Theodore D. Crandall - Chief Financial Officer
Analyst · Ned Armstrong with FBR capital markets, please proceed
Thanks Keith and good morning. All of my comments we'll be referencing the charts that are on our website. Turning to chart one titled Q1 results summary and starting at the top of that slide, revenue in the quarter was $1.332 billion, an increase of 16% over 2006 that includes 7% organic growth, 4% growth attributable to acquisitions and 5% due to the effects of currency translation. Segment operating earnings were $257 million, an increase of 13% year-over-year. Purchase accounting expense was up about $4 million, primarily due to acquisitions completed last year, the largest of those being ICS Triplex. General corporate net expense was $14 million, that's down about $5 million from last year, primarily due to a $6 million pre-tax gain on the sale of the remaining Baldor shares that were received in the sale of Power Systems. For the balance of this fiscal year, we expect a run rate in general corporate net expense of about $20 million to $22 million. Interest expense was $18 million, down slightly from last year. The fourth quarter effective tax rate was 28.5%, in the middle of our range of 28% to 29% guidance for the full year '08. In Q1 last year, the tax rate was 30%. EPS was $1.04 up $0.28 or 37% compared to EPS from continuing operations in Q1 last year. Average diluted shares outstanding in the quarter were $151 million, down 12% from a year ago. During the quarter, we repurchased 1.4 million shares at a cost of $96 million and as of December 31st still had $930 million available under our current $1 billion share repurchase authorization. Moving to chart two, Q4 results: Rockwell Automation. As noted previously, growth in the quarter was 16% year-over-year, a 11% excluding the effects of currency translation. Sales declined 3% sequentially, that's not unusual in terms of normal seasonal patterns and we experienced particularly good performance this quarter in the Americas with continued improvement in Asia. Moving to the earnings side of the chart, as I noted, segment earnings were up 13% year-over-year. Operating margin in the quarter was 19.3%, down one half point from the first quarter of last year, primarily due to the impact of acquisitions year-over-year. Although not displayed on the chart, our trailing fourth quarter return on invested capital was 24.7%, up almost 3 points versus the year ago period. Please turn to the next chart which summarizes the Q1 results of the Architecture & Software segment. Sales in Q1 were up 9% year-over-year, 4% excluding the effect to currency translation. On a sequential basis, sales were up 1%. Operating margin was 25.7%, down 2.1 points from the fourth quarter of last year. Q1 last year was one of the higher margin quarters for Architecture & Software, so was a bit more difficult comparison. Revenue mix was somewhat weak in Q1 this year with processors and software as a lower percent of our total sales and Architecture & Software as a focus area for the technology and growth investments that we told you we would be making this year. A&S margins in Q1 were below our expectations for full year margin in Architecture & Software and as you'll see on the next slide, we had above average margin performance for Control Products & Solutions this quarter. Margins in both segments will vary somewhat quarter-to-quarter. Next chart, chart 4 covers our Control Products & Solutions segment. Sales in Q1 were up 22% year-over-year. That included 10% organic growth, 6% growth attributable to acquisitions and 6 points due to the effects of currency translation. Sales were down 6% sequentially, reflecting a typical seasonal pattern, particularly related to the Solutions businesses within that segment. That being said, our Solutions businesses performed very well in the quarter compared to last year and the anticipated contribution from acquisitions in this segment is on track. Operating margin improved by 1.6 points year-over-year to 14.5% and operating margin benefited from volume leverage and strong productivity performance, partially offset by the impact of the acquisitions in the segment. Let me turn now to chart 5, which shows the geographic breakdown of our sales in the quarter. The chart provides regional growth rates and the far right column shows growth rates excluding the effects of currency translation. As you can see on the chart, we had a strong global mix of sales in the quarter. The U.S. realized 5% year-over-year growth and Canada was up 8%, both excluding currency translation. The contribution of acquisitions in these regions was only about 1%. Latin American sales were up 28%, basically all organic growth, another great quarter for this region and overall, just very good performance in the Americas. EMEA sales were up 20% in the quarter, excluding currency impact. EMEA experienced really strong growth in Eastern Europe but was somewhat weak in the developed countries; particularly the U.K. Acquisitions has a significant impact on EMEA growth, contributing about 12 points of that growth. And Asia Pacific sales were up 13% excluding currency effects, continuing the double-digit growth we saw last quarter, acquisitions added 2 points to the growth in the Asia Pacific region. As Keith noted, we realized a very good balance in revenue this quarter with 50% sales coming from outside the U.S. Now please turn to chart six, Q1 results: free cash flow. We generated $78 million of free cash flow in Q1 compared to $74 million in the first quarter of 2007. Working capital this quarter was a $90 million use of cash. This reflected typical seasonal working capital correction in Q1 and we still expect free cash flow for the full year to be approximately 95% of net income. Please turn to chart seven, which summarizes our guidance and basically repeats Keith's comments. We are reaffirming revenue guidance of 10% to 12%, excluding the impact of currency translations. As we told you in November, our original guidance anticipated only a minor year-over-year impact due to currency. We are reaffirming to diluted EPS guidance of between $4.25 and $4.45 for the fiscal year. And with that, I'll turn it back over to Rondi to begin the Q&A.