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Concrete Pumping Holdings, Inc. (BBCP)

Q2 2023 Earnings Call· Thu, Jun 8, 2023

$7.84

+0.51%

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good afternoon, everyone and thank you for participating in today's conference call to discuss Concrete Pumping Holdings’ Financial Results for the Second Quarter ended April 30, 2023. Joining us today are Concrete Pumping Holdings' CEO, Bruce Young; CFO, Iain Humphries and Company's External Director of Investor Relations, Cody Slach. Before we go further, I'd like to turn the call over to Mr. Slach to read the company's Safe Harbor statement within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. That provides important cautions regarding forward-looking statements. Cody, please go ahead.

Cody Slach

Management

Thanks Camilla. I'd like to remind everyone that in the course of this call to give you a better understanding of our operations, we will be making certain forward-looking statements regarding our business and outlook. These statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from such statements. For information concerning these risks and uncertainties, see Concrete Pumping Holdings’ annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly report on Form 10-Q and other publicly available filings with the SEC. The company disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. On today's call, we will also reference certain non-GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA, net debt and free cash flow, which we believe provide useful information for investors. We provide further information about these non-GAAP financial measures and reconciliations to the comparable GAAP measures in our press release issued today or the investor presentation posted on the company's website. I would like to remind everyone that this call will be available for replay later this evening. A webcast replay will also be available via the link provided in today's press release, as well as on the company's website. Additionally, we have posted an updated investor presentation to the company's website. Now, I would like to turn the call over to the CEO of Concrete Pumping Holdings, Bruce Young? Bruce?

Bruce Young

Management

Thank you, Cody, and good afternoon, everyone. I am pleased to report that in our second quarter we experienced 12% revenue growth, making our seventh consecutive quarter of double-digit revenue gains. This consisted of growth across all segments and was driven by continued market share gains in recent accretive acquisitions and organic growth. These strong results would have exceeded our expectations had we not experienced above average rainfall in most of our markets, west of the Rocky Mountains, as well as in our home state of Colorado. From an end market perspective, we have seen encouraging growth primarily in large commercial projects like distribution centers, warehouses, semiconductor fabrication plants, and EV and battery manufacturing plants. We expect this demand to continue given US reshoring trends as companies look to build out their domestic manufacturing footprint. While demand for large commercial projects is strong, Concrete Pumping demand from light commercial projects has been comparatively weaker due to higher interest rates and some impact from reduced availability of financing from smaller regional banks. Despite this, our expectation for the commercial market for in fiscal year 2023 remained strong. Opportunities with large manufacturing, particularly as we head into peak summer construction seasons. Turning to infrastructure. Our expanding US national footprint continue to drive strong results as it allowed us to capture more revenue from public project investments. We will continue to work to win state and local projects and look forward to renewed investment in the US with the infrastructure investment in JOBS Acts, where we have recently seen an improved visibility of funds flowing to numerous projects, many of which are located in existing markets that we operate in. We plan to aggressively pursue these project opportunities and believe it has the potential to be a five-year-plus tailwind for our business. During…

Iain Humphries

Management

Thanks Bruce, and good afternoon, everyone. Five segment, Q2 revenue in our US pumping business increased 9%, mostly due to contributions from a recent acquisition of Coastal Carolina, but also from strong regional organic growth. In our UK segment, operating largely under the Camfaud brand, despite foreign exchange headwinds, US dollar revenues increased 13% compared to the prior year quarter. Excluding the FX translation impact, revenue grew by 22%. Our team continues to secure energy, road and rail projects in addition to the work we have previously announced with the concrete intensive high speed rail project HS2, which is expected to last beyond 2030. In our US Concrete Waste Management Services segment, operating under the Eco-Pan brand, we continue to deliver exceptional results, including increasing the revenue on an organic basis by 26% compared to the same year ago quarter. This continues to be driven by investments we made in our sales team and the value of our enhanced service offering. Going forward, we expect to maintain Eco-Pan's double-digit organic revenue growth given our continued investment in our team and equipment, its penetration in the market and the continued evolution of the methods used in concrete construction projects to contain concrete waste. Returning to our consolidated results, gross margin in the second quarter was 40.3% compared to 40.4% in the same year ago quarter. As Bruce noted earlier, small improvements in input costs, particularly in diesel fuel, were mostly offset by higher labor costs due to lower equipment utilization. General and administrative expenses in Q2 were $30.3 million, up $1.7 million from $28.6 million in the same year ago quarter, primarily as a result of the headcount editions and higher labor costs related to recent acquisitions. As a percentage of revenue, G&A costs were 28.1% in the second quarter compared…

Bruce Young

Management

Thanks Iain. In summary, we are very pleased with another record quarter driven by double-digit top line growth and expansion in every segment. We continue to prove the compelling business proposition of our high value service and the necessity of our mission-critical service offering in the construction industry, which positions us well for 2023 and beyond. We anticipate ongoing growth in our infrastructure and commercial end markets, given the industry trends we discussed and our ability to capitalize on them given our broad and growing footprint and momentum with heavy commercial projects. Our focus remains on optimizing end market mix to continue to deliver strong top and bottom line growth as we move into the peak summer construction season. We'll also continue to focus on maximizing shareholder value by leveraging our unique operational capabilities, high value service offering and executing non-opportunistic accretive M&A while strategically balancing our leverage. With that, I would like to turn the call back over to the operator for Q&A. Camilla?

Operator

Operator

Thank you sir. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Thank you. And our first question will come from Tim Mulrooney with William Blair. Please proceed with your question.

Tim Mulrooney

Analyst

Bruce, Iain, good afternoon.

Iain Humphries

Management

Hi, Tim.

Bruce Young

Management

Hi, Tim.

Tim Mulrooney

Analyst

A couple questions here. So if I exclude the contribution from Carolina Coastal, it looks like organic revenue growth in your US concrete business was up, maybe low single digit in the second quarter. Is it the type of momentum you'd expect as you heading to the second half of the fiscal year?

Iain Humphries

Management

Yeah. Tim, one thing, and obviously we talked about the weather impact in the second quarter as well, which is not typical. I would maybe add to what you said there was about $3 million or $4 million of weather affected growth that we would've normally seen in the second quarter. I mean, obviously that plays in our utilization as well. So on the organic side, you're right, but I would add to what you said that and the weather certainly played more of a part in this quarter than we've seen in a comparable year last year. But now obviously moving into Q2 and four, with the weather breaking, we would expect improved volume from improved utilization and the same again Q4.

Tim Mulrooney

Analyst

Okay. All right. So it sounds like maybe we're talking really normalized mid to high single digit organic growth is how that business is trending. If you split that up between pricing and volume on a normalized basis, how are you thinking about the business?

Iain Humphries

Management

Yeah. Good way to think about that. So looking at the second quarter, so there's 12% year-over-year growth. 5%, like you said was on the M&A side and then 7% on organic. Of that 7% organic, it's about 2% volume, 5% price.

Tim Mulrooney

Analyst

Got it. So still a strong pricing environment. Just one more from me if you don't mind. The EBITDA margins, they were I think down a little bit in US Concrete Pumping. Just curious if you're able to quantify the impact from excess rainfall? What you think the EBITDA margin would've been without that impact? Just trying to get an idea how to think about margin expansion or contraction as we had in the half of the year.

Iain Humphries

Management

Yeah. Good question. The EBITDA margin impact from weather is about half the other half. There's still some lagging effects on inflation most around labor and that would make up the other half. One thing on inflation that has stabilized in the second quarter was on the fuel side. So there's still a little bit of a hangover on the inflation piece in that margin.

Tim Mulrooney

Analyst

Got it. Thanks so much for taking my questions.

Bruce Young

Management

Thanks Tim.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our next question will come from Brent Thielman with D.A. Davidson. Please proceed with your question.

Brent Thielman

Analyst

Hey, thanks. Good afternoon, guys. Hey Iain, just following up on that last comment about -- just some of the margin compression related to inflation. As you mentioned, I it looks like fuel costs, it's sort of abated to some degree. What other factors that we'd be sort of thinking about here in the second half just in terms inflationary impacts on the business? I would think with fuel abating, you'd have some runway from margins here.

Iain Humphries

Management

Yeah. Certainly going quarter three and four. Most of that comes from improved utilization as I mentioned earlier. It's hard through the second quarter with when you've got this weather affected utilization piece. So yeah, so on the margin improvement we expect a lot of that comes from the pull through and utilization. There is a slight element of inflation in there, mostly around the labor cost. But obviously we're looking forward to Q3 and four where we have more utilization of the equipment, which feeds nicely into the utilization of our employees, which then in turn generates that typical improved margin you're see in Q3 and four.

Brent Thielman

Analyst

Okay. And you guys experienced some pretty significant pressures just associated with tough weather, I guess, particularly in the west and felt some of that in the first quarter too. How do you think about the snap back you can see here in the second half of the year is there's a lot of work you can make up for? I'm just -- obviously there's still constraints out there in terms of how much you can actually get done. I'm just curious how you think about this volume snap back into the second half given tough first half weather.

Bruce Young

Management

Yeah. Thanks for that conversation or that question, Brent. The markets are responding really nicely. The commercial market has been really strong. We've started into Q3 now and we feel really good about the revenues in commercial. Bidding activity is really good in commercial right now, and the project starts are becoming stronger. The infrastructure bill is becoming clear where the dollars are allocated on that. And while the bidding activity hasn't started yet, we expect that to start fairly soon as well and could have some impact on that later in the year and into next year as well.

Brent Thielman

Analyst

Okay. And Bruce, maybe just one more. I mean, how much of the commercial business has sort of evolved or trended toward these larger projects, data centers, manufacturing warehouses? I guess I'm just wondering, are you still seeing a fair number of opportunities within the kind of the lighter commercial vertical? Maybe if you could parse that out, that'd be helpful.

Bruce Young

Management

We don't separate that out as a percentage, but I would say the volume of the larger projects have become a significantly greater part of our commercial market than what we've seen.

Brent Thielman

Analyst

Yeah. Okay. All right. Great, guys. I'll pass it on. Thank you.

Bruce Young

Management

Thanks Brent.

Operator

Operator

At this time, this concludes our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the call back over to Mr. Young for closing remarks. End of Q&A:

Bruce Young

Management

Thank you, Camilla. We'd like to thank everyone for listening into today's call and look forward to speaking with you when report our third quarter fiscal 2023's results in September. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.