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Oil-Dri Corp of America (ODC -1.11%)
Q3 2022 Earnings Call
Jun 08, 2022, 10:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by, and welcome to the third quarter fiscal year 2022 investor teleconference. [Operator instructions] I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, president and chief executive officer, Dan Jaffee. Please go ahead.

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, and thank you, and welcome, everyone, to our third quarter teleconference. With me here either physically or on the line is Susan Kreh, our chief financial officer; Aaron Christiansen, vice president of operations; Chris Lamson, group VP of retail and wholesale, Jessica Moskowitz, vice president and general manager of our consumer products division; Wade Robey, our vice president of agriculture and Amlan marketing; Laura Scheland, vice president, general counsel, and secretary; David Atkinson, vice president and controller; and Leslie Garber, our manager of investor relations. Leslie?

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Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

Welcome, everyone. On today's call, comments may contain forward-looking statements regarding the company's performance in future periods. Actual results in those periods may materially differ. In our press release and in our SEC filings, we highlight a number of important risk factors, trends, and uncertainties, that may affect our future performance.

We ask that you review and consider those factors in evaluating the company's comments and in evaluating any investment in Oil-Dri stock. Thank you for joining us.

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Leslie, and thanks, everyone, for sending in a whole host of questions, really good questions. And so we've got a very informative session for you. So I'll not waste a lot of time. I'm not covering what you didn't want to hear.

So let's turn it over to Susan first for some financial results, and we'll go from there.

Susan Kreh -- Chief Financial Officer

All right. Thanks, Dan. This morning, we have a special guest with us that is our vice president and corporate controller, Dave Atkinson. He's been with us about a year.

He's joining us today to discuss the details of the significant accounting charge we took during the quarter, a onetime non-cash charge. And he'll go through the details with you and then be available to answer any questions you might have related to that coming event. So with that, Dave, do you want to talk to us about goodwill impairment?

David Atkinson -- Vice President and Controller

Sure. Thank you, Susan, for the opportunity to be here today and to talk about our onetime noncash goodwill impairment charge that we took in the third fiscal quarter. For background, goodwill -- the goodwill intangible asset is established during acquisition accounting when the purchase price exceeds the sum of the net fair value of assets acquired and liabilities assumed. In the case of this particular goodwill asset, it releases some multiple acquisitions that took place eight years ago or longer.

We test goodwill for impairment each year as of May 1st. In performing this test, we determined that we had experienced a triggering event in the third fiscal quarter due to continued adverse impact of rising costs and supply chain constraints on our gross margins. We determined that in the third quarter, the carrying value of the retail and wholesale segment was higher than its fair value based on our discounted cash flow model. As a result, we recorded a goodwill impairment of $5,644,000, which has no remaining goodwill in our retail and wholesale segment.

Tax impact, this resulted in a reduction of earnings of $4,397,000 or $0.65 per common share. The remaining goodwill on our balance sheet of $3,618,000 relates to our higher-margin business segment, which does not require impairment based on having fair value in excess of its carrying value. In addition, we do not expect future goodwill impairment charges related to the business segment.

Susan Kreh -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Dave. So the goodwill charge that Dave described does not impact our liquidity. The charge itself was a noncash charge. Further, we have strong relationships with our lending partners and we worked with both of them to exclude the impact of the goodwill impairment from our covenant calculations.

So the amended and modified documents were filed with our fiscal third quarter 10-Q for any of those who might be interested. Transitioning from liquidity to cash. Year to date, we've issued $25 million in notes at a very favorable rate of 3.25% and we've used those proceeds to fund our growth through building inventory, and we're doing that not only because of the increased cost of the supply chain, because of the fact that getting freight out is taking longer, so we have more finished goods on hand, and just to provide overall higher service levels to our customers. We are also making investments to support our growth in our manufacturing facilities as well through capital investment.

We also have opportunistically repurchased shares of stock as we believe they are currently at a very good value. So while we want to leave a lot of time for questions, because I know there will be a few. But if I think about highlights for the quarter, strong, strong revenues in all of our businesses, and we're seeing the benefits of our pricing initiatives as well as volume growth. So if I break that down, I said strong revenue growth is about three-quarters pricing and the other quarter is volume.

I'm particularly optimistic about the quarterly growth in our Animal Health products that was 13% and growing. This is a business, which we -- is strategic, and we're making strategic investments in both capital as well as in SG&A to build out sales and leadership to drive the growth opportunities there. We'll end on that positive note and turn it back over to you, Dan.

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Great. Thank you. And before we address some other questions, we've prioritized a couple just because I'm going to take them combined to John Bair wrote in. What is your most positive takeaway from the results of this quarter? And any positive encouraging trends you see unfolding? I think Susan covered the positives, I'm going to go with the trends.

And then Ethan Starr wrote, what will take to significantly grow Amlan sales and what progress is being made toward that? And the two of them can be combined together, because we're seeing really positive trends. And there was even a third question that we may or may not get to, I think Ethan was more interested in our newer products. But I will tell you what's really driving the excitement and the growth or the older products, the stuff that Mother Nature put in the ground billions of years ago. Our play is -- and as we say, minerals by nature, performance by design.

Our play selectively mined, selectively processed, to maximize what Mother Nature did billions of years ago, is really what's driving all the excitement with actual end user or the actual customers. So we have had incredibly positive tests. This is an industry that you be thankful to hear to move, because it's impacting the human food chain. So it wouldn't be good if we were just bouncing back and forth changing things left and right without being very methodical and getting deep into the data and making sure they see repeat, repeat, repeat performance.

Having said that, all major entrees into new accounts are moving forward with results better than what they had even hoped for when they went ahead and agreed to test the products. So what do we need to grow? It started with building the team. It started with bringing in Heath and Jay and Chuck in the U.S. And really, because we never really had a U.S.

presence. And their reputation in the industry is so strong that when they left Cabb and joined us, because they truly believe in our mineral, before they joined the company, I gave each of them the same spiel which was, look, I'm an accountant. I'm excited about our play, but I don't really understand this industry. Go out to the research center, go to the Mick Jaffee Innovation Center and the big Jaffee microbiology lab, get into the data, and come back to me and either tell me, Dan, your Jason Rainbows, there's nothing here, and I'm staying in my 22-year career here a job -- or no, it's real.

In fact, it's even better than we thought. And that -- and they all joined and the proof is in the pudding. And so it's very exciting. The results are very positive.

And while we don't generally disclose too much of just Animal Health. I know in the Q, we said we did about $14.4 million in Animal Health sales. Depending on revenue recognition because the global supply chain is such a mess right now, that we have product that's sitting on the water, sitting in docks until it gets in the hands of the customer and can be properly recognized in our revenue streams, I can't really tell you exactly where we'll be. And so -- but we believe we have enough on hand already to be around $18 million -- sorry, over $20 million.

We did $18 million last year, that was last year's number. We're $14.4 million at the 0.75 poll this year. And we believe we'll be north of $20 million. If everything that's on the water gets invoiced, we can push $22 million, but we'll be somewhere in between $20 million and $22 million.

And then we already have enough confidence in the tests we've seen, the commitments we've got, and the expansion in the trial to be budgeting for around $40 million next year. So you kind of see what we're seeing, which is this continued snowball growth. And again, as slow as this industry is to move, they are also then going to be slow to move away from it. Meaning once they roll their dice, and it really does -- I'm learning run word of mouth.

You're not really going to hit a single in this industry. You're going to have a grand slam or you're going to strike out, but they talk. These nutritionists talk, rightly so and they should, because they're all trying to help the U.S. food chain and the global food chain.

And so when someone starts to have success, it gets around the industry pretty well. And that's why we're doing trials with such a wide variety of customers all at the same time. So I'm probably not going to get any more definition than that, it's a little more than I usually give, but I felt like I needed to, because the results are still not what we want them to be on the bottom line. The top-line results have been great.

You can see some benefit of price increases. But while we did show gross profit up on a dollar basis, it still was down on a percentage basis from a prior year in the quarter. And we -- it's because our second and third round of price increases really didn't hit until May 15th and June 1st. We have bunches of hit, and you can see it.

But the fourth quarter is when you really should start to see us get on top of this gorilla of global inflation, gas prices tripling, diesel prices rising, everything sort of happening at the same time. And so we are taking absolute price increases. We're implementing surcharges and we're increasing those surcharges as the gas price goes up. We will certainly relieve those surcharges as the gas price goes down.

And we did have a question on hedging. And look, I've been pretty consistent. We're in a rational market. And if we hedge and we hedge wrong, we cannot go to our customers and say, look, we thought gas is at 9$, and we thought it was going to $15, so we forward bought and now it's back down to $3, but we don't want to relieve the hedge -- fuel surcharges because we guessed wrong.

That's not going to be a real fun sales call to have. As we all know, the definition of the market is for every buyer, there's a seller. So buying gas at $9/30, there's someone selling it at $9/30, meaning that there's someone thinking it's going down. There's some thinking it's going up.

And our best move is to ride the wave and then merely handle the dollars. We've never professed to be natural gas experts, and we don't profess to be going forward. And we're just going to stay and ride with the market. And if that means we're 30 days late to the market, then so be it, we believe that's in our customer's best interest than trying to guess and potentially guess wrong, which would be really detrimental to either us, our customers or both.

So that mapped off about three or four questions. So Leslie, where are we going next?

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

So the next question is from John Bair from Ascend Wealth Advisors. And he asked, are you seeing any shift by the consumer away from your premium cat litter products to lower-end offering?

Chris Lamson -- Vice President of Retail and Wholesale

Yep. Good morning, John. This is Chris. I'll take the question.

Thanks for the question. And I think we had a similar question last quarter, and the answer largely remains the same. So as we look at the total category, really what we see as a bit of a barbell effect. So super premium products, so real price premium per use, specifically litter crystals are growing very nicely.

And then at the other end of the market, those brands and retail brands, private label brands that are obviously more value-oriented, are also seeing growth that is in excess of the category. I would put both of our significant businesses within Litter into that latter bucket. And as a result, I'd say, we're benefiting from what I'd call fairly modest tailwinds above the category. Category is already doing well, right, tracked in the low teens.

Those what I'll call value brands that perform particularly well, can't pull the consumer for long. Value brands performed particularly well premium private label and our Cat Pride and Jonny Cat brands are performing ahead of either the segment that they play in or the overall category.

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

OK. Great. Thank you. Our next question comes from Ethan Starr.

What kind of results are Amlan customers seeing with Amlan products, both in the United States and around the world and especially interested in hearing about results for the newer Amlan products?

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Wade?

Wade Robey -- Vice President, Amlan Marketing and Product Development

Good morning. Yeah. Thank you, Dan. Good morning, Ethan, and thank you for the question.

We're seeing excellent results around the world. As we've discussed in previous calls, part of the sales cycle with Amlan products in this industry is to evaluate in the field, our products in customer operations. we certainly share R&D results. We do at CROs or universities, but customers really want to try the products first hand.

In the trials we've been conducting over the last 12, 18 months, we've universally seen excellent results. Our customers are seeing improved performance with our products. As we look around the world and the launch of our new products, we're beginning to evaluate those as well. As we mentioned, again, in a previous call and with our IPP launches, we're launching two new products internationally, our NutriPat product and our product.

Both of those products are in testing now with customers. And again, we're seeing them perform as expected, and we're starting to make great progress in moving those products into the market.

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

OK. Great. Thank you, Wade. Our next question also comes from Ethan Starr.

The 10-Q indicates that you'll be spending $6.5 million to renovate one of your manufacturing facility. Which plant are you renovating, what improvements are you making and what benefits will result from this?

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

And Aaron Christiansen, our newly promoted vice president of operations, will take that one. Aaron?

Aaron Christiansen -- Vice President of Operations

Yeah. That's a great question. Thanks for asking, Ethan. Susan already largely alluded to the answer.

Our capital spend continues to be heavy in our aging infrastructure. The bulk of the spend is in the areas where we support the Amlan business and lightweight cat litter. It's a combination of investments that add capacity, flexibility, redundancy in some cases and address our cost structure. The question specifically states the location, I'd rather avoid that detail, but it is most definitely clear to indicate that the capital spend is definitely targeted in the areas where our commercial teams are targeting strategic growth.

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

Great. Thank you. The next question comes from Kurt Cornwell, who is a longtime shareholder. Was the decision to take the goodwill impairment charge in this quarter related to the substantial increase in inventories year to year? And are you satisfied with current inventory levels?

Susan Kreh -- Chief Financial Officer

So I'll start and then I'll hand it over to Aaron. How's that? Thanks for the question. Now the inventory levels weren't part of what triggered the impairment charge of the quarter. The second half of your question, are we satisfied with the inventory level? Certainly, we've seen an increase in finished goods as the whole situation was great and the long lead times getting our product to customers has increased this year.

As to the rest of inventory levels, I'll let Aaron, market and field operations answer what that -- what do you think about inventory levels?

Aaron Christiansen -- Vice President of Operations

Extremely hard to predict where we go over the next quarter. The market dynamics right now, in particular in freight and export freight are incredibly unpredictable, unstable. The bulk and majority of the increase in working capital over the past quarter has been in export production and volume for several pieces of our business, where we simply have not been able to move the product at the rate that we have historically. All indications are export freight, in particular, is not going to improve over the coming quarter.

We're finding unique ways to manage our working capital down. But obviously, we have to have the product to begin with to be able to move the freight. So we'll monitor as the freight market and other aspects of the supply chain stabilize in the months ahead.

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Great. Thank you. And we have a couple of questions. Ethan asked, what is the number of different countries you have already sold Amlan products in? And John Bair asked to what do you attribute the sales decline in Mexico and Asia? Is it a demand drop or a logistic issue or both? And Wade, I'm going to call on you to take on those two.

Wade Robey -- Vice President, Amlan Marketing and Product Development

Yeah. Thank you, Dan, and thank you for the questions, guys. I'll start with the question related to the countries we're targeting. Even we're targeting approximately 27 countries today and selling around the world really in all key oral are geographies, except for the EU and we've discussed why we haven't approached that market yet.

These are really the countries that we're focusing on, we're not going to have a large expansion in that number over the next 12 months. We'll see instead more significant investment in the key geographies like in the Americas, North America, South America as well as in key countries in Asia, but that list will gradually expand in time. As we look at Mexico and the change that we saw there, if you look at the third quarter of fiscal year 2022 versus 2021, which I think is the reference question you're asking, we saw a decrease in net sales of approximately $147,000, which constituted about 25% for the quarter. And that really was related to a discontinuation of certain product lines that were sold by Agromex that were more equipment or mechanical in nature.

It wasn't related to our core products. rather products that we chose to discontinue that were core to our strategy. And so we see that really as a temporal event.

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

OK. Great. Thank you. Our next question comes from Ethan Starr.

In the slide presentation at the annual meeting, Oil-Dri noted that Amlan has an opportunity to target companion animal rations. I have three questions related to that. First, has the innovation center already developed a scientifically proven product? Second, are you already working with a pet food manufacturer either informally or with a contractual agreement? And third, what can you tell us about when this product might begin to generate revenue for Oil-Dri? Wade, do you want to take that question?

Wade Robey -- Vice President, Amlan Marketing and Product Development

Yes, sure. And again, thank you, Ethan, and thank you for the breadth of the question because it is an opportunity that we see is pretty significant for the company in the future. What's great about our product, and Dan mentioned this, and certainly, our core clay mineral products is that they are effective in a broad range of species. So although we're initially targeting, say, poultry and swine, in the key geographies we're looking to penetrate, we're also pursuing markets like the ruminant market, specifically in dairy and also companion animal.

And the reason is that the products work across PCs really the same. This is basically true for our formulated products as well with some exceptions, but we have a breadth of portfolio that we can target not only production animals, but also companion animals. We're in the process currently of talking with large companion animal feed or food producers. What's fortunate about that is a lot of these very large food companies that we do business with today are vertically integrated and cross species.

So they might produce both poultry feed, ruminant feed, and sometimes companion feed as well. So it makes it a very efficient way for us to penetrate the market. We're not in testing yet in companion animal rations. We're going down a cycle of providing them data and convincing the validation test, but we hope to do that in the near future.

And I would hope that in fiscal year 2023, we begin to see some sales into the companion animal market. But again, we'll have to validate the product with customers and then begin sales in that order.

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

Great. Thanks, Wade. We have a question from Eric Simon. Oil-Dri has a long history of maintaining a very strong balance sheet.

Given it's been a capital heavy year with elevated capital expenditures, working capital growth, dividends, and buybacks, leverage has increased. Does the company have a maximum net debt or leverage ratio in mind? And should we expect free cash flow to improve over the next year or will cash needs remain high?

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Susan?

Susan Kreh -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. A lot of different questions there, so let me start. We expect free cash flow to improve, we expect to continue spending capital, because we've got identified opportunities at the level that we're spending in here in fiscal 2022 into the next year or two. So we've got some very good opportunities there.

Inventories, Aaron talked about earlier, we have an investment in our inventory to serve our customers and just because support the volatility we're seeing in freight and shipping. We do have a strong balance sheet. We still are sitting with a debt to total capital of 18.4%. So really pretty low, and that means we've got -- we've got dry powder and -- to fund the opportunities as they come along.

So we have a specific ratio in mind. I think we've had conversations where unless the opportunity was something we -- and you would really imagine that we would not see that going above 40%. So that leaves a whole lot of opportunity for things that are accretive. So with that, as far as dividends, we intend supporting the dividend and share buybacks will be opportunistic.

But to be honest, we're very attractive at the price of stock right now. So do we have any -- we spent about $11 million year to date on share repurchases. As we sit here today, we don't have any more plans to do so, but that is a good opportunity for us, but it comes last in our ranking of opportunities, growth in our business would trump that and would be the first use of our cash in the form of capital and working capital investment.

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you. And the only thing I would add is, as I look at our balance sheet, we've got $200 million of assets. And the question is, does that mean that could we replace all five of our major U.S. locations, Georgia, two in Mississippi, one in Mounds in Illinois, one in South California for $240 million.

And the answer is not even close. These are historic values, they're depreciated values and so forth. And so as these get older and as Aaron and his team upgrade and just not even upgrading some sense to just maintain, keep up to standard. And then as you layer on the fact that environmental compliance only gets more strict.

The amount of particular you can admit, all that kind of stuff. So you have to have more and more air quality equipment and things like that. It's just -- it's a capital-intensive business. That's the bottom line.

So on the dividend side, obviously, very important. We've always -- we've been paying a continuous dividend for in -- I mean, I was looking back. I mean it's in one of our release. I don't remember, but I want to say over 40 years, we've paid a continuous dividend.

We've raised it 18, 19 years in a row. And it's always on 19 years in a row. That's what I thought 18 years in a row, no worry. And we always look at it in June, and this is June.

So it's certainly on the agenda for today's Board meeting, and that will be a subject for discussion and a review and approval by the Board. And what they're going to want to see is, do we believe that our margins are going to come back, we'll start generating the cash necessary to not only fund the maintenance and growth of the business, but also to then increase the dividend. So I would say you'll know more by close of business today, because that will be a strong signal one way or the other. And Susan and her team will be presenting some cash flow information and so forth, and so that they can make it more informed decision.

Good. So we have one more question.

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

We have time for one more question, which comes from Ethan Starr. In the most recent 10-K, it is stated that oil [Inaudible] in terms with a significant customer so that the customer would pay freight charges directly and such costs wouldn't be included in the price Oil-Dri charges for its products. What is the approximate impact of the change on the top line per quarter? If you can't give a precise figure, could you at least tell us whether it's more or less than $1 million per quarter?

Chris Lamson -- Vice President of Retail and Wholesale

So, Ethan, it's Chris. I think the key point here, and from the nature of your question, I think you understand this, but I just really want to emphasize that there is no real net bottom-line impact to this. So it's simply a lower sales over the last year, we will annualize this effect going into this next quarter, going into Q4 with an offset in -- really in the freight line in our detailed P&L, if you will. So roughly, how much does that approximate to over the last year approximately, a couple of points of sales that were depressed.

And again, no bottom-line impact, simply a shift.

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

So more than $1 million a quarter. Yep. Yep. So good question.

Well, thank you, everybody. And look, we're all looking forward to the fourth quarter. We will have significant price increases already showing, but then more coming and all around trying to recapture costs and protect our margins, and we're very focused on it and nose to the grindstone, and we'll be back with you and whenever that is not quite 90 days, probably a little longer. But after we close the fourth quarter, we'll talk to you then.

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

Thank you. That concludes our call.

Questions & Answers:


Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 30 minutes

Call participants:

Dan Jaffee -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Leslie Garber -- Investor Relations Manager

Susan Kreh -- Chief Financial Officer

David Atkinson -- Vice President and Controller

Chris Lamson -- Vice President of Retail and Wholesale

Wade Robey -- Vice President, Amlan Marketing and Product Development

Aaron Christiansen -- Vice President of Operations

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