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Good afternoon and welcome to the Worthington Industries Second Quarter Fiscal 2021 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be able to listen-only until the question-and-answer session of the call. This conference is being recorded at the request of Worthington Industries. If anyone objects, you may disconnect at this time.
I would now like to introduce Marcus Rogier, Treasurer and Investor Relations Officer. Mr. Rogier, you may begin.
Thank you, Amy. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to Worthington Industries second quarter fiscal 2021 earnings call. On our call this afternoon we have Andy Rose, Worthington's President and Chief Executive Officer; and Joe Hayek, Worthington's Chief Financial Officer.
Before we get started, I'd like to remind everyone that certain statements made today are forward-looking within the meaning of the 1995 Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ from those suggested.
We issued our earnings release earlier this morning. Please refer to it for more detail on those factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. Today's call is being recorded, and a replay will be made available later on our Worthington Industries website.
At this point, I will turn the call over to Joe for a review of the financials.
Thanks, Marcus, and good afternoon, everyone. In Q2, we reported a loss of a $1.40 per share versus earnings of $0.93 in the prior year quarter. There were two unique items in the quarter to call out as follows: Recognized a pretax loss of $149 million, or $2.18 per share, on our investment in Nikola Corporation during the quarter.
This loss consisted of two components. First, we had an unrealized loss of $144 million related to our 7 million shares of Nikola, as the stock fell from $40.81 at the beginning of the quarter to $20.41 at quarter end. As we mentioned on our Q1 call, these shares will be subject to future mark-to-market revaluations for as long as we own the stock.
Second, we reported $5 million in expenses related to the Nikola profit sharing and bonus expenses that we mentioned last quarter. In the quarter, we also incurred restructuring and impairment charges of $11 million, or $0.17 per share, primarily related to the divestiture of our North American cryogenic assets, which we announced during the quarter, as well as an impairment to our oil and gas assets due to the prolonged downturn in that market.
Finally, the prior year quarter benefited by $0.33 per share related to a pretax gain of $23 million we recorded in equity earnings when WAVE completed the sale of its international operations. Adjusting for these unique items, we generated a second quarter record $0.95 per share compared to $0.60 last year.
Consolidated net sales in the quarter of $731 million decreased 12% from the prior year due to lower average selling prices in steel processing, combined with lower volumes in the oil and gas business and Pressure Cylinders and our exit * in Q2 last year from the Engineered Cabs business.
Our reported gross profit for the quarter increased by $15 million from Q2 last year to $135 million and gross margin increased from 14.6% to 18.5% in Q2 of this year. Our adjusted EBITDA was $95 million in Q2 of 2021, up from $76 million in the prior quarter and our trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA is now $317 million.
In Q2, we saw continued strength in many of our end markets and our teams executed exceptionally well, continue to deliver value to our customers while navigating in fluid and challenging environment.
Turning to the businesses. In Steel Processing, net sales of $469 million were down 9% from Q2 of 2020, due primarily to lower average selling prices. Total shipped tons were up 2% from last year's second quarter due to an increase in total tons as a result of our consolidation of the Worthington Samuel Coil Processing JV earlier this calendar year. Direct tons were flat year-over-year and made up 48% of the mix compared to 49% of mix in the prior year quarter.
The market for steel in the U.S. tightened significantly and our teams have been doing a great job managing our supply chains to meet the needs of our customers. We continue to see solid automotive and construction demand and we're beginning to see improvements in demand related to agriculture end markets.
Operating income for Steel Processing of $38 million in the quarter was up $21 million from last year and operating margin more than doubled from 3.3% to 8%. A large year-over-year increase was primarily driven by favorable conversion costs, arbitrage gains that we were able to take advantage of given the rise in steel prices and negligible estimated inventory holding gains in the current quarter compared to losses of $7 million or $0.09 per share last year.
Based on current steel prices, we expect to have inventory holding gains in Q3 of this year. In our Pressure Cylinders business, net sales were $262 million, down 10% from the prior year quarter. The sales in the oil and gas business remain muted due to the downturn in that industry.
Our team at cylinders continue to perform at a very high level and demand for our consumer facing products remains solid. Consumer volumes were down year-over-year due to production limitations as a result of staffing shortages at a few of our facilities, which limited our production. Consumer business also had a very tough comp to last year.
Volumes in our Industrial Products business increased year-over-year and we continue to see softness in demand in Europe. Cylinders operating income excluding the impairment and restructuring charges mentioned earlier was $14 million, down $1 million from the prior year quarter and operating margins were essentially flat. The decline was primarily due to the downturn in the oil and gas business, partially offset by improvements in the industrial business.
With respect to our JVs, equity income during the current quarter was $26 million compared to $47 million last year, which included a $23 million gain related to the sale of WAVE's International operations.
WAVE's results were down slightly year-over-year as the slow recovery in commercial construction continues. Excluding WAVE's prior gain on the sale, equity income was up slightly over the prior year quarter. During the quarter, we did receive $30 million in dividends from our unconsolidated JVs.
Turning to the cash flow statement and balance sheet, cash flow from operations was $107 million in the quarter and free cash flow was $91 million. During the quarter, we received $22 million in proceeds from asset sales, primarily related to the divestiture of our cryogenics assets, we invested $16 million in capital projects, paid $13 million in dividends, and spent $39 million to repurchase 860,000 shares of our stock at an average price of $45.
Looking at our balance sheet and our liquidity position, funded debt at quarter end of $707 million was flat sequentially and interest expense of $7 million was in line with the prior year quarter. We ended Q2 with $713 million in cash. Earlier today, the Board declared a $0.25 per share dividend for the quarter, which is payable in March 2021.
At this point, I will turn it over to Andy.
Thank you, Joe. Good afternoon everyone. Our fiscal second quarter was a record performance despite a few unique operating challenges. Steel prices have been rising rapidly and supply has been very tight as demand continues to recover. We are grateful to our mill partners who are working hard to ensure that we receive steel in a timely manner so that our steel processing business can meet customer delivery schedules.
In Pressure Cylinders, we are facing labor shortages in several regions as strong demand coupled with COVID quarantines and hiring challenges are limiting production. Despite these obstacles, our employees continue to go above and beyond to meet customer expectations while working safely and efficiently.
Excluding the large unrealized mark-to-market loss from our Nikola stake, the core business delivered solid EBITDA and free cash flow for the quarter. We have a sizable cash balance that will allow us to take advantage of market dislocations where it makes sense.
History has shown us that financial flexibility is key during times like these where opportunities arise and speed of execution matters. We intend to continue our balanced approach to capital allocation in 2021 and this will likely include capacity expansion for high return businesses, M&A, and opportunistic share repurchases. Our business is holding its own with an effective vaccine rollout under way, we are optimistic that a normal marketplace is on the horizon, hopefully by the second half of 2021.
Though the next several months will likely remain challenging from an operating standpoint, our leaders are executing solid business strategies that leverage our value drivers of transformation, innovation, and M&A.
Worthington is very well-positioned to come out of this pandemic stronger than when we entered, further separating ourselves from our competitors. A big thank you to all the Worthington family for making it happen every day.
One final note, Worthington Industries is a great place to work because of its people and culture, rooted in our philosophy. Our philosophy is a set of principles with the primary goal of making money for our shareholders, but doing it by practicing the golden rule of treating others the way we would like to be treated.
January 3rd marks a historic day for us as one of the great disciples of our philosophy is retiring after 49 years with the company. Virgil Winland started his career with us as a welder in 1971 in Columbus, Ohio. He led our Cylinders business for several years and will retire as Senior Vice President of Manufacturing. He accomplished a lot in his business endeavors, but I consider his biggest impact to be on our people. He has taught all of us lessons about how to be good in business, but more importantly, how to be better people in the process. He taught us how to step on someone's shoes, but not mess up their shine. And to hire the right people, provide an environment where they can be successful, and hold them accountable. And finally he taught us the importance of bridging the past, the present, and the future as we transform our business and prepare for success in the next 65 years. Virgil you are truly one of the great leaders. Thank you for a lifetime of contributions.
We'll now take any questions.
[Operator Instructions] Your first question today comes from the line of Seth Rosenfeld with Exane BNP. Please proceed with your question.
Good afternoon. Congrats on a good set of results, and thanks for taking our questions today.
Thanks Seth.
If I can kickoff please. To follow-up with a couple of comments you made in your prepared remarks. Within the steel processing, first of all, can you confirm, I think, I might have misheard you. Can you confirm the scale of inventory holding gains this last quarter and perhaps on a relative basis the scale of gains you expect in the following Q3? And then you also mentioned as an arbitrage opportunity in steel processing, can you give us a little bit more color on what that was and the scale please?
Sure. So a handful of questions in there Seth. We had $200,000 of inventory holding gains in the quarter. So essentially zero. We expect those will be significantly higher in Q3, put a number on it but if you go back and look through the way that steel prices have trended, we do expect to have significant gains in Q3 in that regard.
And with respect to the arbitrage gains that is really our intel and ability to lean in and taking advantage of what was really a truly historic run up in steel prices and so that group was able to generate pretty significant leverage and operating margins for the steel business in Q2.
Okay. Would you expect the arbitrage benefit to continue going forward, or should we think about some trade-off arbitrage benefit a bit lower inventory holding gains bigger in Q3?
Well, it's fair. And just to quantify that arbitrage gains after tax was about $5 million in Q2. And so certainly have inventory holding gains in Q3. The quarter is 17 days old and so hard to predict anything on the arbitrage front just yet.
Okay. Very clear. And then a more general question please on the market environment. You touched on earlier how tight the market is. We've all seen steel prices go vertically higher in recent weeks. To what extent are you facing any pushback from your customers and the ability to pass on higher prices? And on the supply side, obviously, a lot of this has been supply led rather than just demand led. Are you seeing any signs of the supply tightness beginning to weaken or when you think about the market going forward, how concerned are you about a crack on the horizon?
Yeah. So, obviously, customers don't like higher prices. But the way we run our business Seth I think you know this is when we sell to a customer it's typically based on an index plus a dollar spread. So the contracts really specifically reset automatically based on what the prices do. Obviously the spot market is a little bit different. I think the spot market for us is anywhere around plus or minus 30% at any given time. But if customers need steel, they obviously have to pay the spot prices. I mean, that's just the way the market works.
With respect to pricing, prices have run up pretty substantially, and I think our -- there is still upward pressure there certainly feels like it for January pricing right now. But obviously when we get close to a $1,000 a ton for hot rolled people start to get nervous. It doesn't get up there very often. So, I think while we haven't seen any cracks in the price at this point, we're starting to wonder when that might occur. So tight market right now.
Very clear. Great. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Phil Gibbs with KeyBanc. Please proceed with your question.
Hi. Good afternoon.
Hey, Phil.
The questions just on the steel inflation, obviously, hot rolled spot has doubled. There's clear anticipation, I think in the curve that it comes down as supply comes back online. I think that seems to be pretty, pretty well understood. But the next few weeks to months, how does this inflation or spike impact the margins in the steel consuming businesses that you own and I think you mentioned the challenge in the consumer product line just because of the lack of steel availability so – and labor. So just curious in terms of, firstly the potential impacts just to the spreads in the non-steel businesses in the short run? And then, when you can get back to trend in consumer cylinders?
Yeah. A lot of questions there, Phil. What I would say on the cylinder side of – every business is a little bit different in terms of how it reacts to rising steel prices. In cylinders, historically, there has been a lag between when steel prices rise and when that flows through. I will tell you that, we have become a lot more sophisticated over the last four or five years with respect to hedging, our steel purchases for that business.
So I would anticipate that the impact is a lot less than it has been historically there. When we go to market, we're locking in some of those margins with hedges. So WAVE is a different business in and of itself as well. WAVE tends to do well in these environments, because they're able to get price increases, and typically they get those price increases ahead of when the steel cost inflation hits, because they have steel on order for a number of months.
So I would expect – for WAVE there would likely be some margin enhancement over the next couple of quarters. For cylinders, there may be a little bit of degradation. But I don't anticipate it'll be as much as it has been historically.
And then in the steel business – we're – we price based on a dollar spread for the most part. And so while the dollar contribution shouldn't change significantly, with respect to the money that we're making, although there will be FIFO gains, so it'll appear like that to some degree. Overall, the margin percentage will go down, because steel prices have risen.
Hey, Phil. And so – so just to finish off Andy's thought there with – embedded in your question was, related to workforce and that both Andy and I mentioned. We have been challenged and that is not at all unique to us. Everybody across the country has been challenged with COVID and cases in quarantines, and people being nervous, and all of those things. And so our plants and our people are doing a terrific job of keeping each other safe and looking out for each other. But again, these things happen and the protocol from the CDC is what it is.
And so, we could have sold more in the consumer business certainly, and in some of other businesses, if we had been able to produce it. And so as we have more and more available labor, we've ramped up hiring and we obviously get people back after the end of their quarantine assuming that they're healthy. And so we expect that that will kind of get better a little bit as we go, but certainly over the next few months should be back to full strength in terms of people at least.
Thanks for handling my multipart questions. I was trying to keep up with Seth. Second question here. CapEx is light in Q1, at least relative to the recent history, what should we anticipate for a budget this year?
I think, if you look at Q1 being pretty heavy and Q2 being pretty light, you could probably average those and double it for the second quarter in terms of what -- spending what we expect in the second half, sorry, what was spent in the first half.
As Andy mentioned earlier, we've got some, what we think, are really attractive growth CapEx projects that are coming up. And so, we're pretty excited about those. But, as you might expect, that will cost us some money.
Thank you.
Thank you. The good news there, Phil, is we have a cash balance that exceeds $700 million right now. So we're in a good spot to take advantage of those CapEx projects, as well as other capital allocation opportunities.
Thanks, Andy.
Your next question comes from line of John Tumazos with John Tumazos Independent. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you very much. Have you been able to get enough of each grade of steel or have you had to turn down any customer orders, because there's not enough steel?
John, the market is very, very tight and we are having conversations with our mill partners and our customers every single day, trying to get everybody what they need and, ultimately, our mill partners are doing the same thing for us.
And so, without getting into specifics, let's just stay, it's a very challenging time for everybody in this ecosystem and everybody is aware of where we are and is trying to level best to take care of customers, whoever those customers might be and get through this as quickly as we can.
Can you give us any insight as to whether hot rolled or cold rolled or galvanized is tighter, whether it's easier to get steel for your processing in Indiana or Ohio, versus Buffalo or somewhere else, or anything like that?
I think the answer is, it's not as easy to get steel as we like anywhere. There are certainly pockets where geography matters, but overall, we're doing everything we can and we know our partners are doing the same. So, we probably can't reliably give you any more specificity than that, John.
Four or five times over the years I've done a private placement or tried to help out a new company. I confess I haven't had one as good as your $2 million in Nikola. Is there a desire on your part or any rationale to lend them a few managers whenever they're in a busy phase, say, trying to get something done?
Yes. John, we have been essentially a passive investor in Nikola since, probably, 2016 The company -- we helped start the company, we seeded it with capital and then maybe the best way to say it is, we set them free. They went kind of their separate ways and started raising third-party capital outside of us. And so, we have not been involved operationally at all or financially beyond our original investments.
So, in fact, we got our $2 million investment paid back two or three years ago. So we really haven't even had capital at risk since then. We have a lot of respect for Mr. Russell, but he's a very capable guy and he's built a nice team over there. And I think they’re working feverishly to get their product to market.
Presumably you still own your 7 million shares the same as the lock up through November 30.
That's correct.
With their GM thing having fallen away, presumably, they need to raise the money through a public offering. Do you think that you'd be willing to say put 10% of your recent proceeds, or $50 million into their next financing to help them along?
Well, they don't need capital right now, John. They have $800 million or $900 million of cash on their balance sheet and their burn rate is far less than that. So now to the extent they do need to raise capital down the road, I don't think that's -- we're not large private equity investors. This was a strategic investment for us around a product line that we were in and around at the time which was all fuel systems. So that's typically the way we do investments. We don't invest in large public companies.
Thank you.
[Operator Instructions] Your next question comes from the line of John Tumazos with John Tumazos Independent. Please proceed with your question.
Is the increase in the minority interest deduction from net income because of the profitability of the Samuel JV recently been acquired and expanded or…
Mostly yes. You're correct John. It is a reflection of the strength and improvement in our majority owned JVs which include TWB, WSP and the Worthington Samuel Coil Processing venture, as well as Spartan.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from the line of Seth Rosenfeld with Exane BNP. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. Just one follow-up, please. When we look at the two JVs WAVE and ClarkDietrich that are most construction exposed, are you able to comment at all on current demand trends? I think last quarter, you spoke about some of the headwinds for non-resi and offices things of that sort. Are you seeing any meaningful weakness across those two businesses?
So I would not say meaningful weakness Seth in any other way other than kind of a slow recovery from the trough in April May. I think WAVE's with volumes were down 5% quarter-over-quarter and their profitability was down slightly. So we certainly see them continuing to recover with GDP and with construction, but still below where they were this time last year.
Okay. Thank you very much.
And at this time there are no further questions in queue. I turn the call back over to the presenters for any closing remarks.
All right. Well thanks everyone for joining us today. I hope that everyone listening has a safe and happy holiday season and get a chance to enjoy some quality time with your family. We look forward to speaking to you again after the New Year.
Thanks everyone.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.