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Transcript
OP
Operator
Operator
Hello, and thank you for standing by. My name is Regina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Phibro Animal Health Corporation Third Quarter 2023 Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Damian Finio, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.
DF
Damian Finio
Analyst
Thank you, Regina. Good morning, and welcome to the Phibro Animal Health Corporation Earnings Call for our Fiscal Year 2023 Third Quarter ended March 31, 2023. My name is Damian Finio, and I am the Chief Financial Officer of Phibro Animal Health Corporation. I'm joined on today's call by Jack Bendheim, Phibro's Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Daniel Bendheim, Director and Executive Vice President of Corporate Strategy. Today, we will cover our third quarter and fiscal year-to-date financial results before opening the lines for your questions. I'd like to remind you that we are providing a simultaneous webcast of this call on our website, www.pahc.com. Also on the Investors section of our website, you will find copies of the earnings press release and third quarter Form 10-Q filed with the SEC yesterday as well as the transcript and slides discussed and presented on this morning's call. Our remarks today will include forward-looking statements, and actual results could differ materially from those projections. For a list and description of certain factors that could cause results to differ, I refer to you the forward-looking statements section in our earnings press release. Our remarks include references to certain financial measures, which were not prepared in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles or U.S. GAAP. I refer to you the non-GAAP financial information section in our earnings press release for a discussion of these measures. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP measures are included in the financial tables that accompany the earnings press release. We present our results on a GAAP basis and on an adjusted basis. Our adjusted results exclude acquisition-related items, unusual, nonoperational or nonrecurring items, other income and expense as separately reported in the consolidated statements of operations, including foreign currency gains and losses net and lastly, income tax effects related to pretax adjustments and unusual or nonrecurring income tax items. Now let me introduce our Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, Jack Bendheim, to share his perspective on Phibro's third quarter and fiscal year-to-date financial performance. Jack?
JB
Jack Bendheim
Analyst · Bank of America
Thank you, Damian, and good morning, everyone. We posted strong fiscal year-to-date sales growth. Our third quarter net sales were $246 million, which reflects 3% growth over the same quarter last year. Despite the challenging market and economic conditions, our consolidated sales growth has been driven primarily by our Animal Health segment and with well-balanced improvements across our three product categories. Our Animal Health segment has achieved a remarkable 10% year-to-date increase in net sales compared to the same period of the previous year. We are unfortunately seeing some signs of recessionary pressure in our Mineral Nutrition segment as our customers are seeking to reduce purchases and lower inventory. We will take steps over the next few months to ensure our inventory is better balanced for our customers' needs. Overall, we have posted strong fiscal year-to-date sales growth despite the challenging conditions. We see continued opportunities for growth in our Animal Health segment. As I mentioned, on a year-to-date basis, our Animal Health segment has achieved a 10% increase in net sales compared to last year, and this segment continues to present us with multiple growth opportunities. We have posted eight consecutive quarters of year-over-year sales growth in each of our three major product categories. From a year-to-date comparative perspective, the product categories of MFAs and other is up 9%, while nutritional specialties are up 12% and vaccines, up 9%. I'm especially pleased with our vaccine growth in Latin America. We recently opened a new autogenous vaccine facility in Brazil and launched commercial poultry vaccines in the region. And regarding the Seasonal Specialties, we continue to find ways to leverage our product and technologies we acquired with the 2019 acquisition of Osprey Biotechnics. I'm also happy to report that our companion animal's development pipeline continues to progress. We see Companion…
DB
Daniel Bendheim
Analyst
Thank you, Jack. I will start with consolidated financial performance on Slide 4, then cover segment-level performance, capitalization metrics and conclude with a review of our financial guidance for the full fiscal year 2023. Consolidated net sales for the quarter ended March 31, 2023, were $245.7 million, reflecting a $6.1 million or 3% increase over the same quarter 1 year ago. This increase was driven by improvement in our largest segment, Animal Health, partially offset by declines in Mineral Nutrition and Performance Products. GAAP-based net income and diluted earnings per share decreased 43%, driven by higher SDA, SG&A and interest expense, offset partially by gross profit improvements and lower income tax expense. After adjusting GAAP results for one-offs and nonrecurring and/or nonoperational costs such as environmental remediation, acquisition-related items and foreign currency movements, consolidated adjusted EBITDA decreased $0.6 million or 2% in comparison to the prior year's quarter, driven by lower adjusted EBITDA in our Mineral Nutrition and Performance Products segments, coupled with an increase in corporate expenses, offset by higher adjusted EBITDA in the Animal Health segment. Adjusted net income and adjusted diluted earnings per share decreased 13%, respectively, driven by higher SG&A expenses and taxes, offset by higher gross profit. Moving to Slide 5, segment level financial performance. I'll start with third quarter financial performance for our largest segment, Animal Health, which includes three product lines, namely MFAs and other nutritional specialties and vaccines. The Animal Health segment posted $164.4 million of net sales for the quarter, which represents an increase of $15.8 million or 11% versus the same quarter of the previous year. Within the Animal Health segment, we reported an $8.9 million or 11% increase in MFAs and other versus the same quarter prior year, driven by increased demand for MFAs domestically and in the region…
OP
Operator
Operator
[Operator Instructions]. Our first question will come from the line of Michael Ryskin with Bank of America.
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Wolf Chanoff
Analyst · Bank of America
This is Wolf Chanoff on for Mike. Congrats on the quarter. So I appreciate you guys flagging the recession and kind of macro impacts that you're seeing in Mineral Nutrition. I'm just wondering how would you describe the possibility that these impacts spread beyond Mineral Nutrition to your broader Animal Health segment, just kind of a range of outcomes around this recessionary impact? And then I have a semi-related follow-up.
JB
Jack Bendheim
Analyst · Bank of America
Thanks for the question, Will. I mean we view our business as recession resistant. We've been in the business a long time. We've been through recessions. And effectively, people eating protein is really among the very, very last things to go. I mean -- and we see changes. I mean people might give a stake and go to chicken or some combination. But overall, our business is more tied to population growth and to general wealth, which the recession sort of again, it's sort of recession resistant.
WC
Wolf Chanoff
Analyst · Bank of America
Got it. I appreciate that. And then -- so sticking with Mineral Nutrition. Last quarter, you called out some kind of choppiness in the U.S. beef cattle feed lots. And I realize that it's only with a small part of your portfolio, but I was wondering if you have any updates on what you're seeing in terms of feedlot dynamics.
JB
Jack Bendheim
Analyst · Bank of America
So for this last quarter, it still remains a very small part of our business. But what we're seeing is demand sort of is more driven by the fact that I spoke about in my opening remarks, that over last year when shipping was so difficult and people were very concerned about supply chain. There was more of an increase in inventories, both at our customers and ourselves. And the worst thing to do is to be is to run out. So prices were better, volumes are better. And I think as the shipping lines have straight down and shipping has become less of a problem, less of a concern, there is this big adjustment. And I think that's a bigger part of this than anything else.
OP
Operator
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Balaji Prasad with Barclays.
UA
Unidentified Analyst
Analyst · Balaji Prasad with Barclays
This is [Shaw] on for Balaji. Just a quick one on your Latin American business. China has recently lifted the embargo on the Brazilian beef imports. Do you see this change as a potential tailwind for your Latin America Animal Health business, which had been performed well recently?
JB
Jack Bendheim
Analyst · Balaji Prasad with Barclays
So I think that is among the other tailwinds of Brazil being a phenomenal PDUs and a very big exporter of protein. So China removing any barriers to commerce is definitely helpful. And the state and the health of the GILTI business as well as the other businesses as we see is continuing to help Latin America, but specifically Brazil in its production and export protein.
OP
Operator
Operator
[Operator Instructions]. Your next question comes from the line of Brian Wright with Roth MKM.
BW
Brian Wright
Analyst · Brian Wright with Roth MKM
I was in you could remind us on the capacity of the Brazilian vaccine facility and what that could mean to grow?
JB
Jack Bendheim
Analyst · Brian Wright with Roth MKM
So the facility -- thanks for the question. The facility that we built is a small facility. It's involved with the otogenous vaccine business. Tasos vaccine business means it's a custom vaccine. We go on farms, we pick up -- we try to isolate the viruses and we make a custom vaccine for that. So it's literally it's a farm-by-farm business. The prices you get is a higher price I would say it's more effective because we're dealing with farm-by-farm variances, but it's not a huge volume business. But beyond that, we recently received approval for some of our vaccines that we produce poultry vaccines that we produced in Israel, and we just started x4 to Brazil. So that's a new start to our business, and that obviously is a much larger business.
BW
Brian Wright
Analyst · Brian Wright with Roth MKM
Great. And then I just was hoping maybe we could kind of get some visibility on just the underlying like U.S. broiler volumes kind of how they progress from January to now. Are they kind of higher now than they kind of began the third quarter?
JB
Jack Bendheim
Analyst · Brian Wright with Roth MKM
The U.S. broiler volumes, I would say, are maybe down to flat and holding steady. Yes, that's it.
BW
Brian Wright
Analyst · Brian Wright with Roth MKM
Okay. And then just same question for maybe Brazilian cattle.
JB
Jack Bendheim
Analyst · Brian Wright with Roth MKM
It's -- cattle is not overlaying our focus, even though it's a bigger part of our business in Brazil, I would say Brazil cattle business just remains flat to slightly up.
OP
Operator
Operator
We have no further questions at this time. I'll turn the conference back over to Damian Finio, for any closing remarks.
DF
Damian Finio
Analyst
Okay. Thank you, Regina, and thank you, everyone, for participating in today's call. We appreciate your time, attention and interest in Phibro Animal Health Corporation. Have a great rest of your day, and please be sure to check out our second ESG report when it's published next week. Thank you.
OP
Operator
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, that will conclude today's call. Thank you all for joining.