May 10, 2018
Executives
Trudi Allcott - Director of Investor and Media Relations Cody Phipps - Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Randy Meier - President of International, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts
Robert Jones - Goldman Sachs Erin Wright - Credit Suisse Sean Dodge - Jefferies Steven Valiquette - Barclays David Larsen - Leerink Eric Coldwell - Baird
Operator
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Owens & Minor's First Quarter 2018 Financial Results Conference Call. My name is Glenda, and I'll be your operator for today.
At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. We will be facilitating a question-and-answer session towards the end of this conference call.
[Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded for replay purposes. I would now like to turn the presentation over to your host for today's call, Ms.
Trudi Allcott. Please proceed, Ms.
Allcott.
Trudi Allcott
Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the Owens & Minor first quarter 2018 earnings call.
I'm Trudi Allcott, and on behalf of the team, I would like to read the Safe Harbor statement before we begin. Our comments today will be focused on financial results for the first quarter of 2018, which are included in our press release.
In our discussion today, we will reference certain non-GAAP financial measures. Information about these measures and reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP financial measures are included in our press release and information posted on our website.
In the course of our discussion today, we may make forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected.
Please see our press release and our SEC filings for a full discussion of these risk factors. Participating on our call this morning are Cody Phipps, our Chairman, President and CEO, who will provide an overview of the business, the new strategy and the acquisition of the Halyard's S&IP business.
And Randy Meier, EVP and Chief Financial Officer and President of International, who will provide details on the transactions, an update of our financial results and more insight into our business performance. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Cody Phipps, who will start things off this morning.
Cody?
Cody Phipps
Thank you, Trudi, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us on the call today.
I'll begin with a few comments on our most recent acquisition and our results for the quarter. Then I'll discuss the continuing steps were taken to transform our business and the potential we see for our new company going forward.
Randy will follow with the discussion of our result and more details about the Halyard S&IP transaction which closed last week. We're excited about the opportunities we see in the market for the combination of Owens & Minor and the Halyard's S&IP business.
This transaction marks a significant step in the transformation of Owens & Minor into a true global healthcare company. Our team's around the world are excited about the future and are already hard at work executing our plans.
Our immediate task is the on boarding of our new teammates and bringing them together under our new combined organization. We believe the combination of our two companies gives us a stronger position in the market place with a leading portfolio of products and exceptional teams around the world.
The Halyard transaction is the largest in our history and by combining Owens & Minor and Halyard's S&IP business; we can leverage our existing channel and our leading portfolio of products to grow our business. The S&IP acquisition also gives us significant opportunities for growth in attractive new markets including Canada, Japan, South Africa and Australia.
To focus our organization and enhance our execution we've formed two strategic business units. The Global Solutions SBU with Stuart Morris [ph] Hipkins as President and the Global Products SBU with Chris Lowery as President, who's most recently COO of Halyard Health.
This new structure for our organization trade sharp execution focus and clear accountabilities to move our business forward. Randy will outline the financial performance of the two SBUs in his remarks.
Let me comment briefly on our results, in looking at the first quarter as expected the acute care distribution space remains a challenging environment. Margin pressures particularly in our US distribution business continue.
At the same time, we experienced executional [ph] challenges in our US distribution business resulting in higher than expected expenses. Our global manufacturing solutions business also incurred higher than expected transportation and on boarding cost especially in UK resulting in a shortfall through our expectations.
To address thesis challenges, we're adding additional leadership and resources to our operations. And we're working to improve our value proposition with enhanced processes and technologies in our distribution centers.
We expect to see steady improvement in these areas throughout the year. Despite these headwinds, both of our new SBU segments showed sequential improvement from the fourth quarter.
Additionally, Byram's first quarter results demonstrated strong revenue growth exceeding our expectation and for the company as a whole, we continue to work aggressively on our cost and productivity initiatives which are all helping to offset the headwinds in our US distribution business. Looking ahead, the acquisitions of Byram and now the Halyard S&IP business are strengthening and diversifying our business model by moving us into higher margin and higher growth businesses.
Let me elaborate on this, the thesis for combining the Halyard S&IP business with Owens & Minor centers around three main opportunities. One; expanding our own brand product portfolio and growing this through our channel.
Two; bundling this expanded product portfolio with our proprietary solutions at the point of care. Good examples of this include our QSight point of use technology SurgiTrack perioperative solution and three; creating a platform for future product growth for our own private label and additional complementary products.
As you're aware, we just completed this acquisition but what I can tell you is that the Halyard S&IP business is off to a good start in 2018 and we're excited to integrate this business. Byram which we acquired in August of last year is also off to a great start and is creating momentum in our strategy to expand across the continuum of care by reaching patients directly at home.
The home health market represents a rapidly growing channel for medical products; we're very pleased with the progress that the Byram team is making. This business is accretive to our earnings and we see opportunities to enhance our home health value proposition for large IDNs to further accelerate this growth.
Lastly, we remain laser focused on improving our operating performance and we're looking across our entire enterprise to drive productivity and reduce cost in everything we do. As we discussed, we have a large scale effort underway that we call our business transformation initiative.
We're continuing to focus on this program and believe we're going to achieve $100 million to $150 million in annualized operating income contribution by the end of 2019. These are all elements that have been put in place within the last year that is progress no matter how you measure it.
While the challenging competitive environment is unlikely to abate, what is changing is Owens & Minor's ability to serve the evolving market through more owned products with the addition of Halyard S&IP products, greater access to attractive alternate site markets through Byram and a more sustainable cost structure through our cost and productivity initiatives. Our focus remains on executing our strategy and improving our operating results.
We had anticipated being able to provide financial guidance on this call, but based on the complex nature of this carve-out acquisition and the significant amount of work required to integrate the business into our new global products SBU. We intend to provide guidance when we announce our second quarter results.
That said, we remain confident that the Halyard S&IP acquisition will be nicely accretive in 2018 and increasingly accretive in outer years. In closing, I'd like to welcome the Halyard S&IP teammates to the Owens & Minor family.
These teammates are skilled, knowledgeable and resourceful. We're all looking forward to a new era of our combined company, we're truly better together.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Randy to review our financial results. Randy?
Randy Meier
Thank you Cody and good morning, everyone. Today I'd like to start our discussion with our results of the first quarter and then spend some time talking about the Halyard S&IP business which we acquired on April 30.
For the quarter, consolidated revenues increased 1.9% and $2.37 billion. Consolidated operating income for the quarter was $24.2 million compared to $35.5 million last year.
Adjusted consolidated operating income for the quarter was $47.6 million virtually the same as last year's first quarter. Performance during the quarter was affected by the previously discussed ongoing price and margin trends and higher than expected cost in the US and the UK.
For the quarter, we reported net income of $8.2 million or $0.13 per share with adjusted net income of $26.2 million or $0.43 per share. The adjusted effective tax rate for the first quarter was 29.6% reflecting lower income in a more favorable tax jurisdictions.
However, we continue to expect our adjusted effective tax rate for the full year to be in the mid-20s. for the quarter, our consolidated asset management metrics were in line with recent trends with DSOs of 28.9 days and inventory turns of 8.3 times.
We call that both measures now include Byram and these metrics will further adjust as our business mix continues to evolve with a consolidation of the Halyard S&IP business in the second quarter. Cash flow from operations was $18.3 million compared to $26.4 million use of cash last year.
And our cash balance at the end of the first quarter was $87.6 million. As we've indicated in the past, we've organized our business segments into two strategic business units.
Global Solutions and Global Products. For your convenience we have filed an 8-K today containing our historical results and the new SBU reporting segments.
The Global Solutions' SBU is comprised of the former domestic and international segments and includes Byram Healthcare and contains four business lines. Distributor solutions, provider solutions, manufactured solutions and payer solutions.
For the quarter global solutions revenues were $2.34 billion compared to $2.29 billion a year ago. Byram Healthcare acquired in August, 2017 and now managed within our payer solutions category contributed $118 million through revenues for the quarter.
Quarterly operating income was $31.6 million compared to $38 million in the prior year. The decline reflects the continuing impact of provider margin pressure, customer losses from the prior year and cost increases due to warehouse inefficiencies in our US distribution solutions area and underperformance in our manufacturing solutions business primarily in the UK.
The Global Products SBU represents a combination of our former proprietary products segment which as a reminder included our CPS and Global Sourcing businesses and will now include the Halyard S&IP business beginning in the second quarter. Global Products revenues in the quarter were $121 million compared to $137 million a year ago primarily due to the CPS business.
Quarterly operating income was $9.8 million compared to $8.1 million in the prior year. Operating income improved largely as a result of improved operational efficiencies primarily in or CPS business line.
Now let's spend a few minutes discussing the Halyard S&IP transaction which closed on April 30. As we've stated the addition of the Halyard enhances our ability to execute our strategy and pursue growth opportunities around the world and further enables us to achieve sustainable, profitable growth by combining its leading portfolio of surgical and infection prevention products with our global distribution and logistics capabilities.
While we remain confident that this transaction is both strategically and financially attractive, the transaction is highly complex carve-out. Over the last six months a tremendous amount of time and energy from various dedicated teams from both Owens & Minor and Halyard prepared for the closing, but more importantly the integration process.
The volume of work required to create the global infrastructure to accept the carve-out assets, enable the on boarding of over 8,000 teammates around the world and align new processes for the existing and new enterprise has only partially been reflected in the financial terms in the first quarter results. And I'd like you take a moment to thank all of our new and existing teammates, who participated in the process and those who backfilled the everyday work required to service our customers.
Well done. But now the real work begins, we've doubled the number of teammates, expanded our global footprint and added world class manufacturing and clinical sales expertise.
We'll also be operating under a significant number of transition services agreements or TSAs in the coming months. As a result the work we must do in our first 100 days will be as significant as the effort to plan the integration over the last six months.
Our focus will be not only on the integration, but on expanding and delivering value for our customers. During this initial period, we expect to gain greater visibility and insight into our ability to realize the expected synergies on or ahead of schedule and exit the majority of the TSAs as soon as possible.
In doing so, we're confident that this transaction will be accretive in 2018. As previously discussed upon consolidation, we expect to gain approximately $750 million of incremental of annual revenues from the acquisition.
The balance of the $1 billion of revenue generated by the S&IP business already flows through our channel. We remain confident in our ability to deliver $40 million to $50 million in synergies over the next three years with approximately $13.5 million of synergies achieved in the first 12 months.
These initial synergies are expected to be generated in several areas. First; operating expense and corporate overhead cost synergies through the consolidation and reduction of corporate expenses.
We expect to achieve savings and logistics and distribution expenses. For example, we should see savings from strategic sourcing of common carrier rates for shipment, allowing us to consolidate volume and achieve improved rates.
In direct sourcing of various services is expected to generate saving as a result of our increased global scale. And finally, we expect to realize synergies as a result of consolidating our own brand and leveraging our distribution channels.
On the financing front, the acquisition was financed with a combination of cash and debt. We recently closed on amended credit agreement which included $196 million Term A loan with our bank group and an institutionally financed $500 million Term B loan.
While this will meaningfully increase our leverage, we believe the acquisition will be accretive to earnings this year and improve cash flow as well as allow us to effectively manage our balance sheet going forward. And finally, our board recently approved the second quarter 2018 dividend payment of $0.26 per share, a 1% increase over the prior period.
Thank you and with that, we'll turn it over to the operator for questions. Operator?
Operator
[Operator Instructions] our first question comes from the line of Michael Turney [ph] from Bank of America. Your line is now open.
Unidentified Analyst
I want to think about, I know you're not providing guidance but maybe if you can talk about the puts and takes as you expect the business into this year. if you can talk about what are some of the tailwinds you have?
Maybe explain some of the comp effects, that you've had in terms of some of the recent headwinds where there's customer attrition, market pricing, whatever it maybe just so we can get a sense on how at least the base business, traditional distribution business absent S&IP should be growing as we head over the course of this year, especially with all the noise I would say, that is currently going on as you work to integrate S&IP.
Cody Phipps
Yes, Michael let me take that and then I'll ask Randy to comment. First, I think we've been clear - we expect the challenges that we've seen in the acute distribution space to continue, so from a headwind standpoint, the margin pressure in that space.
I would call that out as the primary headwind and then we still expect to be working through some headwinds in our international segment. On the tailwind part of this and where we're excited, we're very excited about the steps we've taken to strengthen and diversify our business model.
So going forward, we expect to see benefits from the Halyard S&IP acquisition obviously, it's going bring platform for growing our own brand products and we have more headroom there than most. And the second one we're very excited about is, is Byram and how it's allowing us to access the attractive alternate site market.
So I would call both of those out as areas where we expect to see tailwinds and obviously we're working very hard to improve the sustainability of the margins in our distribution business. Randy?
Randy Meier
Sure, Mike. I think Cody said it very nicely and as you'll know, we've been highlighting some of the challenges in the - what we formally call the core distribution business and the ongoing transformation activities that performed pretty well in 2017 and are up to reasonably start in 2018.
With the new segments, a lot of these activities are going to be captured in the global solutions business and I think when you put the core distribution business together with our transformation activity, the consolidation of Byram and the positive results they're showing. I think we have a fairly reasonable outlook and as we said, in our last quarter we were looking for sequential improvement over the fourth quarter which admittedly was not a great quarter, but much more in line with the third quarter, I think that's what we delivered and I'd expect to continue to see that kind of performance going forward.
Unidentified Analyst
Understood and then just one other question. When you think about the rapid business transformation and the steps you're taking to reposition some of the cost base on a long-term basis.
Is there some kind of calculation or rule of thumb we should be thinking about in terms of type [indiscernible] growth you need to see some of those RBT cost savings flow down to the bottom line and going forward as you continue to pursue on this plan, what do you think can contribute just to broad based margin expansion versus what some might be reinvested in the business?
Cody Phipps
First of all I'm very pleased with how that team's operating it, we're going into our second year of that business transformation effort and we're seeing very good results from it. Not all of it related to the productivity in our facility, so what I say is, we expect to see continuous improvement there and contributions.
The one area that you're pointing out that is more challenging, we had some loss business last year and some deleveraging going on and in that environment it's very difficult to drop productivity improvements through to the bottom line. We're starting to see the business stabilize and when it does, we expect to see more of those DC [ph] productivity initiatives flow through to the bottom line.
As you've seen we've committed to $100 million and $150 million of sustained improvement by the end of 2019.
Randy Meier
And Mike just to sort of echo those comments. Historically the trend of that business has been pretty in line with overall utilization rates since we always get a comment about utilization rates, I might as well address it here.
We continue to see reasonable utilization. Obviously the flu season in the first quarter probably contribute to some of that but overall, we can still believe there is a positive nature to the utilization rates in that segment of our business and typically that order is fairly well on a go forward basis.
Unidentified Analyst
Understood. Thanks so much.
Operator
And your next question comes from the line of Robert Jones from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Robert Jones
I just wanted to go back to the performance of the core business a little bit better. I know you guys commented on it, but within global solutions.
It seems like maybe revenue would have been down slightly versus last year, if we adjust for Byram. I know it's like operating income in the segment might have been down, maybe roughly north of 30% if we adjust for Byram.
I guess, first is that directionally right and then Randy, if I heard you correctly, would you characterize the core business has haven't gotten better sequentially versus 4Q. I know 4Q was a tough quarter and then, just relative to the trend do you think that core business in 1Q was more better or just trying to get any thoughts around the core business would be helpful.
Cody Phipps
Sure. kind of have two questions, there one sort of top line growth year-over-year and where we're going to be.
As you recall, we had a fair amount of turnover in the last year's first quarter with some puts and takes that's all come through the business. so then I think, when we're thinking about sequentially and where we're going, we continue to believe that we have from an overall volume through the channel, some reasonable opportunity to continue to see some positive trends there.
And what I was alluding to with the sequential trends, we announced in yearend results. we talk about expectations in the first quarter and we didn't give performance guidance but what we suggested is that, we would continue to see sequential growth on a consolidated basis.
We happen to see good growth in our two new segments as in aside [ph], but we expected to see sequential improvement in terms of the overall performance of the company more in line with the third quarter and I think we accomplished that.
Robert Jones
Okay, that's helpful and then Randy, just to follow-up on the synergies. It sounds like you expect from S&IP to be the same as what you had outlined previously but maybe the cost might be a little bit higher to onboard the business.
if I heard you correctly, I'm just curious are those separate from the synergy targets that you outlined?
Randy Meier
We've never really talked in terms of the cost to achieve this synergies. I think there's always going to be a number of acquisitions related cost that will incur over the next year or two as we integrate this business on a global basis.
So they were not net numbers, they were just raw synergy numbers. But you're absolutely correct.
The goals and the opportunities $40 million or $50 million over the next three years and $13 million to $14 million in the next 12 months is what we continue to look for.
Robert Jones
Very good. Thank you.
Cody Phipps
Robert, I just wanted to add to that - we just closed this transaction. I think Randy articulated how large and complex it is, but I do want to just say that, we're very pleased with the early day.
I mean - Chris Lowery is leading this, he was the former COO of Halyard, the transition teams are off to a really good start. It's just early on in a very large integration effort.
Robert Jones
Understood. Thank you Cody.
Operator
And your next question comes from the line of Erin Wright from Credit Suisse. Your line is now open.
Erin Wright
I guess a follow-up to that question. I guess what are more specifically some of those complexities that were somewhat surprising at the carve-out that you were speaking to and in terms of those incremental cost before and potential net synergies coming from the acquisitions, if you can maybe quantify that a little bit better, that would be helpful.
Thanks.
Randy Meier
Sure, Erin. I think when we announced the transaction six months ago, we recognized that this was a carve-out and so I wouldn't say that they were surprising.
I think surprising nature was just as we went through it and around the world, the amount and enormity of the activity that would be required to create the infrastructure to absorb both the teammates that we've taken on and a variety of locations around the world as well as just our ability to conduct business on the first day. that said, as we look forward over the next the proverbial first 100 days is just a tremendous amount of activity and as Cody indicated we're off to a very good start, but again we have a significant number of TSAs particularly in the first 90 to 100 days to ensure the transition, we still have teammates that are transitioning based on local rules and regulations and how that occurs, we've got a few albeit small rolling closes of a few local jurisdictions around the world and so there's just a tremendous amount of moving parts, that I think when we announce the transaction didn't anticipate just the length of time to accomplish the closing activities and the on boarding activities.
And I think as we move through that, again over the next couple of months and we'll be in a better position with increased visibility and transparency throughout the organization to give you guidance as we move forward.
Cody Phipps
And I would just add, one of the goals I've set for the organization when we started this diversification move was to do this better and if you look at the results - Byram know it in just the first period, first second period with Byram, that acquisition is exceeding our expectations. The integration efforts, everything the teams' did there is exceeding our expectations we want to bring that same approach with Halyard and we're off to a good start and we see very compelling value from both of these acquisitions, but we want to be very precise in outlining what we expect.
Erin Wright
Okay, great. That's helpful and then from a capital deployment perspective.
How quickly kind of do you expect to delever here I guess, what sort of balance sheet flexibility do you have now? Thanks.
Randy Meier
Sure, what we said all along and what we've said during our capital raising efforts. Is that over the next three years or so, we would expect to get down to sort of pre-acquisition levels in terms of our total debt-to-EBITDA which would be back down into the mid-three's.
we'll be relatively speaking well into the five's upon closing. So again we recognize that we'll be fully utilizing our balance sheet, but the focus on improved earnings integration getting off of the TSAs and continue to improve cash flow and earnings over the next couple of years, will certainly continue to that and allow us to deleverage in appropriate period of time.
Erin Wright
Great. thank you.
Operator
And your next question comes from the line of Sean Dodge from Jefferies. Your line is now open.
Sean Dodge
So maybe going back to Halyard and just thinking about the timeline a little more for the stages of the integration. It sounds like there is a lot of upfront focus on building out the infrastructure while you sell the TSAs in place.
When we think about the opportunities you mentioned for growth, so opening up new markets to sell the rest of the Owens & Minor platform, it sounds like that's a little bit further down the road in the next, that's going to be focus much over the next 100 days.
Cody Phipps
Well at the end I think let me restate part of the thesis here Sean, which is one; we were low single-digit owned brand product. So first by making this move and bringing in the Halyard S&IP products we go from low single-digit to low double-digit of owned brand products and that's just by getting the integration right out of the gates.
Another opportunity we see is, we have our kitting business and we control what goes in those kits. So we have a growth opportunity to put more of the Halyard S&IP products into our kits.
Another opportunity is to start to take our MediChoice brand, our own brand that we have here domestically and start to sell that internationally now with the clinical resources that Halyard brings. So I think what we're trying to say is that the immediate focus is on making the integration successful, standing up the new global products SBU and we see lots of value there and then appropriately staging those other growth drivers as we look ahead.
But most of the focus right now is making sure we get that initial phase, right.
Randy Meier
And just to echo that again and add more some colors. One of things that we spend a tremendous amount of time on with Chris and the activities and what we talked about in our prepared remarks was the focus, was beyond integration and making sure that the pieces are all going to work - fit together, we can take the costs out and create those synergistic opportunities on the cost side.
And Chris understands and the team's understand around the world. We're wanting to hit the ground running with these products as we've said, the products already flow through our channel.
So on the revenue side of the equation don't mistake the fact that we are very prepared to continue to be focused there. So there is no delay and it's sort of top line aspect of that.
Cody Phipps
I think the other thing I'd add to is, we know the Halyard folks, well we've been strategic partner of that business for a long time and what's exciting for both them and for us to is to bring the two organizations together. Within the old Halyard organization there was a lot of focus on other medical device categories we're bringing them over here and they are the focus and we formed this new global products SBU.
So I would say the esprit de corps amongst the two organizations is very high to, let's get out there and sell more products. So we just want to get that initial phase right.
Sean Dodge
Okay, very good and then. On the kitting business I know you've been wrestling with some production issues.
It sounds like those have been stabilized in the United States, but still a little challenging internationally, did I interpret that right?
Cody Phipps
First of all, what we used to call the CPS business is now part of the global products SBU and we like it under that new leadership and team structure, that business made very good progress operationally and both domestically and abroad. So stabilizing the business and both of those units are now turning toward growth and that's going to take some time, but we were pleased with the progress they made to operationally improve and position the business to grow.
Sean Dodge
Okay, very good. Thank you again.
Operator
And your next question comes from the line of Steven Valiquette from Barclays. Your line is now open.
Steven Valiquette
The first one just despite the general market comments flu prevalence which is lower acuity. There's actually been a lot of discussion this quarter from the publicly traded hospital companies witnessing greater acuity within their in-patient and mission mix.
So I guess I was curious whether you guys were seeing any evidence of that higher acuity for admission within your own SKU sales mix in the quarter and also more importantly, perhaps did that help your results [indiscernible] on 1Q versus what your results would have been otherwise in the first quarter? thanks.
Cody Phipps
Thanks Steven, that's a great question. Going back to the January, February timeframe we did see some incremental volume flowing through the channel.
We attributed a large part to some of the activity around the flu season and so that activity at the acute care center really being driven by that, little softer in March timeframe, but again so really pretty good quarter in terms of utilization and volume through the channel. [Indiscernible] a lot of attention and stay close to our customers to try to sort of get some visibility and sustainability if it was more just a flu season or something else there.
But again, always good to have increased volumes and positive first quarter, it's a good way to start the year and we'll keep you updated as the year progress, but that's where we are so I think it's pretty much aligned with. I listen to the 10 A call and the HCA call and they seem to indicate similar trends.
Steven Valiquette
Okay, great. maybe one other quick one, if I can sneak another one in.
with the balance sheet capacity you're spending on M&A and the associated increased financial leverage. Some investors are asking us about your dividend policy and whether you plan to stay committed to a current levels or could there perhaps be a change in your dividend philosophy going forward.
Thanks.
Cody Phipps
Sure. Absolutely in terms of our dividend policy as we indicated in our remarks, the board did authorize our dividend and we're continuing with our history of continuing to grow the dividend.
One of the things we spend a lot of time on during the past year, as we made both the Byram and Halyard acquisition with understanding how well we could do and sustaining the dividend as we simultaneously delivered the balance sheet and we continue to believe that we can do both and move the business forward and continue to grow. So I think, at least at this juncture there's been no change in our perspective on that.
Steven Valiquette
Okay, that's great. thanks.
Operator
And your next question comes from the line of David Larsen from Leerink. Your line is now open.
David Larsen
Can you talk a little bit about the year-over-year growth rates for Byram and Halyard? What were those revenue growth rates and what are the operating margins?
Randy Meier
Well when we talk about Byram, we can only give sort of anecdotal growth perspective. It was not a public company last year, it was part of a large organization.
As Cody suggested in this remarks and he commented on, we continue to see both sequential nice movement in that business both from a top line and from an operating perspective and so we're very pleased with the acquisition and the progress that's been made and the future outlook there. We haven't given guidance on margins, but we continue to see very nice margins there.
It's well above what the historical distribution business was and as I think most folks understand and as Cody pointed out. the home health and some of the chronic disease states that Byram support is one of the fastest growing segments of healthcare.
So again for both the top line and profitability perspective, we're real pleased with that acquisition and how it's going. With regard to Halyard, we have tried to give some indication along with the [indiscernible] it's out there and what Halyard has been.
We saw some pretty positive results in the fourth quarter sequentially as is business continued during the transition and in the first quarter that, we continue to see some positive momentum in terms of revenue growth. So I think some of the concerns about the trend line growth of the past year I think beginning to be addressed with some of the more recent results.
so again we're very positive about the acquisition and the opportunity to integrate it and really see this as a springboard to the future.
Cody Phipps
And David if I could just add on Byram case, again exceeding our expectations accretive to our earnings. What's been nice and just we've owned it since August of last year, but our teams have done a nice job of connecting the Byram team to large IDNs and we're starting to unlock growth there and what we see, is as the industry moves, the value base payments more and more of our large IDN customers care about following their patients to their home and we see in compelling opportunity connect to Byram value proposition back to our large IDNs.
Little early on that, but I'm seeing a nice trend there and I like the way the two teams are working. But for purposes right now, growth is exceeding expectations and as Randy said it's accretive and much higher margins in the core distribution.
David Larsen
Great. Thanks and then when do you lap these customers losses and do you have any significant renewals on horizon?
Thank you.
Randy Meier
Most of the significant exists and things that we referred to over the past couple of years are going to be behind us as we move into the second and third quarter - so from a top line perspective we should begin to see more reasonable comparisons as we move ahead here. But there's just the normal trend and churn in our business every year, so there's ebbs and flows to that.
and as far as any meaningful renewals, as we've indicated a number of times. Anywhere from about 25% to 30% of our business is always up for renewals every year.
There's large customers, small customers, so that the breadths of I would say, we have ongoing opportunities to continue to retain and grow our business as we move forward, but that's kind of everyday life for us, as we go forward. But I don't think it's anything that's material when you look out ahead.
David Larsen
Great. thanks very much.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] and our next question comes from the line of Eric Coldwell from Baird. Your line is now open.
Eric Coldwell
I wanted to go back to David's question just now, on Byram and the growth rate there. Last quarter we had Byram doing $129 million of sales.
You reported $118 million today. But you just said it grew sequentially.
So I'm hoping to get a little more specificity on what you're saying there.
Randy Meier
Sure, Eric. And I'll be little more specific - I think it grew sequentially based on our own expectations of where it should be, but the Byram business is seasonal as I'm sure you know that side of the business with their leverage to reimbursement and third party payer and so in the first quarter when people are hitting their deductibles, there's always a bit seasonality and that and fourth quarter is seasonally their strongest quarter.
So you're absolutely correct, but I misspoke relative to just the absolute numbers as speaking more in terms of around expectations. But year-over-year it's seeing very nice growth and we continue to be very positive about the opportunities to leveraging that business with our own customer base and channel access which is the steep is behind [indiscernible] not only Byram, but also Halyard.
So combining both from a more vertically orientation on that and expanding on the continuum care with Byram certainly creates opportunity for us to continue to see nice growth and improved profitability on a go forward basis.
Eric Coldwell
Got it. Quickly on S&IP.
We had a lot of questions here obviously, but how much of their inventory is moved through the channel on a consignment basis?
Randy Meier
Formally their inventory and consigned through us.
Eric Coldwell
Consigned globally. So perhaps in these 90 countries they're in that - they might not have the infrastructure or footprint, they might be consigning maybe through some kind of third party organization or directly to a hospital in some country.
I'm curious how much of that inventory might be under consignment.
Randy Meier
Well we would be integrating or consolidating all that inventory, if it were consigned. There's not a given their portfolio or the portfolio that we're acquiring.
There is not a lot of consigned [ph] inventory. Perhaps [indiscernible] and some of the products they're selling has a little bit - in the nature of both products.
But we're going to get the vast majority of the inventory on our books that move through. We have a few third party or 3PO like situations which creates synergy opportunities with our own global distribution logistics channel.
But most of that again that would be to use your word a consignment of owned inventory at a 3PO but again that would be consolidated on our balance sheet. But over the traditional consignment stock but at a hospital or point of care, that usually doesn't occur within these products.
Eric Coldwell
Okay and then last question, do you know how the inventory is tracked? What the systems are in each of those countries?
Is it one global standard? Is it kind of some of legacy stuff that we've seen with some other global medical supply companies like Excel spreadsheets or is this a more robust cloud-based system?
How do you track inventory in that business?
Randy Meier
I think this gets to one of the challenges and opportunities of the integration and this sort of transitional period and part of the myriad of TSAs that we have in place, one of them is an IT TSA. We operate a variety of platforms around the world and I think that one of the reasons that we acquired the underlying IT systems was so that we could create a little bit more continuity as we move forward.
The basic infrastructure technology that Halyard was utilizing was an SAP platform around the world. But I would say it's not cloud based, we're not using Excel Spreadsheets but we're somewhere in between and there's opportunities as we move forward.
But again the long pole in the tent so to speak will be the IT transition which is we're expecting sort of an 18 to 24-month opportunity and I think both the Remainco [ph] of Halyard plus [indiscernible] both recognizing the cooperative opportunity and really focused on doing the things necessary to ensure a smooth transition there. But again there's going to be a lot of work around that going forward.
Eric Coldwell
All right, thanks very much that's helpful. Appreciate the comments.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] and there are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Mr.
Phipps for his closing remarks.
Cody Phipps
Thank you for joining us today. We're excited about the steps we've taken to strengthen and diversify the company including the Halyard acquisition.
We look forward to seeing you on the road this summer and updating you on our second quarter call. thank you.
Operator
Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This concludes the call.
you may now disconnect. Good day.