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Applied Industrial Technologies Inc (AIT 0.08%)
Q4 2020 Earnings Call
Aug 12, 2020, 10:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Welcome to the Fiscal 2020 Fourth Quarter Earnings Call for Applied Industrial Technologies. My name is Michelle and I will be your operator for today's call. [Operator Instructions].

I will now turn the call over to Ryan Cieslak, Director of Investor Relations and Treasury. Ryan, you may begin.

Ryan D. Cieslak -- Director of Investor Relations and Treasury

Thanks Michelle and good morning to everyone on the call. This morning, we issued our earnings release in the supplemental investor deck, detailing our fourth quarter results. Both of these documents are available in the Investor Relations section of applied.com.

Before we begin, just a reminder, we'll discuss our business outlook and make forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are based on current expectations, subject to certain risks, including the potential impact from the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as trends in sectors, and geographies, the success of our business strategy and other risk factors. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to update publicly or revise any forward-looking statement. In addition, the conference call will use non-GAAP financial measures, which are subject to the qualifications referenced in those documents. Our speakers today include Neil Schrimsher, Applied's President and Chief Executive Officer; and Dave Wells, our Chief Financial Officer.

With that, I'll turn it over to Neil.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Ryan, and good morning everyone. On behalf of our entire team at Applied, we hope you and your families are healthy, safe and managing well. I'll start today with a brief operational update, including our ongoing actions in response to the COVDI-19 pandemic, as well as what we're seeing across our business in this fluid environment. Dave will follow with a summary of our financials and some specifics on our fourth quarter and outlook, and then I'll close with some final thoughts.

I first want to take a moment to thank our entire Applied team for their strong effort and support throughout our fiscal 2020. I'm proud of what we've accomplished and how we've responded. Particularly over the past several months as we face an unprecedented environment from the pandemic and manage to slower demand, within our core end markets. It's inspiring to see how we've stepped up to the challenge collectively, and remain focused on driving value across our customer and supplier base. Our top priority remains the well-being of our associates, customers, suppliers and business partners, as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to evolve. We have quickly adapted our operations, and embedded various safety measures, allowing us to swiftly adjust to our customers' requirements and solidify our supply chain. All our operations and facilities have remained open, and fulfillment at our distribution centers and local service centers remains efficient.

Our operating model and sales team has shown tremendous flexibility. Effectively leveraging virtual communication platforms, system investments made in recent years, and our multi-channel capabilities. The resilient nature of our value proposition is apparent across many facets of our company. From the motion control products we provide for critical break-fix MRO applications throughout essential industries, such as food and beverage, agriculture, and pulp and paper, to leading fluid power solutions, including electronic control integration, driving greater safety and precision, as well as pneumatic solutions supporting various areas of technology, life sciences and sustainability. Our position is further strengthened by our team at Olympus Controls, who are addressing greater safety and productivity requirements in the COVID-19 environment, through leading next generation automation solutions.

We are also gaining traction with our cross-selling opportunity, focused on further penetrating our fluid power, flow control, automation and consumable solutions across our legacy service and our customer base. Of note, we are experiencing greater quoting activity, and sales of flow control products and solutions across our service center network over the past several quarters. We're also encouraged by initial progress in identifying and developing opportunities aimed at connecting Olympus Controls' automation capabilities across traditional industries.

Our cross-functional teams are laying a foundation that is driving greater customer awareness at various strategic accounts, particularly as the environment cycles and customers look to consolidate spend with fewer more capable providers, that are already critical to their direct production infrastructure. We're still in the early innings of this cross-selling opportunity, which we believe is meaningful and should drive the incremental growth into fiscal 2021 and beyond. Importantly, through the evolving backdrop over the past several months, our business and entire Applied team has shown powerful durability. Our operating discipline and prompt cost actions have allowed us to quickly align expenses and manage working capital within the slower environment, driving mid teen decremental margins, record cash generation and improved liquidity during our fiscal fourth quarter. We are encouraged by the execution across our team in recent months, which provides solid footing entering fiscal 2021. As expected, the broader demand environment remain challenging throughout our fourth quarter, as customers implemented shelter in-place orders, reduced production, closed facilities, and deferred project activity. By month, organic daily sales declined by a high-teens percentage rate year-over-year during April and May, followed by a low 20% decline during June, despite a slight sequential improvement in daily sales rates. Organic sales to-date in our fiscal first quarter of 2021 or down by mid-teens percentage year-over-year. When considering prior-year comparisons by month and typical seasonal progression, we would characterize underlying sales as generally stable to slightly stronger, since [Technical Issues].

Weakness remains pronounced across many of our core manufacturing end markets. This includes heavy industries, such as machinery metals, oil and gas and transportation. While more customers are bringing facilities back online following shutdowns in recent months, the pace remains gradual and balanced by adjustments to production schedules and working capital discipline. In addition, while we are selling greater amounts of safety and janitorial supplies to customers, given COVID-19, this product category represents a small portion of our business and was less than 5% of our overall sales during fiscal 2020.

There are however some positive signs in recent weeks, worth noting. In particular, order rates have gradually improved across our service centers since early July. We are starting to see greater maintenance activity and break-fix demand from heavy industry customers, as production gradually ramps and safety buffer stock is depleted, following what we believe was some unusual pandemic driven pre-buying during April. Combined with our increased orders across our consumables business and improving industrial sentiment, such as indicators like PMI, which typically lead our core business. We believe industrial activity is firming, is behind us. Ultimately, as industrial production regains momentum, we believe our customer requirements will be meaningful, following a prolonged period of idle production and maintenance deferrals on critical equipment and infrastructure. That said, visibility remains limited and uncertainty still exists around the speed of recovery, as customers continue to manage operations around a still evolving pandemic and macro outlook.

As such, we remain focused on managing expenses, and are extending various cost actions we outlined last quarter into early fiscal 2021. These actions include temporary pay reductions and furloughs, as we align to current business conditions, while preserving jobs. We understand our requirements and will remain disciplined, as the cycle continues to evolve. That said, these actions are not easy, and we intend to proactively reverse them where appropriate, as soon as possible, given the inherent value our associates bring to this organization and to our growth opportunity going forward.

With our business model showing durability in our fourth quarter, our balance sheet in a strong position, and initial signs of a recovery ahead, we will take an offensive approach into fiscal 2021.

Now at this time, I'll turn the call over to Dave for additional detail on our financial results and outlook.

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Thanks Neil. Before I begin, I will remind everyone that a supplemental investor deck, which recaps key financial performance and discussion points, is available on our investors site for your additional reference. To provide more detail on our fourth quarter results, consolidated sales decreased 17.9% over the prior year quarter. Acquisitions contributed 1.5% growth, partially offset by an unfavorable foreign currency impact of approximately 1%. Netting these factors, sales decreased 18.4% on an organic basis, with a like number of selling days year-over-year.

Turning to sales performance by segment, as highlighted on slide 7 and 8 in the deck, sales in our service center segment declined 22.3% year-over-year or 21.1% on an organic basis. Lower industrial production activity and customer facility closures from COVID-19 precautions drove reduced MRO needs across the majority of our service center customer base during the quarter. Weakness was particularly acute within metals, mining, oil and gas, machinery and transportation end markets, partially offset by more resilient demand within food and beverage, pulp and paper, forestry, electronics and chemical industries, as well as growth in our Australian operations.

Within our fluid power and flow control segment, sales decreased 6.8% over the prior year quarter, with our August 2019 acquisition of Olympus Controls contributing 5 points of growth. On an organic basis, segment sales declined 11.8%, reflecting lower fluid power sales within industrial OEM, and mobile off-highway applications, as well as weaker flow control sales from slower project activity. This was partially offset by fluid power sales growth within the technology end-market during the quarter.

Moving now to margin performance, as highlighted on page 9 of the deck, gross margin of 28.7% declined approximately 40 basis points year-over-year or roughly 70 basis points, when excluding non-cash LIFO expense of $0.8 million in the quarter. This compared favorably to prior year LIFO expense of $3.4 million. Gross margin performance was largely in line with our expectations, with year-over-year declines, primarily reflecting unfavorable mix, tied to softer sales across our local service center accounts, coupled with a greater mix of lower margin project business in our Canadian operations, as well as lower levels of vendor support, attributed to softer volumes. These headwinds were partially balanced by our margin expansion initiatives, stable price cost dynamics, and positive fluid power and flow control segment performance.

While we expect some of these headwinds to persist near term, we remain focused on driving annual gross margin expansion, as demand levels normalize, reflecting benefits from our systems investments, the positive contribution of expansionary products, strategic growth from our technical service oriented solutions, and initiatives to expand business across our local customer base.

Turning to our operating costs; on an adjusted basis, selling, distribution and administrative expenses declined 13.8% year-over-year, excluding $1.5 million of non-routine costs in the quarter, $1 million of which was recorded in our service center segment and $0.5 million in our fluid power and flow control segment. These costs include severance and facility exit cost related to actions implemented in response to the weaker demand environment.

Adjusted SG&A expense declined nearly 16% over the prior year on an organic basis, when excluding operating costs associated with our Olympus Controls acquisition. As highlighted last quarter, we implemented various actions to align expenses with slower demand. These include restricting T&E, over time, temporary labor and consulting spend. as well as staffing alignments, implementation of furloughs and pay reductions and the temporary suspension of the company's 401(k) match. While materially difficult, our team displayed great discipline and swiftly executed these requirements across the organization. As a reminder, this includes a mix of both structural and temporary cost actions, as we continue to assess the environment.

With the demand outlook still soft and uncertain, we remain focused on managing costs near term and have extended the temporary cost actions into our current fiscal first quarter of 2021. That said, we will be balancing these cost alignments into our fiscal first half, as we look to execute our strategic growth initiatives and requirements to ramp and effectively respond as recovery continues to unfold.

Adjusted EBITDA in the quarter was $64.8 million, down roughly 26% compared to $87.6 million in the prior year quarter, while adjusted EBITDA margin was 8.9% or 9%, excluding non-cash LIFO expense in the quarter. On a GAAP basis, we reported net income of $30 million or $0.77 per share, which includes the $1.5 million of previously referenced non-routine costs on a pre-tax basis. On a non-GAAP adjusted basis, excluding these costs, we reported net income of $31.1 million or $0.80 per share, down $39.8 million or $1.02 per share respectively in the prior year quarter.

Moving to our cash flow performance and liquidity; during the fourth quarter, cash generated from operating activities was $127.1 million, while free cash flow was $123.2 million, or nearly four times adjusted net income. For full year fiscal 2020, we generated record free cash flow of $277 million, representing 186% of adjusted net income and up over 70% from $162 million in the prior year. The strong cash performance during the quarter and the full year reflects ongoing contribution of our working capital initiatives, as well as the countercyclical cash flow profile of our business model.

Given the strong cash flow performance in the quarter, we ended June with nearly $269 million of cash on hand, with over 80% of that unrestricted U.S. held cash. Our net debt is down 22% over the prior year, and net leverage stood at 2.3 times adjusted EBITDA at quarter end, below the prior quarter level of 2.5 times and the prior year level of 2.6 times. We are in compliance across our financial covenants, with cushion at the end of June, following the solid quarter of cash flow performance.

During July, we utilized excess cash to pay off a $40 million private placement note that came due. The paydown of the note, which had a 3.2% fixed rate, will drive additional cash interest savings into fiscal 2021. We have now paid down roughly $170 million of debt since early 2018, including $55 million within the past seven months. In addition, our revolver remains undrawn, with approximately $250 million of capacity, and additional $250 million accordion option, combined with incremental capacity on our uncommitted private shelf facility, we remain in a positive liquidity position. Capital deployment near term will continue to focus on preserving liquidity and opportunistically paying down debt, though our M&A initiatives and related pipeline remain active. Our focus remains on smaller bolt-on targets, that align with our growth priorities including fluid power, flow control and automation opportunities.

Transitioning now to our outlook; as noted in our press release, we are refraining from providing formal full year fiscal 2021 financial guidance at this point, due to ongoing uncertainty around the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Visibility remains limited on how customers will proceed with operations, particularly if an additional wave of infections materializes into the fall and winter months. As such, we believe it more productive to be transparent on how our operations are trendy to date, and provide near term directional guidance as appropriate, pending greater clarity on a macro trajectory, particularly when considering the unique nature of this downturn.

With that as a backdrop, assuming underlying demand remains consistent with July and early August trends for the remainder of the quarter, we expect fiscal first quarter 2021 sales to decline 17% to 18% organically year-over-year. This includes an assumption of high teens organic declines in our service center segment and mid-teen declines in our fluid power and flow control segment. As a reminder, we will have roughly a half a quarter of inorganic contribution from Olympus Controls, which was acquired in mid-August of 2019. At this sales level, we believe high teen decremental margins is still an appropriate benchmark to use near term. This takes into consideration, cost actions and emerging growth and operational requirements, as we position around the recovery.

In addition, to provide a frame of reference and some direction for your full year modeling, assuming sequential daily sales patterns are consistent with average historical trends, this would imply year-over-year sales declines do not materially improve, until the second half of our fiscal year, with a return to year-over-year organic growth in our fiscal fourth quarter. Again, this assumes sequential trends in the daily sales rates that are similar to historical seasonal patterns, and can certainly vary, depending on the direction of the industrial cycle, the broader economy, and execution of our growth initiatives going forward. Lastly, we believe an effective tax rate of 23% to 25% remains an appropriate assumption near term.

From a cash flow perspective, keep in mind our free cash generation is typically softer in the first half of our fiscal year, reflecting modest seasonality. As such we expect, moderation from record fourth quarter level sequentially near term. We also expect potentially greater working capital requirements in the fiscal 2021, as we look to support growth and the recovery, as the recovery of the year plays out. Our capital and capex requirements remain limited, with fiscal 2021 targeted at $15 million to $20 million of capital spend. Overall, we are encouraged by our fiscal 2020 cash performance, which provides further evidence of our strong cash flow profile, including benefits from working capital initiatives, and improving margin profile in recent years. We remain confident in our cash generation potential going forward, and reiterate our normalized annual free cash target of at least 100% of net income.

With that I will now turn the call back over to Neil for some final comments.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Dave. As we enter fiscal 2021, we see a significant opportunity ahead, as we leverage our industry position, as a leading technical distributor around new and emerging growth opportunities. While we are facing a challenge as the industrial economy transitions from a generational pandemic, we have a remarkably strong business model, that generates cash and adapts well throughout the cycle, as we demonstrated in our fourth quarter. This foundation will provide significant support to navigate through the near term headwinds, while staying focused on our strategic initiatives, aimed at positioning and adapting the company for stronger organic growth, relative to our legacy trends, greater free cash generation, and improved returns on capital in the coming years. I strongly believe our greatest opportunity is now in front of us, considering our cross-selling potential, customers' increasing technical needs, potential greater U.S. industrial production requirements, and likely ongoing, if not accelerated industry consolidation in coming years.

Our value proposition puts us in a unique position to emerge, as a leading growth beneficiary from these tailwinds. We plan to leverage our comprehensive suite of technical products and solutions, as we expand into emerging areas of growth from an ever more sophisticated, automated, and connected industrial supply chain. These growth opportunities, combined with our operational excellence initiatives, expansion of our shared services model and leveraging our systems investments, will further solidify our ability to expand margins in coming years.

Long term, we remain committed to our financial targets of $4.5 billion in sales and 11% EBITDA margins. While the timing of these goals is dependent on the industrial cycle trajectory, I believe they are within Applied's reach and provide the framework for significant value creation, as we execute our strategy going forward. To our customers and suppliers, our message is clear, we are the leading stand-alone distributor of industrial motion power and technologies, with growing capabilities across next generation automation and industry 4.0 solutions. We have the most comprehensive portfolio and technical service capabilities, premier engineered solution expertise, and greatest track record of consistency and commitment to this vital space. We are investing for the future, developing best-in-class talent and focused on solidifying Applied, as the eminent return enhancing channel for your critical industrial supply chain products and solutions. We are here to serve and partner with you during these unique times, and what will be fast-moving and dynamic environment going forward.

Once again we thank you for your continued support and with that we'll open up the lines for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]. Your first question comes from Quinn Fredrickson from Baird. Your line is open.

Quinn Fredrickson -- Baird -- Analyst

Hey, good morning guys.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Good morning

Quinn Fredrickson -- Baird -- Analyst

So my first question is just on trends in the service center business. It seems like most of the recovery and momentum since April has been in the fluid power and flow control, whereas the service center business has stayed kind of steady. Is that just a function of more of local customers and the service center than in the fluid power and flow control or a heavier mix of the heavy industries or any other reasons why the service center hasn't seen that same recovery?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

I'll start. I would say, one would be the participation and presence with the heavy industries. And so we think about metals, mining oil and gas machinery and transportation, that would be heavy participation there. Since the beginning of the fiscal year, we have seen some improvements in order rates and trends, but it has been a little modest and gradual, as we've gone through. And then from the various shelter in-place and customers coming back the local customers perhaps have been a little slower to do that across some of the varieties. So you are correct in thinking, that is an input on service centers.

Quinn Fredrickson -- Baird -- Analyst

Okay, thank you. And just secondly on gross margin, just any color you could provide on the near-term outlook? You've obviously got the continued point of sales and product mix [Indecipherable] plus maybe some further volume recovery in local customers. Would your expectation be that gross margin is slightly higher sequentially, but still down on a year-over-year basis in the first quarter?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think to start as we move through probably a good benchmark is, sequentially I think relatively unchanged. If we look probably a driver on gross margins was mix and local accounts. But we think coming through sequentially unchanged, if I look at the comparison ahead year-over-year from last year, it'd be a little bit more challenging, as we go through the first quarter. But I would think sequentially, kind of unchanged as we start the fiscal year.

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

I'd just elaborate that Q1 is our toughest year-over-year comp, where we were at 29.4% last year. But again, the fundamental is still there and expect to see that trend improve then, as we start to see some net local count mix come back.

Quinn Fredrickson -- Baird -- Analyst

Okay, thank you very much guys.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

And your next question will come from Michael McGinn from Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Good morning, everybody. Good quarter.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Hi Mike.

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

I just want to walk through the margin incremental target. So you're taking additional temporary cost actions, but it seems like stagnant at that high teens decrementals. Can you just walk me through the math with the structure on why -- what could push you to maybe mid-teens or even below that?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

We talked to a high teens, we delivered a 15% decremental here in the most recent quarter. We do have some costs that come back in terms of reset on bonus targets, things of that nature. But also, we've left some room to -- as we've talked in the script to make some investments and position ourselves for growth. So we're not kind of top behind, if you will, in terms of -- as that recovery comes. So continuing to make some strategic investments in the business, you see that reading through, and that's why we're still talking in terms of the high teens versus potentially something that looks more like what we have posted in Q4,

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, that's it, Michael. We will see some SG&A, as travel starts to reoccur more than it did in the fourth quarter, and there'd be some associated expense, I think as general people, find a way back to normal medical appointments and routines, there'd be a little bit come in that. But our real view is, be connected to our customers. We are important to them. We think we're one of the few to get internal access into many of these facilities right now and we plan on fully participating in helping them and not reacting or just responding to it later in the time period.

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Okay. And just going back to the topline real quick; fluid power, I think in the last quarter you said it was trending down mid-teen, both your base business and FCX. Kind of improved, but you mentioned some of your customers restocked for some parts. Can you just frame the magnitude on how it affected the top line, maybe the margin as well, and then is that why we're seeing just kind of -- seeing a little dip back in here to the down mid-teens or any help there would be appreciated?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

I don't think we saw -- especially in the fluid power flow control side, a great deal of stocking or I'd say that phenomena is probably -- to this point, we picked up on it a bit more on the service center side of the business, really starting around April. We've talked previously, not a lot of stocking and destocking in this business, just given the randomness of demand. But the other 50% is not break-fix. Here again, there are some repetitive items used, and I think just protecting themselves from potential supply chain disruption that -- and the uncertainty of what was to come. We had some customers that may have ordered a bit heavier in April, to protect themselves. So I think what we're seeing is, very stable demand in fluid power, flow control, just given the, the more project and technical based nature of that business, list stocking, destocking that comes with that. And certainly, some easier comps, as we go back to the comparisons between the growth that the service center side of the business is posting, as opposed to fluid power and flow control. But both very stable and slightly improving demand trends, as you look at the daily sales rates.

Ryan D. Cieslak -- Director of Investor Relations and Treasury

Mike, this is Ryan, just to reinforce what Dave said on and if you look at the fluid power and flow control segment performance in the quarter, and the service center segment keep in mind the comparisons are different there, right. As Dave mentioned, easier comps in our fluid power and flow control segment, which is helping the year-over-year trend there. I would also say though, when you look at that business, as we talked about this cycle we do have, that we've seen expansion and growth within the technology and market, which is providing a nice balance to some of the legacy, industrial fluid power business that we have, and we expect that to continue here going forward. But keep in mind, as we go into the first quarter and maybe even the second quarter, and the comps within that segment, they do get more difficult, and that's why we say we would expect for the first quarter, to be down mid-teens versus the down 12% organic they put up in the fourth quarter.

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Okay. And then last one on me, free cash flow was really good, it's great. I think the working capital, as a percent of sales, lowest it has been since 2012. Can you just frame for me what restocking looks like for you guys? Are we talking working capital, a modest, $20 million, $30 million use and mostly the back half, or are we looking something more, like we saw in 2012 timeframe, where that was a much larger $60 million use?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

I mean we're going to do our best using the tools at our disposal. I think we're in a much better position this time. If you look at our -- coming out of the last couple of cycles, where you look back, we were, say, maybe a 60% to 70% of net income in terms of free cash, as we did some restocking and build some of that working capital that comes with the volume. As we talked in the script, we're still targeting, 100% that's balancing and continuing to leverage the investments we've made in systems, to bring back inventory thoughtfully and continuing initiatives around, our collections to be able to fund some of the AR growth that's going to come with the volume, with further performance improvement, in terms of past due. So we see that being more balanced this quarter. But they will still be, as we talked about particularly in the back half of the year, some demand and tug from the operating working capital that comes with the recovery, but we'll be much more I think disciplined and thoughtful and being able to manage through that coming out of this cycle.

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Appreciate the time. I'll pass it along.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Mike.

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. Your next question comes from Joe Mondillo from Sidoti & Company. Your line is open.

Joseph Mondillo -- Sidoti & Company -- Analyst

Hi guys, good morning. Just a follow-up on that last working capital question, both inventory and payables. So inventory was down about 13%, and the revenue being down 18%. How do you think you fared with your inventory management in the quarter? And do you foresee more opportunity to reduce inventory? And then on the payable side -- your payables were up over 20%, could you just help us understand what's going on there and what to expect going forward?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Sure. The inventory, we will address that first. We still see opportunities as we work through. I like the results and kind of where we had traction in Q4, as we continue to work to leverage the investment that we have in inventory, and bring down some of that stocking level commensurate with the decline in sales we've seen. That was not fully balanced across the business. So we still have some opportunities that will provide some source of cash for us, particularly as we work through the first half of 2021. On the payables side, we don't see anything unusual about the trend in terms of -- sort of there was no change in discipline or approach in terms of payment terms. So I see that as a function of kind of the inventory, commensurate with the inventory purchases and that reading through. So we'd expect our payables trends to continue to look much like they have in prior quarters. We have continued initiatives around obviously terms expansion, use of purchase card programs etc to help extend terms. But the real opportunity comes to us in terms of the continued management of inventories and working through, again, some more opportunity there. As well as, like the traction that we've made on the collection side of the equation, actually despite a tough environment, brought down overall past due about 3% sequentially in the quarter. So pleased with the performance of the team there and we'll continue to work that one as well.

Joseph Mondillo -- Sidoti & Company -- Analyst

Okay. And then question on fluid power, flow control segment. The margin was better than I was looking for, very good expansion there, considering the challenges. How do we think about that margin that you put up in the fourth quarter, and how to think about sort of the year-over-year comparisons going forward?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Sure. Some of that margin, I mean, it's a combination of both, very nice and improved gross margins in the business, that was one of the -- our synergy case opportunities with FCX, that showed ongoing progress in terms of margin expansion there. You know, some of that -- just here again, just the technical nature of the value that we bring there, helps us protect some of those margins on kind of both sides, fluid power and flow control. Certainly the overall operating margin benefit as well from the -- kind of the cost countermeasures reading through, we will still expect gross margin expansion as we move forward. Some of that temporary benefit will roll off, as we do see the recovery, but will replace with volume benefit. So still like our prospects for continuing to show improvement in operating margin across that business.

Joseph Mondillo -- Sidoti & Company -- Analyst

Okay. And I guess just lastly that segment I know does have a little bit more of a backlog component to it. The particular parts of that segment that you have sort of backlog driven, as far as your visibility and what that backlog sort of looks like, did that come down throughout the quarter, and is that maybe why you're expecting the year-over-year declines to increase a little bit in the first quarter? Just talk about the visibility that you have in there?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

It's still pretty steady. And I think here again, as Ryan indicated, we're seeing the benefit of tech market hanging very nicely, that's helped to provide some buffer. But really, we've seen pretty stable backlog position across the quarter. Really does come down to more of that comp issue, as we talked about, in terms of the year-over-year comps, now starting to get a bit tougher in that business.

Joseph Mondillo -- Sidoti & Company -- Analyst

Okay. And then I guess, last thing for me, regarding your debt and how you're thinking about managing that, should we expect you to continue to try to consistently ramp down the debt throughout the year? How are you thinking about that debt pay down?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Sure. In M&A, continue to leverage will be a priority, just in this environment, still like our position and nearly $269 million of cash on the balance sheet, as we ended the quarter. So as we talked on the call in the script, the priorities will still be deleveraging kind of the modest capital requirements, is going to give us some flexibility to pursue some selective bolt-on M&A, we talked about the priorities there, in terms of the M&A and still very active pipeline. So as we will start getting back out, perform diligence, etc, we expect some disciplined work around the M&A funnel as well. But deleveraging will still be a priority in this environment.

Joseph Mondillo -- Sidoti & Company -- Analyst

Okay. Thanks for taking my question.

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Sure. Thanks, Joe.

Operator

Your next question will come from Adam Uhlman from Cleveland Research. Your line is open.

Adam Uhlman -- Cleveland Research -- Analyst

Hey guys, good morning. I wanted to -- I might have missed it, but could you size the magnitude of the temporary cost savings here, this past quarter? And then can you confirm your debt planning on being in place for the entirety of the first quarter?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I would say, we don't really size them fully. But I would say, two-thirds of the decline we had in the fourth quarter were more around specific actions and really those will continue for the duration of the of the first quarter that we're in. And so I think that will help.

Adam Uhlman -- Cleveland Research -- Analyst

Okay, got you. And then I guess as a society as a whole has shifted a lot of transactions to e-commerce. I would suspect that you've probably seen a lift in sales through that channel. I was wondering maybe you could speak to the activity levels that you're seeing there and then maybe more so on any investment programs that you have in that channel, to expand your scope and breadth of offerings?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think the good news on that side is the tools and the capabilities exist. I believe we have higher investment requirements in doing that and doing a little bit more on with engaging with customers and follow-up. But from an electronic standpoint, I would say mid 20s, 25% or so of the business comes in that way, that includes applied.com, EDI. Electronic Data Interchange, but also then Procurement Systems, connections between ourselves and given [Indecipherable]. And so that could ramp a little bit what we are seeing, is also just more virtual connection with engineering teams and procurement teams and on-site teams, and so while we are physically present at times, where we have led technology to generate demand and serve their requirements.

Adam Uhlman -- Cleveland Research -- Analyst

Okay, got you. And the last thing for me, do you have any additional restructuring costs planned for the current quarter, the first half?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

I would say, we will continue to evaluate and look at and where we have requirements or opportunities that we will act on, I wouldn't say at this stage that they are meaningful. Personally, I think we're in line on our cost. Leadership team continues to have the right focus. In our sessions and reviews now, we're spending a lot more time on customers and our growth opportunities, as we see those opportunities ahead of us, rather on cost and cash. We know how to operate in the cycle, demonstrated it in the fourth, will again in the first, that's where we're spending our time, effort and energy.

Adam Uhlman -- Cleveland Research -- Analyst

Got you. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question will come from Chris Dankert from Longbow Research. Your line is open.

Christopher Dankert -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking the question. I guess earlier we've been talking about seeing some increased break-fix demand, as some of this equipment that was kind of idled in an unplanned manner, turns back on. I think you've briefly mentioned something like that in the prepared remarks. But just are we starting to see that break-fix demand come back in any meaningful way, if things turn back on or is it a bit slower than you would have expected, I guess?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

I think the ramp has been gradual. I think customers are still dealing with time out, whether as they adjust shifts or production schedules. Some to their demand environment, some may be virus related, but as that equipment comes back up from being down or idled for a long period of time, we are starting to see a little bit more of that. And our view is, that only increases as demand across these industries, including these heavy industries, starts to come through.

Christopher Dankert -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Got it, got it. Understood. And then, my apologies if I missed it, but did you comment at all on the impact of pricing in the quarter? I assume it was nominal, but just kind of dot the I's there, I guess?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

It was nominal, offset inflationary impact, but negligible in terms of the impact on overall growth.

Christopher Dankert -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Got it, got it. And then to the extent you're kind of willing to comment here, I guess trying to put all these pieces together, it seems to me like back of the envelope map, assumes SG&A kind of comes up in something of a seasonal fashion for the first quarter off of a very impressive fourth quarter, kind of controlled SG&A level. Is that the right way to think about it here?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Dave

We expect that here again. That's the difference too in the mid-teens versus the high teens decremental we're talking about. Once again that is travel, etc, starting to ramp back up. So there is virtually none in Q4, as well as here again, positioning around some investments, as we work to make sure that we're ready to capture the opportunity on the upside. So not holding true to our strategic priorities and have not shut our funding on some of those projects that we see will continue to drive growth for us in the future.

Christopher Dankert -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Got it, got it. Thanks so much and good luck going forward here guys.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Chris.

Operator

And your next question will come from Steve Barger from KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is open.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Thanks. Good morning guys.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Back to your commentary around pace of service center improvement, are you confident you're retaining your typical share, or are you seeing any kind of aggressive price competition from smaller competitors that you should be concerned about?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

I think we're confident. We're confident in the broader capability in doing it. I still think the environment overall is productive, with good recognition on cost to serve. I think for us, just the ability to be connected and then be connected with motion control bearings, power transmission products, but then also to be connected and have expertise around fluid power and flow control. And now, even as we start a little bit more on automation in those solutions, I think that is helping us. So now we feel very good about our position.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Great. And I want to make sure I understand the revenue dynamics, if 1Q revenue is down 17% to 18%, looks like you'll have the normal sequential step down from 4Q. But do you expect 1Q is the trough quarter for revenue in dollars and then sequential improvement for the rest of the year?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

I think as we think about it, assuming these kind of historical trends hold, that we would see our year-over-year sales declined would not materially improve until the second half, and then we would return to growth in the fourth quarter.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Okay.

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

And Steve yeah, on Neil's point with that, the comment of not really seeing the year-over-year trends improve into the back half, that would be an assumption, if we just assume normal sequential patterns from where we are today, and what that implies ultimately then for the year-over-year trend, because the comparisons really don't change much from the first to the second quarter, and then they change more materially into the back half.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Yeah, I mean obviously 2Q is normally down a little bit from 1Q. I was just wondering if that pattern changed this year, because of the weakness that we've seen, starting in April. It sounds like you expect kind of stability in this level plus or minus?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Yeah, I think that that's a fair assumption to start with. Right, and certainly depending on the cycle coming off of what is very low level, that as you mentioned April, depending on our execution of growth strategies, that we're deploying right now, that can vary that trend. But I think what we would say is, just as a guiding post, if you assume normal sequential patterns on historical averages, that dynamic of no material improvement in the year-over-year trend into the back half, is how I would think about it again, as a starting point.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Got you. Switching gears, a big part of the strategy is helping customers to think about or integrate robotics, automation, Internet of Things. Can you talk about how those customer interactions or your commercial efforts have evolved over the past five or six months, as you've had to step back from the physical?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Well, to your point, right, we're still making connections, sometimes physically on, sometimes they are virtual sessions, and when they are virtual sessions, you can really expand your participation and level of expertise. So as we think about Applied and our Internet of Things Connect program with customers, we're working to deal with problems that they have or solutions that they're looking for, and how can we solve them around discrete operations, discrete automation opportunities. And so I like what we're able to do, and help them on communications connectivity-type devices, as they look to connect IT with their operating technology, things around use of robotics that helps in their social distancing, or material handling, even some of those that have some cleaning techniques around them, which has some encouraging potential for us to go through. Use of vision, which helps them perform quality and inspection, and then connecting this data, which lets them do more remote management, remote monitoring, whereas in the past, maybe they've relied on traveling people or experts to go around to some of their sites or facilities as they can connect them and review those similar things, they're just able to do it a little bit more productively, effectively maybe safely in this environment. And so those are the things that we're working on. And connecting with our suppliers, because there is more technology, more sensors, more capability coming in to those products. So we think we're well positioned to connect those items from our suppliers to specific customer needs, and then be part of reviewing and interpreting the performance data around them.

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

I think the team hasn't missed a beat in terms of the sales activity. One of our reviews here a month ago, when the sales engineers from Olympus indicated that they are -- is probably making five times the sales pitches, just because of being able to do it virtually, cast a wider net and be able to be more efficient in delivery. So I think, we've had some learnings come out of this, but the team has adapted well to the COVID environment and still driving growth.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Have you seen a commensurate increase in closings, relative to that increase in pitches? In other words, are people just curious and trying to figure out what the capabilities are, and then they're likely to revert if we get a vaccine or whatever, or do you think this is driving a permanent change in how people are thinking about the importance of automation robotics, vision, anything else?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

I think it's driving more around the importance and the use and the adoption. So we don't feel like we're in actual presentation mode as we go through. Now we know we have some projects that got slowed as we would go on site and help with commissioning and pull through. Now, we think that's going to start to ease, as we go into this quarter or perhaps future quarters, because people are more comfortable with safety routines and having individuals through. But no, I mean, we think it's meaningful. We think it is here to stay and will be part of the ongoing value proposition.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

And last one for me. You talked a little bit about this already, but any lessons learned that you're applying to your own business in terms of automating or digitizing, just anything that's making you more productive, based on how -- what you've learned from talking to customers about their requirements?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So as we do that, both with our supplier products and as we talk with customers and as we think about Internet of Things and technology, we're not missing the beat, at using technology to improve or drive our own internal productivity. I think we always have a focus on that. But as we think about warehouse management opportunities and flow of material and put away, as we think about routines and practices that we can have in service centers and technology to help with shared services or pull out more, what has been more manual or mundane tasks out of those operations, and free up time for those individuals to spend more time connecting with customers and quotes and quote follow-ups. We will continue to work those. I like some of the things we've done. I still feel like we have a nice runway to also help ourselves.

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

That's good detail. I appreciate it. Thanks.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

And your next question will come from Michael McGinn from Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Thanks for the follow-up guys. I just wanted to ask about the international business. Any color -- one of your competitors, Inenco, has seen some positive trends out of Australia. Can you just frame for us what a recovery looks like in the service center business and what the gap historically has been between your international and domestic and where it currently is today?

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

Well, I think we mentioned in the quarter, our team in Australia and New Zealand, they had growth, and so continue to participate and have that now. So I think the team is faring very well. They too have dealt with some of the pandemic coming through. I think New Zealand has 100 plus days of string going on, so operations continue there. But I think, Australia has fared very well. So we continue to see that activity and our local teams are fully participating in that. And they too, right -- as we grow our offering and capability, including service and predicted preventative maintenance and remote monitoring, we're seeing those trends come through.

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Okay. So the growth by FQ4 framework that you outlined, that's both a service center and FP comment, or is it more weighted toward one or the other?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Mike, can you just repeat that question? I am not sure we fully understood it?

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

So the peak to trough would -- by growth by the fiscal fourth quarter would apply a bigger move for service center. I'm just confirming that, both service center and fluid power, you're assuming growth by the end of the year? Is that the case? More weighted to one sector?

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Yeah, we would say is it's -- because we did not give a specific color around by segment, as it relates to the fourth quarter, but we would expect a recovery in both of those segments, starting to really materialize on a year-over-year trend basis as we get into the fourth quarter.

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Okay. That's it from me. Thanks.

Operator

At this time, I'm showing no further questions in queue. I will turn the call back over to Mr. Schrimsher for closing remarks.

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

I just simply want to thank everyone for taking the time, joining us today and we look forward to the continued interaction throughout the quarter.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks].

Duration: 59 minutes

Call participants:

Ryan D. Cieslak -- Director of Investor Relations and Treasury

Neil A. Schrimsher -- President & Chief Executive Officer

David K. Wells -- Vice President-Chief Financial Officer & Treasurer

Quinn Fredrickson -- Baird -- Analyst

Michael McGinn -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Joseph Mondillo -- Sidoti & Company -- Analyst

Adam Uhlman -- Cleveland Research -- Analyst

Christopher Dankert -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Steve Barger -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

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