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Earnings call: MSC Industrial Supply revises full-year outlook amid sales dip

EditorAhmed Abdulazez Abdulkadir
Published 18/06/2024, 12:32 am
© Reuters.
MSM
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MSC Industrial Supply Co. (NYSE:MSM), a leading distributor of Metalworking and Maintenance, Repair, and Operations (MRO) products and services, has reported a decline in average daily sales (ADS) of over 7% year-over-year in its preliminary fiscal third-quarter results. The company has also adjusted its full-year outlook, signaling challenges in gross margin and website rollout delays. Despite these hurdles, MSC Industrial remains focused on long-term revenue growth and operating margin expansion, with corrective actions underway to address the identified issues.

Key Takeaways

  • MSC Industrial Supply's ADS fell by over 7% year-over-year in the fiscal third quarter.
  • Gross margin performance was below expectations due to slower revenue growth and a miss in gross margin plan.
  • The company is accelerating the website rollout and taking corrective actions to improve gross margins.
  • Full-year outlook has been revised to a decline in ADS of 4.7% to 4.3% and an adjusted operating margin of 10.5% to 10.7%.
  • Improvements in gross margin and revenue growth are expected in the second half of the fiscal year.
  • The next earnings call is scheduled for July 2nd.

Company Outlook

  • MSC Industrial Supply has lowered its full-year outlook with a less optimistic projection for ADS and adjusted operating margin.

Bearish Highlights

  • The company experienced lower-than-anticipated benefits from macro conditions and a decrease in seasonal uplift.
  • There is a significant reduction in the expected ADS step-up for the second half of the year, now projected at 1% compared to the previously expected 10%.

Bullish Highlights

  • Management remains committed to the long-term goals of the company, focusing on revenue growth and operating margin expansion.
  • The company is addressing the web rollout and gross margin issues with urgency and expects to see improvements soon.

Misses

  • MSC Industrial Supply missed their gross margin plan due to a slower ramp of revenue growth in their core customer segment.
  • The website delay has impacted marketing efforts and web pricing realignment, hindering new customer acquisition.

Q&A Highlights

  • The earnings call Q&A session covered gross margins, demand outlook, and website enhancements.
  • The company acknowledged the website issues and is confident in resolving them quickly, with improvements expected in the current fiscal quarter and early fiscal 2025.
  • John's resignation does not affect the timeline for website improvements.
  • Marketing programs are set to launch once the website user experience reaches satisfactory levels.

InvestingPro Insights

MSC Industrial Supply Co. (MSM) has been navigating a challenging fiscal third quarter, as reflected in their preliminary results and adjusted outlook. Amidst these developments, certain metrics and actions by the company's management provide additional context for investors seeking to understand the broader picture.

InvestingPro Data shows a market cap of $4.27 billion and a P/E ratio of 13.69, which adjusts to 13.22 for the last twelve months as of Q2 2024, indicating a valuation that may catch the eye of value investors. Furthermore, the company's dividend yield stands at 4.38%, underscoring its commitment to returning value to shareholders, a commitment further evidenced by its history of maintaining dividend payments for 22 consecutive years.

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For investors intrigued by these insights, there are 13 additional InvestingPro Tips available for MSM, which can be accessed to gain a more comprehensive understanding of the company's financial health and market position. Be sure to use the coupon code PRONEWS24 to get an additional 10% off a yearly or biyearly Pro and Pro+ subscription, offering an even greater value as you deepen your investment research.

Full transcript - MSC Industrial Direct Comp Inc (MSM) Q3 2024:

Operator: Good morning and welcome to the MSC Industrial Supply Fiscal 2024 Preliminary Third Quarter Results and Annual Outlook Update Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ryan Mills, Head of Investor Relations.

Ryan Mills: Good morning. Thank you for joining us for MSC's Preliminary Third Quarter Fiscal 2024 Earnings Results Conference Call. Erik Gershwind, our Chief Executive Officer; and Kristen Actis-Grande, our Chief Financial Officer are both on the call with me today. During today's call, we will refer to various preliminary financial data in the presentation that accompany our comments, which could be found on our Investor Relations webpage. Please note that the estimates announced today are subject to change based on the completion of the company's quarter-end review process. Let me reference our Safe Harbor statement, a summary of which is on Slide 2 of today's presentation. Our comments on this call as well as the information found on our website contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the US securities laws. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated by these statements. Information about these risks is noted in our earnings press release and other SEC filings. I'll now turn the call over to Erik.

Erik Gershwind: Thank you, Ryan, and good morning, everyone. Yesterday, after market closed, we released preliminary results for the fiscal third quarter and we updated our full year outlook. I'll provide color on this update and I'll then pass it over to Kristen to cover our outlook in greater detail. We'll then open up the line for questions. Before getting into the numbers, let me offer some perspective. Over the past several years, since the start of our mission-critical chapter, our management team worked hard to improve execution across all areas of the business. And those efforts translated into three consecutive years of meeting or beating our targets from fiscal 2021 through 2023. We are disappointed with our performance thus far in fiscal 2024. However, we are undeterred and we remain steadfast in our commitment to the long-term goals that we've set for revenue growth and operating margin expansion. Even this fiscal year, many parts of our business are performing as expected particularly in a challenging macro environment. The technical and high-touch portions of our growth formula, including implants, vending, national accounts, public sector and OEM are all executing well. We've isolated our performance challenges this fiscal year to two things. One is the slower-than-anticipated ramp of revenue growth in our core customer. And this is due in large part to delays in the rollout of our new website and search functions, which have a ripple effect on other initiatives like our marketing plan and our web price realignment. We are taking action to accelerate progress on the website rollout and hence unlock the path to core customer growth. Two, is a miss to our gross margin plan for the full rollout of our web price realignment. This was a highly complex project hinging on highly complex pricing and discounting systems. Our testing during the pilot phase did not sufficiently surface all of the pricing anomalies that we saw during the rollout. As a result, we experienced some surprises. We've gotten our arms around those. We are implementing corrective actions and we are beginning to see improvements to our gross margin trend. Looking longer term, we'll continue executing the initiatives that are delivering. We are correcting the two areas that hurt us this fiscal year. And we will continue executing a productivity pipeline to fund ongoing investments in growth. All of this is with an eye towards outgrowing the industrial production index by at least 400 basis points and growing adjusted operating margins to the mid-teens. I'll now turn to the specifics, beginning with a summary of our preliminary results for the third quarter. Average daily sales declined a little over 7% year-over-year and that's inclusive of a headwind of approximately 300 basis points of one-time public sector orders in the prior year. Gross margin improved slightly year-over-year, but was below our expectations, and is expected to be below second quarter levels by approximately 60 basis points. Operating expenses performed in line with expectations and were similar to the second quarter on a dollar basis. These factors combined, produced in GAAP earnings per share an expected range of $1.26 to $1.28 or $1.32 to $1.34 on an adjusted basis. Cash flow generation remained strong in the third quarter, keeping us on track to achieve greater than 125% operating cash flow conversion for the full fiscal year. Simply put, we are not pleased with these results. And this is especially the case for average daily sales growth and gross margin. The remainder of my prepared remarks will focus on explaining the performance and on what we are doing to change the trajectory of those two metrics. Starting with revenues. As you can see on Slide 4, average daily sales increased sequentially across our primary customer types with notable sequential improvement in the public sector. However, these improvements were not meaningful enough to achieve our flat year-over-year growth expectation for the full fiscal year. And there's two factors behind this. First, the expected macro improvement has yet to materialize. Conditions remain soft, particularly in the heavy manufacturing and metalworking related end markets that comprise a large percentage of our revenues. This is evidenced in output metrics, sentiment surveys and feedback from channel partners many of which have eroded since our last earnings call. Within our own business, only 43 of our top 100 national accounts showed year-over-year growth in Q3. And second, while several of our growth initiatives are executing to plan, the improvements to the core customer growth rate are occurring at a slower pace than we expected. I'll now address what we're doing about it. First, we're maintaining focus on the areas of the business that are delivering. This includes our high-touch solutions where momentum continues building, as evidenced by the quarter-over-quarter improvement of 4% in our In-Plant program count and 2% in our installed vending base. Another area is the public sector, where budget constraints are beginning to ease. We are winning here and achieved double-digit sequential ADS improvement during the quarter. An additional focus area is our OEM fastener business and our cross-selling formula, which is resulting in new wins and double-digit sequential ADS improvement. We remain committed to the initiatives tied to reenergizing our core customer. The single biggest headline here is our website enhancements, which are running behind schedule. We still expect some improvements to roll out this fiscal year, but not to the magnitude we expected during our previous call. We expect the balance to now roll out in the early stages of fiscal 2025. And this is also slowing the pace of our marketing campaign and hence the traction of our web price realignment initiative, as we're holding off from aggressively driving new customers to our website until the improvements are in place. As a result, this delay is impacting the timing of revenue inflection across our core customer base. As you may have seen, our former Chief Digital and Information Officer, John Hill, resigned as of this week. Brian Bello, who has been a strong leader within MSC's IT organization for over 15 years is assuming the Interim Lead of the area. Alan Yang, also an experienced leader with us for over 15 years maintains his role as Chief Technology Officer. To further assist our e-commerce efforts, we've added resources and some third-party expertise. I have confidence that we will deliver a high-quality upgrade to the web experience. The web pricing realignment was completed at the end of last quarter. While it is taking more time than anticipated to translate into growth, we continue to see encouraging signs in customer behavior that bode well for the future. These include improvements in customer Net Promoter Scores and website metrics such as exit, add-to-cart and conversion rates. Finally, with respect to marketing. As I mentioned, we've taken a more moderate approach to date than we anticipated due to the website delays. We are gearing up a more aggressive campaign to launch coincident with material improvements to our website to strengthen our position in capturing the expected benefits. We'll include digital marketing and social media campaigns, search engine marketing, supplemental print materials and personal outreach. The second factor that influenced our fiscal third quarter performance is gross margin. Roughly half of the miss is attributable to mix driven primarily by the public sector, combined with the slower ramp in core customers. The remainder of the gap is the result of unexpected drag from our web pricing realignment. As you will recall, our pilot generated an outcome that was roughly gross margin neutral. After a full rollout in late February, the following few weeks in March performed in line with plan, which contemplated some early gross margin chop that we saw during the pilot. However, April and early May gross margins took a step down from March rather than ticking backup as we saw on the pilot. Our root cause analysis identified that when we move from pilot into full rollout, the complexity of our pricing and discounting systems produced some anomalous results, including unintended extra discounting. The pilot which was smaller in volume and contained fewer product lines was not robust enough to surface these complexities. We've taken corrective actions to address this and we started seeing improvements in gross margin trending, as of the last week of May and into early June. We'll update you on our gross margin trajectory during our third quarter call on July 2nd. And I'll now turn things over to Kristen.

Kristen Actis-Grande: Thank you, Erik, and good morning, everyone. Moving to Slide 5. As a result of our third quarter performance, we are lowering our outlook for the full year. We now expect ADS for the full year to be down 4.7% to 4.3% year-over-year. As you may recall, embedded in our prior outlook was a meaningful second half step-up in our average daily sales rate that I will speak to momentarily. Given our reduced sales outlook and recent gross margin performance, we are lowering expectations for adjusted operating margin for the full year to a range of 10.5% to 10.7%. The gross margin, as Erik previously mentioned, we experienced unanticipated headwinds this quarter from our web pricing realignment initiatives combined with mix headwinds. Additionally, we tightened the expected outcome of certain other financial metrics with less than three months left in the fiscal year as shown on the slide. All of these fall within the prior range. And lastly, it is worth noting that we do continue to expect strong cash flow generation throughout the year and have approximately 2.1 million shares remaining on our current share repurchase authorization. Before turning the call back over to Erik, I want to spend a moment walking you through drivers influencing our lowered revenue improvement in the second half. The midpoint of our updated outlook implies a first half to second half ADS step-up of 1%, compared to the 10% we previously expected. The biggest factor of the decline is lower than expected benefits from macro conditions, which is also pressuring the typical seasonal uplift we experienced in the second half. The balance of the walk can be found on Slide 6. I will now turn the call back over to Erik.

Erik Gershwind: Thanks, Kristen. Over the past three years, our management team worked hard to improve execution across all areas of the company. We built a solid track record of meeting our commitments for many quarters consecutively. This year has been a step back and we are not pleased with our performance. However, we are moving swiftly to take corrective actions and to restore performance to where it belongs. We remain firmly committed to our longer-term goals of outgrowing IP by 400 basis points or more and achieving mid-teens operating margins. Before we open the call for questions, and as a reminder, the purpose of our press release and call is to update you on our preliminary results for the fiscal third quarter and the impact on our annual outlook. We appreciate your keeping questions this morning focused on those two topics. And then we'll provide more color and a progress update on our July 2nd earnings call and then in turn, a full fiscal 2025 framework during our October call. Thank you and we'll now open up the line.

Operator: We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Dave Manthey with Baird. Please go ahead.

Quinn Fredrickson: Hey. Excuse me. Good morning, guys. This is Quinn Fredrickson on for Dave. So I just wanted to ask about.

Kristen Actis-Grande: Hey, Quinn.

Quinn Fredrickson: Hey, good morning, Kristen. Just wanted to ask about gross margins. So specifically, the 60 basis points of negative variance versus your expectations in 3Q. How much of the two factors, the mix and web price solution are you assuming carries over into 4Q, if at all? And then I think you made a mention about exceeding normal seasonality or in line with normal seasonality for 4Q. Can you just remind us of kind of what fair normal sequentials are for 4Q?

Kristen Actis-Grande: Yes. Sure, Quinn. So on the first part of your question on the web price realignment, we would expect that 30 basis point headwind that we saw sequentially Q2 to Q3 to correct itself. So you should think about a 30 basis point benefit Q3 to Q4. I'll elaborate a little bit -- maybe on how to think about overall gross margin sequentially 3Q to 4Q, because obviously, that is just one component of that. So if you assume you got a 30 basis point improvement in price from the web price realignment corrections, there is a step-up sequentially in cost, product cost inflation, which is about 40 basis points. So netting those out, it's a decline of 10 basis points sequentially. And then we're seeing a little bit more mix pressure coming in the fourth quarter. I'd size that as probably 10 to 20 basis points down. And then to answer your second question, what we would normally see Q3 to Q4 sequential is a headwind of 40 to 50 basis points from mix. So that's kind of in a normal year based on what we see in product and customer mix, Q3 to Q4, that would be the normal amount of pressure on mix.

Quinn Fredrickson: All right. Thank you.

Operator: And the next question comes from Ken Newman with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Ken Newman: Hey, good morning, guys.

Kristen Actis-Grande: Good morning, Ken.

Erik Gershwind: Good morning, Ken.

Ken Newman: First, on the -- just the demand outlook. I'm just curious, obviously, you're seeing a little bit more headwinds within your heavy manufacturing and your core customer sector. Just any color on the impact of what auto sales this quarter were and just how you're thinking about demand in that vertical into the fourth quarter? And I think it also would just be helpful if you could just talk through with any more granularity that you can on the other heavy manufacturing end markets that's had a lot faster turn than others.

Erik Gershwind: Yes, sure. I'll take it, Ken. Look, I would say in general, and I don't have the auto numbers right in front of me. But in general, what we saw was, obviously, as you know, 70% of our business is manufacturing, the majority of that is heavy manufacturing areas like machinery and equipment, metal fabrication, our job shops, which are highly representative of our core customers were particularly soft. You could see that if you look at the IP and some of the sub-indices, that's where we saw most of the softness. And that's really reason number one for the core customer not inflecting as we expected was we were expecting more improvement there. And then again, reason number two was in our own control with some of the initiatives and particularly around the website that we have our arms around now and plan to fix quickly.

Ken Newman: Okay. Maybe just as my follow-up, on the 4Q OpEx, I think you're highlighting that being sequentially higher as a percentage of revenue. Can you quantify in dollars, what is the sequential impact of maybe some higher incentive comp or versus the other buckets of lower volume absorption? Any color there?

Kristen Actis-Grande: Yes, sure, Ken. So on the step-up, I break it down into really two main buckets. One is an increase in variable compensation, which is tied to nonrepeating benefits that we got in the third quarter. And I'd size that like around $4 million roughly. And then the second bucket is a combination of G&A from prior strategic investments and the strategic investments, which are currently impacting the P&L. And I'd size that around like $2 million to $4 million, could be as high as $5 depending on when we bring the marketing efforts online.

Ken Newman: Got it. That's helpful. Thanks.

Operator: The next question comes from Steve Volkmann with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Stephen Volkmann: Right. Excuse me. Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to talk a little bit about the price realignment, Erik, because obviously, others have done this in the past. It's been choppy for most who have done it. And I guess I'm trying to figure out how you have confidence that you sort of have your hands around the unexpected dilution that you saw this quarter relative to that initiative.

Erik Gershwind: Yes, Steve, thanks for the question. As you said, look, highly complex initiative. We entered the full rollout with a lot of confidence. Obviously, our goal was gross margin neutrality, which was an aggressive goal, and we had a lot of confidence in that goal. And the confidence was supported by the pilot results. So we were feeling very good going into full rollout. As we mentioned, essentially, what happened here, Steve, is the pilot simply wasn't robust enough to surface. We have a very complex set of discount structures and systems and algorithms and all of the anomalies didn't get surfaced during the pilot. That's the punch line. I will tell you that we have -- I've been pleased with the reaction of the team. Because these anomalies were in pockets and not across the board, it took us a bit of time to get at them. We do feel that we have gotten to them and the barometer of there, Steve, of how do we know is just seeing several weeks in a row with nothing new. Once we did, fixes went in, and we are starting to see the fixes impact in a positive way, impact gross margin trending, and that would be really late May into the current month. But the confidence would come from the response from the team, when we identified the issues, one; and two, having several weeks now under our belt of not surfacing anything new.

Stephen Volkmann: Okay. That's helpful. And I guess the follow-up maybe for Kristen is how should we think sort of sequentially about gross margin then? Is it better in the fourth quarter? Or how does it sort of stack up with normal seasonality?

Kristen Actis-Grande: Yes. So overall, slightly better than normal seasonality, Steve, and the way that you get there sequentially from Q3 to Q4, this is what we're expecting to happen in fiscal '24. You get a slight improvement from price of around 30 basis points. Costs, however, is stepping up sequentially. So net price cost should be down about 10 basis points and then a little bit more mix headwind down about 10 to 20 bps.

Stephen Volkmann: Okay. All right. Thank you.

Operator: And our final question comes from Patrick Baumann with JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM). Please go ahead.

Patrick Baumann: Hi, good morning. Thanks for letting me in here. Just wanted to zero-in on the website enhancements and your ability to manage this within the renewed time line given the leadership changes you disclosed this week. So first, what changes have been made already to the website and what's still to come? And then relatedly, you said something about adding resources to help support this. Does this require hiring new people from the outside? And if so, how long does it take to get new software engineers into the company to assist here?

Erik Gershwind: Pat, yes, sure. Happy to take this one. So look, I think just stepping back for a second, we talked about the core customer not inflecting in part economy, this is the big one that's in our control because the website and I'll talk to your specifics and give you some more color here, but the website, we had several programs, all lined up towards the core customer, not having the website ready for prime time really had a ripple effect on the other ones because we didn't want to launch the marketing and without launching the marketing, the web pricing realignment, it's hard to get as much traction as we want with some of our -- with new customers for certain. So this was -- this is the issue on the revenue side. What I would tell you in terms of -- at the start of the year, I think, we had highlighted two areas of focus. One is what we call platform, which is the transactional engine, the second being search or product discovery of how you find and buy. And where we're at now is most of the work on the platform is done. The big headline here, Pat, is the search function, which is the big -- unfortunately, that is the big step function change in terms of the quality of the user experience and what we're counting on for revenue growth is the search and product discovery function and it's running late. I would tell you that John's resignation really does not have an impact on our time line here. One, I guess, silver lining as it gives me a chance, this is an area that's near and dear to my heart. I go back a long way with the early days of our website to get even closer to it and to the team. So I have no doubt we can and we will fix this. What I would tell you is that the resources that we're talking about, we're not talking about new hires that are months away because you're absolutely right, Pat. I mean we are approaching this with urgency. So when I say assistance and resources, it's either coming from within the company or coming from the third-party assistance that I mentioned because it's got to happen fast. So what I would anticipate is some benefits to the search, product discovery experience beginning to roll out this fiscal quarter. And then others and probably the bulk of it, to be honest, will be early in the early portions of fiscal '25. And our plan is to -- the marketing program will launch commensurate with when we feel and our customers feel that the experience is ready for prime time and we're ready to drive people there. So I am confident we will -- can and will fix it and we're moving with urgency. So we're not waiting on months for new engineers.

Patrick Baumann: Okay. Thanks for the response. I'll respect your request for one question and best of luck.

Erik Gershwind: Thank you, Pat.

Kristen Actis-Grande: Thanks, Pat.

Operator: This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Ryan Mills for any closing remarks.

Ryan Mills: Thank you for joining today's call. Please reach out with any follow-up questions you may have. We look forward to speaking to you again during our fiscal third quarter earnings call on July 2nd.

Operator: This conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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