructure solutions. Only the latter of those three which is less than 20% of the segment has long lead times. There we've cut the lead times dramatically. In more importantly in things like Vidmar boxes, we've build a Vidmar box in a day. There's not much lead time to be cut from that. So, our businesses very well. In our made-for-stock tool businesses, the Proto's, the Mac's, the Facom's, we've already taken 25% and more out of our lead times. A lot of that has come from when and if we source components, the rest of it has just come from leading out our factories so it's going to vary dramatically by business. Some, always room to improve but approach world-class, Vidmar being a classic example and then 25% to 40% coming out of lead times, some of which didn't start at world-class levels for the rest of our industrial businesses.
  • Operator:
    Your next question comes from Eric Bosshard from Cleveland Research.
  • Unidentified Analyst:
    Good morning, guys. It's actually [Mark] stepping in for Eric. In terms of the security segment, organic was a little bit softer and just kind of looking back to last quarter you guys thought that for the year it would run around that down mid-single digit rate, so second quarter a little bit softer than that. How should we think about the second half organically within the security segment? Is 2Q a better run rate or is the first quarter a better run rate for the business?
  • Jim Lorry:
    I would say Mark that the second quarter is probably not the best run rate for the back half of the year, it's most likely a blend of the first half and what we are assuming for the back half of the year.
  • Unidentified Analyst:
    Okay. Within that piece of the business pricing in total for the company still favorable but slightly less favorable than 1Q. Was the pricing pressure relative to the first quarter within the installed business in security or are you seeing some pricing pressure elsewhere?
  • Jim Lorry:
    The pricing pressure within security is definitely on the install business, in particular the national accounts pricing is under a lot of pressure. As our customers just like we look to cut costs they are going after their vendors and clearly when they have leverage, purchasing leverage, they are willing to exert it much more so than in a typical environment. So, we are not seeing dramatic pricing pressure in the core commercial accounts which is good and the margins are holding up well there and we know we are walking from some business in national accounts where we are just not capitulating on price to the extent that some of the other competitors are. We believe strongly in our value proposition and the performance of the business substantiates that and so we are trying to hold our prices at a fairly constant level in that business, even in the national accounts.
  • John Lundgren:
    Okay. Mark, this is John, I'll just add onto that so you don't get cut off. It may appear on the surface to be a rather bold statement that we are holding prices particularly in national accounts and not theoretically, in reality losing some business. We are cautiously optimistic and there is a lot of historical precedent to say that much of that business will come back to us when whoever's taken it, regardless of whether it's a large national competitor or a small local competitor, on the national accounts level, it's much more likely to be a larger competitor. When and if, they fail to deliver at the level that we've delivered in the past, you know and it's clear in the industry, our attrition rates are not among the lowest, they are the lowest in commercial security. There is a reason for that and a business that an account that is won on price will can and might well ultimately be lost on service. We'll get it back on our terms at our price that does take some time. We're very patient in that regard, because we think that's the right strategy for a business that's such an important part of our future.
  • Operator:
    The next question comes from Sam Darkatsh from Raymond James.
  • Jeff Saut:
    Thank you. This is Jeff calling in for Sam. First question, it surrounds the restructuring, you mentioned 35%, but its headcount, of the other 65% of that, is any of that discretionary spend that you would expect to come back faster, if units stabilize?
  • Don Allan:
    Jeff, this is Don. We won't expect any of this to come back faster than the previous restructuring programs we've done. We believe that these particular items are very similar items to what we've done before, so with additional cuts around T&E, and other discretionary spend. It's a real question mark for next year, how much comes back. It's really about us as a management team and how we control it and what decisions we make and what we allow to come back. It's really going to be dependent on what our ultimate thoughts are on the end markets and our revenue projections for next year. So, there will be some cost pressures that we talked about before around certain employee benefits that could be $40 to $60 million. It's difficult to really know of the carryover benefit we're getting, how much of that that comes back, as you say, or what pressures we have that offset it because it's really going to be dependent on our decision and what we allow to come back and it's going to be based on our revenue projections.
  • Jeff Saut:
    Okay. Second question, the improvement in gross margin, or the change, old guidance to new guidance for gross margin, I assume is mostly mix but my question is the second half degradation in gross margin if you are guiding towards 100 bps or so, is that all related to price? And can you talk about the price versus material inflation relationship and where you see that going in the second half?
  • Jim Loree:
    We actually benefited on a year-over-year basis by about, slightly over 300 basis points from the combination of productivity projects, price and acquisition mix. Some of those aspects will abate as time goes on because in particular, price, the vast majority of our pricing was implemented in the second and third quarter of last year. So when we look at a back half year-over-year analysis, clearly price will not be increasing sequentially at the same rate. That said, inflation is a crapshoot and that's why we have a range because we had modest deflation in this quarter, very modest, but there was a point in the quarter when we thought we were going to have inflation. So, as you know, in the March-April timeframe, commodity prices were spiking, they subsequently abated and it's not clear from here, you know, what commodity prices are going to do. A lot depends on the perception of the economic recovery and when it occurs and what the speculators do and so on in the commodity markets. However, that clearly is the reason that we have a range and what we feel is a relatively conservative range for the gross margin that we indicated.
  • John Lundgren:
    This is John. Importantly, it is a sequential decline arithmetically but from, if you will 39.5% to 38.5% the midpoint of the range that Don required, I'll live with that in this environment, if we can continue to achieve it, but you know, arithmetically you are correct and I think that Jim explained the rationale behind it.
  • Jim Loree:
    And when you think about the pressure on unit costs that is created by this volume issue that we have relative to the marketplace, that also is a big variable and we're anxiously looking forward to the day when we can actually have some volume to run through our factories and benefit from the absorption of overhead that will create. Now the contribution margin and the gross margin in this company varies by about 10 points and so that's going to really bode well for us when we do have some kind of a resurgence or at least some kind of up-tick, would be a better word than resurgence in volume.
  • John Lundgren:
    And then just last point, just to add a little color to the same subject. We've made it very clear working capital is a focus, working capital returns is a focus. It goes without saying, but it's worth for us, but it's worth repeating. We no longer run our factories for liquidations, the mantra is sell one, replenish one is how we think about it. And to Jim's points with the soft volumes, we're not going to simply run product in the inventory, miss our working capital returns, but to the extent in that reduced volume environment, we continue to basically produce to fulfill demand and nothing more that has pressure on margins. So it all contributes, but the objective being to maintain it within 100 basis points of a 163 year record first half performance.
  • Operator:
    The next question comes from Nigel Coe from Deutsche Bank.
  • Unidentified Analyst:
    Good morning, guys, this is actually [Nicole] asking questions on Nigel's behalf. First of all, if we can just go into a little bit more detail on the price inflation dynamic, if you could quantify that for the current quarter it would be helpful?
  • Don Allan:
    This is Don, Nicole. We really don't want to get into that level of detail for various reasons. I think we've been very clear that prices are positive and productivity was as well and mix of security with a little bit of deflation, as Jim just indicated and that's really where we would like to leave it.
  • Unidentified Analyst:
    Okay. And then, if you could speak to the head count reductions, how many have you actually taken out so far and then could you provide the mix between US and Europe?
  • Don Allan:
    The new set of actions are about 200 headcount, so I don't have the other ones right in front of me. We can certainly get that to organize; it's about 2000 people roughly.
  • Jim Loree:
    200 on top of 2000. The 2200 in total the combination of the three programs.
  • John Lundgren:
    This is John that is skewed toward the US; A, 60% of our revenues are in the US and B, as I think everyone on the call realize the costs have been recognized in the charges but in terms of cash flow, there are very rigorous and serious sets of legal and procedural guidelines that one follows in Europe and we understand them very well. We've successfully been through in the past and we're not going to attempt to circumvent or accelerate any of those processes and procedures that are there for a reason. So we will ultimately get where we need to be in Europe, the dialog and the collaboration with the unions and the works councils has been all we could hope for. There is tremendous reality and I think outstanding perspective on what the situation is. They have been skewed in the US, heads that come out later on will be and the cost associated with that, certainly from a cash perspective, will be skewed more towards Europe just due to the time lag.
  • Operator:
    The next question comes from Michael Kim from Imperial Capital.
  • Michael Kim:
    Hi, good morning, guys. Just going back to the security segment and specific to the convergent business, you guys talked a little bit about the increase in RMR and speak a little bit about attrition and pricing and where you're seeing in particular areas of either strength or weakness. Thanks.
  • Don Allan:
    Well, I feel like we've pretty much have covered, I am not sure if you caught the first part of the call Michael, but we delved into that in a fair amount of detail. If you want to call offline to Kate afterwards, she can run you through it, okay?
  • Michael Kim:
    Sure, I apologize.
  • Jim Loree:
    Page 11, on the presentation, Michael, that's more detail than anyone has ever provided on this subject in a call of this nature, so if there is something beyond that that you need, Kate if she is able, will provide that for you offline, if that's okay?
  • Michael Kim:
    Okay. So, I missed the beginning part of the call earlier.
  • Jim Loree:
    I think you'll find that pretty helpful. We did it for a reason and the reason was your question is a valid one, but let's not do it twice.
  • Michael Kim:
    Okay, sounds good. And then just maybe more in general terms, can you talk a little about the framework for RMR relative to installations, installations obviously have been under pressure from the macro environment and how we should probably think about RMR going forward?
  • John Lundgren:
    Michael, it's the exact same answer. Jim spent five minutes on it. It's on page 11. And why don't you have a look at that and then give Kate a call, but hopefully you will get more than what you need on that explanation.
  • Jim Loree:
    Our hypothesis going into the call was that, that would be a topic that people would want to understand, so we took the proactive step of providing that information in great detail. So, I think you will really get what you need from that when talking to Kate.
  • Operator:
    The next question comes from Kenneth Zener, Macquarie Capital.
  • Kenneth Zener:
    I wonder if you could just kind of talk about the competitive landscape specifically in tools, given the extreme downturns that we've had, and I think you guys are managing your business very well and at a reasonable leverage. How is it looking relative to the private label competitors that you see, whether they are European or Asian, and how has that impacted the M&A landscape that you see?
  • John Lundgren:
    Well, I guess that's two very different questions, Ken. If I can try to dissect them, I will. We have talked about this on previous calls and other than our Stanley associates we certainly value the Stanley brand as our most important asset. What happens in any branded category, and this is both industrial and CDIY, but if you particularly think of the Stanley brand and Bostitch brand, we are number one or two in every category where we compete and that is a very good place to be. There are numerous recessions or periods of economic downturn over the last 30, 40 years where two things happen; private label and even generics as you've suggested grow, and the leading brand growths, and it's the brands in the middle that get squeezed out. Why is that? Obviously people in the middle are trading down to private label, but the customers want and need the leading brand as a reference point, so they can even widen the gap between private label or the retailers brand and the leading, if you will, national brand or the leading premium brand. So the winners, year in, year out, through these periods of economic downturn are the number one brand. Thankfully we're it in almost every category. And private label, and it is at the expense of particularly the numbers three and four brand. How that has impacted the M&A landscape? We've talked over time, there's tremendous, if you will, consolidation opportunity in the industry, but quite frankly there's little or nothing going on and our view is that hasn't affected it at all. Any and all companies, our views are very cautious in terms of protecting their balance sheets and there's been no more or less activity than we've seen in the past. So that's a long way of saying no change.
  • Jim Loree:
    I mean our hope would be that the industry would consolidate at some point, the hand tool industry, and that some of these number three and number four brands, owners of these brands would want to consolidate their activities with us. As John said, it's actionability are implied. Actionability is everything when it comes to that and if there is no desire, there is no activity.
  • Kenneth Zener:
    Understood. The second question I have, just further clarity on the impressive benefit you guys are getting on the gross margin line. You guys were just talking about in terms of the percentage basis, but the implied 75 million, that's primarily from a more realistic view about your input costs?
  • Don Allan:
    No. It's a combination of productivity projects, price and acquisition mix offset and that's over 300 basis points, as I mentioned. Offset by significantly higher unit cost related to lack of absorption in the manufacturing area.
  • John Lundgren:
    Yes. Our view, Ken, is we think that something a lot of folks are missing, we can talk about modest deflation and it looks like there maybe some. Our volumes are down 20%. Our actual costs all other things being equal are up dramatically. A 20% volume decline and that much less volume flowing through our factories overwhelms the modest impact of any deflation, which Jim and Don already suggested, we're only beginning to see. So, it's taking a lot of hard work on three other fronts. Our normal productivity funnels, short lead times purchasing, you name it to keep up all the benefits to come from our SFS initiative, it's taken all of that to keep us where we are and input costs are a very, very small piece of any positives we've seen in the past. Quite frankly, a very small piece of our belief that we can maintain within a 100 basis points those margins going forward in the second half of the year.
  • Operator:
    The last question comes from Michael Rehaut from JPMorgan.
  • Ray Huang:
    This is actually Ray Huang on for Mike. You guys talked about the market share gains in CDIYs, I'm wondering if you could break out or give some more detail on which end markets or channels are getting share and then, if you had any detail on any specific products or initiatives that are driving the gains.
  • Jim Loree:
    Well, the end market is defined by the name of the segment, which construction in DIY. There is no particular differentiation there between construction and DIY. I mean the share gains coming in the US at large retailers in particular, one very large retailer, the largest retailer in the world and we've got substantial share gain there. Then in Europe we've a number of smaller customers, when taken in the aggregate representing reasonably significant share gain.
  • Ray Huang:
    Then if you think about CDIY stabilizing in the back half of the year, how we should look at the margins on in that segment, are you kind of thinking in the 10% range for the back half of the year?
  • Don Allan:
    We're not going to forecast margins by segment. We never have. I think what's important that Jim Loree mentioned in quite a bit of detail, when he went through that segment is three sequential quarterly increases that we're very encouraged by and that's coming not just from the cost benefit of combining our former Consumer Tools and Storage business the path that's, but also by essentially having a larger combined team to focus on the same end markets and we're seeing, the cost benefits I say are fairly obvious and straightforward. They're easy, but the share gains have come or beginning to come and we think will come in the future, due to the fact that we have the strength and strength, the combined professional organization, a product development process, focusing on the same customers and the same end markets, which was the logic for putting these two businesses together in the first place. So, thus far it has been probably, pick a number three quarters' cost, 25% volume going forward. That's going to be about 50-50, which validates the rationale for combining those businesses in the first place.
  • Operator:
    At this time I would like to hand the call back over to Ms. Kate White.
  • Kate White:
    Thank you, Jennifer. We wanted to close today by letting you know how you could gain access to members of the Stanley Management Team throughout the remainder of the year. We will be participating in a number of industry conferences as well as hosting an Analyst Day in November at the New York Stock Exchange. We have laid out these locations and dates in slide number 20 in our presentation. This concludes the Stanley Works second quarter 2009 conference call. We thank you for your time today. Again, if you have any questions, please feel free to either email or call me.
  • Operator:
    This does conclude today's conference call. You may now disconnect.