Earnings Labs

Distribution Solutions Group, Inc. (DSGR)

Q3 2017 Earnings Call· Thu, Oct 26, 2017

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Lawson Products Third Quarter 2017 Earnings call. This call will be hosted by both Michael DeCata, Lawson Products’ President and Chief Executive Officer, and Ron Knutson, Lawson Products’ Chief Financial Officer. They will open the call with an overview of the third quarter results. There will then be time for questions and answers. This call is being audio simulcast on the internet via the Lawson Products Investors Relations page on the company’s website, lawsonproducts.com. A replay of the webcast will be available on the website through December 31, 2017. During this call, the company will be providing an update on the business as well as covering relevant financial and operational information. I would like to point out that statements on this call and in the press release contain forward-looking statements concerning goals, beliefs, expectations, strategies, plans, future operating results and underlying assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described. In addition, statements made during this call are based on the company’s views as of today. The company anticipates that future developments may cause those views to change. Please consider the information presented in that light. The company may at some point elect to update the forward-looking statements made today but specifically disclaims any obligation to do so. I will now turn the call over to Lawson Products’ Chief Executive Officer, Michael DeCata. Please go ahead, sir.

Michael DeCata

Management

Good morning and thank you for joining the call. This morning, I’ll comment on the quarter and our overall progress. Ron Knutson, our CFO, will provide a more detailed review of the financial results for the quarter, and then we’ll take questions. Overall, I would summarize the quarter by saying that we have demonstrated very good progress across many aspects of the company, highlighted by the largest acquisition that Lawson has ever made. We achieved 9.5% sales growth on an ADS basis for the quarter which contributed to a 68% increase in adjusted operating income. In the past, we’ve communicated that as we grow the top line and hold costs flat, we will see impact on our operating leverage as more earnings will drop to the bottom line. This quarter demonstrates that fact. This makes the fifth consecutive quarter of increasing average daily sales versus the prior quarter, having delivered an 8.2% increase in Q2 and a 7% increase in Q1. Organically, we grew 8.5% for the quarter. On a year-to-date basis, we have grown average daily sales by 8.2% overall, including acquisitions. On an adjusted basis, we improved operating income by $1.5 million and achieved a 26.2% flow through on one less selling day. Now let’s discuss some of the specifics for the quarter. We continued to achieve broad-based growth across the company. Every one of our regions achieved growth, and our Canadian business was up 28% for the quarter in local currency on an ADS basis. Strategic accounts ADS grew 58% versus last year and 46% year-to-date. Overall, we’ve seen continued strength across the broad market; however, we are seeing disproportionate growth from our oil and gas sector. This is attributable to both increased production but also share gain. Overall, I believe that our superior service is enabling…

Ron Knutson

Management

Thank you, Mike, and good morning everyone. As Mike indicated, solid sales results experienced in the first half of 2017 continued into the third quarter. This represents the fifth sequential increase in quarterly average daily sales. We continued to invest in the business and pursue acquisitions that drive growth opportunities and that leverage our current infrastructure. Here are some Q3 highlights. First, sales finished at $75.7 million for the quarter. Average daily sales were up 9.5% versus a year ago and up 2.5% from the second quarter. Excluding the impact of 2016 acquisitions, average daily sales increased 8.5% over a year ago. Second, our adjusted operating income for the quarter improved by $1.5 million to $3.6 million from $2.1 million in the third quarter a year ago. Third, gross margin percentage remains stable at 60.8% despite the continued customer sales mix shift to lower margin customers. I will comment further on this in a moment. Fourth, we ended the quarter with $19 million of available cash and an additional availability of $36 million under our credit facility with no outstanding debt. I’ll also talk about the impact of our recently announced acquisition in a few moments on this debt level. Now let me share some of the details. As I just mentioned, we finished the quarter with sales of $75.7 million on 63 selling days, one less than the year-ago quarter. On a quarterly sequential basis, we were up 2.5% again on one less selling day. As compared to a year ago, third quarter sales benefited from the following: first, actions that we’ve taken to drive growth are getting results. This includes converting new locations for our existing strategic relationships, improving the on-boarding process of new reps, driving additional accountability to the field management, providing reps with forums to support…

Operator

Operator

[Operator instructions] Our first question is from Kevin Steinke of Barrington Research. Please go ahead.

Kevin Steinke

Analyst

Good morning, Mike and Ron. So congrats on the nice results. Obviously you talked a lot about the internal growth initiatives and the acquisitions, how that’s contributing to growth. You also mentioned the improving MRO marketplace. Just wondering if you can talk about that a little bit more outside of oil and gas, which has been a big contributor to growth, what the MRO marketplace feels like or what sort of improvement you’re seeing, and if you think that’s sustainable.

Michael DeCata

Management

Yes Kevin, good morning, thank you. I think there are a number of drivers here. As you see time utilization increasing for over-the-road trucking miles, for example, as you see the rental equipment industry increasing, certainly oil and gas as you see rig counts, and beyond rig count as you see unfinished rigs, oil wells that have been drilled but fields that have not been fracked, all of that in aggregate drives machine utilization. So for us, what drives our business is when customers run their machines more for any reason, whether they go from the second shift and add a third shift, or there’s more over-the-road trucking miles or time utilization of their equipment increases, that just drives wear and tear on machines, so we’re seeing that across the broad spectrum. Now, we’re also working hard through the strategic accounts conversion process, through technology, we saw an 11% increase in our sales rep productivity, so there are a broad range of processes, technologies that we’re putting in place to try and distance ourselves from the market, so we are seeing the market lift, but our challenge here is to grow beyond the market. As well, I mentioned Lawson Central and MS Teams. I cannot over-emphasize just how powerful a tool it is when every rep has access to the knowledge of every other rep on a short cycle Q&A kind of a process. That is an incredibly powerful tool, and the more people who are in and more people who participate, the more effective the network becomes. So all of those are drivers, both the market and our ability to win share and capture more customers and share of wallet.

Kevin Steinke

Analyst

Okay, great. Yes, that 11% increase in sales rep productivity, that looked like an especially strong number there. I don’t know if you can dig into that a little bit more? I guess you’ve talked about the tools and the networking and what have you, so do you think those are the key contributors there to the increased productivity? Obviously you’re also getting a lift from the market, but I guess any more color about that increase in productivity would be helpful.

Michael DeCata

Management

Yes, that is again. Again, there is some component , and in our environment it’s hard to dissect how much is market and how much are the activities that we’re engaged in. We’re going to deal with the market as it comes to us. Our challenge is what are the actions we can take. We talked about conversion of strategic accounts. As an example, this is something we’ve been working on for a while, we worked on it last year. This year, we targeted seven strategic accounts where we’re working on the conversion, and just to remind you, the conversion process is one where we already have an existing relationship with a large multi-site strategic account and yet we aren’t capturing all of the locations, so here we have a welcome audience, the corporate folks that are strategic account customers welcome us and try and help, and yet we have to go out and earn that business one day at a time. So that is providing a lift for our sales reps and for our company, winning more share, and then while we’re at an account picking up more share of wallet and servicing more of the 12 product categories at every account, all of these things in aggregate contribute. It’s pretty hard to dissect the specific numbers associated with each one of these activities.

Kevin Steinke

Analyst

Right, fair enough. That’s helpful. The strength in the gross margin, 60.8% despite the customer mix shift, Ron, you cited lower distribution center cost as one of the drivers there. Are we seeing the benefit of the Fairfield closure flowing through there?

Ron Knutson

Management

Yes Kevin, so we’re seeing a couple of things. First is we did see consistent with the second quarter a little bit of downward pressure just from a customer mix standpoint, but we were able to more than offset that with really overall distribution center productivity improvements, including the benefit of Fairfield, and then also some of the additional programs that Mike talked about relative to our relationships with our suppliers and vendors with some higher rebates coming through in the quarter. So we were pleased with the overall percentage; however, our focus, and I think you saw this in the third quarter--I mean, we’re really growing aggregate gross margin dollars, so there will probably continue to be some pressure on the percentage, in particular the customer mix shift moving that around a little bit, but our goal is to increase the margin dollars, which we saw this quarter and actually second quarter as well.

Kevin Steinke

Analyst

Okay, sure. You mentioned the focus on increasing gross margin dollars, although you still feel comfortable around that 60% level going forward?

Ron Knutson

Management

Yes, we do. Now, one item to take into account is that’s pre-The Bolt acquisition, so we did talk about this a little bit on The Bolt conference call, that they do create gross margins slightly less than ours, so that will put--you know, that will bring down the percentage just from including Bolt Supply in our Q1 and go-forward numbers. But again, it will certainly add to our gross margin dollars.

Kevin Steinke

Analyst

Okay, right, yes. Thanks for that reminder. Speaking of Bolt Supply House, now that it’s been a few weeks since the acquisition has been completed, can you just give us an update on what you’re seeing in terms of the integration, what the steps are there? As you’ve talked about, you gained confidence in doing integrations from some of the other acquisitions you’ve done, so just kind of wondering where you are in that process and what the next steps are there.

Michael DeCata

Management

Yes, right. It’s been a nice and smooth transition, a team that is really committed and seamlessly jumped in, so we’re feeling great about it from that perspective. You know, the first order of business is we have wanted a western Canada distribution center for quite some time, and while that was not the only reason that we put the two companies together, certainly it is one of the benefits that we see, and so the first order of business is putting some of the A and B items that are Lawson and Kent items into that distribution center, and so that’s the first order of business. There will be expansion opportunities to add more branches, probably in British Columbia to begin, and of course as a reminder, it is our intention to run Bolt as a standalone for the foreseeable future, so that enables us a little more time. Our primary opportunity with Bolt is growth, and we are extremely excited about Bolt’s growth and also Lawson growth because of the now western Canada distribution center. The combination, though, our primary driver was all about upside rather than cost-related synergies.

Kevin Steinke

Analyst

Okay, got it. Perfect. Thank you for taking the questions.

Michael DeCata

Management

Thank you.

Ron Knutson

Management

Thanks Kevin.

Operator

Operator

As a reminder, ladies and gentlemen, it is star, one if you would like to ask a question. The next question is from Steve Barger of Keybanc. Please go ahead.

Ryan Cieslak

Analyst

Good morning, guys. This is Ryan on for Steve.

Michael DeCata

Management

Oh, hey Ryan.

Ryan Cieslak

Analyst

Hey. Sorry if I missed this, but kind of curious to know if you could give us a little bit of color on the trends you’re seeing so far in October.

Ron Knutson

Management

Sure, so I’ll comment on that, Ryan - this is Ron. For the first, call it four weeks, I guess, from a Q4 standpoint, we’re not seeing any dramatic shift one way or the other from where we ended the third quarter. What I would say is that, and I think both Mike and I commented on this, we are up against tougher comps as we move into the fourth quarter, so our sales started ticking up really at the end of Q3 of 2016 and continued to expand throughout the fourth quarter, so we are--and in combination with that, we are lapping an acquisition that we made in mid-fourth quarter of 2016, so that will add to the tougher comps as well. But I would say that we feel good about where we are right now from a sales perspective. We feel good about the trends that we’ve seen over the past few quarters and don’t see anything in the foreseeable future as we enter into the fourth quarter and even into 2018 that would take us off course.

Ryan Cieslak

Analyst

Okay, thanks. I believe in your prepared remarks you said you started to get some price increases. Are you hearing anything from your suppliers that would suggest more meaningful price increases in the future?

Ron Knutson

Management

No, in fact--maybe I misstated that. No, we are not seeing anything out of the ordinary either on the cost side or the pricing side that--you know, anything changed for the last several years. It’s really over the last several years been pretty steady state, both on the supplier side and our ability to pass through where we do see the normal price increases, which are few and far between, and same thing on the pricing side. No unusual pricing pressures over the last several years.

Ryan Cieslak

Analyst

Okay, then you had nice incremental margins, around 26% this quarter. How should we think about incremental with Bolt Supply going forward?

Ron Knutson

Management

So what we’ve stated in the past is that we typically can achieve 25 to 30% leverage on our organic business going forward, and we’ve realized that over the last--I would say the last few quarters. As Mike mentioned, The Bolt Supply will be run more as a standalone organization. There certainly are opportunities for us to take advantage of their western Canada distribution and so forth, but going forward we expect that their EBITDA will be able to grow. I think Mike commented in his prepared remarks that they’ve been in the low double digit range from an overall EBITDA perspective, so Bolt Supply will be accretive to us immediately, so it’ll allow us to trend more on the higher end of that 25 to 30%.

Ryan Cieslak

Analyst

All right, thanks guys. Congrats on the quarter.

Ron Knutson

Management

Thanks Ryan.

Michael DeCata

Management

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Just another reminder, it’s star, one now if you would like to ask a question. Gentlemen, it appears we have no further questions in the queue at this time. Would you like to make some closing comments?

Michael DeCata

Management

Yes please, thank you. Thank you for joining the call, and thank you for following Lawson Products. The third quarter continued our growth trend and reinforces our improving earnings trends. We remain optimistic that the actions that we’ve taken as well as process improvements through Lean Six Sigma are enabling us to win share in the market. As the U.S. and Canadian industrial economies continue to expand, customers need our services even more and depend on Lawson Products to maximize their productivity. We feel very good about our progress. There is considerable work ahead of us to continue to accelerate our sales and earnings growth. I have the utmost confidence in our value proposition and our teammates. Lastly, I’d like to take this opportunity to publicly welcome the outstanding team at The Bolt Supply House. Our team and our company overall continues to grow stronger. We’re positioned and committed to a prosperous future. Thank you again for joining us this morning, and have a wonderful day.

Operator

Operator

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