May 3, 2015
Executives
Jennifer Rice - Vice President, Investor Relations Boris Elisman - President and CEO Neal Fenwick - EVP and CFO
Analysts
Bill Chappell - SunTrust Jason Campbell - KeyBanc Jack O'Brien - CJS Securities William Reuter - Bank of America Chris McGinnis - Sidoti & Company Kevin Steinke - Barrington Research Sam Reid - Barclays
Operator
Good day, ladies and gentlemen and welcome to the Quarter One 2015 ACCO Brands Corporation Earnings Conference Call. My name is Tracy, and I will be your operator for today.
At this time all participants are in listen-only mode. We will conduct a question-and-answer session towards the end of this conference.
[Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this call is being recorded for replay purposes. And I’d now like to turn the call over to Jennifer Rice, Vice President of Investor Relations.
Please proceed ma’am.
Jennifer Rice
Good morning, and welcome to our first quarter 2015 conference call. Speaking on the call today are Boris Elisman, President and Chief Executive Officer of ACCO Brands Corporation; and Neal Fenwick, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Slides that accompany this call have been posted to the Investor Relations section of accobrands.com. These slides provide detailed information to supplement this call.
When speaking to quarterly results, we may refer to adjusted results. Adjusted results exclude restructuring, and apply a normalized effective tax rate of 35%.
Schedules of adjusted results and other non-GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are in this morning’s press release. Forward-looking statements made during the call are based on certain risks and uncertainties, and our actual plans, actions and results could differ materially.
Please refer to our press release and SEC filings for an explanation of certain of these risk factors and assumptions. Our forward-looking statements are made as of today’s date and we assume no obligation to update them going forward.
Following our prepared remarks, we will hold a Q&A session. Now, it’s my pleasure to turn the call over to Boris Elisman.
Boris Elisman
Thank you, Jennifer, and good morning, everyone. As we remind you each year at this time, due to sales seasonality, the first quarter is typically our lowest revenue quarter, as well as one that generates a small loss.
We earn all of our profit in the second through fourth quarters. With that in mind, I'll keep my comments relatively brief on this call.
In total, the quarter came in about where we expected. North American computer products were in line or even slightly better than our expectations.
But international results were worse than expected. Overall, net sales declined 12% versus the prior year, and on a constant currency basis, sales decrease 6%.
Our adjusted loss improved to $0.04 a share from $0.05 a share a year ago, primarily because of our continuing disciplined approach to managing costs. On as segment basis, North America sales were down 3% or down 1% on a constant currency basis.
The 1% decline was achieved despite more than 300 retail store closures by our two largest customers and the U.S. West Coast port disruption, which impacted many companies importing finished goods from Asia, in which impacted both, our North America and computer product segments.
Profits in North America improved significantly by $6 million, driven by cost reduction in productivity initiatives. In the U.S., sales were flat, as growth with wholesalers, independents, mass and e-tail offset declines in the office super stores.
Looking forward, we’re expecting as good back-to-school season from sell-in perspective, at least comparable to what we experienced last year in North America. The international segment was the biggest driver of the quarter sales decline.
Total sales were down 24% or 12% on a constant currency basis. Brazil accounted for the majority of the decline.
We saw a small decline in Europe and Asia-Pacific with other markets relatively flat or slightly positive. International operating income was down $5 million, mostly due to declines in Brazil.
We have raised prices in our international markets to help offset the impact of foreign currency translation and our cost of goods sold. The benefits of those increases will be seen more as the year goes on.
We will also try to delay the impact of currency movements and our inventory purchases through hedges. So while we are effectively managing the impact of foreign currency translation and our cost of goods sold, overall foreign currency translation is still expected to have a meaningful impact on our total company results for the year.
We commented on the slowdown in Brazil during the Q3 and Q4 2014 earning calls. The slowdown is a result of a deteriorating economic situation in the country and lower business and consumer confidence due to a host of issues, including high inflation, contested elections and major political corruption scandals and high levels consumer debt.
During last Q3 and especially Q4, we saw our sales growth moderate due to conservative inventory holding strategies that many of our customers pursued in light of these issues. In January, which is typically a strong back-to-school shipment and replenishment month, we saw much lower sales than in prior year as customers chose to be out of stock rather than hold excess inventory after the season.
Our sales in Brazil were down almost $14 million in the quarter or $11 million at constant currency. While we anticipate recovering some of those sales in the remainder of the year, we will not recover all of them.
Our computer products segment showed stabilization with constant currency sales declines slowing to 6% and operating income showing a solid improvement on a constant currency basis. We are pleased with our execution against our strategy of shifting away from commoditized tablet accessory products and focusing on higher margin value-added products in that segment.
I'm pleased to report that we repurchased 2.7 million shares of stock in the quarter and additional 1 million in April. And we just completed an amendment to our bank facility which extends the maturity of the five years, slightly reduces interest rates and increases the flexibility of our capital structure.
Neal will provide more color on this in a moment. In terms of our 2015 outlook, where we iterate our sales, adjusted earnings per share and free cash flows targets.
Foreign exchange rates have deteriorated a bit since the time we gave our initial guidance, but it's early to know how that will shake out for the year. North American back-to-school sell-in looks promising, and we will have a positive impact from the shares that we have repurchased through April, that could offset some of the weakening of foreign currencies.
So net-net, we're still comfortable with our range of $0.70 to $0.74 per share, and reported sales declines in the high-single to low-double-digits. With that, I'll ask Neal to provide additional detail on our first quarter results.
Neal?
Neal Fenwick
Thank you, Boris, and good morning, everyone. Our first quarter performance is recapped on Pages 2 and 3 of our slide deck.
Q1 sales decrease 12% or 6% on constant currency. The underlying decline was driven primarily by our international business, due to Brazil as Boris noted.
Adjusted loss was $4 million or negative $0.04 per share, an improvement from a loss of $6.2 million or negative $0.05 cents in the prior year quarter. Foreign currency translation at a $0.01 per share adverse impact.
Looking at the specifics. Gross margin improved 80 basis points in the quarter to 27.7%.
The improvement in gross margin was primarily driven by cost savings and productivity initiatives, which contributed 140 basis points to gross margin and more than offset adverse impacts from mix in foreign exchange, as detailed on Page 3 of our slide deck. SG&A expenses were down 11% in the quarter.
Foreign exchange translation reduced SG&A by $3.9 million or 5%. The underlying decline was due to the benefits from our ongoing cost reduction and productivity initiatives, and lower pension costs of $1.7 million.
As a percentage of sales, SG&A increased modestly 20 basis points, as sales deleveraging of 160 basis points more than offset benefit from our cost savings and productivity improvements. Turning to an overview of our segments for the quarter.
In North America, sales decreased 3% or 1% on a constant currency. The decline was primarily, the office super store channel.
North America adjusted operating income improved $6 million to $5.1 million from a loss of $1.2 million in the prior year quarter, the result of cost savings and productivity improvements. In our international segment, net sales decreased 24% or 12% on a constant currency basis.
The decline was primarily in Brazil were volumes declined due to economic slowdown, reducing both consumer demand and channel inventory levels. Europe, Asia-Pacific and Australia had slight volume declines, but they managed costs well and posted profit improvements.
We raised prices in our international markets to help offset the impact of the weak foreign exchange on our cost of products that we sourced in U.S. dollars.
But due to the overall sales decline, international adjusted operating income declined $3.3 million from $8.1 million last year and margins contacted 300 basis points. Computer products net sales decreased 15% or 6% at constant currency.
The decline was due to the final stages of exiting low-margin tablet accessories. Despite the sales decline, computer products adjusted operating income would have improved at constant currency, but was essentially even $2 million versus $2.2 million a year ago.
Foreign exchange was a $900,000 adverse impact. Product mix is becoming more favorable as a result of our strategy to focus on higher margin value-added products.
Turning now to our cash flow and balance sheet. We had positive cash flow generation during the quarter and free cash flow of $41.3 million.
This was similar to the prior year first quarter. For 2015, we still expect free cash flow of approximately $140 million.
Once again, we expect our main cash generation in the third and fourth quarters. Q2 will be a cash outflow quarter, as it was last year, due to the seasonal working capital buildup for North American back-to-school season.
We used $21 million to reduce outstanding shares by 2.7 million shares. And as Boris mentioned, we have since repurchased an additional 1 million so far in April.
As a result of the year-to-date share repurchase activity, we have updated our expectations for 2015 share count on Page 6 of our slide deck to 112 million diluted shares. This does not include any assumptions for future share repurchases.
Turning to the amendment of our credit facility that was just completed. The purpose was to extend the maturity of the revolver and the term loan back to five years.
We also increased the revolver to $300 million from $250 million. The amendment also changes a few other provisions, such as increasing the foreign investment cap and accordion feature each up to 500 million.
This increases the flexibility of our capital structure. With that, I'll conclude my remarks and move onto Q&A, where Boris and I will be happy to take your questions.
Operator?
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Please standby for your first question.
And your first question comes from the line of Bill Chappell from SunTrust. Please proceed.
Bill Chappell
Good morning. Thank you.
Boris Elisman
Good morning, Bill.
Bill Chappell
Good morning. Just, I guess first on maybe talking on the international side and Brazil.
I think, we were kind of finished the back-to-school season or just finished there. And so, I mean, have you seen things actually deteriorate or are we kind of at just a stable level in terms of the office supplies and back-to-school supplies?
Boris Elisman
The season is finished. The overall season was down probably mid-single-digits as far as the sell-out is concerned.
Right now in Q2 and Q3 those are pretty low quarters, where we just supply regular office business. At the end of Q3, it starts to build up again for sell-in for next year's back-to-school.
But things are relatively back to normal. As we mentioned during the prepared remarks, our customers chose to carry a very, very little inventory not to replenish at the end of the season.
So right now the channel is pretty dry, and the sales in April are actually pretty strong due to that very low inventory.
Bill Chappell
Okay. And then switching gears, kind of looking towards costs and pricing, I would imagine you got some cost benefit already from lower commodities this quarter.
I imagine that will pick-up as we move through the back half of the year, but at the same point just trying to understand as you do kind of mid-year pricing adjustments, whether you'll be able to hold on to those gains, or whether you expect to have to take price drops and kind of what you’ve factored in, in terms of sales?
Boris Elisman
Commodity costs are fairly benign. Some are down and some are up.
We’re incurring a few extra costs due to the West Coast port disruptions in the U.S. We have to ship through the East and that is more expensive for our back-to-school.
And then on the international front, the very high appreciation of U.S. dollar versus most of the international currencies is causing some pain for us, and it will take us a while to catch up with the price increases to make us margin neutral.
Bill Chappell
Okay. And then last one for me, just on the share repurchase.
It's certainly nice to see, but I'm trying to understand on what your capacity constraint is probably not the right word, but what you're allowed to do in terms of share repurchase under the current agreement and what would need to happen and what constraints you have from expanding that going forward?
Boris Elisman
We are allowed to purchase up to $60 million a year, as long as our net debt to the EBITDA ratio stays between 2.5 and 4. We finished last year at 2.9.
So within that range, we can purchase up to 60 million shares or $60 million worth of shares. And then if it goes below 2.5, it’s unlimited.
Bill Chappell
So, is there a rollover from last year, or is it kind of…
Boris Elisman
No, it's an annual bucket.
Bill Chappell
Okay. Perfect.
Thanks so much.
Boris Elisman
Thanks, Bill.
Operator
Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of Jason Campbell from KeyBanc.
Please proceed.
Jason Campbell
Hey guys. How are you doing?
Boris Elisman
Good morning, Jason.
Jason Campbell
I wanted to talk about how much of a drag the office super store channel was for you in your North American, and then it seems like you did pretty well there mitigating those losses. Just wondering where some of your gains and wins were outside that channel?
Boris Elisman
Sure. I won't give a number for the quarter.
Overall we said that during the year, we expect about $40 million in sales reduction due to super store channel consolidation and store closures, and we’re on track to be roughly in that range. The decrease in that channel was mitigated by growth pretty much everywhere else, our independents channel and I'm including the whole channel and the wholesalers that supply them did pretty well and we saw positive sales growth there.
The e-tailers did really well. We saw big growth there.
We’re seeing growth in drugstores and that's a change from last year, so we're gaining share in that channel. And then our mass did really well.
So it’s really across the board outside of the office super stores that we were able to mitigate all of the sales declines in that channel.
Jason Campbell
And then real quick, when - you mentioned some pricing increases on the international side. Can you talk about where those price increases were geographically, and when they went into effect?
Boris Elisman
Yes, they are happening everywhere. The international currencies weakened pretty much everywhere and we had to take pricing action in January across the board.
We had taken pricing actions or have taken pricing actions in the spring, and February and March in some of our countries to try to catch up. And then we are taking additional pricing in some countries in July.
So given that on average, the U.S. dollar is 15% stronger right now than it was a year ago.
We can't catch up just with one pricing action given that magnitude. So it will take us a couple of price increases to get there, and we are in the process of implementing all of that.
Jason Campbell
Okay. And then lastly, can you remind us when you kind of lapped the decision to kind of deemphasize these commoditized products in your computer products division?
And then once you get past some of those headwinds what's your outlook for fourth quarter and into next year for that category?
Boris Elisman
We should lap all of that in the second half of the year beginning in Q3. Our assumptions are that the first half of the year will still see a negative sales growth in computer products as we get out of some of those tablet accessories, and we'll see single-digit growth in the second half of the year and a significant profit improvement as well.
Jason Campbell
All right, thank you very much.
Boris Elisman
Thank you, Jason.
Operator
Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of Jack O'Brien from CJS securities.
Please proceed.
Jack O'Brien
Good morning.
Boris Elisman
Good morning, Jack.
Jack O'Brien
I just want to take a quick question and talk about back-to-school and any detail you guys have on how that's shaping up for North America?
Boris Elisman
Yes. As we stated in our prepared remarks, we’re pleased with the current state of back-to-school sell-in.
We believe that we will be able to at least comp what we did last year. And last year if you remember, we had a very successful back-to-school.
So it looks promising. But remember, we don't know how much it’s going to be Q2 versus Q3.
So that’s not known. And then the sell-out is the important part and that has to be still delivered.
But from a sell-in perspective, we're very, very pleased how it looks right now.
Jack O'Brien
Okay, great. Thank you very much.
Operator
Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from William Reuter from Bank of America.
Please proceed.
William Reuter
Good morning guys.
Boris Elisman
Good morning, Bill.
William Reuter
I'm not - I don't have history with you guys in price increases. Can you talk to me about historically when you guys have increased price on a per unit basis?
What that does - sorry, out of - yes, on a per unit basis, what that does to your units?
Boris Elisman
You mean do the units go down?
William Reuter
Yes. I'm wondering what's the net effect on revenues, meaning - yes.
Boris Elisman
Yes, typically we only increase prices to recover costs. So we're not trying to enhance our margins from a power pricing perspective.
And given that, both, us and all of our competitors and most of our customers’ source from the same geographic regions, the cost increases that we are seeing are being seen across the board. So we don't really see a volume decrease as a result of that.
Our products are very inexpensive from a consumer perspective. So you expect to be some price elasticity, but it's not huge even just the low cost of our products.
So we don't really anticipate as a result of the price increases that we will see a volume decrease.
William Reuter
Okay. And then previously when you guys had talked about acquisitions, you had mostly been talking emerging markets.
I guess can you talk a little bit about what you're seeing there and the breadth of opportunities and what the probability is if you guys are executing something this year?
Boris Elisman
Bill, I can't give you any probabilities and numbers on that. That’s just too uncertain.
Just to remind you, we do believe that acquisitions are an important part of our growth strategy. We’re looking at three types of acquisitions.
You mentioned emerging markets. We believe those are important.
We’re also looking at some consolidation opportunities if and when those come about, and we're also looking to expand to some of the near adjacencies in some of our mature markets. So all of those types of acquisitions are on the table, but the timing is too uncertain to comment on.
William Reuter
Okay. And then just lastly for me with regard to your restructuring, which is expected to save $30 million this year.
I guess it sounds like you're on pace to achieve that. And just to make sure, that's what will be realized during the year, not the run rate at the end of the year.
Is that correct?
Boris Elisman
That's correct. We have roughly $16 million of restructuring benefits that will be achieved during the year and we have an additional $14 million, $15 million of Lean Six Sigma productivity initiatives that will be achieved during the year.
So the total is not $30 million.
William Reuter
Okay. Thank you very much.
Boris Elisman
Thank you, Bill.
Operator
Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from Chris McGinnis from Sidoti & Company.
Chris McGinnis
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question.
Boris Elisman
Thank you, Chris.
Chris McGinnis
I guess just a follow-up on the last question. If trends - I guess at this level of sales trends, do you see any need for additional cuts or restructurings?
Boris Elisman
No, we are comfortable. Our guidance or reiteration of guidance includes all of the puts and takes that we see.
So we’re comfortable with the current level of trends. As I mentioned, we’re actually pretty pleased with the back-to-school sell-in trends that we're seeing.
Some of the FX effect that were so pronounced in the first quarter should mitigate as we go into the year, unless something else changes. And if something else changes that we will take the appropriate action.
But right now given what we know, we believe that the - our current cost structure is appropriate.
Chris McGinnis
Sure. And then I guess just a question on market share and Brazil and any expectation.
Obviously, you had a laundry list of issues there. But just how your comfortability on your market share there, and maybe growth even in that kind of difficult environment?
Boris Elisman
Overall, we think we held onto market share in the meat of the market. We, on purpose chose not to compete at the very low-end of the market last year, which we deem not to be a good return on investment.
But in the meat of the market which is the mid-price point, high-end price points, we believe that we held onto market share. The decline in demand in Brazil is just a function of the overall market.
It's not the function of our performance. And we think that the economic conditions in Brazil will stay difficult in the foreseeable future and we’ll have to manage it to that effect.
Chris McGinnis
Sure. Thank you.
Boris Elisman
Thanks, Chris.
Operator
Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of Kevin Steinke from Barrington Research.
Please proceed.
Kevin Steinke
Good morning everyone
Boris Elisman
Hi, Kevin.
Kevin Steinke
Hi. So it sounds like on currency, you're not really materially changing your expectations for the headwinds in the year.
I think before you were talking about a 5 percentage point in headwind?
Boris Elisman
Yes, we talked about exactly, and in that range. Currencies got a little bit worse since our initial guidance, but we think both through operational performance improvements as well as through the share buybacks, we should be able to hold to the EPS guidance range that we provided.
Kevin Steinke
Okay. And then Neal talked about in his prepared comments employee benefit savings from, I believe lower pension costs.
Was that kind of a one-time thing, or is that something that's changed going forward?
Neal Fenwick
Our pension costs will be lower each quarter by a similar amount, so the amount that showed up in the first quarter. It's fundamentally part of the strategy we've been following for a while to de-risk our pension plans and also to get them into situation where they’re less of a burden from a cash contribution.
And that's obviously already rolled into all of the guidance that we gave.
Kevin Steinke
Okay. Should we still think about the advertising and SG&A expenses roughly flat as a percent of revenue, and then you think if you can get some gross margin improvement this year?
Boris Elisman
We think we will get gross margin improvement this year comparable to what we saw last year, and SG&A should be up a little bit versus prior year.
Kevin Steinke
Okay, great. Thanks for taking my questions.
Boris Elisman
Kevin, the dollars will be down, but the percent will be up.
Kevin Steinke
Okay. Perfect.
Thank you.
Boris Elisman
Thank you, Kevin.
Operator
Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of Sam Reid from Barclays.
Please proceed.
Sam Reid
Thank you so much for taking my question. A quick question with respect to cost savings and productivity improvements.
Obviously, you did a great job of kind of levering those expenses on the gross margin line in 1Q. Curious sort of how that plays out over the balance of the year from a relative standpoint.
Any thoughts around that? And then I've got one follow-up.
Boris Elisman
We don't have a view of how this will go quarter-by-quarter, Sam. Overall, we should see your 40 to 50 basis point improvement in our gross margin, but how it will play out it’s difficult to say.
Sam Reid
Got you. And then circling back to some earlier questions around raising pricing in international markets.
Looking at that question from a different vantage point, could you give us a sense to the size of those pricing mechanisms relative to those currency moves? Just trying get a sense as to what those puts and takes are.
Thanks.
Boris Elisman
As I mentioned, currencies increased anywhere from 8% for the pound versus a dollar or dollar versus pound to 17%.
Neal Fenwick
18% of the euro.
Boris Elisman
Yes, 18% for the euro, 17% for the Brazilian reals. And given the magnitude of those changes, it's a couple of price increases.
And some of the range 2% to 3% at one time and then 5% to 7% the second time and others range from 6% one-time and then 12% the second time. So we work with our customers.
We see what the market is doing. What the conditions are and we put the prices increases through.
The important thing is that we put price increases through. We have to recover our costs and everybody - every one of our managers knows that, and we have a disciplined approach for doing that and we are well on our way to execute it in 2015.
Sam Reid
Awesome. Thank you so much.
I appreciate that.
Boris Elisman
Thanks Sam.
Operator
Thank you for your question. I would now like to turn the call over to Boris Elisman, President and CEO for closing remarks.
Boris Elisman
Thank you, Tracy. In closing, I'd like to thank all of you for being on the call this morning.
While we’re pleased with our performance in the quarter, it is clear to us that foreign exchange and customer consolidation will continue to be challenging for the rest of the year. Nevertheless, I'm confident in our ability to meet these challenges through strong execution against our business plans.
I look forward to speaking with you on our next call and hope you have a great day. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. That concludes the presentation.
You may now disconnect, and have a good day.