Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Unifirst Corp  (UNF -0.25%)
Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call
Oct. 17, 2018, 9:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the UniFirst Corporation's Fourth Quarter Earnings Conference Call. During the presentation all participants will be in a listen-only mode. Afterwards, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. (Operator Instructions)

I would now like to turn the conference over to Steven Sintros, UniFirst's President and Chief Executive Officer. Please go ahead.

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you and good morning. I'm Steven Sintros, UniFirst's President and Chief Executive Officer. Joining me today is Shane O'Connor, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. I'd like to welcome you to UniFirst Corporation's conference call to review our fourth quarter and full year financial results for fiscal year 2018 and to discuss our expectations going forward. This call will be on a listen-only mode until I complete my prepared remarks. But first, a brief disclaimer.

This conference call may contain forward-looking statements that reflect the Company's current views with respect to future events and financial performance. These forward-looking statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties. The words anticipate, optimistic, believe, estimate, expect, intend and similar expressions that indicate future events and trends identify forward-looking statements. Actual future results may differ materially from those anticipated, depending on a variety of risk factors. I refer you to our discussion of these risk factors in our most recent 10-Q and 10-K filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

I am happy to report that UniFirst's fourth quarter produced strong results for both our Company and our shareholders. Overall revenues for the quarter reached an all-time high, coming in at $434.1 million, up 7.6% from last year's fourth quarter. On the profit side, fiscal 2018 and 2017's fourth quarters were affected by one-time items that we reconciled out of our results to provide more meaningful comparisons for investors.

As a result of the US tax reform, in the fourth quarter of 2018, we approved a one-time bonus to our valued employee Team Partners. Our executive team felt it was important to share this benefit with our employees, because of the integral role they play in our ongoing success. The total charge in the fourth quarter related to this one-time bonus was $7.2 million with the cash outlay coming in September. As a reminder, our fourth quarter of 2017 was impacted by a $55.8 million impairment charge related to the Company's CRM systems project.

Excluding these two non-recurring items, operating income increased 7%, when comparing the fourth quarter of 2018 to the same quarter a year ago. Shane will go through the details of this shortly, as there were many benefits and headwinds that blended together to impact our final results.

For the full year, revenues were also a new UniFirst record at $1.696 billion, up 6.6% from fiscal '17 and excluding non-recurring items, operating income was up 10.5%. Our fourth quarter and full year earnings per share comparisons positively -- were positively impacted by the recent US tax reform and our buyback of 1.178 million shares of Class B and common stock in the third quarter of 2018.

Overall, we're pleased with the results of fiscal '18, a year in which our Core Laundry Operations led the way with a record in new account sales. In addition, the Company benefited from the timing of customer price adjustments and increases in merchandise recovery charges. Our Specialty Garments segment, which delivers specialized nuclear decontamination and cleanroom products and business services, as well as our First Aid and Safety Segment, contributed positively by providing over-sized contributions to our top and bottom lines for the full year.

To give credit where credit is due, I would like to sincerely thank our thousands of employee Team Partners throughout North America, Central America and Europe for their continued commitments to our customers and to our Company, and for all their hard work to help produce positive financial results for UniFirst in 2018.

Going forward, we'll continually be focusing on innovative ways to improve our existing and to introduce new Companywide processes and systems to help ensure the delivery of consistent service excellence that exceeds our customers' expectations. We'll continue counting on our professional field and national account sales teams to effectively communicate the UniFirst difference to the markets that we serve and to continue with their record-setting selling trends for fiscal '18 and to drive our organic growth. And we'll continue investing in our Company's most important asset, our people, with evolving and expanded training programs, improved tools and infrastructure to assist them in performing their jobs, all while providing career advancement opportunities.

As we look ahead to fiscal 2019, we're excited about the opportunities that lie ahead. However, as we discussed in our earnings call last quarter, we continue to expect that the ongoing low unemployment economy will result in related headwinds, including staffing and recruiting challenges, as well as related salary and wage pressures. We also expect to face cost implications associated with the rising merchandise and energy costs. These headwinds were building in the fourth quarter, but their impact was tempered by the strong revenue growth, including the timing of customer price adjustments and quarter-over-quarter improvement in healthcare claims, as well as workers compensation and other payroll-related costs.

We expect these challenges to take a larger toll on our operating margin in fiscal year '19, as will investments that we continue to make in our people, our technologies and our overall infrastructure in pursuit of our ultimate objective of being universally recognized as the top service provider in our industry. We believe these investments will ultimately aid in new customer acquisition and customer retention, resulting in long-term value and returns to our shareholders.

And with that I'd like to turn the call over to Shane, who will provide additional details on our quarterly results of fiscal 2018 and our outlook for fiscal '19.

Shane O'Connor -- Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President

Thanks Steve. Revenues in the fourth quarter of 2018 were $434.1 million, up 7.6% from $403.6 million a year ago and full year revenues were $1.696 billion, up 6.6% from $1.591 billion in fiscal 2017.

Operating income for the quarter was $41.4 million compared to an operating loss of $10.4 million in the fourth (Technical Difficulty) should be reconciled out to provide a more meaningful comparison of our financial performance. Operating income in the current quarter was reduced by a one-time bonus to our employees of approximately $7.2 million to share in the benefits received from the recent US tax reform. This bonus was approved in the fourth quarter of 2018 and was recorded to selling and administrative expenses. In addition, the prior year period operating income included a $55.8 million impairment charge related to our CRM systems project.

Excluding the effect of the one-time bonus to our employees and the impairment charge, adjusted operating income in the current quarter was $48.6 million, an increase of 7% when compared to the adjusted operating income in the prior year period of $45.4 million.

Net income for the quarter was $35 million or $1.81 per diluted share, compared to a net loss of $49 million (ph) or negative $0.24 per diluted share in 2017. Net income for the full year was $163.9 million or $8.21 per diluted share, compared to $70.2 million or $3.44 per diluted share in the prior year. Excluding the impact of the one-time bonus and the impairment charge we previously discussed, our adjusted net income for the fourth quarter of 2018 would have been $39.9 million or $2.06 per diluted share, compared to $29.2 million or $1.44 per diluted share in the fourth quarter of fiscal '17.

Our adjusted net income comparison in the quarter benefited from a lower tax rate in 2018 of 20.2% compared to 39.3% in the prior year period, primarily due to the positive impact of the recent US tax reform, as well as other discrete adjustments, mostly related to tax credits the Company recognized in the quarter. In addition, our adjusted diluted earnings per share further benefited from the previously announced $146 million repurchase of Class B and common stock in March of 2018.

Our Core Laundry Operations, which make up 90% of our total business, reported revenues for the quarter at $391.8 million, up 7.4% from last year's fourth quarter. Organic revenue growth, which adjusts for the estimated effect of acquisitions, as well as fluctuations in the Canadian dollar, was 6.6%. During the quarter, we continued to benefit from the strong new account sales in fiscal 2018, as well as the timing of certain positive price adjustments and the collection of merchandise recovery charge.

Excluding the effect of the one-time bonus and the $55.8 million impairment charge, Core Laundry adjusted operating income increased to $46.3 million, up from $41.9 million in prior year, or 10.6%. Adjusted operating margin for the segment increased to 11.8% in the quarter, compared to the adjusted operating margin in prior year of 11.5%. During the quarter, we primarily benefited from lower healthcare and workers' compensation expense compared to the prior year. As a reminder, in the second half of 2017, we experienced abnormally high healthcare and workers' compensation claims and we were concerned that there might be a similar trend in the second half of 2018. However, our claims experience was significantly better than both the prior year period, as well as our expectations coming into the quarter.

We continue to be impacted by wage pressures, primarily within our production and service and delivery positions, which resulted in higher payroll costs in the quarter as a percentage of revenues. In addition, increasing merchandise amortization, energy costs and depreciation expense provided additional margin pressure during the quarter. Energy costs increased to 4.3% of revenues in the fourth quarter of 2018, up from 4.1% a year ago.

Revenues in the quarter for our Specialty Garments segment, which delivers specialized nuclear decontamination and cleanroom products and services, increased to $29 million from $24 million in the prior year period, or 20.7%. This top line performance was again driven by strong contributions from its Canadian and European customers, as well as its cleanroom division. Specialty Garments operating income in the fourth quarter of 2018 decreased to $1.2 million from $1.6 million in last year's fourth quarter, primarily due to a higher -- due to higher production costs as a percentage of revenues.

For the full fiscal year, Specialty Garments set a new segment record for both revenues and operating income, with revenues totaling $118.5 million and operating income of $14.1 million. As a reminder, this segment's results can vary significantly from year-to-year due to the timing of reactor outages and projects.

For the fourth quarter of 2018, our First Aid segment reported revenues and operating income of $13.3 million and $1 million, respectively, compared to $14.7 million and $1.9 million for the same period in fiscal 2017. The decrease in both revenues and operating income during the quarter was primarily the result of lower direct sale activity in the segment's wholesale distribution business compared to prior year.

UniFirst continues to maintain a solid balance sheet and financial position. At the end of the fourth quarter of 2018, cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments totaled $270.5 million, down from $349.8 million at the end of fiscal '17. This decrease is primarily due to the $146 million share repurchase we previously discussed, as well as $42.7 million spent on the acquisition of that businesses.

Capital expenditures in fiscal 2018 totaled $112.7 million. As we continue to invest in capital projects that will help us meet our long-term strategic objectives, including new facility additions, expansions, updates and automation systems. In 2019, we expect CapEx to be elevated and approximate $130 million, due to a higher level of plant replacement and expansion projects that we have decided to move forward with to improve our capacity, capabilities and efficiencies within the related markets.

Over the last number of quarters, we have indicated that we have been evaluating our options moving forward related to our CRM systems project. In the fourth quarter of 2018, we finalized the partnership with a third-party to license a solution that will meet the requirements of our business and customers. We have kicked off the multi-year project to further develop, implement and subsequently deploy this application and in fiscal 2018 capitalize $1.9 million related to the project.

Our preliminary estimates are that we will capitalize between $30 million and $35 million related to this project with $5 million to $10 million coming in fiscal 2019. These costs include license fees, consulting fees, capitalized internal labor cost, handheld devices and hardware cost to support the deployment of the system.

I'd now like to take this opportunity to provide our outlook for our fiscal 2019, which will include one extra week of operations compared to fiscal 2018 due to the timing of our fiscal calendar.

We anticipate our full year revenues for fiscal 2019 to be between $1.765 billion and $1.785 billion and we expect full year diluted earnings per share to come in between $6.65 and $7.05. I will remind you that net income and earnings per share comparisons in fiscal 2019 will be significantly influenced by the one-time impact of tax reform in fiscal 2018, with next year's effective tax rate assumed to be 26% compared to 12.5% in fiscal 2018. Although 2019's effective tax rate is expected to be 26%, this rate will fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter based on discrete events, including the impact of stock compensation benefits.

The top line guidance assumes an organic growth rate excluding the impact of the extra week in fiscal 2019 of between 2.5% and 3.5% for our Core Laundry Operations and an operating margin at the midpoint of the range of approximately 9.7%. The decline in margin is primarily due to unfavorable comparisons from payroll and payroll-related costs, merchandise amortization, energy and depreciation expense as a percentage of revenues. Payroll and payroll-related costs are expected to increase, primarily due to the wage pressures that we continue to experience. We have had to raise wage levels in many markets due to the impact of minimum wage increases, as well as general competition for and the availability of labor in this low unemployment environment. Ensuring that we are able to attract and retain quality Team Partners is core to our ability to provide strong service to our customers. Based on the current energy prices, we are modeling an overall increase in energy costs in 2019 to 4.5% of revenues compared to 4.3% in 2018.

In the latter part of 2018 and into 2019, we've continued to see increases in the amount of merchandise we are placing into service to support our customers' rental programs. This is partially due to stronger new account sales in fiscal 2018, as well as a higher level of replacement adds compared to a year ago. These increases have and will continue to result in increased merchandise amortization costs in 2019. Lastly, depreciation expense will be higher due to the increased amount of capital investments that we have made over the last few years.

Our Specialty Garments segment revenues are forecast to decline between 2% and 4%, coming off a historically strong year. In addition, the segment's operating income is forecast to be backwards between 10% to 15%. The anticipated decline in both revenues and operating income is due to the timing and relative profitability of its planned outages and project work.

Our First Aid segment's revenues and operating income are expected to be ahead of fiscal 2018 by approximately 2% to 3%. In 2019, we also expect to be impacted by a number of items, all within selling and administrative expenses that are largely offsetting. However, we thought it warranted calling them out.

Our guidance includes the impact of our adoption of accounting standards update 2014-09, revenue from contracts with customers. We expect this adoption will have no impact on the timing of our revenue recognition. However, our selling and administrative expenses will benefit from the capitalization of sales commission payments and the subsequent amortization of those commissions over the expected service period of the associated customer relationship, This is a non-cash impact and we expect the net benefit will approximate $2.5 million in fiscal 2019.

As I previously discussed, we have kicked off a new CRM systems project and will be capitalizing certain internal labor costs related to its implementation. We anticipate that $2 million to $3 million of payroll cost that we incurred in 2018 will be capitalized in the upcoming year. These benefits will be largely offset by increased expenses related to the timing of certain selling promotional events, as well as the impact of a recent change in our vacation policy that we anticipate will result in additional expense, due to its impact on our employees vacation usage in 2019 compared to the prior year.

Based on these projections, we expect that we will generate free cash flows in fiscal 2019 of approximately $65 million to $70 million. This cash flow combined with our existing available cash continues to position us to make additional investments in our business, pursue acquisition targets aggressively, as well as explore additional capital allocation strategy.

This concludes our prepared remarks and we would now be happy to answer any questions that you might have.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

(Operator Instructions) The first question comes from the line of Andrew Steinerman with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Andrew Steinerman -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

Hi. My question is to kind of look back on margins, to look forward past 2019. For a long time your operating margins were close to 14%, which were on the high end of the industry, and then they've been coming down most recently and into next year. My question is, do you have a medium-term goal for your margins and do you sense that perhaps some of your margin successes in the past are kind of becoming a headwind now, particularly around merchandise amortization?

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Andrew this is Steve. So I think as far as the 14%, and you talked about merchandise amortization, I don't think that's the biggest differentiator between then and now. I think we talked a lot over those couple of years. The benefits from some of the energy markets we were realizing as partially being the reason that the margins had ticked up so much. Looking ahead, and you say kind of a mid-term target, I mean we really would like to push those margins up toward 11%-plus and we think we can get there. But as I alluded to in my comments, we're going through a period right now where we are making a lot of investments in the business to position ourselves for the future, whether it be with technology investments in our facilities, in a number of areas that we feel are important for the long term. And that combined with, I think, some of these nearer-term challenges with the salary pressures and so on are intersecting to create what we're guiding for next year. We will continue to be looking at opportunities. A lot of the investments that we are making we do expect to lead to efficiencies, although some of them are sort of multi-year projects, similar to this technology initiative we're going through. So hopefully that answers your question.

Andrew Steinerman -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

It does. I'll just put one more question on merchandise. You mentioned a higher level of merchandise replacement going on right now. I was wondering if there might also be a benefit on your side in terms of merchandise recoveries being charged to customers and what's the timing there?

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

That's a good question. I mean, at times when your merchandise infusions are higher, there's some offsetting recovery. We did have a strong recovery year and quarter. I think we're a little cautious that that may provide some difficult comparisons going into next year, but that is an area when you ask about how do we continue to deal with rising merchandise and rising costs in general and looking to our customer to make sure we're being fairly paid for those services and that merchandise is a big part of that. So we will continue to do that.

Andrew Steinerman -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

I appreciate it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of John Healy with Northcoast Research. Please go ahead.

John Healy -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

Thank you. Steve, I was hoping you could talk just a little bit about the trend seen throughout the quarter and maybe what you've seen to start this quarter, just in terms of the revenue momentum, if there was any sort of improving or decelerating cadences the last two months have taken place?

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes, I think as we alluded to from a -- I'll break it down in a couple of different pieces. On the new sales side, we've had a very strong year. We sold more new business by over 10% than we did a year ago. So I think the environment continues to be strong that our team internally continues to execute on that side. I wouldn't say there's been any major change in trend over, say, the last several months in terms of the environment. From an economic perspective, we talked about adds reductions being an indicator. We have not seen any major improvements or declines in that area. I know a question we get asked often is that oil sector and what we're seeing.

So to kind of answer that one, West Texas continues to be strong, but that's really the only area that we're seeing decent sized upticks in business. Other than that, I think our customers are fairly healthy, I think they're dealing with a lot of the same employment and staffing-related issues as we are and they continue to work through it. We -- our retention has been stable during the year, but as I've alluded to before, in my mind, not good enough and I think that's an area of opportunity and a lot of the investments we're making are designed around improving that area of our growth drivers, to improve the organic growth.

John Healy -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

Great. And then just one question about capital allocation, with -- it seems like a lot of the internal investments you're making, either into technology or the facilities, is there a thought to maybe not pursuing M&A as aggressively until you get some of this stuff behind you, and if there is any sort of updated thoughts on maybe any ways to return cash to shareholders in any kind of unique ways?

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

As it relates to the M&A, I would say there is not a thought to be less aggressive, particularly on the smaller tuck-ins, one, two-plant operations. We're still out there aggressively looking for opportunities. As you well know, most of those opportunities arise out of family businesses going through their life cycle and we continue to keep those relationships close to take advantage of opportunities as they arise. So, particularly for the small and mid-sized deals, we will continue to be aggressive and try to bring those into the fold.

In terms of other capital allocation, we'll continue to evaluate, depending on our level of cash flow, the level of those acquisitions that have come along. When you look at this year, obviously we did some share buybacks, we spent about $40 million on acquisitions, we raised the dividend a little bit. And those are the things we'll continue to balance as we move forward in looking at what opportunities are out there, whether it's buying our own stock or looking at acquisitions. So it's part of the continued evaluations and that'll continue. As Shane alluded to, our CapEx will be up some this year and probably some elevated next year as well as we go through. And probably have made somewhat of a conscious decision to do a few more projects that are out there to get some of our infrastructure where we'd like it to be to put ourselves in a good position to grow.

John Healy -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

Great. Thank you guys.

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

(Operator Instructions) The next question comes from the line of Justin Hauke with Baird Capital.

Justin Hauke -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Great, thanks. So, I guess I'm going to ask a little bit more on the 2019 margins, just hopefully help us understand a little bit more, because if you -- what you're saying with the 9.7% at the midpoint, I mean you'd have to go back to like 2006, 2007 that margin at that level. And given the overall strength, it's just -- it's hard to reconcile why the decremental margin would be that significant, even recognizing the labor expense headwinds and some of the other items that you talked about. So, maybe the first thing would be, as a total percentage of your cost structure, how much is labor and labor related and what are you assuming that increases in '19's guidance, just so we can understand the labor component a little bit better?

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure. I mean, I guess the best way we can tell you is that we expect about a 7 to 8 tenths on the margin headwind related to labor, and that is broken up in a few areas. I think probably about a half a point is related to more of our service and delivery labor, maybe a little bit more than (ph) 5 or 6 tenths of a point. And that is directly or at least a lot of it is related to the wage pressures that we're seeing, whether it be minimum wage increases or just the trickle-up effect of minimum wage increases across our employee base. Some of the other delta probably fall on labor -- probably falls into the category of what I've been talking about investments that we continue to make in our infrastructure, trying to improve a number of different areas, just to improve our overall capability and improve efficiency in a number of areas that we're making investments in training and development of our people, efficiency projects on maintenance and some other areas we're investing in that we think will have a return over time, hopefully later in the year into the following years, but that makes up some of the difference. So when you look at the 1.5-or-so-percent decline that we're projecting that's the labor piece. And then the remaining you have a couple of tenths on merchandise, a couple of tenths on depreciation, a couple of tenths on energy and that's sort of taking us to where we go. We will continue to try to work with our customers and our operations to offset as much of that as we can, but that's what our outlook looks like right now.

Justin Hauke -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Okay. That's helpful in terms of just moving pieces of it. So 70 basis points to 80 basis points, and 50 basis points is the direct wage increases. I guess, on a percentage basis, I mean how much are wages increasing across the organization, and what are you assuming? Is that a 5% increase, is that a 10% increase? I'm not exactly 100% sure how much of the total cost structure is labor.

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

That number -- and I don't have it in front of me -- but about 40% of our expenses are labor, it's probably not exactly the right number, but it's in the ballpark.

Justin Hauke -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Great. Okay. And that's direct and indirect, I guess?

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Correct.

Justin Hauke -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Okay. On the -- shifting gears, on the CRM system, I guess it sounds like you went with a third -- another third-party, you had a third-party before and you were kind of thinking about maybe doing some self-development instead. What is it about this new system or the choice that you made that's different than the last one and why it makes sense, if you think could just give a little more on that, because that seems like there was a pretty big milestone to make a decision?

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

The biggest decision to clarify is, is that our previous project was a much more significant custom project, building a lot of the applications from ground up. The new project is working with the partners, develop some technology that's very on point for the industry itself and working the partner with them to enhance the technology and -- as the base of the system. So it's a little bit more of a ready-made product, proven product that we're going to work with them to enhance. So from that perspective, we view it as much lower risk and we're excited and happy about the new path that we've landed on.

Justin Hauke -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

And when is the -- at least initial goal for when that system would be live with the --

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

At this point, we're not putting out that -- at this point we're not putting out that timeline. What I'd say is, for fiscal '19, we will not be actively deploying the system, but as -- we will keep investors updated as we move along. I think for obvious reasons, based on what we went through the last time, we want a little bit more runway before the landing on when those go live dates would be.

Justin Hauke -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Okay. That's it for me for now. Thank you guys.

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

(Operator Instructions) It appears that there are no further questions on the phone lines at this time.

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Okay, well, I'd like to thank everyone for joining us today to review our fourth quarter and year-end financial results. We look forward to speaking with you again in January when we expect to be reporting our first quarter results for fiscal '19. Thank you and have a great day.

Operator

Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. That does conclude the conference call for today. We thank you for your participation and ask that you please disconnect your lines. Thank you and have a good day.

Duration: 38 minutes

Call participants:

Steven S. Sintros -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Shane O'Connor -- Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President

Andrew Steinerman -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst

John Healy -- Northcoast Research -- Analyst

Justin Hauke -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

More UNF analysis

Transcript powered by AlphaStreet

This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.