Superior Industries International, Inc. (SUP) Q3 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

Superior Industries International, Inc. (NYSE:SUP) Q3 2022 Earnings Conference Call November 3, 2022 9:00 AM ET

Company Participants

Joanne Finnorn – Senior Vice President, Investor Relations

Majdi Abulaban – President & Chief Executive Officer

Tim Trenary – Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Conference Call Participants

Gary Prestopino – Barrington Research

Operator

Hello, and welcome to Superior Industries Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Teleconference Call. My name is Priscilla and I’ll be your coordinator for today’s event. Please note this call is being recorded and your lines will be on listen-only. However, you’ll have the opportunity to ask questions at the end during the Q&A session. [Operator Instructions]

We are joined today this morning by Majdi Abulaban, President and CEO; Tim Trenary, Executive Vice President and CFO; and Joanne Finnorn, Senior Vice President Investor Relations.

I will now hand you over to your host, Ms. Joanne Finnorn to begin today’s conference. Thank you.

Joanne Finnorn

Good morning, everyone and welcome to our third quarter earnings call. During our call this morning, we will be referring to our earnings presentation which along with our earnings release is available on the Investor Relations section of Superior’s website. I am joined on the call by Majdi Abulaban, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Tim Trenary, our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.

Before I turn the call over to Majdi, I would like to remind everyone that any forward-looking statements contained in this presentation or commented on today are subject to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Please refer to slide 2 of this presentation for the full safe harbor statement and to the company’s SEC filings, including the company’s current annual report on Form 10-K for a more complete discussion of forward-looking statements and risk factors.

We will also be discussing various non-GAAP measures today. These non-GAAP measures exclude the impact of certain items and therefore are not calculated in accordance with US GAAP. Reconciliations of these measures to the most directly comparable US GAAP measures can be found in the appendix of this presentation.

With that, I’ll turn the call over to Majdi to provide a business and portfolio update.

Majdi Abulaban

Thanks Joanne, and thanks everyone for joining our call today to review our first quarter results. I’ll begin on slide 5 with the highlights.

Our team delivered another quarter of solid results, including double-digit growth in value-added sales and adjusted EBITDA, along with substantial margin and content per wheel expansion; this while facing continued industry supply chain disruptions, depressed volumes and commodity cost increases.

In line with the plan we laid out in our value creation road map, we have remained focused on driving operational improvements across the enterprise while continuing to collaborate with customers and suppliers on inflationary cost recoveries and other cost reduction solutions.

We also continue to leverage our differentiated portfolio to capture demand for premium wheels expanding content on wheel in the quarter by 10%. These combined efforts have enabled us to achieve EBITDA margins on par with pre-pandemic levels while overcoming persistent macroeconomic headwinds, including inflationary cost increases as well as unfavorable FX.

This is a testament to the capabilities of our leadership team as well as our operational strength. While these headwinds continue to weigh in on our operating environment, we are seeing some signs of improvement in industry production, which we expect to continue heading into 2023.

During the quarter, we also maintained focus on cash generation and preservation through prudence with capital expenditures and working capital management. This has enabled us to achieve an historic low net debt of $456 million and to maintain strong liquidity of $283 million.

Moving on to slide 6, which highlights regional industry production. While industry production is improving with notable increases on a year-over-year basis, in both North America and Europe, sequential comps actually point to continued industry supply chain challenges.

Having said that, demand for our innovative portfolio of products continues to play out manifesting itself in sustained growth above market. As I mentioned last time, this trajectory has not necessarily been linear, but it has equated to long-term outperformance and profitable growth. In fact, our portfolio has delivered a compound annual growth rate of 7% since early 2019.

We expect this trajectory to continue as markets recover further. In addition to recovering markets our ongoing focus on enhancing our portfolio technology will continue to serve as a tailwind driving growth over market. Consumer demand for lighter and larger wheels with premium finishes has remained strong and our ability to meet this demand has been a key driver in our long-term outperformance.

Moving on to slide 7 to address our current operating environment. While global industry production remains significantly below pre-COVID levels due to the lingering challenges addressed on the left side of this chart, we are beginning to see some improvements. Compared to prior year, global production volumes in our markets increased 28%, supported in part by the easing of semiconductor supply chain constraints.

That said, we expect the tailwinds shown here, including low dealer inventory and record aging fleet and pent-up demand to continue to propel our business forward. And while an inflation-driven demand destruction scenario is plausible, we do not see that playing out.

On to slide 8 to discuss our progress against our value creation road map. Our team continues to do an outstanding job executing on the priorities laid out on this slide. This is evidenced by the strong financial performance we have delivered throughout the year. In fact, I just came back from a visit to our operations in Mexico, where we are operating at best-in-class quality levels and where our team is taking continuous improvement to a whole new level.

Dozens of master black belts, black belts and green belts, solving problems and delivering exciting bottom line savings. A case in point, our oldest plant in Mexico, recently received a quality award from Nissan and was named GM Supplier of the Year. We are very proud of their achievements.

Equally important is the commercial discipline, we have instituted throughout the company. This is not a priority of our sales team only. It is the priority of the entire organization. Teaming up with customers on cost reduction ideas as well as collaborating on cost recovery dialogues. Here, we have made very good progress.

In terms of profitable growth our portfolio continues to play out. And as I mentioned last time now more than ever and it’s exciting here our global-to-local manufacturing footprint continues to be the choice for customers pursuing localization in region.

In fact, just this week, we launched a localization effort in North America of a major program for a European OEM operating in the US. Again another exciting evolution here of the strategic value of our footprint our in-region footprint.

Slide nine provides a bit more color on the drivers of our long-term content per wheel growth. So, adoption of electrification, lightweighting, aerodynamics, and consumer preference for larger wheels with premium finishes continues to accelerate. A case in point.

Since 2019, we have tripled the number of wheels with lightweighting applications in North America and doubled the same in Europe. Further, our premium wheel mix grew from 35% in 2019 to 49% now. And in fact if you look at the wheels larger than 19 inches that has gone from 19% to 52%. So, in total adoption of these technologies has enabled us to deliver a staggering 30% increase in content per wheel over the last few years.

Slide 10 showcases some of our most recent launches reflecting increasing adoption of our premium offerings among key OEM customers on a wide range of platforms from traditional internal combustion vehicles to electric vehicles including the Ford Mach-E and Mercedes G-Class shown on this slide. These product launches continue to reflect the evolution of consumer preference as the market continues to move towards our premium offerings.

Turning on to slide 11, which highlights the collective effort of the Superior team. These are tangible results tangible results of executing our strategic priorities. With unit shipments still historically low compared to pre-COVID levels we expanded EBITDA margins net sales per wheel and content per wheel. This demonstrates the agility of our business as we are achieving these results in a volatile market environment and also demonstrates the substantial upside ahead as industry volumes improve.

So, slide 12 is actually the same information but it’s on a year-to-date basis. It highlights a couple of things. It highlights the lumpy nature of customer recoveries. But more importantly, it highlights the run rate EBITDA of our business which if you go back historically in a normal volume environment is about 25% a year. So, we’re there.

Slide 13 addresses our full year 2022 outlook. We are maintaining a conservative view of industry vehicle production volumes versus current IHS outlook and we expect modest industry improvements for the remainder of the year. In line with these expectations our guidance remains unchanged and has not changed all year with adjusted EBITDA anticipated in the range of $165 million to $185 million and cash flow from operations of $105 million to $150 million. Tim will elaborate on our expectations further in his remarks.

In closing, I am proud of our team’s performance in this past quarter and throughout the year. We are in the third year of industry depressed volumes and supply chain disruptions. We have executed day-in and day-out in the face of these challenges. We look forward to continuing this momentum and to generating further value for our shareholders as the year comes to a close.

And now I will turn the call over to Tim. Tim?

Tim Trenary

Thank you, Majdi and good morning everyone. Commodity cost increases especially the cost to alloy aluminum and the cost of energy general inflation and global supply chain instability and constraints continue to burden the company’s cost structure.

The cost of energy has however come down from recent highs and the stability of global supply chains has generally improved. Light vehicle production in our markets continues to be depressed due to component shortages affecting our customers’ vehicle production.

ECI, our established and disciplined Enterprise Cost Improvement program supported by our expanding Lean Six Sigma capabilities what we refer to internally as CI or continuous improvement, continues to support our financial performance and operations in this business environment. We are pleased with the execution of our cost-out programs and the performance of our manufacturing commercial and procurement teams.

Let’s look at slide 15, Third Quarter Financial Summary. The company sold 3.8 million wheels in the quarter 8% more than in the prior year period. Net sales increased to $406 million for the quarter compared to $311 million in the prior year period. The increase in net sales is primarily from higher aluminum cost pass-through to our customers.

The cost of aluminum and the cost to alloy the metal remains elevated, has come down from recent highs. Value-added sales increased to $178 million for the quarter compared to $162 million in the prior year period due in large part to more wheels sold, but also customer recoveries of inflation offset in part by the weaker euro.

We reported a net loss of $0.4 million for the third quarter or a loss per diluted share of $0.35 compared to a net loss of $7 million or a loss of $0.61 per diluted share in the prior year period.

The year-over-year sales bridge is on slide 16. Volume, price, and mix benefited value-added sales by $31 million in the quarter in large part because of the higher wheel sales compared to the third quarter of last year and recoveries of cost inflation.

Aluminum costs passed through to our customers was up $79 million compared to the prior year because of the elevated cost of aluminum. And the weaker euro burden value-added sales by $15 million.

On slide 17, adjusted EBITDA increased to $36 million in the quarter compared to $30 million in the prior year period. The adjusted EBITDA margin for the quarter was 20% an acceptable margin on $178 million of value-added sales.

Volume, price, and mix and fixed change were inconsequential. Recovery of extraordinary cost inflation from our customers supplemented Q3 performance of $12 million. Metal timing was a $6 million burn in the quarter, compared to a $7 million benefit in the prior year period. The impact of metal timing tends to net out overtime.

Slide 18, third quarter cash flow, cash flow provided by operating activities was $17 million, compared to negative cash flow provided by operating activities of $46 million in the prior year period. This improvement is largely due to significantly better working capital performance in the quarter compared to the prior year period.

Net cash used in investing activities decreased to $11 million compared to $20 million in the prior year period. Capital spending this quarter is low, because of timing of expenditures. We still expect capital expenditures on the order of $75 million for the year.

A cash payment for non-debt financing activities was $4 million, flat compared to the prior year. Free cash flow for the quarter was therefore $2 million compared to negative free cash flow of $70 million in the prior year period.

An overview of the company’s capital structure is on slide 19. Funded debt was $577 million at quarter-end $39 million less than year-end 2021. The decrease results primarily from the weaker euro and therefore depreciation of the euro-denominated debt.

Net debt decreased to $456 million, $47 million less than year-end 2021. Funded debt and net debt have continued to decline this year and are the lowest since the UNIWHEELS acquisition.

At the present somewhat elevated cost of aluminum the company has a larger investment in metal on the balance sheet than is normal. We size this incremental investment at about $8 million at quarter-end. This will come back to us as aluminum cost continues to normalize. Liquidity was $283 million at quarter-end.

The debt maturity profile is depicted on slide 20. We have no impending maturities of funded debt. Revolving credit facilities which mature in May and October of 2023 were undrawn. The company is in compliance with all loan covenants.

The capital markets have pulled back, especially the public leveraged finance market. Fortunately the company isn’t compelled to do anything at this moment. And with the passage of time we intend to continue to improve our operating model, improve our financial performance and to delever the balance sheet. We stay close to our financing relationships and intend to pursue a refinancing of the company at the appropriate time.

The company’s 2022 financial outlook is on slide 21. The timing of the industry recovery and the Ukraine conflict could have a meaningful impact on light vehicle production in the remainder of the year and therefore, our financial performance.

The euro is depreciated vis-à-vis the dollar and has adversely affected sales and EBITDA, but has benefited the funded debt. Global supply chains continue to be unstable and are sometimes constrained but have improved.

The cost of manufacturing inputs especially energy are uncertain. Energy prices have however come down from recent highs. The amount and timing of the recovery of extraordinary cost inflation from our customers is also uncertain.

We do expect a modest recovery in light vehicle production in the remainder of the year and beginning of next year. Having said all of that, we expect to sell 16 million to 17 million wheels in 2022 with net sales in the $1.6 billion to $1.7 billion range and value-added sales in the $740 million to $800 million range.

We expect adjusted EBITDA in the range of $165 million to $185 million and cash flow from operations to be $105 million to $150 million. We expect capital expenditures on the order of $75 million. We now model a 35% to 45% effective tax rate for the year.

In closing, we delivered a solid quarter. Value-added sales were up, EBITDA was up, content per wheel was up and net debt was down. Discussions with our customers regarding recovery of extraordinary cost inflation are ongoing.

There can be no assurance that we will have continued success and the recoveries may be lumpy. Customer recoveries of extraordinary cost inflation supplement our self-help programs ECI and CI.

This taken together with the company’s demonstrated ability to maintain commercial, procurement and operations discipline should put Superior in a position to benefit significantly from the operating leverage in our business when light vehicle build recovers.

This concludes our prepared remarks. Majdi and I are happy to take your questions. Priscilla, back to you.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We’ll now take our first question from Gary from Barrington Research. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Gary Prestopino

Hi. Good morning, everyone.

Majdi Abulaban

Hi Gary, how are you?

Gary Prestopino

Good, just fine. Hey. In speaking with some other Tier 1 suppliers, they’ve said that their order patterns have been very erratic and are starting to improve. I would assume that you’re starting to feel that same thing, less erratic orders from your end users. Even some of these Tier 1s are saying the automakers order things and then just don’t pick them up in time.

Majdi Abulaban

Yeah. Gary, just two things and I’ll speak to the erratic nature of orders. Actually this year is surprising. I mean, we all felt that the automakers would get a handle on these microchip shortages.

Volumes have come in short of what you expected, what I expected far short of it I’d guess, right? The year was supposed to be a 20% year. And it could be just a 5% year. I would say that the erratic nature of orders has moderated a bit but it’s surprisingly still there.

And I think Gary, it’s largely because the problem now is not only a microchip problem. It’s actually broader to other supply chain factors that some customers that you’re aware of have run into a couple of months ago having to build 50,000 vehicles and not be able to ship them.

So I would say it has moderated but it’s still there. And the issue for us the issue for us is the erratic nature of these orders causes us to increase to incur costs; costs frankly that we cannot afford and costs that we are in discussions with our customers on recovery.

Gary Prestopino

Okay. And then, on slide 9, when you highlight all of the various growth aspects there with lightweighting premium finishes et cetera is that within your actual portfolio, or is that just within the industry?

Majdi Abulaban

No, no, that’s — actually the blue bars are our portfolio. The industry versus — this data Gary is versus 2019. So if empowers that 2019 on market, you would show that that’s down 15%, right? So the market is down 15%. Our lightweighting applications are up 15%. It’s a very exciting story. And actually our view is when you look at these drivers of content growth in our business, they actually accelerate. And in my remarks I went into a couple of statistics about if you compare lightweighting, where it was just 24 months ago versus now, it triples in some cases and doubles in others. But what I didn’t say in the remarks is what percent of our portfolio has lightweighting applications in it. It’s less than 15%. So we are far, far from where we can be and where we will be as these technologies continue to be adopted by our customers.

Gary Prestopino

Okay. That’s great to hear. And then lastly, and I’ll let somebody else jump in you signed a pretty big deal with Toyota. You announced it last quarter. When does that start ramping up? In 2023?

Majdi Abulaban

Yes, it starts up ramping up in Q — it’s not Toyota by the way. It’s — we didn’t disclose the customer actually. Sorry about that Gary. We did not disclose it. But it starts in Q2 of next year.

Gary Prestopino

Okay. I don’t know where I got Toyota then I must have heard some – heard from somewhere else. Okay. Thank you.

Majdi Abulaban

You’re welcome.

Operator

Thank you, Gary. [Operator Instructions] We have Gary again. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Gary Prestopino

Yes. Thank you. Obviously, some questions on the proverbial elephant in the room on your balance sheet. Do you have any number on what the senior notes are trading at in the market right now? They’re denominated in euros correct?

Tim Trenary

Yes, they are, Gary. It’s Tim.

Gary Prestopino

All right. Well, looking at it. Okay.

Tim Trenary

If I may Gary both elements of our funded debt the term loan and the bonds over in Europe what you referred to as the senior notes unsecured notes the fact that they trade at both is — are a reflection of the capital markets in general. In other words if you look at the amount by which those securities have traded down, it roughly reflects the amount of decline necessary in order to reflect the yield in the marketplace today of those types of securities. Said another way, it’s a reflection of the marketplace not a reflection of the marketplace’s perception of our paper.

Gary Prestopino

Right. But if I see on Slide 19, you’ve got them on the books at 213 million. They’re €217 million. That’s a translation thing. But do they trade in the market at all? I guess what I’m trying to get at is…

Tim Trenary

They do. They do trade.

Gary Prestopino

Okay. Are they trading above par?

Tim Trenary

No, they’re trading below par at a discount to par.

Gary Prestopino

Okay. Any thoughts to maybe starting to use a little bit of excess cash flow to start buying back some of the notes if at all possible given where the dollar is relative to the euro?

Tim Trenary

Yes. So we have given that some consideration. There are at least two downsides if you were doing that, because they are so closely held and therefore the market for them is so illiquid any transaction in these securities tends to move the value of the securities significantly. So that’s a roundabout way of saying is were we to undertake that exercise our ability to buy in these notes at the discounted price a meaningful amount of it that is not very great, because it would just in my judgment would just quickly move the value of the securities. That’s number one.

Having said that, if one considers the value that the company might create were it to undertake what I just said and to bring in what I would consider a small amount of the notes, I just think it’s better for the company to maintain the flexibility that it enjoys with its liquidity right now. So on balance to-date given where the notes are trading, we’ve decided not to do that. If the notes traded down further versus or if the euro depreciated further that might change.

Gary Prestopino

And what’s the yield on those notes right now?

Tim Trenary

We’ll have to get that for you before we end the call here. Jack, can you do that for me?

Gary Prestopino

Okay. No problem. I can even get that on the follow-up call. That’s all I have. Thank you.

Majdi Abulaban

Thanks, Gary.

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We’ll now take our next question from Graham Kramer from Faze Investment Advisors [ph]. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Unidentified Analyst

Great. Thank you. I think just a question, when I look at the value-add sales per wheel, obviously, not adjusted for the numbers you present here, it looks like North America that has declined let’s say 10% this year — $46 to $42, whereas in Europe it’s been going up quite a bit. Could you just comment on that trend? Is that mix, or am I doing my math right here?

Majdi Abulaban

Graham, a couple of points. First, these numbers are adjusted for FX, okay, just to be sure. Second, when you look at the year-on-year comp in North America, mix was very, very strong last year. In fact these guys blew it out of the water. So you see some moderation, some moderation this year and you see Europe catching up. Overall, Europe was always a higher contented story on average than North America. But the growth in both sides of the ocean is very, very comparable.

Unidentified Analyst

Okay. Okay. And just in terms of the trends, just looking at the unit sales again I see — I mean obviously, Europe is weak. I know there’s a lot going on over there. But we had a pretty big sequential decline in 3Q, which I don’t think is the norm seasonally. What are your expectations in that part of the world as far as just — or what are you hearing about how the demand is shaking out?

Majdi Abulaban

I mean, that’s a very good question. And Europe obviously has been a surprise for all of us, especially given what happened in Ukraine, right? So year-to-date Graham, if you look at Europe the industry grew at 2%, right? If you look at North America, the industry grew at 11%. So when you combined the whole our markets grew about 6% year-to-date. We have said, we think the year will close out more like 5%. That implies potentially a flat Q4. Q4 last year was stronger than Q3. What we are seeing is the OEMs continuing to struggle much more in Europe than in North America with supply chain issues. Actually to Gary’s point, not only we’re not seeing the volume, but also the erratic nature of schedules is still there and surprisingly there, Graham.

Unidentified Analyst

Okay. And is aftermarket is that affected here at all, or not? As far as Europe goes.

Majdi Abulaban

The aftermarket for us last year, last year was a phenomenal growth story for us, 24% growth year-on-year, largely because of a lot of — well I will say most of the market is served out of Asia not just China, but the rest of Asia. And there were a lot of transportation issues and we had to step in and help our customers. We actually gained quite a bit of share in that process. So what you see really is a moderation of where we were. Our position in the aftermarket is very strong overall in Europe. Market share-wise we believe we are number one. Our market share in Germany actually is close to 25%. We continue to maintain that. And that business has always served as an offset to some of the volatilities we saw on the OEM side. It’s a good business for us, but you’re seeing some moderation back to let’s say where we were in 2019 levels.

Unidentified Analyst

Okay. That’s great. That’s all from me. Thank you.

Majdi Abulaban

Thank you.

Tim Trenary

Gary Prestopino, it’s Tim. The bonds, the euro bonds are yielding today 15%.

Operator

Thanks for the questions. It appears there is no further question at this time. I’d like to turn the conference back to you Mr. Majdi Abulaban for any additional or closing remarks.

Majdi Abulaban

Thanks, everyone for joining our call today. In closing, I am very encouraged by our results this quarter and throughout the year. We look forward to continuing to [indiscernible] on our strategic priorities and delivering long-term profitable growth. To the Superior team, thank you for your hard work for your perseverance and for continuing to take care of [Abrupt End]

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