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Carlisle Companies Incorporated

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Q4 2012 · Earnings Call Transcript

Feb 8, 2013

Executives

David Roberts – Chairman, President & CEO Steven Ford – CFO

Analysts

Pete Lisnic – Robert W Baird Matt McConnell – Citi Glenn Wortman – Sidoti & Company Ivan Marcuse – KeyBanc Capital Markets Neil Frohnapple – Northcoast Research James Kawai – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Ajay Kejriwal - FBR Capital Markets

Operator

Good morning. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Carlisle Companies Incorporated fourth quarter earnings conference call.

[Operator instructions.] I will now turn the call over to your host, Mr.

David Roberts, chairman, president, and CEO of Carlisle Companies. Sir, you may begin.

David Roberts

Good morning, and welcome to Carlisle fourth quarter and 2012 year end conference call. On the phone with me is our CFO, Steven Ford; our chief financial officer, Kevin Zdimal; and our treasurer, Julie Chandler.

On our website, you will find slides for today’s call. Those slides detail our performance in the fourth quarter and for the full year 2012.

I will review our overall performance for 2012 later in the presentation, but let me start by saying we are extremely pleased and proud of our 2012 results. During the year, we established new record highs for annual sales and earnings, with sales growth of 13% and EBIT growth of 54%.

This is the second year in a row we have established sales and earning records. I can’t say enough about the performance of our employees throughout 2012.

Their ability to generate sales of $3.6 billion and earn $424 million earnings before interest and taxes, was nothing short of remarkable. Let’s now turn to the presentation.

I encourage everyone to read slide two, titled “Forward Looking Statements.” Slide two details the risks associated with making an investment in Carlisle.

I also encourage anyone who’s considering an investment in our company to also review our SEC filings. Let’s now move on to the details of the quarter.

Turning to slide three, you see that our sales in the fourth quarter grew 7% to $845 million, while EBIT was up 46% as we earned $77 million. This was a new fourth quarter record for sales and earnings, despite continued weakness in our braking business.

Organically, we enjoyed 4% growth, with interconnect technologies, construction materials, and transportation products all contributing to our organic growth. An additional 4% of growth is attributable to the acquisitions of Tri-Star, which we completed late in 2011, Hertalan, which was acquired in early 2012, and Thermax, which we purchased on December 17 of 2012.

Food service grew as a result of price increases, but volume was down 1%. Brake and friction was down 25% as our customers continued to lean out the inventory in our finished goods channels.

Quarterly earnings were up 46%. Included in the 46% growth was a $5.6 million charge for a lump sum distribution pension payment made to former employees and a $2.9 million business development cost charge that we took.

These two charges negatively impacted EPS by $0.08 after taxes. Margin was up 240 basis points as a result of improved selling price realization, improvements in operating efficiencies and transportation products and COS savings compared to the fourth quarter of 2011.

For the fourth quarter, we generated free cash flow of $116 million, compared to $41 million in 2011, for a cash conversion rate of 241%. Our cash conversion rate for the year was 128%, as we generated free cash flow of $346 million, compared to $112 million in 2011.

Slide four provides you with a sales bridge for the quarter. Our 3.6% organic growth was from price, volume, and other mix changes.

3.7% of our growth came from acquisitions, and a minor 20 basis points negative effect was felt because of FX. On slide five, you will find our EBIT margin bridge.

The pension and corporate development costs reduced our profitability by 100 basis points while net price, and the impact of raw material costs, was at 150 basis points positive impact. Volume contributed 10 basis points, COS savings 110 basis points, and acquisitions and other operating improvements added 70 basis points.

As I said earlier, we earned $77 million in the quarter, which is a fourth quarter record. On slide six, we begin the review of our individual business segments, starting with construction material.

Sales grew 10% in the quarter as our sales rebounded from a slow second and third quarter. The growth we enjoyed is real growth, and was not specific to one region.

While Superstorm Sandy helped our results as we sold repair materials to waterproof roofs that were damaged by the storm, it wasn’t the only driver of growth. New construction in the Southeast, Southwest, and West, along with reroofing activity and higher polyiso demand contributed to growth.

The Hertalan acquisition added 2% to our growth, price and mix added 3%, and volume added 5%. EBIT was up 46% as we earned $66.3 million.

Margin increased 400 basis points, generating EBIT margins of 16%. I don’t think this level of earnings will become the norm for fourth quarter at CCM, but competitive price discipline, cost savings, and outstanding manufacturing execution in the quarter helped bolster our margins.

In 2012, we began the construction of two new polyiso plants. Both of these plants will be in full production by the second half of this year.

The Seattle facility has been producing a polyiso since the end of 2012, and will be in full production later in the second quarter, followed by the startup of our Montgomery, New York polyiso plant in the second quarter. Slide seven details the performance in the transportation products segment, where sales were up 5%, driven by a very good growth in high-speed trailer tires and power transmission belts.

Power sports, outdoor power equipment, and ag/construction were all relatively flat. The outdoor power equipment segment is still suffering from drought-like conditions that we saw in the mid part of 2012.

Transportation products EBIT was up dramatically, as we moved from a loss position in the fourth quarter of 2011 to a fourth quarter profitability in 2012. EBIT in the quarter included a $1 million charge that we took as we closed our Buji, China plant.

The plant is now closed and all production has been moved to Springfield, Missouri, and Fort Scott, Kansas. Slide eight details the performance of our braking business.

We are suffering from lower sales, because our customers’ heavy construction equipment and mining equipment channels are full of unsold inventory. Our sales were down 25% compared to 2011, and our EBIT margins were down 42%.

The management team did a very good job in generating 10% EBIT margins in the quarter, on a 25% decline in sales. This business will remain soft for at least the first half of 2013, but we think we’ve touched the bottom of the demand curve and do not expect it to decline from the current incoming order rate.

We have taken steps to manage our costs, but have done everything we can to hold on to our skilled employees, as we anticipate a pickup in orders later this year. While the incoming order rate has flattened, I don’t think that we’ll generate EBIT margins at the same level as the fourth quarter during the first and second quarters of 2013.

We expect some decline in margins, but they should remain in the high to mid single digit range. Interconnect technologies continued its rapid growth rate in the fourth quarter, growing 42%.

The Tri-Star acquisition anniversaried at the end of November, but we added Thermax on December 17. Our aerospace markets continued to be very strong, while test and measurement was down 19%.

Military sales were down 1% in the quarter, and while we’re not ready to declare that military sales have flattened, it appears they may have neared the valley of the demand curve. EBIT for the quarter was $16 million, up 57%.

Included in our EBIT was a $1.4 million charge for the acquisition of Thermax. While the Thermax acquisition added a small amount of sales in December, we didn’t register any profitably as the acquisition costs and the step-up of inventory value more than offset any profitability that Thermax generated.

As you turn to slide 10, you’ll see that food service grew 7% in the quarter, which was driven by lower rebates compared to the prior year, and a 4% increase in selling prices. Volume was actually down 1% in this segment.

EBIT improved 210% from a $2.1 million loss in the fourth quarter of 2011, to a $2.3 million profit in the same period of 2012. Included in the $2.3 million profit was a $1 million charge that we took to fund restructuring of our operations.

The large restructuring charges are now behind us, and we’re headed for low to mid-teen margins by the end of the year. Slide 11 details the performance for the total company in 2012, for the full year, Carlisle sales grew 13%, while earnings grew 54%.

Organically, our sales were up 8%, with approximately an additional 5% coming from the acquisitions of Tri-Star, Hertalan, Thermax, and a small amount from PDT. EBIT margin was up 320 basis points, finishing the year at 11.7%.

Our effective tax rate for 2012 was 33%, compared to 28.4% last year. Our EPS grew 45% to $4.18 per share.

These were all records. At the bottom of slide 11, you’ll see detailed sales and earnings information for each of our business segments.

Our sales and margin bridges are showing on slides 12 and 13. This concludes my review of the business segments.

I’ll now turn the meeting over to Steve Ford, who will review our balance sheet, cash flow, and working capital slides with you. Steve?

Steve Ford

Thanks, Dave. Good morning.

Please turn to slide 14 of the presentation. On November 20, we issued $350 million of 10-year senior notes at 3.75% to fund the Thermax acquisition.

We currently have all $600 million of availability under our credit facility, as we repaid all of our revolver borrowings in the quarter, with generated cash flow and the remaining proceeds from our bond issue. Our balance sheet remains strong, with debt-to-capital ratio of 30%, and a net debt to EBITDA ratio of 1.2.

We remain well-positioned for future growth. Turning to slide 15, our cash flow from operations for the quarter was $162 million, a $91 million improvement from the fourth quarter was $162 million, a $91 million improvement from the fourth quarter 2011.

As Dave noted, we generated $116 million of free cash flow in the quarter for a conversion rate of 241%. For the year, we generated $346 million of free cash, compared to $112 million in 2011, for a conversion rate of 128%.

Very strong performance, especially in light of the year over year increase in capital expenditures. Turning to slide 16, our average working capital as a percentage of sales for the quarter was 22.2%, as compared to 21.9% for the fourth quarter 2011.

We remain committed to improving our management of working capital, and achieving our long term goal of 15% of sales, with a particular focus on inventory turns. And with those remarks, I’ll turn the call back over to Dave.

David Roberts

Thanks, Steve. Operator, would you open the floor for questions please?

Operator

Of course. [Operator instructions.]

And our first question comes from Pete Lisnic with Robert W. Baird & Company.

Pete Lisnic – Robert W Baird

Dave, if you can give us a little feel for 2013 in terms of your mid to high single-digits kind of growth, top line. You talked a bit about brake and friction.

Just wondering what the other businesses look like in terms of either accelerate or deceleration in organic demand, as you kind of look to ’13.

David Roberts

The construction materials business, CIT, are off to very good starts. We’ve got some challenges in the fourth quarter with comparisons, but frankly we’re very pleased with what we’ve seen in those two businesses at the start of the year.

Food service will be fine. It will grow at mid-single digits.

And I think transportation products will also grow at mid-single digits. I think the challenge for us is going to be the braking business.

What we’re being told now is that it should be a first two quarter issue, by our customers. I’m not ready to turn on the production levels at a level where we’re starting to build inventory, but I think we’re feeling a little better about what we’re hearing about the second half of the year in the braking business.

Pete Lisnic – Robert W Baird

And the margin commentary that you gave on brake and friction with margins kind of lower than what you saw in the fourth quarter, is there a mix issue there? It looks like that [decremental] looks a little bit more severe than what we saw in the fourth quarter.

David Roberts

There will be a little bit of mix. Realistically, I think we’ll probably be high single digits on the margin lines for the first quarter.

I would expect a little bit of pickup in production in the second quarter, and we should be bouncing around that 10% range. But we’re just cautioning everybody that we’re not quite sure what’s going to happen there.

So we’re basically giving you conservative guidance on mid-single digits.

Pete Lisnic – Robert W Baird

And then if I could just switch to roofing really quickly. A couple of questions there.

As you put these new plants online, can you give us a feel on whether or not you’re going to see any sort of incremental types of costs in 2013, in the first half of the year? Any sort of startup costs there?

David Roberts

There will be a little bit, but it won’t be noticeable by you all. They’ll start up very smoothly.

We started up the Seattle plant late in December. It’s up making iso board today, and frankly I think the New York plant will come up as smoothly, because that will be employees from the old plant transferred to the new plant.

So we don’t really see anything that would suggest there’s going to be startup costs associated with those.

Pete Lisnic – Robert W Baird

And you gave us a little color on U.S. I’m just wondering what the trends look like in Europe, and just how EPM adoption there is evolving.

David Roberts

It still looks very good. We’re forecasting certainly slightly above 10% growth, perhaps 15% growth in the year, in Europe.

Now, it’s a small segment. But it’s growing very nicely.

Operator

And your next question comes from Matt McConnell with Citi.

Matt McConnell – Citi

To follow up on the outlook question, how do you think about margins from here? I know you never say full operating margins, but construction material is at 16% for 2012.

That’s the high mark. So how are you thinking about margin expansion into 2013 for construction and maybe then for the whole company as well?

David Roberts

We expect margins to be up slightly this year, with the exception of the drag we’ll have with the braking business. So we’re a little conservative in what we’re looking at based on not knowing what’s going to happen in braking.

And keep in mind, braking really drove a significant amount of our earnings in the first quarter last year. So we’re cautious as we look at that, but the 16% that we earned in construction materials, I think that was driven by a very disciplined pricing environment, and I think that the manufacturing guys just did a wonderful job of executing in the business in the fourth quarter.

Sixteen is the high water mark for us. We’re looking at 15% on an operational basis.

If the volume picks up, we could get there, to 16%, but we’re looking at 15% or so.

Matt McConnell – Citi

And you had great price costs there. You’re lapping some of the price increases there.

So is that going to be positive into 2013 for construction materials?

David Roberts

We certainly think so. We’ve seen our competitors have issued some price increases.

We’ve issued a price increase on TPO. And really to recover some of the raw material cost increases that we’ve seen, but we don’t see the breadth of raw material cost increases that we saw in 2011.

I think they’re more manageable this year. And that increase in TPO was really to recover what we’re seeing on the raw material side.

But our competitors are doing the same.

Matt McConnell – Citi

And you mentioned the tough comp. Construction materials had a huge start to the year last year.

So just to help frame expectations, do you expect that to be up organically in the first quarter of ’13? Or will there be a little decline on that tough comp?

David Roberts

You know, January, which we usually never talk about, the month that we just finished, but January was really a strong month. Now, you never know what’s going to happen in February or March, but we would expect it to be a tough comp, I guess is the best way to put it.

Operator

And your next question comes from Glenn Wortman with Sidoti & Company.

Glenn Wortman – Sidoti & Company

In interconnect technologies, are you seeing any demand slowdown, just due to the issues around the Boeing 77?

David Roberts

No. Conversely to that, they’ve told us not to slow production at all, that they don’t expect this to be a long term issue, and they’re actually expecting to increase demand mid-year.

Glenn Wortman – Sidoti & Company

And then on brake and friction, just as far as expectations for the first quarter, looking at it sequentially, do you expect revenue to be about in line with the fourth quarter? Do you expect it to be up a little bit?

David Roberts

I think it might be down slightly in the first quarter, revenue-wise. I think they’ll be okay on the margin side.

But it really depends upon what the heck happens with production obviously, or the demand at our customers’ locations. But I wouldn’t expect it to be much different than the fourth quarter, I guess is probably the way to put it.

Glenn Wortman – Sidoti & Company

And then back to interconnect technologies, just on margins, can you just talk a little bit about the outlook there, with the recent acquired, I think there’s some higher-margin products there. Just maybe kind of frame the outlook expect over the next year or two.

David Roberts

Don’t forget, there’s still some inventory step-up costs. We have other things that are going to occur in the first quarter that you really won’t see that margin in the first quarter from the acquisition.

But certainly as we get into the year, we think we’ll be 15% or greater in CIT this year.

Operator

And your next question comes from Ivan Marcuse with KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Ivan Marcuse – KeyBanc Capital Markets

If you look at your total units sold, or your volume, in construction materials in 2012, is it even, or down? How much down from your past peak?

I guess ’07 or ’08 would be your strongest year. How far down would you say you are on total units?

David Roberts

You know, I just don’t have that information in front of me. Volume was down a little bit, but I just don’t have the information in front of me.

I can’t answer that.

Ivan Marcuse – KeyBanc Capital Markets

And would you still say that your total demand is kind of about 75% replacement? Right now in ’12?

David Roberts

Yeah, about 75% is what it was.

Ivan Marcuse – KeyBanc Capital Markets

You mentioned in the Southwest, Southeast, you saw some nice new construction sales. Are you seeing backlogs increase, or bids, or anything, all over new construction?

How are you looking at new construction going out in 2013/14 versus what it has been?

David Roberts

Maybe just a bit by region, we think that the Northeast will probably be mainly reroofing because of the storm. We think the Southeast/Southwest and the West Coast, up through Washington, will be driven by new construction.

We think the Midwest will still be relatively soft. But we think the perimeters of the U.S.

will be okay.

Ivan Marcuse – KeyBanc Capital Markets

And then on the food service business, now that you’ve restructured a little bit, how are you looking at margins going through the year? And do you think that you could get up to the mid-teens in this level?

David Roberts

Yes.

Ivan Marcuse – KeyBanc Capital Markets

On a full year basis for ’13? Or is that just the ultimate goal?

David Roberts

It’s the goal. It might be slightly lower than 15%, but I think we’re really confident that this business can be a 14-15-16% margin business.

Ivan Marcuse – KeyBanc Capital Markets

On transportation, how much do you think, if demand was to be low to mid single digit, up to your expectations, and now with the Buji facility consolidated in there, where do you think you get the margins in this business, keeping the momentum going that you’ve created this past year?

David Roberts

I think they’ll be higher than this year. We’ve got the Buji closing.

We’ve got the two mixers that are now up and running, one in Clinton and one in Springfield, which will bring some cost savings to us. There are a few other cost savings that we have.

We’re looking at a good year by transportation products terms, I guess. Margins should be in that 8% range, maybe slightly higher, but not much higher than the 8-9%range.

Operator

And your next question comes from Neil Frohnapple with Northcoast Research.

Neil Frohnapple – Northcoast Research

As a follow up to Peter’s question, assuming we see a recovery in brake and friction in the second half of ’13, do you think for the full year you guys could still achieve organic growth? Or do you think that the revenue declines we’ll see in the first half will preclude this from happening?

David Roberts

Just in braking, or the company?

Neil Frohnapple – Northcoast Research

Brake and friction.

David Roberts

It depends upon when it recovers. I think if it recovers, and it normally recovers very quickly when it does, you could see maybe a flat year to last year.

But we still have not seen signs that incoming order rate is going to start to improve. They’re telling us second half of the year, but we’re being a bit cautious about that at this point.

Neil Frohnapple – Northcoast Research

And is that across the board between mining, ag, and construction? Or is there any differences between what you’re seeing with order boards, i.e.

is construction going to recover a little bit sooner? What are you kind of seeing there?

David Roberts

I think construction will come back more quickly than what mining will. But we would expect ag to recover.

We were down in the fourth quarter. I think ag would be the first we would see recover.

Then construction, and then probably mining.

Neil Frohnapple – Northcoast Research

And then one last one. How is the integration of the Thermax acquisition progressing?

And any additional color you could provide there would be helpful, such as margin profile versus the rest of the CIT business.

David Roberts

Yeah, the margin profile of Thermax was actually at a higher rate than what the remainder of the business was. Now we’ll have some integration costs in the first half of the year, but we would expect that that business, with the amortization that we have, with the costs that we have in the first quarter related to the purchase of the business, that we think that margins will probably be in the low teens to maybe mid-teens.

Operator

And your next question comes from James Kawai with SunTrust Robinson Humphrey.

James Kawai – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey

Relative to Thermax, have you given out the goodwill amortization run rate, so we can dial into the margin there?

Steven Ford

I think for modeling purposes, the business after the amortization should be at about 15%. So that would suggest about $8 million or so of additional [DNA] by virtue of purchase price accounting.

James Kawai – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey

And then Steve, while I have you, it looks like working capital was about a $100 million benefit to free cash flow for the year. Can you kind of walk us through the dynamics there?

And also maybe prospectively working capital as we go into 2013?

Steven Ford

Year over year, our receivables and inventory were both down. And that contributed to about half of that working capital improvement.

And the balance of the improvement came from payables and some of our other prepaid type assets. We expect that momentum to continue, and we’re very focused on improving our terms, and we’re looking forward to working capital benefit to the cash conversion calculation in 2013 as well.

James Kawai – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey

And on brake and friction, I think most of the OEMs, it sounds like they’re giving out maybe two to three months of lead time on orders and such. And I was just kind of curious, when do we get an indication about the second quarter?

Because that seems to be the point of inflection that most people are focused on.

David Roberts

As of today, we have seen nothing that would suggest the second quarter is getting any stronger. And our lead times are just as you said.

They’re anywhere from 8 weeks to 12 weeks, and we just haven’t seen any further decline in order rate, but we’ve seen a flattening of the order rate, and nothing to suggest that second quarter’s going to be any better than the first.

James Kawai – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey

And then I just wanted to frame construction materials in Europe for a moment there. It looks like Hertalan improved sequentially from the beginning of the year, if you seasonally adjust things.

And can you kind of give us a sense for what the organic growth rates are there? And also, now that you have two businesses over there, kind of the total size of that business and maybe what your plans are strategically over the next couple of years?

Because it seems like that’s one of your best organic growth opportunities.

David Roberts

It is, but certainly we’ll not equal what happens in the U.S. Hertalan and PDT we think will grow probably 10-15% this year.

I think it would be safe to probably model 10%. But still, it’s a couple hundred million dollars of $1.6 billion in revenue.

So it’s still relatively small. The organic growth will come from the U.S., and we’ll see good organic growth here, driven by a nice add-on in what’s going on in Europe.

While it will grow at a faster rate than the U.S., it’s still relatively small compared to the U.S.

James Kawai – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey

And the profitability profile there, is there any structural difference in the margin rate there? Or is the potential kind of similar to the U.S.?

Mid teens.

David Roberts

It’s very similar to what the U.S. is.

It was slightly lower last year, but not significant. But it’s a margin profile that would be very similar to what the U.S.

would be.

Operator

And your next question comes from Ajay Kejriwal with FBR.

Ajay Kejriwal - FBR Capital Markets

Within brake friction, so the construction business down 41%, any sense on how much of that was customer build rate versus destocking? Did you see any inventories being used by customers, resulting in those numbers for you?

David Roberts

You mean are they using inventory that they’re carrying in their build rate rather than buying?

Ajay Kejriwal - FBR Capital Markets

Exactly. I mean, that 41% I thought looked a little high.

And then the other question is, it sounds like you expect things to come back in the second half. Is that comps?

Are you kind of hearing stuff from your customers? Any color there would be helpful.

David Roberts

The reason I think it probably looks high to you is because we’re supplying equipment to the braking system, so the really large equipment, and that’s down more so than smaller construction equipment. So I think it will take a little while for the large construction equipment business to come back.

No, we’re not seeing anything in order rates. All we’re hearing is from our customers that they expect the second half of the year to be better than the first half, but they’ve given us no indication of what that means as far as number-wise.

But again, keep in mind that our products go into mainly really heavy, large pieces of equipment as compared to the smaller pieces of equipment.

Ajay Kejriwal - FBR Capital Markets

And then in the quarter, you think this was more reflective of build rates? Or your customers were buying less than they were actually building?

David Roberts

I think it’s a combination of the both. But I think it’s really more build rates being down as them using inventory.

But there’s no question they use some inventory off the floor. That’s why, as I said in my comments, we’ve held on to all of our skilled tradespeople, because normally when they start up, you have very little notice, and you’ve got to be producing parts very quickly to be able to supply their demand.

So we’re making sure that we have the availability of skilled labor available when that happens.

Ajay Kejriwal - FBR Capital Markets

And then in your [unintelligible] wheel business, maybe any update on the year end contract negotiations and how does that make you feel about ’13?

David Roberts

We feel good about ’13. Our contracts are indexed for raw materials.

We think we’ll see some slow demand in outdoor power equipment, primarily because the drought last year, the channel was full of inventory, and the drought really had a depressing effect on sales in the retail channel. And we think that will roll into 2013 just as the channel gets cleared out.

But other than that, we feel pretty good about the business. And I said it will probably grow at about the same rate it did this year.

And I think margins will be up.

Ajay Kejriwal - FBR Capital Markets

On that growth rate, good color on [unintelligible] wheel. Could you maybe talk about the top line organic growth rate for the other segments?

David Roberts

You know, I haven’t done that, but I’m going to mention it in my closing comments if you want to wait.

Ajay Kejriwal - FBR Capital Markets

Sure. Then maybe just one more from me, on your restructuring expenses.

Any cost there? What should we be expecting by way of one-timers or restructuring expenses.

I know you said for the new startup plants there’s not much by way of additional cost, but food service, sounds like you’re done with consolidation. Anything else we should be thinking about?

Steven Ford

We mentioned that at CIT and Thermax there will be some additional inventory step up in acquisition capitalization. That has about a million dollar negative impact.

There will be a small additional restructuring expense at food service, nothing significant. And with the startup of the iso plants, there will be some incremental cost.

But again, we’ll be able to manage through that, and that should not be significant to reported results in future periods.

Operator

You have an additional question from James Kawai with SunTrust Robinson Humphrey.

James Kawai – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey

Just a follow up. We just went through the Beacon numbers.

I know they’re a distributor for your construction materials business, and it looks like their organic growth was down 9% or so in the quarter. And I wouldn’t expect you to comment specifically on them, as they’re a customer, but any thoughts on what’s happening in the channel?

Or is there any dynamic going on that would be helpful for us to understand the split?

David Roberts

Obviously I can’t comment, other than what we know about Beacon. But was that commercial?

James Kawai – SunTrust Robinson Humphrey

Yeah, on the commercial side, stripping out the acquisitions.

David Roberts

I honestly can’t respond to that, because we actually saw organic growth in the regions that I talked about. Can’t respond to that.

I honestly don’t know why their numbers would be down.

Operator

And at this time, I’m showing no other questions. Do you have any closing remarks?

David Roberts

I do. As the conference call draws to a close, let’s turn to slide 18.

In 2013, we expect our sales to grow to mid to single digit rate. If all goes well, and the braking business begins to recover in the second half of the year, our growth rate could actually reach double digits.

The growth in sales will be a combination of acquired and organic growth. Our focus will continue to be on margin expansion.

We expect our sales growth at rates similar to what we did in the past two years. Our corporate expenses for the year I expect to be $51 million, interest expense for 2013 is forecasted to be $34 million, and DNA at $123 million.

We plan to spend about $125 million on capital projects, as we continue to position the business for organic growth. We’re planning for cash conversion rates at 100%.

Our tax rate is projected to be 30-33% for 2013. As we look at the business segments, both CCM and CIT are off to very strong starts, and we see nothing in the incoming order rate that suggests this momentum will slow.

Driving construction materials is new construction. We think reroofing may slow a bit, with the exception of the Northeast, obviously, as that region recovers from the superstorm.

But we think the slowdown in reroofing in other areas will be offset by the recovery in new construction in 2013. Price discipline continues among our competitors.

We recently announced a 5% TPO price increase to offset upward pressure we had seen in some select raw materials. And that price increase goes into effect on March 1.

For the full year, CCM should grow in the high single-digit range, and keep in mind the business grew 34% in the first quarter last year, so comparisons could be difficult in the first quarter in construction materials, even though we’re off to a very good start here in the first quarter. CIT will continue to grow at double digit rates organically, combined with organic growth.

With the addition of Thermax and Radex, our growth should be approximately 35% in CIT. Margin will be a focus and should improve during the year.

An unknown is the build rate of the 787. We’ve been told by our customer not to slow production, and in fact they plan on an increased production, from the five aircraft a month that is currently being built to seven, toward the mid-part of the year.

If the battery issue continues to persist, obviously that projection could change, but as I said earlier, they’ve told us not to slow production. Growth in the braking business will continue to be a struggle for the first half of this year.

Braking customers are indicating that production rates should increase by mid year, but frankly we’re going to be very cautious with these forecasts. We want to ensure that we deliver braking components to serve their needs, but we don’t want to needlessly build working capital and use money to obviously build inventory.

As a reminder, the braking business had a very strong first half in 2012, and made a significant contribution to our earnings in the first quarter of last year. So comparisons could be difficult in the first quarter this year, as a result of a slowdown in the braking business.

Transportation products is expected to grow at low to single digits again in 2013. We think that there will be continued softness in the outdoor power equipment segment as they work off inventory that wasn’t sold during the drought.

Power sports is expected to be up slightly, and ag should grow at single digits. Transportation products continues to be a margin story.

The new mixes are up and running in Clinton and Springfield, and Buji is now closed. These changes will drive operating efficiencies in transportation products, and we should see an upward trend in margin this year.

Like transportation products, food service is also a margin improvement story this year. The three facilities we announced that were being closed last quarter are now closed, and we’ll see positive impact on margins throughout the year from these changes.

We also implemented a 2% price increase effective January 1 in the food service business, and we’re still focused on reducing our costs, including our scrap rate, which we’re attempting to drive down by 50%. All of these actions are expected to lead to margin improvement throughout the year, with our goal of achieving mid-teen margins by year end.

Revenue in food service should grow in the mid-single digits in 2013. This concludes my comments, and I want to thank everyone for calling.

I look forward to reviewing our first quarter results with everybody in April.