Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Superior Uniform Group (SGC 1.70%)
Q2 2021 Earnings Call
Jul 28, 2021, 2:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Superior Group of Companies second-quarter 2021 conference call. With us today on behalf of the company are Michael Benstock, company's chief executive officer; Andy Demott, chief operating officer, chief financial officer, and treasurer; Phil Koosed, chief strategy officer. And from the Promotional Products Division, we have Jake Himelstein, BAMKO's president.

After the speakers' opening remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. This call is being recorded, and your participation implies that you agree to this. If you don't, then simply drop off the line. I'd now like to turn the call over to Hala Elsherbini, senior managing director of Three Part Advisors, who will read the safe harbor statement.

Please go ahead.

Hala Elsherbini -- Senior Managing Director,Three Part Advisors

Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. This conference call may contain forward-looking statements about Superior Group of Companies, the company, within the meaning of Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1935, the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, and all rules and regulations issued thereunder. Such statements are based upon management current expectations, projections, estimates, and assumptions. Words such as will, expect, believe, anticipate, think, outlook, hope, and variations of such words and similar expressions identify such forward-looking statements, which include statements on the impact of COVID-19 on the company's business, including inventory, supply chain, manufacturing capacity at the company's own and contract manufacturing facilities, service capacity and customer demand.

Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause future results to differ materially from those suggested by the forward-looking statements. Such risks and uncertainties include but are not limited to the following: the effect of the COVID-19 crisis on the US and global markets; our business operations, customers, suppliers, and employees; general economic conditions in the areas of the United States in which the company's customers are located; changes in the markets where uniforms are worn, where promotional products are sold and where call center services are used; the impact of competition; the company's ability to successfully integrate operations following confirmation of acquisitions; and the availability of manufacturing materials, as well as the risks and uncertainties disclosed in the company's periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, the quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2021, and the 8-K filed recently. Shareholders, potential investors, and other readers are urged to consider these factors carefully in evaluating the forward-looking statements made hereunder and are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking statements. The company does not undertake to update the forward-looking statements contained herein to conform to actual results or changes in the company's expectations, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by law.

10 stocks we like better than Superior Uniform Group
When our award-winning analyst team has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has tripled the market.* 

They just revealed what they believe are the ten best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Superior Uniform Group wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys.

See the 10 stocks

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 7, 2021

Please note that all growth comparisons that management makes today will relate to the corresponding period in 2020 unless otherwise noted. With that, I'll turn the call over to Michael.

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you, Hala. I think your portion of this gets longer and longer every single quarter. Thank you all for joining us to discuss our Q2 results.

In addition to Andy and Jake, I'm pleased to be joined by Philip Koosed, our recently appointed chief strategy officer and the newest member of our C-suite. Phil is dynamic leader with proven strategic acumen, and we're excited to further tap into his expertise. Additionally, Jake has been an invaluable leader serving as COO and CFO of BAMKO these past few years. His depth and breadth of business and industry experience, as well as his prior M&A work, is tremendous asset.

His recent promotion to president is certainly well deserved. For the call format, I'll open the second-quarter highlights, and Phil will provide the higher-level thoughts on our strategic direction, followed by Jake's review of BAMKO. Andy will then provide an operational and financial review. As usual, when we are done, we will open the line for questions.

So let's get started. Sales are quickly moving in the right direction and our core businesses are prospering. In particular, we're seeing a faster than expected recovery in most of the sectors of our uniform business that were weakened by the pandemic. We're also seeing a return to normalize yet strong levels in our other uniform channels.

Overall, second-quarter results in visibility for a strong second half gives us greater confidence to update our sales guidance that we gave during our first-quarter call. We now expect to approach $525 million in revenue for fiscal 2021 versus our guidance last quarter of approaching the $500 million mark. This puts our revenue target on par with 2020s spectacular numbers. To keep some perspective here, I'm going to throw out a lot of numbers now I hope we keep up with it.

In 2019, our total sales revenue was $377 million. In 2020, our sales revenue were $527 million, exceeding our budgeted $408 million by $119 million. Our core non-PPE sales for 2020, this is last year, was $396 million. Our anticipated sales for this fiscal year will greatly eclipse our actual core sales results last year.

Our 12.5% guidance with respect to our growth from 2025 remains the same. We are on track to meet our consolidated CAGR goals of organically achieving nearly $900 million in revenue in 2025 and along with acquisitions expect to exceed $1 billion. Let's take a closer review of our segments. As anticipated, our uniform division, serving both healthcare and essential employee ID end markets, are normalizing when compared to the frenetic pace of pandemic purchasing last year.

For HPI, activity is booming with some customers' demand is nearing and even exceeding pre-pandemic levels. This is particularly evident in lodging, entertainment, hospitality, food service, and transportation. As corporate customers realize rebounding sales, they are returning to an issue that's paused during the pandemic, including uniform upgrades and market checking RFPs. As a result, we are also seeing a market increase in customer acquisition opportunities.

We're excited about initiative we began last quarter at HPI to combine the HPI sales team with our BAMKO sales team as a shared service, to move both divisions toward a more direct sales approach versus the cross-selling approach that we've successfully executed since our acquisition of BAMKO in 2016. I can tell you this. This exponentially deepens our ability to uncover and participate in many more opportunities. This strategy, which we beta tested in Q2, is already paying dividends.

Jake will speak more about this in his remarks. Our remote staffing division, the office groups, continues to post remarkable results as existing customers add seats and many new customers are on-boarding. We're seeing more openness than ever for near-shore outsourcing as many of our customers and prospective customers are experiencing difficulty in hiring in the USA. Many of these have their teams in the US working remotely during the pandemic and have come to the realization that many of the tasks they thought had to be done in-office could be done in a remote environment, and they're now wanting to do the same work at a lower cost with us.

Customer preference for incentive work is somewhat of a mix bag. We're seeing more customers willing to accept the hybrid solution of work from home and from center. Regardless of their choices at our current rate of growth, we'll have to only slightly tweak our future investments in infrastructure to accommodate this unprecedented opportunity for growth. Overall, we continue to capitalize on tremendous tailwinds, resulting in a quarter where we added 437 billable agents across all sites.

Keep in mind that we had 184 agents in Q1 for a total of 621 agents for the first half of 2021. To put this in perspective, our original 2021 forecast, which was ambitious goal for 362 new seat requirements for the entire year, we've already put on 621. From a profitability standpoint, the team delivered outstanding results again and an operating margin of 24%. BAMKO delivered the third consecutive quarter of record sales and core promotional products.

I'm going to leave the rest of our discussion around BAMKO to Jake. Turning to our operating environment. Global logistical and supply chain challenges, as well as increased prices for raw materials, persist for many businesses, including ours. We are not immune from the disruptions.

But our proactive stance on building our inventory early has provided a level of insulation and gives us, on a longer-term basis, further advantage over smaller competitors. In addition, like others, we also faced hiring challenges domestically in lower-wage jobs, which has presented a headwind for our distribution centers. We believe the coming cessation of the supplemental unemployment benefits combined with our creative and aggressive recruitment, incentive, and retention programs, should allow us to maintain needed staffing levels. In regard to the recent tragic events in Haiti, fortunately, our own managed facilities and wonderment are far removed from the epicenter of disruption in Port-au-Price.

The company's production facilities remain largely uninterrupted, except for a couple of days following the tragedy and a two-day government-mandated mourning period. Overall, we have not experienced a material impact to our business. And our inventories of the products made in those factories, as I said earlier, are more than adequate to offset any unexpected disruptions. We're also still in aggressive hiring and training mode in our Haiti facilities as we begin to staff now that the third facility has been open.

As I said at the start of the call, we continue to be impressed by the rising leaders in our company. Our team is passionate and driven and hardworking. They are the key to our future success. Phil's entrepreneurial drive, innovation, and strategic mindset are assets to the company.

We're pleased to welcome him as our first chief strategy officer. Phil, take it from here.

Phil Koosed -- Chief Strategy Officer

Thank you, Michael. I'm very excited to take on this new role and to help shape the future strategic direction of SGC as we enter our second 100 years of growth. I'm an entrepreneur by nature. So I know that growth and the ability to reinvent is really central to the success of any company.

This ability to reimagine the future of this business is built into the DNA of SGC. It's the reason why after 100 years we are more than just surviving, we are thriving. Reimagining the future of this business is the main focus of this role and the primary reason I'm so excited about it. We have built an incredible foundation upon which we can create future growth.

Some critical areas to build upon will be shaping our technology strategy, focusing on client experience, expanding our M&A efforts, and enhancing our talent throughout the organization. I will touch on each of these briefly. First, shaping our technology strategy. Nowadays, every company needs to be a tech company and SGC is no different.

Technology already weaves into every aspect of our business. This will expand rapidly in the next decade as we benefit from the developments in AI, machine learning, advanced robotics, and blockchain. Some of these developments will involve building upon our existing proprietary technologies that we have developed in-house and some of these efforts will require being at the forefront of new technologies that can improve our business. On the client experience side, we have some amazing highlights with some of the largest companies in the world, showing just how good we are at customer experience.

However, we must not rest on our laurels. We will be obsessed with client experience, and we will work diligently to improve it at every level. Our M&A strategy will continue to build upon our rich success we have had with the previous acquisitions. We have made six acquisitions in the last eight years and their effect has been transformational.

We will be focused on maintaining a robust acquisition pipeline so we can continue our current strategy of being extremely selective in terms of who we acquire. Lastly, on the talent front. We know that talent is everything. As a global company, we have the luxury of hiring anywhere in the world.

Therefore, we will be laser-focused on making sure that we attract and retain the best talent in the world. This organization is an entrepreneurs' playground, and I feel privileged to be part of it. We are called the 100-year-old start-up because we are continuously experimenting with new ideas. Our culture encourages this type of experimentation and is the primary reason we will be a $1 billion company within the next five years.

Now I would like to turn the call over to Jake Himelstein. Jake served as our CFO and COO of BAMKO before being promoted this quarter to become our new president of BAMKO. Having worked with Jake for eight years, I can think of no better person to take on this role. I'm excited to watch as his exceptional leadership elevates the business to new levels.

Jake?

Jake Himelstein -- President, BAMKO

Thank you, Phil. This is such an exciting time for SGC and for BAMKO. I'm honored and humbled to lead such an incredible team. Now onto the quarterly review.

As expected, PPE sales slowed down substantially this quarter. Our extraordinary PPE sales of Q2 2020 did not recur in Q2 2021, that did not come as a surprise. However, we are thrilled to report that our core promotional product business has experienced a resurgence in sales, and we expect that to continue throughout the rest of the year. Overall, BAMKO ended the second quarter of 2021 with revenue of $48.7 million, gross profit of $16 million, and operating income of $5 million.

While these figures represent year-over-year decreases from our extraordinary PPE-driven Q2 of 2020. When you consider the anomalous nature of our PPE sales a year ago, this quarter's results were phenomenal. I'm particularly happy to report that this quarter's promotional product revenue was at an all-time high at $47.7 million. Promotional product revenue made up over 98% of total quarterly revenue.

Perhaps most impressively, this is an 85% increase over the same period last year. This now marks the third consecutive quarter that our division has set a new all-time high watermark from promotional product revenue in the quarter. This is our core business. This comes back with a flourish, and it's exciting that we continue to trend upwards to even greater heights.

With the rollout of the vaccine in the US and the easing of COVID restrictions, the promotional products industry started to see an increase in spend during Q2. Clients in the entertainment and travel sectors have increased their spend much quicker than we anticipated. Marketing budgets have started to open back up and we have already seen companies planning for year-end employee gifting. While the promotional products industry as a whole was up about 3% or 4% in the first half of 2021 compared to the first half of 2020, it remained down by about 20% when compared to pre-COVID levels.

Our backlog at June 30th was $67.6 million, almost entirely made up of core promotional products. This backlog is 66% higher than at March 31st. Another sign of the continued resurgence in promotional product spend. We've discussed our ability to create operating leverage to scale on prior calls, and this quarter continues that trend with a very strong operating margin of over 10%.

Overall, our BAMKO team executed well during the first six months of 2021, posting 6% sales gain compared to an exceptionally strong first half of 2020. We've benefited from continued market share gains, PPE customer conversion to branded merchandise customers, and sales contribution from our January 2021 acquisition of Gifts By Design. On the M&A front, we are seeing more opportunities surface as a result of pandemic-related impacts, as well as potential tax law changes. The pipeline is robust, including many unsolicited proposals seeking out SGC as a strong potential partner.

In Q2, we altered our approach on cross-selling promotional products and employee ID uniform programs, now allowing BAMKO's 70-plus sales reps to directly sell uniform programs to both new and existing clients. This move made sense given promotional product and brand-new newborn programs typically at the same buyer groups within our customers. This represents a vast expansion of the team selling large corporate uniform programs and has already yielded many significant opportunities that otherwise would not have been uncovered. Finally, I'm proud to announce that BAMKO was ranked No.

11 in the latest listing of top promotional product distributors in North America. We jumped eight spots this year from our position at No. 19 last year, and we achieved the biggest growth rate of any company on the entire list. This speaks to the strength of our customer value proposition and the incredible BAMKO team, which continues to receive high industry honors.

BAMKO was also named as one of 2021's greatest companies to work for in the promotional products industry for the fourth consecutive year. I'll now turn the call over to Andy for his operational and financial review.

Andy Demott -- Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer

Thanks, Jake, and good afternoon, everyone. We're all pace with capital investment initiatives across our distribution facilities at our Eudora, Arkansas center, beta testing of new upgraded robotics are slated for Q4 with the go-live launch early next year. The consolidation is expected to yield approximately $2 million of annual savings, as well as provide significant technology advantages and efficiency. We continue to reap the benefits of improved efficiencies, resulting from higher automation and robotics in our CID Dallas distribution center as well.

And our third manufacturing facility in Haiti is now beginning operations. Turning to the financial highlights. Consolidated net sales, exclusive of PPE sales, increased by $23 million or approximately 23% compared to the second quarter of 2020 as we continue to see a rebound in markets, and we continue to take additional market share. Including PPE consolidated sales declined 18% compared to the prior-year quarter to $130.8 million.

This decrease in PPE sales was in line with our expectations. Uniforms and related products' net sales excluding PPE decreased 7% or $4.5 million compared to last year. PPE sales were $5.8 million versus $8.9 million a year ago. Additionally, second-quarter 2020 sales of non-PPE healthcare products included an extraordinary surge in demand that has been reduced as we move through the pandemic.

We were successful in adding new business and channels to offset to book this change and are well-positioned to continue to capitalize on this growing part of the market. We're seeing an offset to the higher PPE healthcare uniform demand in second quarter last year with a resurgence of demand for non-healthcare recovering industries, such as restaurants transportation, and the hospitality industries. As we progressed through the pandemic, we felt it was critical to provide backlog information each quarter to provide transparency on the PPE business that had been booked but not yet delivered. Now the crisis PPE is not expected to be a significant portion of our uniform revenue moving forward, our backlog for uniform sales because it's primarily of orders that will shift very quickly and is not meaningful for evaluating the state of the uniform business.

Jake's already reviewed BAMKO's results, I'll move to the office bureaus. The team reported tremendous growth and exceeded expectations with net sales after intersegment eliminations up an impressive 73% to $13.9 million. Growth is attributed to expanded customer relationships and onboarding new customer engagement at an incredible rate. We continue to have tremendous tailwind in this segment.

For the quarter, consolidated gross margin as a percentage of sales increased to 36.1%, a 100-basis-point improvement from 35.1% in second-quarter 2020. Our total SG&A expenses decreased approximately 7%, reflecting a decrease in bad debt expense of $2.8 million. And as a percentage of sales, SG&A was 25.9% versus 22.8% in second quarter last year due primarily to the lower PPE sales in the current period. Income from operations for the second quarter was $13.3 million, compared to $19.6 million in 2020 second quarter.

Operating margin was a solid 10.1%, compared to 12.3% last year. During the second quarter, we terminated our two noncontributory qualified defined benefit pension plans, which were fully funded. Consequently, we recognize a settlement charge of $6.9 million during the three month ended June 30th, which represents the acceleration of deferred charges previously included within accumulated and other comprehensive loss and the impact of remeasuring the planned assets and obligations of termination. The pension plan terminations did not require cash outlay by the Company.

Net of the recognized tax benefit of $0.6 million, this charge resulted in a reduction of diluted earnings per share of $0.39 during the second quarter of 2021. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was 17.3%, compared to 19.6% a year ago. The effective rate for second-quarter '21 was favorably impacted by $0.8 million of windfall tax benefit from stock options exercised during the quarter and $0.6 million of stranded tax benefits that were recognized as a result of the termination of the pension plans. These benefits were partially offset by the nondeductible pension termination charge.

Net income was $4.6 million or $0.28 per diluted share, compared to $15.2 million or $1 per diluted share in quarter two last year. Excluding the impact of the pension termination charge and related tax benefit, net income would have been $0.67 per diluted share in the second quarter of '21. Also of note, our second-quarter 2020 represented the highest quarterly earnings in the company's 100-year history. We are in a strong liquidity position and at June 30th we had cash and cash equivalents of $7.5 million, an increase of $2.4 million in the current year.

Capex for the first half of the year was $11.3 million. We are on target with our capex investments in automation and efficiency, and still expect to be in the range of $16 million to $17 million for 2021. In recognition of our continuing strong performance, the board of directors increased our regular quarterly dividend by 20% in the second quarter to $0.12 per share. In total for the six months ended June 30, 2021 and 2020, we paid $3.4 million and $1.5 million respectively in dividends.

I'll now turn the call back to Michael for his closing remarks and a general outlook.

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Andy. That was long but lot of information in there. Those of you who have been with us before we are -- you know that we're always laser-focused on our future. And our top priority still remains having a disciplined execution of our long-term strategies, both organically and via targeted acquisitions.

SGC is on its best footing ever and I'm confident that are talented, hardworking, passionate leadership and workforce will take us to new heights in the coming year. We strongly believe we have the right plans in place to grow beyond being $1 billion business in less than five years from now. These are very exciting times for SGC. With that, we'd like to open the call for your questions.

Questions & Answers:


Operator

I'll begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator instructions] First question comes from Tim Mulrooney, William Blair. Please go ahead.

Tim Mulrooney -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Hey, Michael, Andy, Phil, Jake. Good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. So on the uniform business, excluding PPE I think the uniform business was down about 7% on a tough comparison.

But I do think those comparisons start to get easier in the back half of the year. So with that in mind, based on what you know today, would you expect to see year-over-year growth in this business in the second half of 2021, excluding PPE?

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

I'll jump in on that. This is Michael. Thanks for the question. It's a good one.

With the resurgence we're seeing of what was considered nonessential businesses during the pandemic and the fact that we're playing catch up at this point. I think we pretty well explained that from a service standpoint, these logistical nightmares have been quite unusual. And also, our customers ordering two or three times what they normally ordered in a quarter has left us pretty shy of some safety stuff in some areas. So as we catch up, we're going to see a quick resurgence of that business.

On the other hand, we're starting -- where the healthcare business was starting to calm down a little bit, although, we're in new channels and we're selling for certainly our fashion scrubs and a lot new channels at walmart.com and target.com. And zappos.com recently is a new one. On the institutional side, a lot of that will depend on what happens with the pandemic. As hospital censuses are going up, we expect to see somewhat of a resurgence in our scrub apparel, our patient apparel, even our isolation gowns, barrier coats, and all the items that were bought in great quantities last year.

So yes, we expect our uniform business to have leveled off by the end of the year, certainly, made up the difference and we're working to create the environment we're willing to go beyond that.

Tim Mulrooney -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

OK. Yeah. Thank you, Michael. And you kind of addressed my next question, which was going to be specifically on the healthcare opportunity, because you mentioned new channels helping to make up for some of the difficult comparison with PPE.

My question was going to be, are these new channels mostly on the institutional side or on the retail side, but you named a bunch of retail channels. So is it fair to say that, is that what the larger opportunity is for you guys, moving forward, is it mostly on the retail side when it comes to where the growth is going to come from?

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

It's really a mix bag. We are on the retail side, for sure, but you know, we also have the new distributor we press released a couple months ago, SanMar, who's moving our product through the branded merchandise, you know, customers of theirs, the 22,000 customers of theirs. We also have the [Inaudible] product, which is kind of a crossover between fashion, healthcare, and CI that I believe UniFirst and others have announced that they're adopting as their fashion product for the institutional healthcare side of the business. So it's a very mixed bag.

It really is going to come from both of them.

Tim Mulrooney -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

OK. Thank you. And I wanted to say congratulations to Phil and Jake on your promotions. 

Jake Himelstein -- President, BAMKO

Thank you.

Tim Mulrooney -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Jake, to you specifically. It looks like the backlog of BAMKO is very strong. And I know you helped out a lot of folks during the pandemic with PPE, including a lot of new customers that you hadn't previously engaged. So I guess my question is, how much of this increase in backlog, if any, do you think is the result of converting some of those PPE customers into traditional promotional products customers?

Jake Himelstein -- President, BAMKO

Yeah. I think the most -- certainly, there is some of that, right? We've said it before, and it stays pretty consistent. We've converted about a third of our PPE-only customers in 2022 promo customers, right? We were there and they trusted us in their toughest times when they needed PPE, and we've been able to convert about a third of those into promotional product customers. And we continue to work with these customers to find additional opportunities to penetrate and get the promotional product business.

So we think that's only going to continue to expand. And I think across the board, our backlog is really strong. And I mentioned in the script but the most impressive part of it is that virtually none of that is PPE, it's all promotional products and branded merchandise. And that's what's most exciting is that we're seeing that resurgence coming into what we think is going to be a really strong holiday season as well.

Tim Mulrooney -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

OK. Thanks. Thanks for that commentary. If I could just sneak one more in, I don't know if this would be for Michael or Andy or Phil.

But it's not PPE. So you expect PPE to be, I guess, about $45 million this year down from $130 million last year. But still well above the $4 million or so that you generated in 2018 and 2019. Is this level, this $45 million kind of what you'd expect moving forward PPE revenue to be much lower than the peak in 2020, but still remain elevated relative to pre-COVID levels?

Andy Demott -- Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer

Yeah. I mean -- I think the $45 million, I mean, it does include a little bit of prices PPE that we've already -- that we had and is really more in the first quarter. Our expectation -- let me back up a little bit. Part of the PPE product that we're selling has kind of become part of uniform programs for starter kits for the gig economy type people.

I think going forward, people are going to have hand sanitizer in their starting kit and they're going to have a mask, going to have gloves. Some of that just going to be in our normal product and not really show up as being PPE. But from an ongoing basis, I think your pure PPE nonquestion type, you're probably talking somewhere in the $5 million, $10 million.

Tim Mulrooney -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Got it. OK. Thank you, Andy, and thank you all for taking my questions.

Andy Demott -- Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer

Thanks, Tim.

Operator

Thank you. Next question comes from [Inaudible] Investments. Please go ahead.

Unknown speaker

Great quarter. I had two questions. The first [Technical difficulty] outlook for 2021, it looks like in the first half of the year, there's a big use of working capital. And you mentioned that capex was sort of heavily weighted there.

So I was wondering if you could just sort of address how the free cash flow will go for the full year of 2021? And then the second question was addressed to Phil, just to talk a little bit more about the specifics around the technology strategy and the customer experience, which were the first two items you highlighted in your focus.

Andy Demott -- Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer

OK. Relative to the cash flows, I mean, the first half of the year really included some extraordinary incentive type payments that were based on last year relative to really executive and sales comp across company, as well as significant earn-out from some of our acquisitions, primarily in the commercial products arena, as well as paying income taxes on those items. So it was a heavy use of that during the first half. We also -- as Michael mentioned, we did beef up our inventories a bit due to supply chain and just to be prepared for that as we go forward.

We would expect to see that start leveling and also work its way back down now as the supply chain continues to work its way out. From a capital expenditure perspective, as I mentioned in my remarks, we do expect for the year that number is going to be somewhere between $16 million and $17 million. So we would expect from here we should be positive from a cash flow perspective. Michael, do you want to answer to it?

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

No. And Phil was -- the second part of that question --

Phil Koosed -- Chief Strategy Officer

The second part of that question. So without disclosing too much, on the technology front, we've been heavy into technology for quite some time. And I would say we've been well ahead on the technology curve in our industry and our respective industries for quite some time. The exciting part now is we're seeing more and more ability to integrate technology further into our business.

So over the course of the last couple of decades, I would say the technology has been an advantage and been an advantage that we've been able to stay ahead of our competitors on. But we believe that we can widen that gap by embracing some of the newer technologies out there that are really making advancements in permitting various industries across the board. I mentioned AI and machine learning and advanced robotics and blockchain on the supply chain side, and that's that we're already working toward. And in many cases, we already have some pretty advanced robotics right now in our warehouse and we have some pretty good direction in terms of how AI might affect our business in the coming years.

And so we're looking forward to seeing that really come through because we think it'll widen the gap between us and our competitors on the technology front. On the customer side, to the second part of your question, focusing on our client experience and making sure that what we've done in the past and what we deliver from an experiential perspective continues in the future. That's first and foremost. I mean, I think that's something that any business out there that's worth their sales is going to be focused on their customers' experience and making sure that their customer not only goes and is happy with what they've got and what the services that we're providing but are actually fans of our business.

And I think more and more we get business from referrals and the main reason why is because of the fact that we've actually developed fans within our customer base. And so that's really our focus is how do we go and make this experience so good that we're not only going and making the customer happy but also the ranting and raving to various folks and referring business to us in the future.

Unknown speaker

Can you measure customer retention and sort of fan level among the customer base?

Phil Koosed -- Chief Strategy Officer

Yes, that's something that we measure and will continue to measure.

Unknown speaker

Good. Thanks.

Operator

[Operator instructions] Next question comes from Kevin Steinke, Barrington Research. Please go ahead.

Kevin Steinke -- Barrington Research -- Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, everyone. I wanted to start off by asking about, Michael, I think you mentioned in your prepared comments seeing more opportunities to bid on new uniform programs, and can you just expand on that a little bit and what's driving that pickup?

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

I think there are so many factors driving it, but let's start with the fact that everybody struggling to get new employees right now. At the low-wage jobs that people are, most people are wearing uniforms. So they're enticing them by putting them into more uniforms, power levels have improved, we've been told instead of giving employee two sets of uniforms, they might give you three, four or five. Also, turnover has increased.

So you hire an employee, two weeks later, he decides to go somewhere else, you read the jobs reports about people leaving their jobs. So they have to go get a new uniform for the new person they hire. There's another sale for us. I think healthcare workers have been working on the retail side, have been working crazy hours of overtime.

They've made a lot of money doing it. They're buying more fashion scrubs. I think we've spoken about this before, Kevin, that whenever we come out of a recession, which is really our only context here, we've never come out of the pandemic, at least not that I remember what we did in '19 and '20. But whenever we come out of recession, we always come out stronger, we always see a flurry of marketing dollars being spent, makeovers of stores that have been very, very slow.

Everybody's about branding -- rebranding themselves. We see people do new logos, new logos require new RFPs, recolorations of their current logos and their stores require new RFPs for uniforms that will match all of that. It's the normal flurry we saw post the big recession a decade ago, more than a decade ago, and something we've got used to. And I think, because we were so active during this recession, during this pandemic and reaching out to prospective customers, we didn't get lost, while a lot of other people I think, dumped their head in the sand, collected their PPP money, and said, I just got to make it through this period of time, we got more aggressive.

I think, our strategy with respect to that we described with respect to HPI and was now going from five salespeople to 75 salespeople is huge. There is an opportunity in this country that we will not uncover, I believe, and many more than we could have in the past. And we're training those people up but quite frankly, we have a big team behind that group of 75 people that's ready to start getting in front of customers and presenting. And all those 75 people have to really do is get us face-to-face appointments or in today's world zoom appointments.

So I think everything is moving in the right direction from the standpoint of RFP activity. I think a lot of people were let down during the pandemic too whole need good service. And this logistical nightmare is truly that. But I do think that we're much better positioned than most of our competitors to deal with this logistical nightmare that's out there.

And it's pretty nightmarish. I mean, we're talking about what used to take 45 days, taking 90 days now. And as ordering patterns pick up and suddenly find yourself short of inventory because of that but you can't get any inventory in any faster, I think it's hurting a lot of our competitors. So I think it's -- I call it the perfect storm.

But for us, it's like the rainbow we just have to follow it to the pot of gold, and that's what we're doing.

Kevin Steinke -- Barrington Research -- Analyst

OK. Yeah. That sounds great. I wanted to follow up on just -- you're now targeting sales in 2021 approaching $525 million, compared to about $500 million previously.

Is that increase being driven by any specific business or is it just kind of across the board strengthened all your segments?

Andy Demott -- Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer

Kevin, it's really across all of them. I mean, we feel very good about where we're at with all the businesses. Michael talked clearly about how well TNG is doing. Jake covered on BAMKO.

And the uniform businesses is bouncing back stronger. So we feel very comfortable that really it's going to be across the board.

Kevin Steinke -- Barrington Research -- Analyst

Great. Thanks. And then I think something that you didn't mention on the call unless I missed it was, last quarter, talked about CID and their plans to expand internationally. Can you just provide us an update on that initiative and where you stand with that?

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

I can provide a little bit to you without giving away any competitive advantage. We are starting to ship and take orders for our Poland warehouse. We have hired a person away from a consulting firm that was working for us where they agreed to let that person worked for us directly as an employee. We have already resumed our strategy of going to trade shows in Europe and whereas last year, we did no trade shows before we did.

Keep in mind that our business last year for international was about $30 million overall across all of our segments. So we're looking to turn that quite frankly into $100 million business in the next few years. And we think we've got the makings to do that, we've got the right people, we brought another sales executive into our international group. We're doing some very serious deep strategic planning right now to make sure that we're focused on the right areas of Europe.

We are actually engaging some experts in that area to help move us into the right places, so we don't waste a lot of money doing it. And so that's essentially how we're going to get there.

Kevin Steinke -- Barrington Research -- Analyst

OK. Good. And you know, you talked again about the logistics and supply chain issues and how they're rippling through the economy. And have you seen any sort of loosening or improvement on that front, any updated thoughts on that? And I guess also related that also inflation, I know you implemented some price increases around the time of your last call in the uniform business.

Do you see the need to do that again going forward, or just kind of any update on those various macro issues?

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

We're looking at whether we need to have price increases again or regularly. We wouldn't be the only ones to do so in our industry. We initiated our price increases pretty early to cover ourselves. As I said, we've taken long positions on inventory to try to protect our customers as much as possible.

So that at least what we have in our pipeline will be as the lowest cost possibly be. It's not going to change the fact that the freight costs, ocean, air, everything is more than doubled, in some cases, more than tripled. So the first part of your question, no, we don't see any easing of logistical problems. They seem to not be easing at all.

In fact, they're getting worse, which I think helps us quite frankly, because we're still in a better position than any of our competitors. We hear about people struggling out there very, very badly. And many of our competitors -- customers are reaching out to us. So I'm sure in places where -- in specific places where we're not servicing our customers up to the level that we'd like to, even though we're being very transparent, we're having constant communications with our customers, not burying our heads in the sand.

And I'm sure there's some of that activity going the other way also. But as I said in the past, particularly with HPI, they have, whatever it is 6% or 7% market here, there's still 93% of the market they don't have a share of. And so if more of our competitor's customers are upset than our customers, in the end, we win and that's essentially where we see it. I don't think -- from everything I read, I don't think we're going to see any easing of this logistical problem this year at all.

And it might be mid-next year before it gets resolved. But there's not enough ships, people have learned to Internet job, there's this whole -- still this capability of ordering something online to your house and having it shipped from Asia, and that's taking up a lot of cargo space now. Because it's under $800, it comes into this country, and they don't pay duty on it. So there's a lot of people who have kind of reinvented their own businesses to be able to ship directly from Asia, but it's taking up a lot more container space in doing so.

So I don't see an easing of it. And eventually, it'll become too expensive for some folks and their customers won't want to pay the bounty that they have to pay to get products. And those people will become hopefully our next prospects and opportunities.

Kevin Steinke -- Barrington Research -- Analyst

OK. Great. And then I wanted to lastly ask about -- you mentioned -- I think it was Jake talk about more M&A opportunities bubbling up in the promotional product space. If you look at those opportunities, and you mentioned quite a few inbound calls about potentially combining with BAMKO.

As you look at that pipeline, how many of those do you think would kind of represent really solid candidates that you'd maybe want to partner with? I know you try and maintain a high bar when you're looking at opportunities. But just kind of maybe talk about the actual opportunities that you think can arise that would be nice-quality opportunities as a result of this challenging environment for competitors?

Jake Himelstein -- President, BAMKO

Yeah. Thanks. Thanks for the question, Kevin. I mean, look, we're looking at acquisitions across all areas of the business.

All of our divisions, all of our companies, and future of the business has opportunities. Certainly, BAMKO has a robust pipeline but there are opportunities elsewhere as well. And you're right, we have a high bar for what we look for acquisitions, it's got to be accretive to the bottom line, easy to integrate, good for culture, bringing in new line of business. We saw that with Gifts by Design, we did earlier this year in Q1, hit all those different targets that we needed in order to do the right acquisition.

So we're in discussion with a number of companies, some of which we've been talking to for years. And we've always held, Kevin, that we have to be talking to a lot of different targets in order to find the right ones. And there could be dozens and dozens that we're talking just to find the right one. So we're not going to jump at an opportunity because it presents itself to us and more often not people calling us it's just not the right opportunity.

But we're being opportunistic and then you never know when the time's right for some of these. So we're certainly going to keep looking at them as they come in and as we solicit new opportunities.

Kevin Steinke -- Barrington Research -- Analyst

OK. That's helpful. Thanks for taking all the questions. I wanted to add my congratulations to Phil and Jake on your new roles.

Jake Himelstein -- President, BAMKO

Thank you so much.

Phil Koosed -- Chief Strategy Officer

Thank you. Appreciate it.

Operator

This concludes the question-and-answer session. Now I'd like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Michael Benstock for closing remarks. Please go ahead.

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

All right. I'll make this real quick. It's been long for all of you. Thank you very much for joining us today.

We're very excited about where our business is at. We hope to report to you next quarter continued great results. See you in October.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 51 minutes

Call participants:

Hala Elsherbini -- Senior Managing Director,Three Part Advisors

Michael Benstock -- Chief Executive Officer

Phil Koosed -- Chief Strategy Officer

Jake Himelstein -- President, BAMKO

Andy Demott -- Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer

Tim Mulrooney -- William Blair & Company -- Analyst

Unknown speaker

Kevin Steinke -- Barrington Research -- Analyst

More SGC analysis

All earnings call transcripts