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Advanced Drainage Systems Inc  (WMS 0.64%)
Q1 2020 Earnings Call
Aug. 01, 2019, 10:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Advanced Drainage Systems First Quarter Fiscal 2020 Results and Infiltrator Acquisition Conference Call. My name is Jason, and I am your operator for today's call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question-and-answer session.

[Operator Instructions] Thank you.

I would now like to turn the presentation over to your host for today's call, Mr. Mike Higgins, Vice President of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations. Sir, you may begin.

Mike Higgins -- Vice President of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations

Thank you. Good morning, everybody. Thanks for taking the time to join us. With me today I have Scott Barbour, our President and CEO and Scott Cottrill, our CFO. We have quite a bit to cover today, so first, we're going to discuss this quarter's results, then we'll move on to discuss the Infiltrator acquisition that we announced this morning, and then, finally, we'll wrap it up with -- open up the call for Q&A.

I would also like to remind you that we will discuss forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially from those forward-looking statements because of various factors, including those discussed in our press release and the risk factors identified in our Form 10-K filed with the SEC. While we may update forward-looking statements in the future, we disclaim any obligation to do so. You should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, all of which speak only as of today.

Lastly, the press release we issued earlier this morning is posted on the Investor Relations section of our website. A copy of the release has also been included in an 8-K submitted to the SEC. We will make a replay of this conference call available via webcast on the Company website.

With that, I'll turn the call over to Scott Barbour.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Mike. There's really three things I want to make sure we get thoroughly communicated today. One, ADS stand-alone had a very solid quarter and a start to our fiscal year. Two, the Infiltrator acquisition and our excitement about this opportunity we have, and three, the guidance for ADS FY 2020 and the combined basis of ADS and eight months of Infiltrator.

As I said and I think you saw, we're off to a strong start in fiscal 2020 with continued strong sales growth and profitability. Our topline was driven by strong growth of both pipe and allied products. Domestic sales increased 9%, driven by our core domestic construction business, as well as our agriculture business. Construction market sales growth of 9% was driven by non-residential, residential and infrastructure market sales. In addition, our agriculture business grew 15% this quarter with very strong volume growth, despite poor weather and uncertain agriculture economic conditions.

We experienced another quarter of strong sales growth in our allied products, where growth was driven by double-digit sales increases in products such as our Storm Tech retention/detention chambers, our Nyloplast catch basins, and our water quality products. We will continue to drive our water management solution strategy with this portfolio.

On a regional basis, we experienced broad-based growth across the US, especially in the Southeast, the Atlantic coast, and Western regions. Florida, California, and Virginia were our top performing states this quarter as we continued to apply our market share model and realize favorable conversion trends. These sales -- these states where we have seen very nice double-digit growth trends, and along with other key crescent states as I have described in the past, are focused investment geographies for us for both pipe sales and allied product attachment increases.

Internationally, our sales declined primarily due to sales in our Mexico business, where we experienced a significant decrease in publicly funded projects. We are pursuing new customers and exploring cross-selling opportunities with our Storm Tech chambers in Mexico to bolster our performance during this slowdown and public infrastructure spending in the region. We will continue to monitor these dynamics, but do not expect stabilization into that market until possibly the back half of this year. Growth in our export sales offset a slight decline in Canada, and international sales other than Mexico were flat with prior year.

Moving to profitability, we had a good line of sight coming into the corner and how we would do, and things turned out generally how we expected. Our adjusted EBITDA margin was 19.4%, which we achieved through strong growth in both pipe and allied products, favorable material costs, and disciplined execution.

Importantly, we were able to offset the expected first quarter inventory absorption headwind from retention of key manufacturing employees in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2019. Though the margin was flat to the prior year, I'd like to point out that 19.4% is a very good margin and the second highest quarterly margin we have reported as a public company.

Our guidance for fiscal 2020 contemplated the first quarter inventory absorption headwind, and we are on track to achieve our targeted margin expansion for the full-year. We also generated a significant amount of free cash flow this quarter due to an improvement in working capital. In line with our strategic capital deployment program, we returned $82 million to shareholders in June through dividends, including the $75 million in special dividends to all shareholders of record.

At the end of our last fiscal year, we were less than 1.5 times levered, with a good line of sight on the improving cash flow generation of the business. Our discipline in this area continues to improve, and though cash generation will not be linear, the improving trend is important.

A week ago, we passed the five-year anniversary of our IPO. In the last five years, our stock price has grown from $16 to around $32, and we have returned over $170 million to shareholders through dividends and the modest $8 million stock buyback we did over two years ago.

We have also recently executed a disciplined review process with our Board of Directors to look at, first, avenues to grow pipe and allied product lines of business; an assessment and improvement plan on the agriculture line of business; and a review of the attractiveness and relatedness of markets that fit with the key elements of our business model, including our market share model, which focuses on converting products from traditional materials to plastics. Second, our distribution focus. And third, businesses with scaled recycling competencies and activities.

Today, we announced the acquisition of Infiltrator Water Technologies, a longtime partner of ADS and a leading player in the onsite septic wastewater treatment market. I'll go into further details on the acquisition after we finish discussing the quarter, though we are obviously very excited to partner with Infiltrator.

Overall, we did a good job executing on the quarter, meeting our commitments and positioning ourselves for the balance of the year. We will continue to mitigate inflationary pressure and deliver continuous improvement in our manufacturing and logistics activities. We are excited about the Infiltrator acquisition, an opportunity in front of us to go forward with the Infiltrator team led by Roy Moore as our partners. Finally, we will continue to execute on our capital deployment plan, with a focus on working capital improvement and debt pay down.

With that, I'll turn it over to Scott, who will discuss our first quarter performance.

Scott Cottrill -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Scott, and good morning, everyone. Jumping right into our quarterly results, adjusted EBITDA increased $5 million, or 6.9% year-over-year to $80.3 million, and our adjusted EBITDA margin was 19.4% flat to the prior year. The adjusted EBITDA growth was driven by sales growth in our pipe and allied products, variable material costs and pricing, as well as effective cost containment. Additionally, transportation expense was modestly favorable in the period due to improved efficiency, as well as a decrease in diesel and common carrier rates that we saw last year.

As expected, we faced a headwind from higher inventory costs this quarter primarily as a result of our strategic decision to retain experienced employees and line operators despite a decrease in production pounds late in fiscal 2019. All this higher cost inventory was consumed during the first quarter and is fully reflected in our margin guidance for the year. Recall, the midpoint of our guidance range assumes 80 basis points of margin expansion, which we continue to expect, will come in the second, third, and fourth quarter of this year.

Moving to slide 7, we generated $53 million of free cash flow in the period, an increase of $50 million over the prior year, driven primarily by improved working capital performance and higher adjusted EBITDA year-over-year. As a result of this strong performance, we ended the period with $40 million less in debt than the prior year.

Note that this is after the special dividend net impact of $63 million, which is the total $75 million special dividend payment to all shareholders less the $12 million the ESOP paid back to the Company to pay down its loan. We also ended the quarter 1.5 times levered, favorable to our position last year of 1.8 times levered. The impact of the special dividend was approximately a quarter-turn of debt. This strength in our balance sheet allowed us the flexibility to go out and execute on the Infiltrator acquisition announced today. Though the transaction will take our leverage out of our targeted leverage range of 2 times to 3 times, we do expect to be at or below 3 times levered within the next 18 months.

On slide 8, you can see the capital deployment priorities we laid out at our Investor Day in November. At that meeting, we highlighted our highest priority uses of cash we're investing in our business to drive growth and profitability, as well as strategic acquisitions. In the last three months, we've paid a $75 million special dividend, increased our regular quarterly dividend, and closed on the transformational acquisition of Infiltrator we are discussing today.

Our capital deployment strategy will now prioritize organic investments in our now-combined business and paying down debt to get us back within our guardrails of 2 times to 3 times levered.

Finally, on slide 9, we confirm our financial outlook for the legacy ADS business in fiscal 2020. Based on our order activity, backlog, and current market trends, we anticipate net sales to be in the range of $1.425 billion to $1.475 billion, representing year-over-year growth of between 3% and 6%. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $245 million to $265 million, representing growth of 6% to 14%. These ranges represent an adjusted EBITDA margin of 17.2% to 18%, or a margin expansion of 40 basis points to 120 basis points.

With that, I'm going to turn the call back over to Scott, who will discuss this morning's acquisition announcement.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Okay, thank you. So the chart before you now is a chart that we used in our Investor day last November, and I think it shows a framework of how we were going to look at the uses of capital relative to acquisitions. If you start with the left, strategically, this combines two leaders in markets that are highly adjacent and aligned, and really both of us drive our business based on conversion from traditional materials to plastic materials.

In the middle, qualitatively, Infiltrator is a high-margin, world-class operating platform. We have had a successful partnership with them for over 15 years. They are a team and a company that we're well familiar with. And then on the right side, the financial, it's an accretive acquisition to us. You'll see that it improves our last 12 month's EBITDA margin by 360 basis points, that's without the synergies. So from a financial standpoint, it really mixes up the overall business.

Turning the chart, you can see the three priorities that we laid out at our Investor Day; sales growth, margin expansion, and free cash flow. And in each of these categories, the combination of ADS and Infiltrator is a stronger company than where we started or what we described to you at the Investor Day. At the end of this deck, we'll provide guidance on the go-forward for ADS plus eight months of Infiltrator, and we'll try to narrow in for you all at that time. You can see that this has been a long-lasting partnership as you look to the next chart. We've been doing business in many different ways over several years. We were in a joint venture together on Storm Tech.

We had transactions between the companies in and that period of time, and we've obviously been working with these folks very closely. So we understand many of the things about how their business runs and how our business runs. We're a culturally complementary business, and I really like the fact that we both have the conversion story in our markets and that we're both very big recycling companies. And we have scale and competencies in that area.

If you turn to the transaction, we signed and closed yesterday on the purchase of Infiltrator. The multiple with synergies is 8.6. That gives us the full run rate of $25 million out in the third year. As Scott mentioned earlier, at close we'll be 4.4 times levered. Our intention is to issue up to $250 million of equity to derisk ourselves, and that, along with our cash flow that we'll generate from this, our intention is to get below 3 times levered within 18 months. We'll be very, very focused on that as we move forward. The synergies will really mainly come through manufacturing, recycling, logistics, some SG&A efficiencies, about 20% of them will come through cross-selling opportunities with our distribution. We're both highly distribution-focused companies.

If you look at the financial impact and you look forward with the synergies in there and a full run rate of that, it would be a 510 basis point improvement over our last 12-month period ended in March of this year. So it's a significant step forward in the profitability of the combined companies, and I think very much in line with what we talked to you about at our Investor Day.

Very important, Roy Moore has been the leader and the President of Infiltrator for several years, a long career in this industry. We're very excited that he and his team will go forward with us, and we're looking forward to partnering with them in the years to come.

Now, in the next chart, chart 15, you can see ADS, then you can see Infiltrator of these are based on our fiscal year 2019. And then, when you put them together, you can see we get to a $1.6 billion company. Our margins go up to over 20%, which I think as you all know from my prior discussions with you, we saw that as a big goal for us to be able to get over that, and this accelerates that. It greatly increases our sale of allied products. That now becomes 40% of the mix of the company from 28% as ADS stand-alone. This has been an important initiative for us, is to increase our exposure to allied products.

And as a total, we're a more diversified company. We do increase our exposure to residential, yes, but we were in these residential markets to begin with. And overall, we're more diversified company in our end markets, and we'll talk about that a bit more as we go forward.

Turning to chart 16, Infiltrator is, as you can see at the bottom left, it grows at a nice CAGR of 9%. They've been growing their profitability faster than their sales through a lot of very solid operational initiatives and new product introductions. They're headquartered in Connecticut. Their major manufacturing facility is in central Kentucky. They're focused in this wastewater and the storm water market with us. I think the wastewater market was one we were in to a degree, but saw this as a very natural adjacency, an extension of what we do today. And we'd often described to you all, as we looked at our overall markets, this is right there in the middle of it.

I think importantly, and we'll talk about this more and more as we go forward, the high recycling content that Infiltrator uses, a lot of competency and scale in their recycling activities, and that, along with our competencies and scale in recycling activities, we really love the combination of those two.

Next, I'll step through some of the investment highlights as we go through, but several -- everywhere from building together, expanding our market, a great business, complementary cultures and management teams, the recycling scale, Roy and his team, which we love, and then the ability to bring our two companies together to enhance growth, margins, and cash flow in addition to those synergies that we have, all things that I believe that we have talked about before and led at our Investor Day with.

As you flip to the next chart, you can see on the left, the key characteristics of ADS; on the right, the key characteristics of Infiltrator, creating together in the middle leading positions in our core markets, innovative new products that displace traditional materials.

Frankly, this is another conversion story. I've always thought that the conversion story, or the conversion angle, was one of the best things about ADS. We certainly add to that with the conversion story of Infiltrator, leaders in plastics recycling that we talked about, then commitments on safety, operational excellence, and sustainability, all very good characteristics of both of these companies which we will combine.

I'll flip to chart 19, and talk a little bit about the market here. The primary products are plastic chambers and plastic tanks. As you can see on the bottom left, they've consistently grown that category in their core septic business market. It's grown from an $800 million to $1.2 billion market over the last several years, with the tanks growing a little bit faster than the chambers that are in the leach field. On the bottom right you can see kind of that customer breakdown. And one thing I would point out, while the combined companies and our exposure as ADS goes up in residential, there is an important component of that residential that is repair and replace in Infiltrator, which is much less cyclical and I think adds to our portfolio as ADS that has a nice repair and replace component, which was something that was not as evident in our end-market segmentation.

Going to chart 20, we're big fans of the market share model around approvals, acceptance, coverage, and win rate. Infiltrator has a very similar model, a very strong technical sales force, very strong component of that, that is out there gaining approvals in the market. That's what drives the acceptance. They have great coverage with our distribution, and then winning, tracking those projects and winning. So we really like the fit in the market share model between the two companies. On the right, as you get to know Roy and his team, they're a very innovative bunch, a lot of engineering capabilities and competencies around materials and injection molding and the application of their products. You can see they've been a very consistent innovator in this market, and they have some very exciting new products, a new technologies teed up.

Going to chart 21, we have a big focus on sustainability and recycling within our Company. It's primarily been focused on polyethylene. Infiltrator's focus is on polypropylene, also an important material for us that we use mainly in a virgin or exclusively in a virgin resin capacity. So what we're very excited about is being able to tap into the engineering and the recycling scale and competencies of Infiltrator to accelerate our use of polypropylene recycled materials. I think many of you have heard us talk about our program around polypropylene that we're working on in engineering right now. And I think that this will help us accelerate and add to that program.

I think another important part of the recycling story here is our ability to scale and leverage the procurement activities primarily in the recycling market. That's kind of a complex market, obtaining these recycled materials. We increase our breadth. We increase our number of touch points in that market. We increase our competencies, and we're buying more. We buying 40% more recycling material out there than we do today, with a lot of engineering and technical know-how behind that. So we think that is very additive and clearly a big part of our synergy plan as we go forward.

I'll turn to chart 22. I mentioned Roy a couple of times. He's been with Infiltrator since 1987 and led it since 2005 through several cycles, several new product introductions, and an enviable growth record in both sales and profitability. Ron, Bryan, Carl, solid, solid gentlemen that know their businesses inside and out. We're very excited to begin working with these four gentlemen on the new products that they're launching into the market, their new technologies, tapping into the distribution relationships that they have as a company. And you can see kind of the job they've done over the last several years, growing the business at 9%. Clearly part of that is a very nice conversion story. Part of that is also the products we buy from them growing, but they've done that while expanding their margins to a very profitable and sustainable rate, given their level of improvement at 32.2% EBITDA margin. So cannot say enough about the team there, and we're looking forward to being up there next week with them.

Now, I'm going to turn it back to Scott. He's going to go through the synergy slides.

Scott Cottrill -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Scott. On slide 23, we have identified substantial synergies that are summarized here. We expect to capture run rate synergies of $20 million to $25 million within three years, driven mainly by improvements in manufacturing, procurement, and SG&A costs, including savings from our joint recycling initiatives. We also expect to realize benefits from cross-selling broader services and product capabilities over the long-term.

On Slide 24, finally, the combined business is expected to generate significant cash flow, which we may use in combination with equity funding to rapidly deleverage our balance sheet. As outlined on Slide 24, we expect our leverage ratio to be under 3 times within the next 18 months, which will put us in line with our long-term target leverage ratio of between 2 times to 3 times that we discussed with you during our Investor Day last November.

From a financing perspective, we've taken out a new $1.425 billion credit facility to fund this transaction and refinance our existing debt. This structure gives us sufficient flexibility to operate our business, while we plan to transition to a more balanced permanent cap structure in the near-term. This will likely include refinancing a portion of the loan in the bond market, as well as issuing up to $250 million of new equity.

Finally, I would like to walk you through our outlook for the year for the pro forma company. We expect net sales to increase 14% to 17% year-over-year to $1.575 billion to $1.625 billion in 2020. We expect adjusted EBITDA to improve to between $310 million and $330 million, and year-over-year margins to expand 290 basis points to 360 basis points to be in the range of 19.7% to 20.3% based on Infiltrator's strong profitability and our combined commitment to operational excellence. We are excited for what's to come and look forward to working with the Infiltrator team as we combine our two great businesses.

With that, I'll turn it back to Scott.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

All right, thanks. So in closing, this acquisition builds on our existing water management solutions platform, expanding our adjustable market opportunity and enhancing our sales growth, margin profile, and cash flow generation. We believe this acquisition will create the nation's foremost water management solutions company, with leading positions in both the storm water and onsite septic markets.

Importantly, with this acquisition, we have a very clear strategic blueprint for the next several years. We will continue executing the market share model, with a particular focus on convergence in key high-growth states. We will improve our performance in delivery and costs across our manufacturing and logistics network, and we will focus on executing an exciting new product portfolio and growth plan with Infiltrator that also adds to our overall growth and margin profile. Now, we will have to do this while returning our agriculture business to growth and being a more consistent performer in our international activities in Canada, Mexico, exports in our Tigre-ADS joint venture in South America. So while we have a lot of work to do, our priorities are clear to us as a management team, including paying down debt and getting to the point where we will be less than 3 times levered within the next 18 months.

So a lot of work to do. We're excited about it. I like the clarity and simplicity of our plan going forward, and knowing what to go and execute on, and we look forward to getting on with that.

So we'll open it up, operator, for any questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Michael Halloran from Baird. Your line is open.

Michael Halloran -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Hey. Good morning, everyone.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Mike.

Michael Halloran -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

So congratulations on the transaction, obviously a lot of moving pieces going on here. So on the acquisition, maybe talk about what you look at the relative outperformance versus market. You certainly have talked about those statistics in your core non-residential markets historically. The slide deck gives a 9% CAGR over the last couple years for that business itself.

How does that business typically track from a growth perspective relative to its core markets? And maybe some statistics around how penetrated their materials are, the plastic sides are, as a percentage of the overall market and what the opportunity set looks like longer-term.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

So, good morning, Mike and Higgins is going to look up the penetration piece of plastics in there. But I just would -- I'd like to give you that flavor on kind of how they grow and what happens there between sales and their margin improvement. So, one, it's a conversion story, just like ours. We convert from traditional materials, like concrete to plastic. We work on approvals and acceptance to do that. They're playing that very same game, and area by area getting approvals from the local authorities, going out and working with their distribution and the local onsite septic contractors to drive preference for plastic because of its better performance cost, installation time all those kinds of things.

On the margin expansion, these guys have done a great job incorporating recycling material, and they're very sharp operators. They have the one facility in Kentucky. It's a pretty good sized facility. And being on that one area gives them a lot of -- let's call it scale and leverage the advantages there. And they've done a nice job in their operations in a continues improvement, automation, their ability to kind of track what's going on in a moment-by-moment basis there. So that's how they've expanded the margins, is really just kind of executing well there and below the surface. That said, they have good spread in distribution. They cover a lot of territory with Carl's sales force, and it lines up very nicely with us. And Mike what's the -- ?

Mike Higgins -- Vice President of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations

Yes. So, Michael, this is Mike Higgins. If you look back at the presentation at 2019, so it suggests that today plastic and septic tanks and septic chambers for the leach field would be 47%, close to 50% of the market. The tanks have a much lower market share in their space, so think of that as something less than 30%, so call it 25%, where the plastic chambers have a little more penetration. But there's still significant upside we believe in both, whether that be the chamber part of that $1.2 billion or the tank part.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

And the growth in the tank part's really been accelerating, so.

Mike Higgins -- Vice President of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations

Yeah.

Michael Halloran -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

And the limitations that they've had from a penetration perspective historically, have those kind of mirrored yours regulation, distribution, expanding geographically, anything else behind that?

Mike Higgins -- Vice President of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations

I don't think so. I would say the dynamics that we face in terms of converting from traditional materials are very similar in this business as well, another reason why we like it. We know how to go and do that through our market share model. They know how to go do that through their market share model, so really the same market drivers. It's gaining that acceptance from the regulators and the contractors.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

And what I would add to that is we speak the same language about gaining in the marketplace through that market share model. And that's been very helpful for us.

Michael Halloran -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Makes sense, and then can you help me a little bit with a two-pronged geographic question? One, splits domestic versus internationally, and then, secondarily, when you're thinking domestically in the States here, how does their footprint overlay with yours when we think about it on a regional basis?

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

So their footprint in the United States would be national. It's concentrated in areas that have higher onsite septic. Sales are concentrated in areas that have higher onsite septic, which might be places like the Southeast, places in the Midwest, but they have distribution in every area. I think their international sales, it was...?

Scott Cottrill -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

It's less than 10%.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, it was less than 10% primarily in Canada. And yes, I think that's about it.

Michael Halloran -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Good. And then from a synergy perspective, you guys laid out some pretty decent timelines, or detailed timelines around the ability to move forward. How are you guys prioritizing that relative to some of the other things? Does this change what you guys are -- some of the internal initiatives you're working on the legacy piece of the portfolio? Do these kind of combine together? And how should we think cumulatively about what the opportunity set is just on the internal improvement category for the overall portfolio when you take these synergies and you layer on what you're doing for the existing portfolio already?

Scott Cottrill -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

So here's how I think about that, is the most important thing we can do is let Roy and his team execute their plan. And so, we'll really operate this as a separate company with Roy as its leader. And I think if they go and execute that plan, we're going to be pretty happy. There are a few very high-impact synergy programs that are underneath that $25 million in the third year, and they're really around material conversion, recycling scale, and then some cross-selling opportunities around products through our respected distributions, which will remain separated.

And Roy and I talked about this a lot. We'll focus on the high-impact few synergies with very focused teams, highly motivated to kind of go out and execute against those plans. And as far as what we have to do within the ADS core business and what you saw at the Investor Day, those things remain right there at the top for the ADS team. And Darren Harvey, our Supply Chain Chief, is rolling along on that hard, and we're already seeing some of those things come along. Now, as you know, that is a journey, where we have a lot to go and do in that area. But we have in our plan, in the models that we've built, we can fully support from a capital and resource perspective, those internal ADS things.

Michael Halloran -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Last one from my perspective. Could you just talk about the momentum that you saw in the legacy business through the quarter? Obviously, really healthy trends, but any signs of change from the underlying demand perspective of the consumer, anything the distribution's saying at this point?

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

So I really appreciate you bringing that up, because in all of this a lot going on, as you said. We didn't want to lose the fact that we had a pretty darn good first quarter. And I would say that there we see things moving at paces equal to or better than what we saw in the first quarter. And our order rate is good. Our backlog is good. We are very busy, very busy, and we continue to see that in quoting levels and in our order releases.

Michael Halloran -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Great, I appreciate the time and congrats again on the acquisition.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Mike.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Matthew Bouley from Barclays. Your line is open.

Matthew Bouley -- Barclays Capital Markets -- Analyst

Hey, good morning, everyone. Congrats on everything. So I'm going to focus here just on the legacy business. So, on the guidance you guys have on the sales side, obviously looking at the quarter, the domestic construction markets, ag, both nicely outperformed. I think what you initially laid out in terms of market outlook. Maybe international was a little softer. But given that performance, and from what you can see today in the end markets, are you suspecting that perhaps we could remain ahead of expectations this year, or is it too early to say that with enough confidence? Thank you.

Scott Cottrill -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes, that's a very leading question, Matt. I appreciate it. No, I think I'd echo Scott's -- I don't think, I know I'll echo Scott's points. We're very encouraged by what we're seeing here in the first quarter in our order book and so forth. But I think that helps us firm up. It's the first quarter, right? It helps us firm up exactly our guidance ranges and where we are in them. Again, if we keep trending the way we are, then we could go to the upper end of that range, and we'll look at that as we get into the next quarter or two. But right now, we're very encouraged by what we're seeing, but, hence, the reaffirming of the guidance that we went out with.

Matthew Bouley -- Barclays Capital Markets -- Analyst

Okay. Perfect. Appreciate that. And then, secondly, on the margin side, again I'm sticking with the legacy business here. You guys are guiding to about 40%, or perhaps a little north of that in terms of incremental margin for the balance of the year, looking kind of toward the midpoint of the EBITDA guide. Is that mostly volume, or are you guys anticipating price versus cost to remain positive? I think Scott C, you mentioned transportation costs have started to turn favorable. How does that play into it? Just any kind of color on the bridge there. Thank you.

Scott Cottrill -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I think it's volume, especially when you see kind of the growth rate that we're seeing on the allied products and the high margin that you have there. So that sales is definitely helping with that incremental margin. But it's more then that spread, is that favorability we saw in the first quarter. We expect that to continue. And then as well, Scott hit on it, right, the transportation. It's not just the inflationary cost pressures ebbing on transportation from diesel and common carrier rates. It's the fact that the guys have, under the ops excellence model, a 5% targeted payload improvement and other metrics that they're working on that we're starting to see the benefit of, and we expect to see more of that as we go through the year.

And on the manufacturing side, Scott talked about what Darren and team are doing. We're starting to get traction there, right. And we had line of sight to this headwind related to this elevated inventory cost from keeping and retaining our workforce. We expect to get a benefit from that as we go through the year, but we had perfect line of sight to that. It came in exactly like we thought. But as we go through Q2, Q3 and Q4, we expect to get a lot of traction there and improvement, especially on a year-over-year basis. So things are lining up really well as we look to the rest of the year, and hence, where the legacy ADS guidance and our reaffirming there.

Matthew Bouley -- Barclays Capital Markets -- Analyst

All right. Perfect. Thanks again and congrats.

Scott Cottrill -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Matt.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] There are no further questions at this time. I turn the call over to Scott Barbour.

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you all again for joining us today. That was pretty easy, two questions. We're off to a good start in the new fiscal year. And as Scott said, we expect to continue the momentum as we move forward. We're focused on our strategic initiatives and the integration of Infiltrator. As a combined business, we remain committed to the execution of our three-year plan as we continue providing best-in-class water management solutions to our customers and maximizing shareholder value.

I want to thank our employees for all their hard work over this last quarter, last couple quarters, with really good execution. And we look forward to another strong quarter and momentum throughout the year and an expanded enterprise. So we appreciate your participation, letting us go a little long today, but we had a lot to cover. We recognize there's a lot of moving pieces right now, so we appreciate your questions and interest in the Company. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 44 minutes

Call participants:

Mike Higgins -- Vice President of Corporate Strategy and Investor Relations

Scott Barbour -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Scott Cottrill -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Michael Halloran -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Matthew Bouley -- Barclays Capital Markets -- Analyst

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