Apr 26, 2012
Executives
Kevin Crum - David W. Scheible - Chief Executive Officer, President and Director Daniel J.
Blount - Chief Financial Officer and Senior Vice President
Analysts
Philip Ng - Jefferies & Company, Inc., Research Division Matthew R. Wooten - Robert W.
Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division Ghansham Panjabi - Robert W.
Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division Joseph Stivaletti - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division George L.
Staphos - Banc of America Securities LLC, Research Division Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division Ariel Avila - JP Morgan Chase & Co, Research Division
Operator
Good morning, my name is Robin, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Graphic Packaging First Quarter 2012 Earnings Call.
[Operator Instructions] I will now turn the call over to our host for today, Mr. Kevin Crum, Assistant Treasurer.
You may begin, sir.
Kevin Crum
Thanks, Robin. Welcome to Graphic Packaging Holding Company's first quarter 2012 earnings call.
Commenting on the results this morning are David Scheible, the company’s President and CEO; and Dan Blount, Senior Vice President and CFO. To help you follow along with today's call, we have provided a slide presentation, which can be accessed by clicking on the Q1 earnings' webcast link on the Investor Relations section of our website at www.graphicpkg.com.
I would like to remind everyone that statements of our expectations in this call constitute forward-looking statements as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements, including but not limited to, statements relating to the effect of the combination with Delta Natural Kraft and Mid-America Packaging, completion of the Macon biomass boiler project, recovery of raw material inflation costs, consumer demand and pricing trends, capital expenditures, cash pension contributions and pension expense, depreciation and amortization, interest expense, income tax rates, debt and leverage reduction, performance improvement and cost reduction initiatives, are based on currently available information and are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the company's present expectations.
These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the company's substantial amount of debt, inflation of and volatility in raw material and energy costs, cutbacks in consumer spending that could affect demand for the company's products, continuing pressure for lower cost products and the company's ability to implement its business strategies, including productivity initiatives and cost reduction plans. Undue reliance should not be placed on such forward-looking statements, as such statements speak only as of the date on which they are made, and the company undertakes no obligation to update such statements.
Additional information regarding these and other risks is contained in the company's periodic filings with the SEC. David, I'll turn it over to you.
David W. Scheible
Thanks, Kevin. Good morning, everyone.
We're pleased with our first quarter results and the way in which we position the business for continued growth in what continues to be a sluggish operating environment. What seems to be increasingly important in our market is capitalizing on strong secular trends within the food and beverage product categories that create pockets of opportunity for growth.
We are investing capital, people and fixed resources to change our end-use share positions in some of these growing areas while protecting our core business at the same time. A really good example of this effort revolves around our Carol Stream, Illinois carton plant where, during this quarter, we invested to reconfigure the focus of the plant towards our growing pasta-packaging sector.
This facility is well situated near our Midwest CRB mills and many pasta producers. Pasta has not been a large category for us in the past, but it continues to grow in a very difficult economy while other categories like frozen pizza and cereal have yet to show significant recovery.
We significantly increased our position in this market based on our investments we have made, and we will continue to do so going forward. We'll focus on our performance improvements.
We had a good quarter. We achieved $17 million of additional benefits in Q1.
We are also investing in new product development to help our customers differentiate their products, lower their distribution costs and improve their sustainability metrics throughout their entire supply chain. By doing these things, we are expanding our addressable market and gaining end-use market share to drive sales growth.
Net sales in the quarter increased 7% to $1.1 billion and adjusted EBITDA increased 5% to $150 million. Strong operating performance and cost reductions, along with higher pricing and favorable volume mix, more than offset higher input costs during the quarter.
You should also note that because we released our NOL valuation allowance in Q4 of last year, during -- beginning this quarter, we began to use a higher tax rate, which impacted our reported earnings per share. We still have over $1 billion of net operating losses that limits our actual cash income taxes.
But for reporting purposes, we are now using a more normalized tax rate. For full year 2012, we expect this rate to be approximately 39%.
Applying this rate to the first quarter of last year, adjusted net income would have been $18 million or roughly $0.05 per diluted share. This EPS compares to $0.06 per share we generated this year.
Strength in our balance sheet and capital structure continues to be top priorities. We generated $33 million of operating cash flow in the quarter and reduced our total net debt by $349 million over the past year.
We also entered into a $2 billion amended and restated senior secured credit facility. We used the new facility, plus cash on hand, to repay approximately $1.7 billion of B and C term loans that were due in May 2014.
We are very pleased to have completed the refinancing entirely in the pro rata bank market and appreciate the confidence, the 31 commercial banks and Farm Credit system demonstrated in us with the new financing. I'd also like to thank our past institutional lenders for their support of Graphic Packaging.
The new credit facility provides us with attractively priced financing and gives us the financial flexibility necessary to meet our operating and strategic goals. Strong operating performance continues to drive bottom line improvement.
These performance initiatives, along with strategic investments in the business, continue to drive cost reduction. In the first quarter, we spent nearly $42 million to upgrade our facilities and optimize our asset base.
The building of our biomass boiler in Macon, Georgia mill is progressing well, and we still expect that it will come online mid next year. This is about an $80 million to $85 million project, of which we expect to receive a tax incentive rebate of approximately 30% of that cost after the project is completed and online.
The boiler will make the mill self-sufficient from an electrical power and steam generation standpoint, thereby reducing energy cost and improving profitability. Our paperboard mills had another very strong quarter, driven by improvement initiatives in energy, operating efficiencies and fixed cost.
We produced approximately 16,000 more tons of board in the first quarter while not building inventory and therefore converting a higher percentage of this board internally. The mills also benefited from a higher mix of CUK board.
Stronger demand for CUK is being driven by new customer wins and substitution trends to our solid CUK fiber carton, which offers superior strength, great qualities as compared, for example, to a traditional Litho-laminated corrugated product. As I mentioned in the last call, we began supplying this product in the growing juice pouch market late last year, and volumes continue to ramp up.
We are excited about other customer wins and the long-term growth strategy for this packaging application. Market demand for CUK applications continues to be strong, and we expect this trend to continue as we expand CUK's addressable end-use market.
Blue-collar unemployment, however, still remains high, which generally continues to negatively impact demand trends for CRB-based cartons like cereal and snacks. We have yet to recover to pre-2009 demand levels in these markets.
And so we'll continue to balance our supply and inventory of CRB through disciplined production and purchases from other CRB producers. Let's talk about folding cartons.
The volume dynamics in our folding carton business, where we saw a 2.3% increase in the first quarter, are improving. The increase was largely driven by new business wins such as juice pouch cartons and end market share gains in pasta and food service.
We are seeing some nice growth in our food service business as a result of new product innovation and substitution trends. Food retailers are looking for cost-effective substitutes for plastic-related products.
Many of our new paper-based containers offer superior performance and return compared to traditional plastic products. The cereal and frozen pizza markets, however, remain challenged in the first quarter.
ACNielsen data estimated that volumes in these categories decreased 3% and 11% respectively in the quarter. The at-home frozen pizza category continues to be challenged by competitive delivery pizza prices.
New pasta sales, as I mentioned. Were very strong as run rates began to approach their full levels in our -- across our converting facilities.
Let's talk about beverage. Industry volume trends across the canned beverage markets increased on a year-over-year basis in the first quarter.
According to the Can Manufacturers Institute, total beverage can shipments increased 1.4% in the first quarter with soft drink increasing 0.9% and beer increasing 2.4%. These results were significantly better than the beverage can shipment decline of 5% that we experienced in the fourth quarter.
Graphic Packaging's beverage business performed well in the first quarter with sales increasing in the mid- to high-single digits, driven by higher pricing and better volume. Volume in beer was not only solid in the craft market, which continues to be good, but also showed encouraging signs from the big brands as well.
Beer was good in Q1. Our international beverage business performed exceptionally well with sales up 11%.
Our business in Europe remains good despite some of the macroeconomic challenges in that market, and trends in both Mexico and Asia were positive contributors to the volume in Q1. Flexible Packaging is sort of a different story.
We continue to see very little change in this segment as the reliance on construction and industrial manufacturing sectors remain challenged. Excluding the incremental volumes from the addition of Delta Natural Kraft and Mid-American packaging acquisition, volumes on our legacy business were off approximately 8% versus last year.
As I mentioned earlier, activities related to the joint venture with Delta Natural Kraft and Mid-America Packaging should enhance both the growth and profit profile of this business. Integration of these businesses remains [indiscernible].
We announced the closure of our Twinsburg, Ohio bag facility and absorbed some cost related to that activity in Q1. We are also making modest investments of capital in the Pine Bluff, Arkansas mill that will increase efficiency and great flexibility necessary for higher levels of integration as we move into 2013.
There were really minimal synergies in the first quarter, but we continue to believe double-digit EBITDA margins are achievable in this business in 2013 as we complete the larger part of the integration activity. Let's talk about pricing.
Pricing inflation for the quarter, we saw a benefit from higher pricing while cost inflation remained in line with expectations. Net pricing increased $13 million in the quarter and was driven predominantly by the reset mechanisms in our contracts that adjust pricing up or down based on previous period changes in inflationary cost.
Included in this $13 million was a $6 million one-time payment of rebates and incentive to customers. We really expect pricing to remain positive for the full year 2012.
Commodity cost input inflation totaled $23 million for the quarter. The primary drivers year-on-year were externally purchased board for both paperboard as well as our multi-wall bag, inks and coatings, chemicals, resin and, for first time, roundwood was higher as a result of wet weather in the Southeast.
This trend, of course, is not expected to continue for roundwood. Freight costs were also up year-over-year as a result of higher diesel fuel and elevated oil prices drove surcharges and secondary fiber price decline on a year-over-year basis, it remained relatively stable over the past several months in an average of roughly $135 per quarter.
This is down from the high scene in Q3 of 2011, which it -- when it approached almost $200 a ton. Decline in natural gas prices also provided a buffer to overall inflation in the quarter.
We are now seeing spot natural gas pricing below $2 per MMBtu for our Louisiana mills. We should continue to capture the benefit of these lower secondary fiber and natural gas prices as newer inventory gets converted into finished cartons and moves through our system.
Looking forward, we had a solid first quarter. We built on 2011 results, and we are well-positioned to continue growing the business in 2012.
The spread between price and cost, price and cost reduction inflation should be positive in 2012, and we expect to see continued expansion in our margins. Reducing debt, strengthening the capital structure remains key initiatives and we will continue running our business to drive cash flows and improve our credit profile.
We will remain diligent in managing our inventories through production and purchasing and are not looking to build inventory that we cannot sell. Some of our end markets remain relatively weak, but others are strong and showing better signs of recovery.
That's the environment we are operating in today. It's a very secular-driven market, where there are pockets of strength and weakness across the different categories.
We'll continue to adapt and grow and invest in our business accordingly. We are investing more resources in the sectors, which remain healthy and make sense for us to be a larger player such as pasta, food service, craft beer and litho-lam substitution, while protecting our core markets at the same time.
We will also continue to optimize our asset base around our customers' needs and offer new and unique packaging solutions to help customers differentiate their products, lower their cost and improve their sustainability metrics. We'll accomplish these goals both through direct investment and potentially smaller, strategic acquisitions that enhance our position globally.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Dan for a more detailed discussion of the financial results.
Daniel J. Blount
Thanks, David, and good morning, everyone. David covered the operational highlights of the quarter.
I'll focus on the financial results. My comments track our posted presentation.
But let's start with Q1 financial highlights on Page 8. Taking a look at the first quarter, we see net sales up 6.7%, or $67 million.
The EBITDA increased 5.1% to $150 million. Net operating cash flow increased by $26 million to $33 million.
And after normalizing the income tax rate, adjusted net income increased $6.4 million or a $0.01 a share. In terms of the tax rate adjustment that you see, as David did, I'll remind you that, in the fourth quarter of 2011, we recorded a value for our NOL tax shield on the balance sheet.
This accounting change has no impact on our cash tax obligation as we will continue to not pay U.S. federal income tax until the NOL is fully consumed.
However, we now record nominal income tax expense to our P&L. The offset to the expense is the tax asset set up on the balance sheet.
In Q1, you will note that the tax rate at 43% was unusually high. During the quarter, the rate was affected by some special international tax adjustments.
Going forward, the tax rate will normalize, and we will be in the 38% to 39% range for our full year 2012. To provide comparable financials, we adjusted 2011 quarterly results to compensate for the tax rate change.
Overall, you will see when we review the sales and earnings comparisons, the main drivers of the net income and EBITDA improvement include revenue growth, improved performance, particularly in our mills, and lower interest expense. Please be advised, as has been our practice, we expect the results for nonrecurring debt refinancing and acquisition integration charges.
This quarter, there are 2 such items to point out. First, as a result in refinancing, $8.9 million of transaction cost, mostly connected to the old loan, were written off.
The second adjustment of $3.5 million relates to the write-down on several assets, plus expenses related to the integration of Delta Natural Kraft and Mid-America Packaging. Moving to the sales comparison on Slide 9.
We see the 6.7% growth in revenues. Volume mix was the largest driver of the top line increase, contributing $54 million.
Our Paperboard Packaging segment increased 4.6% as we benefited from share gains and new product introductions. As David mentioned, we continue to increase our addressable market by targeting corrugated packaging that can be replaced with better performing and lower cost CUK applications.
In the Flexible Packaging segment, revenues increased 17.8% due to the business combination with Delta Natural Kraft and Mid-America Packaging. Now let's talk a little more about pricing because this is really a confusing subject.
The $13 million increase in pricing is the result of realizing $19 million of benefit principally from contractual inflation recovery. This is net.
If you net out $6 million for the one-time incentives and rebates paid to customers, you'll arrive at the $13 million. The rebates and incentives do not repeat this year.
And as a result, we expect pricing to be higher in the remaining quarters. Now overall, if you look at our cost price spread, we incurred $23 million of input inflation and recovered $19 million in price.
It's relatively in balance. The rebate incentive payment is categorized as price, but it is really a payment to reward for superior performance to certain customers.
We really like making these types of payments because these are based on win-win situations, so the customer benefits as well as Graphic Packaging benefits. Now turning to the EBITDA bridge on Slide 10.
We see a year-over-year EBITDA increase of $7 million to $150 million. Not only did we improve performance in Q1, but we also made strong progress with bringing new converting assets online and on-boarding the new product additions that David talked about earlier.
We incurred approximately $3 million of startup costs. However, we are already seeing margins approaching our expectations as it disintegrates into our normal production routine.
Looking at the detail of the EBITDA bridge, we realized $13 million of higher price that we already detailed earlier. $8 million was contributed by volume growth in our Paperboard Packaging segment.
We also discussed this earlier. This contribution was net of the on-boarding cost.
Therefore, we expect margins to increase in future periods. Input inflation was $23 million and David referenced the key drivers.
We performed well in the execution of our cost-cutting initiatives and delivered $17 million of net benefit. We are clearly on track for the $60 million to $80 million of cost reduction we guided to for 2012.
But before we move to margins, an additional comment about input cost inflation. Although we did experience higher cost for wood, primarily in West Monroe, due to the wet spring, we have seen a pullback in the cost of certain inputs, including secondary fiber, energy, purchased board and craft paper.
Given our inventory cycle time and cycle accounting method, the benefit of these lower input costs did not help Q1 as they roll through our P&L on a 2- to 3-month lag. In other words, the benefits from the lower cost input is currently hung up on the balance sheet.
Therefore, we expect our input inflation rate to moderate from a level experienced in Q1 over the next couple of quarters. Now briefly turning to EBITDA margin by business segment, we see Paperboard Packaging margins increase slightly to 17.3%.
While the Flexible Packaging business does not significantly impact our results because it represents less than 10% of the EBITDA, I do want to comment on its margin decline to 3.9%. The decline was not a surprise to us as the mild winter caused the decline in the agri feed [ph] business, and inflationary increases from paper and resin inputs are not expected to be recovered until later this summer.
The main point I would like to make is that volatility with Flex is the primary reason we executed the business combination. As a reminder, the combination allows us to lower the cost of converting and more importantly, vertically integrate converting with paper in-sourced from the acquired Kraft paper mill.
While we see performance in Flex improving somewhat throughout 2012 as we recover inflation and consolidate our converting footprint, the real step change occurs in 2013 as we substitute below-market contracts by in-sourcing paper to our converting plants. We continue to see Flex becoming a more consistent, low-double digit EBITDA margin business once the integration is complete.
With that update on Flex, let's turn back to the big picture with some forward comments about the second quarter. Overall, we are optimistic about continued performance improvement in Q2 as customer rebates and incentives have been settled.
They're paid for. Growth from new products should be produced more efficiently as we have worked through startup issues.
Inflation related to input costs should moderate, and we expect a normal seasonality pickup. Now turning to Slide 11.
Let's look at cash flow, debt and liquidity. First quarter net cash provided by operations improved $26 million to $33 million.
Cash flow from reduced working capital and stronger operating performance drove the improvement. CapEx increased $5 million to $42 million in the quarter.
The investment focused on the Macon boiler, mill productivity improvements and expanding volume opportunities by building new packaging machinery for customers in Europe and China. In March, as David commented, we were pleased to be able to execute a 5-year $2 billion facility entirely in the commercial bank market.
The facility consists of a $1 billion revolver and a $1 billion term loan. The loans were initially priced at LIBOR plus 225 and are subject to a pricing grid based on our leverage ratio.
As our leverage declines to targeted levels, the spread over LIBOR will decline as well. The new facility provides us with greater cash management flexibility, allowing us to further reduce interest costs.
Additionally, we were able to enhance covenant baskets, including improving the company's ability to pay dividends, repurchase shares and make other investments. The facility has 2 financial maintenance covenants, a leverage ratio and interest coverage test and we are well within compliance with both.
Debt [ph] leverage remained relatively stable during the quarter at 3.5x with net debt increasing $28 million during the quarter as to -- as compared to an increase of $30 million last year. Considering that we spent over $20 million related to the refinancing, the year-over-year comparison is quite positive.
Liquidity at the end of the quarter was in excess of $500 million. Our targeted leverage ratio continues to be in the 2.5x to 3x range, and we expect to be near the top end of that range by year end.
And now to conclude, let's move to Slide 12 and I'll summarize our guidance for 2012. Capital expenditures will be in the $190 million to $210 million range with spending focused on completing the bulk of the biomass boiler spend and completing the investment needed to drive the integration of Delta Natural Kraft.
Cash pension contributions will be in the 40 -- between $40 million and $70 million for the year. Pension expense of around $40 million.
Depreciation and amortization in the $260 million to $200 million -- $280 million range. Interest expense of $115 million to $130 million.
Net reduction of $200 million, inclusive of the $22 million spent to refinance our debt. And finally, our net leverage ratio should end the year around 3x.
And with that, I will turn the call back to the operator for the question-and-answer session.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Philip Ng with Jefferies.
Philip Ng - Jefferies & Company, Inc., Research Division
Just a quick question. I know the Flex business is pretty small, but you got more cost cutting in the pipe and whatnot and pricing coming in, in the back half, should we expect profit -- to actually earn a profit in Q2 and things improve a little bit in the back half?
Daniel J. Blount
I think what you'll see, Philip -- is you'll improvement in the second quarter. For instance, we expect some recovery in the price area on that in particular.
And we expect the business to continue to improve throughout the year. I mean, we have already announced the shutdown of our plant in Ohio, and we expect to start to reap some of the benefits on the back half of the year.
David W. Scheible
You will get purchasing savings flowing in and that type of thing, so I don't know that we have a second quarter forecast by segment that we're going to talk about, but your question for the year, yes, we expect to be profitable for the year.
Daniel J. Blount
Just a reminder that 2013 is a big year for that as we in-source the paper supply.
Philip Ng - Jefferies & Company, Inc., Research Division
I got you. And then just on the demand side, I mean you guys are obviously taking share on the CUK side and that's very helpful to your numbers, but you're seeing, kind of, a bifurcation of like demand trends in food versus beer.
I just want to get your sense on what's driving that and have your customers stepped up promotional activity and have they throttled back a little bit on pricing?
David W. Scheible
Well, I mean, that's a better question for Kellogg's general mills and Kraft, and I'm reading the same thing you are and they continue to say that they're -- the pricing -- they've raised the price on those products and it's created some demand and they expect to address that. And so I'll leave that to them.
What I would say is that in the early part of the recession, the food business held up better than beverage. Now you've got a little bit of recovery in some of the industrial sectors so -- and it's been hot in [indiscernible] this week, so beer and soft drink are up.
I don't think -- we're not projecting a huge change or turnaround in things like cereal or in frozen pizza, but I'm a great fan of my customers. So I'm hoping that those demand trends change.
What we're trying to do is make sure that we are skating to where the puck is going. And that's why we've made investments in some of these other sectors or segments that do seem to be pretty more resilient in this economy than cereals, snacks and pizza for example.
Philip Ng - Jefferies & Company, Inc., Research Division
I got you. And then just lastly, I know one of the big carbonated soft drink companies has been vocal about reinvesting in their brand and whatnot, but I haven't seen much flow-through.
Have you seen that marketing or promotional activities pick up for CSD?
Daniel J. Blount
Let me say without [Audio Gap] yes.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Ghansham Panjabi with Robert W. Baird & Company.
Matthew R. Wooten - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
It's actually Matthew Wooten sitting in for Ghansham today. Acknowledging that it is difficult to predict, are your chemical costs downwardly biased in the near-term [Audio Gap] I know you spoke about some of your other input costs.
Daniel J. Blount
I think the primary driver of our chemical cost really was TiO2. If you look across the board, that's the one that was the most volatile on our stage, actually latex and so on and so forth was really pretty flat.
It is really TiO2 and that's [Audio Gap] I think our projection for TiO2 is to continue to increase somewhat throughout the year. But on a year-on-year basis, this is probably the biggest change you'll see in TiO2 vis-à-vis 2011 input costs.
Matthew R. Wooten - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
And then following onto that, is it possible for you guys to substitute away from TiO2? I know that some people in some other industries have been able to do that.
Daniel J. Blount
Yes.
Ghansham Panjabi - Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
And then the last question is, once your leverage ratios have been reached and assuming that you can do so in 2012, have you started to think about preferred methods of free cash flow allocation in 2013, whether it's M&A, buybacks or dividends?
Daniel J. Blount
Yes, we have.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Joe Stivaletti with Goldman Sachs.
Joseph Stivaletti - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Just 2 things. One is you talked about acquisitions possibly, I just wondered if you could put some context on that, possibly, in terms of potential size and what types of things you might want to look at and would you consider anything more in Flexible or would that be out of the question?
David W. Scheible
Well, those are really good questions. But the answer is the same.
I like what we did in 2011. As you saw the 2 acquisitions, probably, we're $80 million to $100 million in total top line revenue.
They were relatively good acquisitions. So that's sort of the right thing, and they were both in areas where we felt like we were strategically shoring up the business.
The Flexible thing Dan talked about. You remember the one we did last year with Sierra Pacific was to be able to get into craft beer.
So those are the kinds of things that we're looking at. And we have an active list of those things going on right now.
So it would be those things that we can get some synergies, additional integration, geographically important acquisitions. And they are out there.
They are relatively small. They're bolt-ons.
But they make a good impact on top line and bottom line because we can integrate them pretty quickly.
Joseph Stivaletti - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
And the other question I have was just now that you've done a lot of work with your bank -- the bank side of your debt structure, I wondered where your -- what your current thinking was, given where your bonds are trading, about doing some refinancing there? It looks like there's obviously a lot of opportunity there.
Daniel J. Blount
If you look at our bonds, I mean, they've become callable, at least the first bonds in 2013. So we'd look at the economics at that point whether or not we thought the economics were attractive to call that bond and reissue some other type of debt, whether it's the bonds or something else.
David W. Scheible
But probably for 2012, it's not [indiscernible] we are aware that those bonds are higher cost interest at this point in time. We clearly understand that.
But it's really not a good return to be able to do anything other than wait until they are callable, and then we'll deal with them with wherever the financial markets look like in '13.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of George Staphos with Bank of America.
George L. Staphos - Banc of America Securities LLC, Research Division
I joined the call a little bit later, so I apologize if you already covered this. I guess the first question I have, within CUK, would it be possible to somehow size the interest appetite from your customers in terms of using the substrate in new applications relative to what you would have seen, say, 6 months ago?
Just some sort of frame of reference in terms of the new product activity and penetration that you're seeing in that substrate, guys.
David W. Scheible
What I would say is, clearly, we've had some large wins on the CUK substitution side, and we talked about those. I will tell you that, George, some of those are really things we've been working on for a long period of time.
And some of that is kind of chunky, right? You work on it for a long period of time.
There's intellectual property involved. There's a lot of transition in -- or transition work that needs to be done.
I don't think that any -- I don't think that the people making CUK right now are necessarily having a difficult time selling the CUK. It's a good substrate.
We can sort of attack SBS on the top. And with the caliper improvement, we can address the CRB as well.
So it's a good substrate model for us. We have a fair amount of focus in that business because it's a more positive mix when we sell CUK.
But we are not -- and so we're in good balance. We made 16,000 more tons in the quarter, most of that was all CUK and they all got sold year-on-year.
So I feel good about those trends on a go-forward basis for the new product activity. And that's where a lot of our focus is really on expanding the CUK pie, if you will.
George L. Staphos - Banc of America Securities LLC, Research Division
David, is the gestation period on these sorts of arrangements, a couple of years, 3 years, 9 months?
David W. Scheible
It really depends. On something as large as the work that we're doing on the pouch, it's taken a couple of years to get that thing work.
But a lot of Litho-lam things that are going on in club store, I mean, that can be 60 to 90 days. It's a better model.
It saves a lot of cost. And the transition costs are pretty easy for customers so they just sort of substitute right under their packaging line.
It's when we need to modify the packaging line to be able to use a different footprint for that fiber. It takes a little bit longer.
So they're all over the board. But I will tell you, this is not -- we had a good quarter on substitution across the board.
And if I -- we just did our new product development quarterly review, and I like the pipeline. I like what's in there vis-à-vis substitution.
And this is substitution that's not necessarily driven at competitors in our current space. It's really more addressable.
It's expanding an addressable market and that is stickier. It's harder to do.
But we also keep it a lot easier because you're really changing the economics and the environmental spot. So that's our primary focus, not really so much CRB and SBS.
George L. Staphos - Banc of America Securities LLC, Research Division
Dave, one last question on that and then one on Macon, is there a way to quantify broadly what the new pipeline looks like there versus, say, what would have been the case a year ago? I'm just trying to think about it from our -- where we sit how to project this going forward?
That's the reason for the question.
David W. Scheible
Yes, I mean, we certainly internally have a very good feel for that. But we have a lot of customer interaction there and I would be uncomfortable giving you that data.
We just -- it would require a lot more confidential disclosure than what we are willing to do in that space.
George L. Staphos - Banc of America Securities LLC, Research Division
Okay, understand that. On Macon, have any of the changes that have occurred in energy prices here in the last 6 to 12 months changed at all what you think the return improvement might be from the Macon biomass boiler project or not at all?
David W. Scheible
Yes, sure. So you got to remember that Macon is really not -- is based on coal.
And you know probably better than me that the energy cost on coal still maintains pretty high. And so our energy profile for Macon has not changed nearly as much as it has for West Monroe, which is based on natural gas.
If you sort of think about for an investment similar in our West Monroe facility, just on a relative scale, natural gas would need to be somewhere around $7.50 to $8 to break even in a biomass investment in West Monroe. But in Macon right now, that biomass project is still very positive because it's coal-based.
The energy in Georgia is predominantly coal-based, I should say. And we buy that electricity from Georgia power, which has other things going on.
They're building a couple of nukes. I don't -- Paul Powers [ph] did not give me any break on energy cost in Georgia.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Alex Ovshey with Goldman Sachs & Company.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Taking into account all the puts and takes, you guys have spoken to on the pricing side and the raw material inflation side, so as we think about the balance of the year, is price relative to your raw material inflation? Or are you looking at it to be largely flattish?
David W. Scheible
If you mean -- you mean, balance sort of?
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Yes, so second quarter through the fourth quarter?
David W. Scheible
I mean, that's sort of of our view right now that pricing and inflation cost sort of balance.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
And then on the volume side, this is really the first quarter in many quarters where we see a nice positive contribution of both the top line and the EBITDA line, so as we think about the balance of the year for volumes, are we thinking about the sustainable number?
David W. Scheible
Well, first of all, that's a 2-part question. One is we actually have seen pretty good growth on volume and EBITDA in previous quarters, so I'll leave that alone.
What I would say on a go-forward basis, is that, yes, I think we are cautiously optimistic. It's so darn hard to forecast the macroeconomics.
I mean, tell me what you think the second half on a macro basis is going to be and I will help you with the volume recovery. But unemployment needs to continue to get better for our volumes to change materially.
To the extent that unemployment rates sort of stays where it is, I think our -- the kind of volume gains that we've seen will be predominantly driven by new products and acquisitions with some secular demand improvement in beverage and some sectors of food. But I don't expect frozen pizza and cereal to all of a sudden have huge changes in their volume trends.
I'd love it, but I don't necessarily count on the second half of the year.
Alex Ovshey Ovshey - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
David, last question, is there an early read you can provide on CapEx for 2013, especially on the context of you getting that rebate back on the biomass project, and the capital associated with the biomass project being largely behind you after 2012?
David W. Scheible
Our guidance on -- by no means, we're barely giving you a view on 2012, but what I would say is our normalized CapEx numbers really are more around $150 million to $175 million. That's sort of -- you can think of that sort of like $100 million or so of maintenance and then $50 million to $75 million for good cost reduction improvement projects.
It will be back at that sort of level in 2013. It'll be strange to see because we will get a cash payment in 2013 from that.
But I don't -- I think you should think about ongoing CapEx in that $170 million range on an average basis.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your next question comes from the line of Phil Gresh with JPMorgan.
Ariel Avila - JP Morgan Chase & Co, Research Division
It's actually Ariel sitting in for Phil. First question is in terms of the demand trajectory throughout the quarter, did you see any differences between January and, let's say, March where one was stronger than the other, excluding any seasonal factors?
David W. Scheible
It was totally sectoral. So we definitely saw a stronger demand in beverage as we headed into the end of the quarter.
I would say the food business, cereal, pizza and so on and so forth was pretty much the same from January to February. Backlogs didn't really change materially.
There's -- I mean, I would say our backlogs are good. We are solid.
We managed -- as you know, as I said, we made a fair amount of extra SUS tons and we sold them all. The CRB tons were more challenging in the process, so we sort of managed our inventory in that space.
Ariel Avila - JP Morgan Chase & Co, Research Division
And then early reads on April trends, much of the same as in the first quarter?
David W. Scheible
Yes, I've learned a long time ago not to give you mid-month trends because it doesn't do any good. What I will tell you is our backlogs are solid.
If we thought there was going to be some major change, negative change in the quarter, I'd be letting you know. That's not what -- that's not our early look on the quarter.
Operator
At this time, there are no audio questions. I will now turn the call back over to Mr.
Crum for closing remarks.
Kevin Crum
Thank you, Robin, and thanks to everyone for listening. We'll talk next quarter.
Operator
Thank you for your participation. That does conclude today's conference call.
You may now disconnect.