TimkenSteel Corporation (TMST) CEO Mike Williams on Fourth Quarter 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Timken Steel Corporation (NYSE: TMST) Fourth Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call February 25, 2022 9:00 a.m. ET

Participating companies

Mike Williams – President and CEO

Jennifer Beeman – Senior Director of Communications and Investor Relations

Kris Westbrooks – Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Conference call participants

Seth Rosenfeld – BNP

Phil Gibbs – KeyBanc

Tristan Gresser – Exane BNP Paribas

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for being here and welcome to TimkenSteel’s fourth quarter 2021 earnings call. At this time, all participants are listening only [Operator Instructions. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today. Jennifer Beeman, Senior Manager of Communications and Investor Relations of TimkenSteel. Thank you. Please go ahead.

Jennifer Beeman

Thanks and good morning. Welcome to TimkenSteel’s fourth quarter and full year 2021 conference call. I’m Jennifer Beeman, Senior Manager of Communications and Investor Relations for TimkenSteel. Joining me today is Mike Williams, President and Chief Executive Officer; Kris Westbrooks, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Kevin Raketich, Executive Vice President of Sales, Marketing, and Business Development. You all should have received a copy of our press release, which was issued last night.

During today’s conference call, we may make forward-looking statements as defined by the SEC. Our actual results may differ materially from those projected or implied due to a variety of factors, which we describe in greater detail in yesterday’s release. Please refer to our SEC filings, including our most recent Form 10-K and Form 10-Q, and the list of factors included in our earnings release, all of which are available on the TimkenSteel website, where non-GAAP financial information is referenced, additional details and reconciliations to its GAAP equivalent are also included in the earnings release. With that, I’d like to turn the call over to Mike. Mike.

Mike Williams

Thank you, Jennifer Beeman, and I appreciate everyone joining us on the call today. 2021 was without a question of transformative year for TimkenSteel, the accelerating momentum in our markets throughout the year resulted in great opportunities and some challenges. Namely the supply-chain disruptions related to semiconductors and the COVID resurgence. However, our teams worked together to effectively serve our customers and remain committed to cost control and working capital discipline to drive year-over-year improvements in profitability.

I am proud of how far our team has come in a short period of time. And I thank the employees of TimkenSteel for their unwavering focus to transform our business. Now, turning to safety, our lost time incident rate improved in 2021 to 0.32, but our offshore recordable rate of 1.85 was slightly higher than last year. With the full engagement of our employees and the United Steelworkers, we will continue to focus on safety for 2022 and are implementing a number of new initiatives, including special attention to hazard awareness and training, safety leadership training, housekeeping, and continued safety protocols related to COVID-19.

Overall, we will continue to drive better safety performance through sustainable process and cultural improvements. As we close 2021 and start 2022, our end market demand has remained healthy and our order book now extends in the third quarter. However, we experienced a sequential decline in fourth quarter shipments given the planned annual maintenance outage at our Faircrest melt shop and unplanned downtime at the Faircrest melt shop, which created some disruption to our supply chain that our team has effectively managed, consequently, we are staying close to customers to fulfill their needs.

And with lessons learned, technology improvements, and the continued implementation of best practices centered around manufacturing excellence, I expect we’ll be better positioned in the future. Before I move on, a quick update on our customer pricing agreements. We are now almost completed our negotiation and are pleased with the positive outcomes. That said, we expect our average base sales price in 2022 to be meaningfully higher than 2021. As expected, we felt ongoing effects of the global semiconductor shortage on our mobile customer shipments.

Nonetheless, customer demand is high and vehicle inventories remain at historic lows. Production continues to be choppy, while most indicators point to a recovery of this market in late 2022 and into early 2023, we continue to serve our customers and remain flexible. Representing 50% of our total shipped tons in 2021, industrial demand remains strong. In 2022, we expect the demand momentum to continue and are focused on enhancing our product and customer mix, while growing our share within targeted markets, such as defense, construction, mining, and distribution, as those sectors are experiencing solid growth.

Lastly, the energy sector continues to recover and customers are ordering material to support drilling and completion activities rate counts continued to decline as a result of higher oil and natural gas prices. We are optimistic that demand will continue to improve in the coming year. As I have consistently stated, our objective is to deliver sustainable through cycle profitability, and cash flow while maintaining a strong balance sheet and creating value for shareholders. To support these goals, we have unveiled a set of strategic imperatives, which are centered around people, profitability, process improvement, business development, and our environmental, social, and governance aspirations.

Let me take a few minutes to outline these five imperative, and then Chris will speak to the financial impact of these actions in a moment. First, we aim to attract, retain, and empower top talent. We will invest in talent and leadership development at all levels of the organization. We were bolstering development initiatives from the leadership level down to the shop for employees. To drive accountability, our compensation is aligned with goals associated with the strategic imperatives and with living our core values.

It is key that we be held accountable for our decision-making and our execution while learning from our mistakes. Every employee fully understands that our goal is to achieve sustainable profitable growth. Through consistent and cross-functional communication, employees will understand how they can contribute to profit and sustainability. Data, knowledge, and efficient proactive problem solving will override hierarchy and bureaucracy. Part of profitable growth is to improve our cost competitiveness through manufacturing excellence.

By addressing the interrelated functions of manufacturing, maintenance, and supply chain, we will streamline and standardized processes. increased agility, and create a sustainable approach that will allow us to weather down cycles and take full advantage of upcycles. Manufacturing excellence involves implementing industry best practices, investing in technology, and engaging an open dialogue with our equipment manufacturers.

I’m confident this work will improve our manufacturing efficiency by increasing productivity, lowering our cost of nonconformance, increasing first-time quality, and improving yield to support customer demand. Another strategic imperative is the thoughtful pursuit of new opportunities to enhance our portfolio of products and services. Over the coming year, we will leverage commercial excellence processes to deepen our relationships with our core customers and standardize our approach, our product offerings and customer service to provide a more efficient and effective customer experience.

We know the ease of doing business is always a priority for our customers. Which is why as an imperative, we will standardize, leverage, and fully adopt modern information technology. By reducing technology complexity, we will become more responsive and flexible to support our customer’s needs, while introducing automation into our business processes to enhance performance. Lastly, we aim to advance our commitment to environmental, social, and governance. In 2021, we developed the communicated our long-term ESG targets.

We will invest in reducing our greenhouse gas emissions and energy intensity to progress towards the achievement of our targets. We will improve safety processes and behaviors to achieve industry-leading performance and remain committed to diversity, equity, and inclusion in our workplace. You can learn more about all of these efforts in our first ESG report, which is expected to be released in the second quarter of 2022. This is a pivotal point in our history. We are energized by our recent success, our path forward, and our business outlook. With that, I’d like to turn the call over to Kris. Kris.

Kris Westbrooks

Thanks, Mike. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. I’d like to start by thanking our employees for their hard work and dedication in 2021. We made progress throughout the year to establish and advance our strategic imperatives. These imperatives are aimed to deliver sustainable through-cycle profitability and operating cash flow for the long term as an outcome of our work in 2021, I’ll be sharing our long-term financial targets and capital allocation priorities towards the end of my remarks today.

Turning now to our financial results. On a full-year basis in 2021, net sales totaled $1.3 billion and net income was $171 million or $3.18 per diluted share. Adjusted net income was slightly higher at $172.7 million or $3.21 per diluted share. Adjusted EBITDA was $245.9 million in 2021, the highest level since 2014. These much improved financial results, reflect the continued success of the company’s ongoing business transformation. In the fourth quarter of 2021, net income was $57.1 million or $1.07 per diluted share.

Comparatively, the company reported a net loss in the fourth quarter of 2020 of $12.8 million or a loss of $0.28 per diluted share. Third quarter of 2021 net income was $50.1 million or $0.94 per diluted share. On an adjusted basis, net income in the fourth quarter was $42.3 million or $0.80 per diluted share. For comparison purposes, the fourth quarter of 2020 adjusted net income was $600,000 or $0.01 per diluted share. Adjusted net income in the third quarter of 2021 was $55.2 million or $1.04 per diluted share.

Adjusted EBITDA improved to $62.1 million in the fourth quarter of 2021, compared to $20.7 million in the same quarter of 2020. This significant year-over-year increase was reflective of the strong demand in raw material surcharge environment, as well as the company’s recent profitability improvement actions. On a sequential basis, adjusted EBITDA declined by $9.9 million as a result of unfavorable manufacturing fixed costs leverage, which I’ll discuss shortly. Turning now to the drivers of the financial results in the fourth quarter of 2021.

Shipments in the fourth quarter were 198,300 tons, a decrease of 14,400 tons or 7% compared with the third quarter. As expected, the sequential decrease in shipments was primarily driven by lower available melt capacity in the fourth quarter as a result of the annual Faircrest melt shop maintenance shutdown. Despite the sequential reduction in shipments, customer demand remains strong during the quarter with shipments across all end markets proportionately similar to the prior quarter levels.

Fourth quarter of 2021 shipments increased 34,300 tons or 21% from the fourth quarter of 2020, primarily driven by a significant increase in industrial and energy shipments. In the industrial end-market, shipments totaled 101,600 tons in the fourth quarter a sequential decrease of 9,400 tons or 8%. In comparison to the fourth quarter of 2020, shipments to industrial customers increased 38,300 tons or 61% reflecting significant year-over-year improvements in distribution customer demand. Mobile customer shipments were 84,500 tons in the fourth quarter a sequential decrease of 4,300 tons or 5%.

During the fourth quarter and full-year 2021, we estimate the semiconductor supply chain disruption negatively impacted our mobile shipments by approximately twelve thousand and forty-five thousand tons respectively. As mobile customers adjusted their operating schedules and delayed shipments to future periods. Lastly, from an end market’s perspective, energy shipments of 12,200 tons in the fourth quarter decreased slightly on a sequential basis, but were nearly three times the level of shipments in the fourth quarter of 2020.

Netsales of $338.3 million in the fourth quarter decreased 2% compared with the third quarter of 2021, while improving 60% compared with the fourth quarter of 2020. The sequential decrease in net sales is driven by lower shipments across all end markets as expected due to our manufacturing schedule, partially offset by higher base selling prices and improved product mix. The substantial improvement compared with the fourth quarter of 2020 is due to an increase in average raw material surcharge per tonne as a result of higher scrap and alloy prices, improved industrial and energy demand, and higher base selling prices.

Manufacturing costs increased sequentially by $13.7 million in the fourth quarter, primarily due to a decline in fixed costs leverage given melt utilization of 71%. The fourth quarter melt utilization was impacted by the planned annual Faircrest melt shop maintenance shutdown, along with some unplanned production downtime. Also contributing to the sequential manufacturing cost increase, was a $2 million employee cash bonus related to the labor agreement ratification completed during the fourth quarter.

In comparison to the fourth quarter 2020, manufacturing costs were flat. Now turning to SG&A expense in the fourth quarter of 2021, SG&A decreased $3.1 million on a sequential basis to $16.8 million primarily as a result of lower salary, benefits, and variable compensation expense. In comparison to the fourth quarter of 2020 SG&A decreased by $1.8 million largely due to lower salaries and benefits expense as a result of past restructuring actions. Recent restructuring actions will result in cash severance payments that were approximately $5 million in 2022.

As it relates to employee variable incentive compensation, 2021 financial results include approximately $19 million of expense related to the successful achievement of profitability and cash flow targets included in the company’s annual cash incentive compensation plan with cash payment expected in March 2022. Approximately half of this 2021 expenses reported an SG&A and the remainder is reported in cost of goods sold. This compares to approximately $9 million of variable incentive compensation expense in 2020.

Moving on to cash and liquidity, quarterly net income drove significant operating cash flow of $90.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2021, a $36.9 million sequential improvement. Additionally, working capital was a source of cash in the fourth quarter of $42 million with over half driven by lower accounts receivable given the reduction in net sales and strong collection activities to close the year. On a full-year basis in 2021, the company generated $196.9 million of operating cash flow and record free cash flow of $184.7 million.

We finished December with a record $259.6 million of cash and total liquidity was a record $510.7 million at the end of December. Regarding pensions, the company recorded a non-cash remeasurement gain of $22.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2021 as a result of the required year-end remeasurement of all pension and post-retirement benefit plans. As a reminder, the impact of pension and post-retirement benefit plan remeasurements is included in GAAP net income, but is excluded from adjusted EBITDA results. In total, as of December 31 2021, the funded status of our company plans was 87% up slightly from the end of 2020.

In terms of required cash contributions to our pension plans, we have no significant required cash contributions through 2031 based on current assumptions. Recently, we kicked off projects to transfer over $300 million of company pension plan obligations to insurers through the purchase of annuity contracts. This pension de -risking strategy, is expected to further strengthen our balance sheet as it’s completed in phases over the next several years. We look forward to sharing further details when available.

Transitioning now to a discussion of our long-term financial targets. Following the year of strong profitability combined with continued working capital discipline, we’re excited to announce our long-term through cycle financial targets, which incorporate the impact of the strategic imperatives Mike highlighted earlier. And the following comments, I will compare our long-term recycle targets to historical leverages. The historical leverages reflect the years 2017 to 2021 the five-year period marked by highs and lows in the steel business cycle. Similarly, our long-term three-cycle targets assume a five-year time horizon from 2022 to 2026.

For reference, details can be found in the investor presentation that was recently posted on our website. Our long-term three-cycle targets include the following five items: 1. We’re targeting an average melt utilization percentage in the mid-80s over the next five-years in comparison to 61% during the historical period. 2. We expect adjusted EBITDA margins in excess of 12% on average through the business cycle in the future in comparison to 8% on average, historically. Adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be aided by $80 million of targeted profitability improvement opportunities associated with our strategic imperatives that are currently in process.

Third, we expect through-cycle return on capital employed between 15% and 17% on average, and comparison to 11% historically. Fourth, we’re targeting capital expenditures between $30 million and $40 million with a balance between profitability improvement, maintenance Capex, and ESG projects. And fifth, we plan to maintain a net leverage ratio less than 1.0 times, reflecting our desire to maintain a strong balance sheet through the cycle. We believe that these long-term through-cycle targets are achievable and representative of our commitment to sustainable profitability and resulting operating cash flow generation.

With our recent strong financial performance in confidence in achieving our long-term recycled targets as the backdrop, our capital allocation priorities include investing in profitable growth, maintaining a strong balance sheet, and returning capital to shareholders. As it relates to our investment in profitable growth. In December, we announced our 2022 capital expenditure budget of $40 million, a significant increase from 2020 and 2021 spending levels. Over half of the 2022 Capex budget is allocated.

The high return organic projects with returns in excess of our cost of capital. Examples of such projects include the relocation of our scrap yard next to the Faircrest melt shop later this year to drive manufacturing efficiency. As well as a multiyear investment in modern information technology tools, the IT investment is expected to reduce system complexity, enhance the ease of doing business with TimkenSteel, and drive process simplification and cost reduction. Traditionally, included in our targeted Capex is an important investment of approximately $3 million per year to make progress towards achieving our 2030 ESG targets.

In terms of maintaining a strong balance sheet, we have no outstanding borrowings on our $400 million credit facility, and continue to maintain working capital discipline as evidenced by significant process improvements implemented and maintained over the last several years. Additionally, we have no significant near-term required cash pension contributions. Returning capital to shareholders is also a critical element of our capital allocation priorities. We recently announced the $50 million share repurchase program.

Based on our recent stock price, the $50 million buyback program equates to approximately 7% of our common shares outstanding. Our share repurchase program is intended to return capital to shareholders, while also offsetting dilution from annual equity compensation awards, which are valued at approximately $7 million per year. We look forward to updating you in the future quarters on our share repurchase program. Switching gears to convertible notes from a return on capital perspective. In January, we negotiated the earlier purchase of $5 million of convertible notes due in 2025 at the cash cost of approximately $12 million.

The approximate $7 million repurchased premium, will be excluded from our non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA reporting in the first quarter of 2022, as a loss on extinguishment of debt. The repurchase had the effect of reducing diluted shares outstanding by approximately 600,000 shares, in addition to reducing outstanding debt and interest expense. At this time, the outstanding principal balance for the convertible notes is $41 million and includes approximately $5.2 million dilutive shares.

We may repurchase more convertible notes in the future depending on the repurchase price and holder interest, among other factors. Both the share repurchases program authorization, as well as the recent convertible notes repurchase, reflect our board and management’s confidence in TimkenSteel’s outlook, and desire to return capital to shareholders. Turning now to our 2022 outlook. First quarter shipments are expected to be down slightly from the fourth quarter of 2021. Annual price negotiations with customers were constructive and are nearly complete, representing approximately 70% of the 2022 order book.

The realized increase in 2022 average base prices is an excess of $100 per ton compared with 2021 average base prices. Conversely, surcharge revenue per ton is expected to decline sequentially in the first quarter as a result of lower scrap prices. From an operations standpoint, melt utilization is expected to be at or above 80% during the first quarter of 2022. Additionally, inflationary pressures anticipated on non-search chargeable raw materials, manufacturing consumables, and other operational items in 2022. Based on current assumptions, the expected inflationary impact is in the range of 10% to 15% over 2021 average prices.

Lastly, from a cash outlook perspective, operating cash flow is expected to be near break-even in the first quarter of 2022. This is primarily driven by higher working capital following a significant release in the fourth quarter of 2021, as well as the payment of variable compensation earned in the prior year. To wrap up, thanks again to our employees who helped TimkenSteel deliver solid 2021 financial results. We’re well-positioned to continue to deliver strong profitability in operating cash flow in 2022, while executing on our strategic imperatives and delivering on our long-term through cycle financial targets and capital allocation strategy. Thanks for your interest in TimkenSteel.

We look forward to sharing our continued progress in the future. We would now like to open the call for questions

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

As a reminder to ask a question you will need to press star one on your telephone to withdraw your question, press the pound key. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. For first question comes from the line of Seth Rosenfeld with BNP.

Seth Rosenfeld

Good afternoon, congrats on strong set of results and thanks for taking our questions today. If I can kick off this with the link, uncomfortable with the question on the outlook for volumes. I’m a bit surprised by the guidance for volumes sequentially down in Q1 recognizing the bullish outlook on demand, normal seasonal strength in first quarter, you don’t station of the outages from Q4. Please walk us through the sequential bridge what’s driving that shipment guidance for the first quarter, please.

Mike Williams

Sure. So the biggest impact is we had some unscheduled downtime that did not allow us to position our working capital or our supply chain to maximize shipments to the order of demand that we have on us. Does that answer your question, sir?

Seth Rosenfeld

So was that the downtime in Q4, now impacting your working capital position in the Q1 shipments?

Mike Williams

Predominantly it was a downtime in Q4, but we did have some unplanned downtime carried over into early Q1. We have those issues resolved and behind us. And we will satisfy all our customers needs.

Seth Rosenfeld

Okay. With that in mind, then it could — I know it’s quite early, but on a normalized basis, assuming that you didn’t have any of those unplanned issues continuing through Q1, what would that imply for Q2 improvements, so we can understand, I guess, where the real demand is going to lie for the year?

Mike Williams

Well, again, we have strong demand. Our lead times are out into the third quarter. So that should give you a perspective of based on our melt shop capacity and utilization rate, similar to Q3 of last year could position you to where those potential shipment levels will be.

Seth Rosenfeld

Okay, very clear. And if I can ask a second please with regards to the outlook for scrap pricing that’s impacting your business. You commented earlier with the expected decline in surcharge revenues on sequentially lower scrap prices. Can you perhaps give us a bit of quantification the range of pressure there? And then also on the scraps we’ve seen meaningful compression of the prime versus obsolete scrap price premium. If remember correctly in the past, when there was a wide premium for prime scrap that aided your margin performance, what aid are we expecting going forward?

Mike Williams

So as you know, there — over the last quarter, there was significant scrap contraction between prime and obsolete. So we continue to see that effect going into Q1 and from my perspective, we’ll see what develops for Q2. Very difficult to forecast. There’s somethings out there that I’ve read recently. We’ve had some pretty difficult weather conditions, so the collections probably been strained. We see demand for scrap increasing domestically as some of these other [Indiscernible] be online for the rest of the year.

It’s really hard to predict Seth, but there’s been some compression. We expect further compression in the first quarter, as Chris mentioned in his remarks. very difficult to predict what it will look like for the second quarter.

Seth Rosenfeld

Either way, we can quantify how much of the benefits that may have historically been that we shouldn’t expect to repeat in the future.

mike williams

Again, very difficult to predict with lots of moving parts with scrap markets and some complexities. So very difficult for us to predict this beyond next month.

Kris Westbrook

It’s true, Mike. And just to add, if you look at the fourth quarter, for example, there was a $7 million headwind for us. Something similar to this, TBD. But January, February certainly, we see this compression. March TBD, depending on the dynamics we are all experiencing right now.

Seth Rosenfeld

Okay thank you so much.

mike williams

To thank. Thanks Seth.

Operator

Your next question comes from Phil Gibbs’ line with KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Phil Gibbs

Thank you. Hello

mike williams

Hello.

Phil Gibbs

Therefore, the target of 80 million improvement in the profitability of the execution rate. I see that $50 million is basically cost and efficiency targets, and $30 million is commercial. How much do you expect to glean in 2022? And how much of that is — maybe we get a little this year, we get a little next year. I mean, what was the timeline? Where are you at to reach that $80 million? ‘Cause obviously the $100 million you already have is apparently in the bag [Indiscernible].

mike williams

Good question Phil. I’ll start and I’ll turn it over to Kris. He’ll give you more quantitative information, but it spans this five-year period that we’re looking at, and I’ll let Kris give you more quantitative information on the timing of that.

Kris Westbrook

Hello. For 2022 we have a clear line of sight to 20% to 30% of that 80 achieved in our P&L in 2022 a significant portion of that comes from the commercial category in terms of product mix optimization as we As we said In the past, it has helped with the 70% targeting for base price contracts, and it gives us 30% of the work for our clients in the spot market. So that’s where we see for ’22.

And then the other piece is the manufacturing investments that we’re making this year, which are included in our Capex milestones, you’ll start to see those benefits in 23 and beyond for those significant investments.

Phil Gibbs

Thank you. And I just wanted to expand a little bit or clarify the comments you made about consumable costs, I think, you said 10% to 15%. So trying to think about what that relates to, let’s define it in terms of dollar impact or something like that and how that plays out over the year? I’m just trying to make sure I understood my thought process correctly.

mike williams

Sure. Most of our non-surchargeable consumables and alloys, we had them under contract for 2022, so we locked in those prices. This is what gives us confidence in the 10-15% range. To put it in dollars, each percent is worth about $3 million in cost. So you can calculate what an additional 10-15% inflation would be to our overall financial results.

Phil Gibbs

I get it. That’s really helpful and then on the EV transition side I noticed you had in your slides that you actually see it as an opportunity, which I think is somewhat intuitive, but maybe you can talk about.

mike williams

Sure. So what’s really come out as we continue to get involved in the EM work is that we’re seeing some vehicle platforms and that actually had more SBQs in them than traditional combustion engine platforms. So we see this as an opportunity because we can actually put more TimkenSteel in EVs on certain platforms compared to internal combustion ones. That’s why we’re highlighting this as an opportunity.

Kris Westbrook

To add that, Mike. The margin profile on this business assigned to us to date is also higher. You see higher prices on the part we have.

Phil Gibbs

Is it because the parts are more complex?

mike williams

It’s correct.

Phil Gibbs

Agreed. Thanks very much.

mike williams

And they weigh more too. Individual pieces weigh more.

Phil Gibbs

Good news. Thanks very much.

Operator

And that — again, if you want to ask a question, [Operator Instructions] And there are no further questions at this time. Do you have any closing remarks?

Jennifer Beman

No not right now. Just to thank you all for joining and we look forward to updating you in the future.

Operator

Thank you for participating. This concludes today’s conference call. You can now log out.

Jennifer Beman

Thank you.

Luisa D. Fuller