AstroNova, Inc. (ALOT) Q2 2023 Earnings Conference Call

AstroNova, Inc. (NASDAQ:ALOT)

Q2 2023 Earnings Conference Call

September 7, 2022 09:00 AM ET

Company Participants

Scott Solomon – Investor Relations, Sharon Merrill Associates

Greg Woods – President and Chief Executive Officer

David Smith – Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Conference Call Participants

Presentation

Operator

Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to AstroNova Second Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 Financial Results Conference Call. Today’s conference is being recorded.

I would now like to turn the conference over to Scott Solomon of the Company Investor Relations firm Sharon Merrill Associates. Please go ahead, sir.

Scott Solomon

Thank you, Kyle. Good morning everyone and thanks for joining us. Hosting this morning’s call are Greg Woods, AstroNova’s President and CEO; and David Smith, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Greg will discuss the company’s operating highlights. David will take you through the financials at a high level. Greg will make some concluding comments and then management will be happy to take your questions. By now you should have received a copy of the earnings release that was issued today. If you don’t have a copy, please go to the Investor page of the AstroNova website www.astronovainc.com.

Please note that statements made during today’s call that are not statements of historical fact are considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements are based on a number of assumptions that could involve risks and uncertainties. Accordingly, actual results could differ materially, except as required by law. Any forward-looking statements speak only as of today, September 7, 2022. AstroNova undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements. For further information regarding the forward-looking statements and the factors that may cause differences, please see the risk factors in AstroNova’s annual report on Form 10-K and the other filings the company makes with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

On today’s call management will be referring to non-GAAP financial measures. AstroNova believes that the inclusion of these financial measures helps investors gain a meaningful understanding of the changes in the company’s core operating results and can also help investors who wish to make comparisons between AstroNova and other companies, on both GAAP and a non-GAAP basis. Reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable GAAP measures is available in today’s earnings release.

And with that, I’ll turn the call over to Greg.

Greg Woods

Thank you, Scott. Good morning everyone. Strong secular trends, including increasing air travel and the growth of digital print for packaging, continue to drive demand for our products and services in the second quarter. We achieved solid orders growth with bookings up year-over-year and sequentially. For the first half of fiscal 2023 total bookings reached $67.3 million, just shy of AstroNova’s previous first half high setback in fiscal 2020. Revenue also grew nicely in the quarter, so less than expected the certain areas of our business continue to be affected by supply chain disruptions, higher component costs and increased freight expenses. We have taken several actions, including selective implementation of price increases to moderate the impact of those challenges.

Reflecting our demand drivers, we generated 8% top line growth in the second quarter. Our bookings increased 14% year-over-year and 7% from the first quarter of fiscal 2023. These increases were primarily driven by our Test & Measurement segment, with the continued production ramp-up of Boeing aircraft, especially the 737 MAX. An increase in military related orders, having considerably higher demand for our repair and parts services associated with the rebound in commercial air travel. Our Q2 service and other revenue was up about $1.2 million or 36% year-over-year to $4.5 million, a quarterly record for the company, demonstrating the importance of recurring revenue in this segment.

Turning to our Product Identification segment, Q2 revenue was essentially flat year-over-year, but up almost 8% from Q1 of this year. While we are pleased to see the accelerated pace of orders late in the quarter, the volume did exceed our manufacturing and shipping capacity, resulting in extended lead times, especially for some of our PI products and supplies. Over the past several weeks, we have improved our production rates and we expect to catch up on the delayed shipments and return to our normal lead times as we move through the second half of the year. We’ve also made good progress addressing the supplier quality issue that we discussed with you a couple of quarters ago, but affected certain models of our label printers. Having these printers offline at customer site obviously impacts PI sale.

Our technical teams are aggressively working the process of retrofitting the effected printers to quickly return them to full operating condition for our customers. Although taking these steps has resulted in some unplanned expense in the segment. For us, quality is paramount, customer first is the foundation of AstroNova operating system. Our priority is to make sure every customer has a great experience with our products. Within the PI segment, one of the areas we’re particularly excited about is the digital print for packaging market. The growth of this market plays directly into the strength of products such as the T3-OPX, our direct packaged solution for packaging houses and manufacturers. The T3-OPX is becoming the e-commerce printing system of choice for customers to create unique packaging using environmentally friendly materials to showcase their brands, while eliminating waste.

The global growth of the e-commerce channel is another important megatrend shaping our PI business. It’s also one of the reasons we are thrilled about the recent acquisition of Astro Machine. A leading manufacturer of printing solutions and automated equipment for applications including digital color label, promotional marketing material and branded mailers, a new market adjacency for us. As I noted on our acquisition call a few weeks ago, Astro Machine has attractive operating margins and a favorable operating expense profile. Culturally, it’s a great fit with our company. And the early weeks of the integration have proceeded smoothly and as planned. From a valuation standpoint at a purchase price multiple of less than one times revenue on a full-year 2021 and trailing 12 month basis, the transaction was also an effective and efficient use of our capital, checking all the boxes of our M&A strategy.

Now let me turn the call over to David for the financial review.

David Smith

Thanks, Greg, and good morning everybody. I’ll give you some comments on our financial performance through the first half of fiscal 2023. Please note that our earnings release includes GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation tables, primarily reflecting the CARES Act benefits that contributed to our results in fiscal year 2022. I’ll be discussing our first half results excluding the CARES Act benefits we had in last year’s second quarter. We believe this lens provides a more appropriate perspective on our operating results. But the GAAP results in the comparisons as well — well the GAAP to non-GAAP and the reconciliations are detailed in the press release and the related tables that are included with it.

At the midpoint of the year, our revenue was up about 7.4% to 63.3 million, driven by growth in the T&M segment. T&M revenue is up 47% through the first half of fiscal 2023 to $18.2 million, primarily attributable to the ramp of the 737 MAX and the return of commercial air travel as the pandemic continues to recede. As Greg suggested, our aerospace repair overhaul and parts product lines were particularly robust. This part of the business also has relatively higher margins than the average. Product ID revenue came in at $45.3 million through the first six months of this fiscal year, down about 3% from the prior year due to the issues Greg discussed.

Looking at revenue by type, hardware was up almost 16% to $17.9 million through the first six months of the year. Service and other revenue [climbed] (ph) 46% to $8.2 million, while revenue from supplies was $37.1 million, essentially unchanged from the prior year period. Combined segment operating profit came in at 7.1% or 11.3% of revenue, compared to $7 million or 11.8% of revenue in the first half of last year. Operating expenses remain under good control, through the first six months of this year they were $20.1 million, up about $200,000 over — on a year-to-year basis through six months and up about $400,000 when comparing Q2 to the same quarter last year. Most of the increase is due to employee-related costs as the business recovers. As well as some broad catch up after two years of COVID induced cost controls.

Our plan and expectation is that, as revenue recovers we will see operating leverage and operating expenses grew more slowly than revenue. So far this year that’s been the case, operating expenses as a percentage of revenue were 200 basis points — about 200 basis points lower than last year at 31.8%. Operating income was $2.0 million or 33% of revenue, during the first half of the fiscal year compared to $2.1 million 3.5% of revenue in the same period last year. As Greg highlighted, product demand remained strong with bookings through the first half of fiscal ’23 at $67.3 million, up about 6% from last year. Looking at revenue by region, at the midpoint of fiscal-year US revenue accounted for 61% of our total business, with international making up the remainder 99%.

Turning to the balance sheet, inventory has grown substantially since last quarter, up almost $5 million since the end of Q1, and has grown $7.6 million since the end of last year. At the end of the second quarter, the lack of about $330,000 in delayed T&M segment parts presented prevented shipments of about $2.4 million of product with the associated inventory of about half of that. Additionally, T&M segment inventory has also increased to support higher demand, part shortages and the needs to build buffer stocks to be able to respond to the demand pulses.

In the PI segment, there’s also been a significant inventory build as we intentionally moved to increased buffer stocks by multiple months in response to the numerous supply chain disruptions we’ve experienced earlier this year to make absolutely certainly could provide our customers with timely and consistent delivery of their consumables. Maintaining customer access to consumables is a critical part of our value proposition and the business strategy. We started to see some of those supply constraints ease somewhat recently and we’ve begun to unwind these inventories, but it will take a couple of quarters to accomplish this fully. As we discussed in the recent press release and conference call, we completed the Astro Machine acquisition after the quarter and we’ll talk about their income statement contribution and balance sheet impact in much more detail, but in our next quarterly call. But to reiterate, we do expect this to be accretive to earnings in the second half of this year, even after the effect of transaction expenses.

So I’ll turn the call back over to Greg now.

Greg Woods

Thanks, David. Let me close with three key takeaways from today’s call. First, underlying demand is robust with favorable secular trends creating tailwinds for growth. Second, we are confident in our long-term strategy as we continue to build on our track record of value generated M&A and new product development. And third, we have added and important strategic component with Astro Machine, which gives us expertise in automation and material handling, expands our color label printer offerings, adds to our domestic manufacturing base, increase meaningful cross-selling opportunities with other areas of our PI business.

With that, David and I will be happy to take your questions. Operator?

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Well, it looks like we have no questions in the queue. So I will turn the call back to Mr. Woods for any closing comments.

Greg Woods

All right then. Well, thanks everyone for being with us here this morning and enjoy the remaining weeks of the summer and look forward to catching up with you at Q3 or at one of the fall packaging labeling shows, most notably the [indiscernible] end of September and the Pack Expo, end of October. So long for now.

Operator

Thank you. With that, this concludes today’s call. Thank you for your participation, you may now disconnect.

Question-and-Answer Session

End of Q&A

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