Universal Corporation (NYSE:UVV) Q3 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

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Universal Corporation (NYSE:UVV) Q3 2024 Earnings Call Transcript February 7, 2024

Universal Corporation isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).

Operator: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Universal Corporation Third Quarter Fiscal Year 2024 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all lines are in a listen-only mode. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] This call is being recorded on Wednesday February 7, 2024. I would now like to turn the conference over to Jennifer Rowe, Assistant Treasurer at Universal Corporation. Please go ahead.

Jennifer Rowe: Thank you for joining us. George Freeman, our Chairman, President and CEO; Airton Hentschke, our Chief Operating Officer; and Johan Kroner, our Chief Financial Officer, are here with me today and will join me in answering questions after these brief remarks. This call is being webcast live and will be available on our website and on telephone taped replay. It will remain on our website through February 7, 2024. Other than the replay, we have not authorized and disclaim responsibility for any recording, replay or distribution of any transcription of this call. This call is copyrighted and may not be used without our permission. Before I begin to discuss our results, I caution you that we will be making forward-looking statements that are based on our current knowledge and some assumptions about the future and are representative as of today only.

Actual results could differ materially from projected or estimated results, and we assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statements. For information on some of the factors that can affect our estimates, I urge you to read our 10-K for the year ended March 31, 2023. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, impacts of pandemic, customer-mandated timing of shipments, weather conditions, political and economic environment, government regulation and taxation, changes in exchange rates and interest rates, industry consolidation and evolution and changes in market structure or sources. Finally, some of the information I have for you today is based on unaudited allocation and is subject to reclassification. In an effort to provide useful information to investors, our comments today may include non-GAAP financial measures.

For details on these measures, including reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measures, please refer to our current earnings press release. Universal Corporation again delivered strong financial and operational performance in the third quarter of fiscal year 2024. Operating income and net income for the quarter were up 13% and 28%, respectively, relative to the third quarter of fiscal year 2023, which helped increase our operating income and net income for the nine months of fiscal year 2024 by 20% and 13% respectively, compared to the same period last fiscal year. Our tobacco business continued to perform very well, driven by a favorable product mix and strong demand from our customers. Improved margins, larger crops in Africa, and strong tobacco shipments in line with our expectations benefited our results in the nine months and quarter ended December 31, 2023, compared to the same period last fiscal year.

We continue to be encouraged by the solid progress the team is making to expand our ingredients business. The investments we have made to build out the research and development and corporate sales teams are starting to gain momentum and have positioned us for future growth. Some financial highlights for the nine months and quarter ended December 31, 2023. Net income for the nine months was $79.3 million, or $3.17 per diluted share, and was $53.2 million, or $2.12 per diluted share for the quarter ended December 31, 2023. Excluding certain non-recurring items detailed in today’s press release, net income increased by $12.6 million, and diluted earnings per share increased by $0.49 for the nine months. And net income and diluted earnings per share increased by $12.1 million, or $0.49 per share respectively, for the quarter ended December 31, 2023, compared to the same period last fiscal year.

A field of tobacco plants growing in bright sunshine.

Operating income of $153.8 million for the nine months ended December 31, 2023, increased by $25.1 million, and operating income for the quarter of $87.5 million increased by $9.9 million. Selling general and administrative expenses were up $21 million in the nine months on higher compensation costs, and up $10.6 million in the quarter ended December 31, 2023, largely on higher compensation costs and unfavorable foreign currency comparisons compared to the same period last fiscal year. Some highlights for our segments. Operating income for the Tobacco Operations segment increased by $29.9 million to $148.9 million for the nine months, and by $10.5 million to $87.6 million for the quarter ended December 31, 2023 compared to the nine months and quarter ended December 31, 2022.

Tobacco Operations segment operating income was up largely on higher prices and a more favorable product mix, partially offset by lower tobacco sales volume. In the nine months and quarter ended December 31, 2023, African crops were larger, and carryover crop shipments from South America were significantly lower compared to the same period in fiscal year 2023. Operating income for the Ingredients Operations segment was $5 million and $2.2 million, respectively, for the nine months and quarter ended December 31, 2023. In the quarter ended December 31, 2023, operating income for Ingredients Operations segment was in line with results for the same quarter in the prior fiscal year, as incremental revenue and margins from the sale of new products offset the effects of market challenges for our core products and higher expenses resulting from the investments that we were making to position the segment for future growth.

Operating income for the segment for the nine months ended December 31, 2023 was lower as compared to the same period in the prior year, mainly as a result of lower operating income in the first quarter of the current fiscal year. Results for the first quarter of fiscal year 2024 were negatively impacted by customer inventory recalibration. As we enter our last quarter of fiscal year 2024, global leaf supply for all types of leaf tobacco continues to be tight, and as of December 31, 2023, our uncommitted tobacco inventory was at a low level of 8%. While we expect global leaf tobacco supply to remain tight in fiscal year 2025, in part due to El Nino weather conditions, we believe the strength of our diverse global footprint will help us satisfy our customers’ leaf tobacco needs.

With our ingredients business, we are pleased with the progress. We are making on an expansion of our processing capabilities at our ingredients facility in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. We expect those resources to be fully operational in the third quarter of fiscal year 2025 and positively contributing to our earnings as soon as fiscal year 2026. Another important achievement in fiscal year 2024 has been the progress we made to advance the Universal’s global sustainability agenda. These include the December publication of our 2023 sustainability report and our recently announced participation in a solar project that we believe will help us meet our target to reduce operational greenhouse gas emissions by 30% by 2030. We are pleased with our sustainability advances, and we continue to seek opportunities to further promote sustainability in our business.

We are proud of our performance thus far in fiscal year 2024. We believe our strategy of maximizing opportunities in our tobacco businesses by capitalizing on our industry-leading market position in the primary exporting region and our robust sustainability practices, while at the same time investing for growth in our ingredients business, continues to serve us well. Demand for leaf tobacco and our relationships with our longstanding and diverse customer base remain strong, and our position in the tobacco business can offer us opportunities in the future. We continue to make measured and thoughtful progress on our ingredients platform, and we are excited about the opportunities for our business. We believe that we are on the right path for a successful future.

At this time, we are available to take your questions.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] One moment please for your first question. And your first question comes from the line of Ann Gurkin from Davenport. Your line is open.

Ann Gurkin: Good evening, everybody. Congratulations on good numbers.

Unidentified Company Representative: Thank you.

Unidentified Company Representative: Thank you, Ann.

Ann Gurkin: And also a big congratulations on your progress versus your sustainability goals. That is well done. A lot of kudos to you all for achieving those goals and maybe even achieving them ahead of time.

Unidentified Company Representative: Thank you.

Ann Gurkin: I wanted to start, if I may, with the Ingredients segment. I have a number of questions. So, operating profit of $2.2 million, you just talked about highlights sales of new products, but also sales of core products or existing products at lower margin, and also some additional costs for investing for future growth. Can you break out those additional, that cost component? Kind of what’s an underlying operating profit number without the investment costs in it for the Ingredients segment?

Unidentified Company Representative: Ann, as you all know, we don’t break out individual pieces. However, what we can tell you is that you’re now seeing a fairly complete R&D and commercial group cost structure. So, we only have seen a glimmer of the benefits of these investments. And we expect it will take until 2026, as Jennifer said, until we see positive earnings from these. So, as we told you previously, we’re making some significant investments in the R&D area as well as in the commercial group. So those investments, it will take a little bit of time for those to really show earnings. On top of that, of course, as Jennifer pointed out, the facility in Lancaster won’t come online until later this year. And at that point in time, we will be able to actually produce that product.

So, again, it will take a little bit of time for us to get there. So, we had a couple of weak quarters early on. There is still some weakness in the core products, but we are seeing some of those benefits from these commercial folks that we have hired, and especially the R&D that we pointed out where there are some new products that we have put out there, which will be more sticky which add value, which you’re margin up. So all that looks positive, but it’s going to take a little bit of time for us to truly see the benefit of all these investments.

Ann Gurkin: Okay. So, the sequential slowdown from Q2 to Q3, maybe it’s partially seasonal, but partially reflecting a step up in these investments. Is that kind of fair to think about it?

Unidentified Company Representative: Yeah. That is fair.

Ann Gurkin: And that level of investment should continue Q4 or fiscal 2025. So, we’ll think about the margin kind of in the low single-digit range going forward because they’re level investments in the mix of business, or how do I think about margin progression? I expected it to continue to strengthen through fiscal 2024 and then into 2025, but should I change that thought process?

Unidentified Company Representative: Well, as I pointed out, again, the platform commercial group and R&D group is pretty much built out. So, those costs are now baked in, and you might have a person here, a person there, but at the end of the day, those costs are in, and they’re going to be around for a while. So, the question there becomes how much more can you sell? At the moment, the capacity is limited. Yes, we still have capacity on core products, but in order to sell these new products that we’re going out selling with the R&D group, with the help of the R&D group, you need to get that factory online, and that’s not going to happen for a little bit. That’s why I was saying it is going to take a little bit of time. Again, we had a very weak first quarter where we took some inventory write-downs because raw material prices were coming down faster than anticipated.

We’re sitting on a little bit of inventory there. So — but in total, raw material prices are coming down. So, from a revenue — similar to tobacco, when green prices on tobacco come down, you just pass that on. So, we’ll see where we end up with the margins. The margin percentages are holding up really nicely at the moment, and we only think that’s going to be better in the future, again, because of the R&D, the stickiness of the new products that we’re developing, and all those things that come with this new investment we’re making.

Ann Gurkin: So, what I think should be a high single-digit operating margin target for this Ingredients segment business, I should be thinking about hitting that target more in fiscal 2026.

Unidentified Company Representative: I’m not going to give you an exact number, but we should see improvement in the future. Because again, otherwise, we wouldn’t make these investments. These are sizable investments, and we need to see good returns on those investments.

Ann Gurkin: And the pace of investments, is it taking a little bit longer for the investments in Lancaster? You brought CapEx down a little bit. Is that a reflection of maybe the timeline for investing in the ingredients business, or is there anything else to read into that?

Unidentified Company Representative: No, there is a — there was a bit of a delay getting some of the approvals. And when the facility comes online, we have to do trial runs, and we have to do some other things. So, it’s taking a little bit longer than anticipated. We’re working as fast as we can. Everybody’s screaming for product. And until we can make it, we can’t sell it. So certainly, everybody is fully aware that we want to put it online as quickly as we can. But we have to be conscious of being able to make the product right and everything being in order in that facility.

Ann Gurkin: And the increase in Salesforce, I think some of the opportunity was to try to cross-sell product among customers. Are you achieving that — any of that ability with your new product sales?

Unidentified Company Representative: Yeah.

Unidentified Company Representative: Yes, we are. As we pointed out previously, again, with the help of the R&D group, we are using people from the different companies that we bought to go to customers with cross-products, a little bit of a beverage, a little bit of a dry product in there. That is, again, slightly different, but it adds value. And you can margin up on those things because again, if they bite, you have a product that is unique.

Ann Gurkin: That’s great. Okay. Great. Switching over to tobacco. How should I think about sales volumes in fiscal 2025, given that it looks like the industry or the outlook for the global crop has tightened more, particularly in South America? How do I think about that top line or those volumes pricing fiscal 2025 for tobacco?

Unidentified Company Representative: As we stated, we continue seeing strong demand for all varieties of tobacco that we produce. And of course, the El Nino effect is there in South America and Brazil. We estimate about 20% reduction of that crop size there as a country. And in Africa, we had some rains and the transplanting of tobacco is completed. And right now, we are seeing a dry spell right there. But hopefully, in the next coming weeks, we’re going to see some rain. Tobacco is a very resilient plant. And so, we see also shipments now, not just for the fiscal year 2025, but also still in the last quarter of 2024. If you look at our balance sheet, we have over $1 billion of tobacco inventory. So, we are estimating and projecting to just substantially ship out some of that tobacco that we have.

As we stated, we have an uncommitted inventory of 8%, which is low. And part of that tobacco, of course, always the cutting time there is March. And part of that tobacco might fall into the next fiscal year.

Ann Gurkin: Okay. And then regarding the tobacco, do you expect still — or I guess, I’m looking for a worldwide, sorry, uncommitted leaf number? Maybe Jennifer has that.

Jennifer Rowe: Yes. It was 14 million kilos at the end of December.

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