Clearfield, Inc.

Q1 2024 Earnings Conference Call

2/1/2024

speaker
Operator
Good day and welcome to Clearfield's Fiscal First Quarter 2024 Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Greg McNiff, Investor Relations for Clearfield. Please go ahead.
speaker
Greg McNiff
Thank you. Joining me on the call today are Sherry Baranek, Clearfield's President and CEO, and Dan Herzog, Clearfield's CFO. As a reminder, the slides in this presentation are controlled by you, the listener. Please advance forward through the presentation as the speaker presents their remarks. Please note that during this call, management will be making remarks regarding future events and the future financial performance of the company. These remarks constitute forward-looking statements for purposes of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements. It is important to also note that the company undertakes no obligation to update such statements except as required by law. The company cautions you to consider risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements contained in today's press release, earnings presentation, and on this conference call. The risk factor section in Clearfield's most recent Form 10-K filing with the Security and Exchange Commission and its subsequent filings on Form 10-Q provide a description of these risks. They are also summarized on slide two of the earnings presentation. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Clearfield's President and CEO, Sherry Baranek.
speaker
Sherry Baranek
Sherry?
speaker
Dan
Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today to discuss Clearfield's results for the fiscal first quarter 2024. We also intend to provide an update on our business and current market trends. Please turn to slide four. I noted last quarter that while the industry is facing several near-term macroeconomic and seasonal headwinds, broadband service providers continue to deploy equipment and long-term demand remains as strong as ever. In the following slides, I will preview recently released market data that demonstrates this case as well as the basis for our optimism regarding the long-term outlook. Consistent with our optimism, Clearfield repurchased 436,000 of its shares for approximately $12 million in the first quarter ended December 31st, 2023. Total net sales for the first quarter of fiscal 2024 were $34.2 million, above the high end of our guidance range, driven by higher-than-expected sales from our large regional service provider customers due to their ordering of complementary products to support their inventory mix needed for current deployment. Dan will discuss our financial results for the quarter in more detail shortly. While we continue to expect the next few quarters to remain challenging due to the inventory overhang across the industry, we remain focused on positioning Clearfield to take share when ordering patterns return to a more normalized cadence. To that end, we are expanding and enhancing our product portfolio in order to reduce the overall cost of fiber deployment by making the process as efficient as possible. We recently announced the addition of an innovative vault to our current product portfolio, which is designed to reduce the cost of shipping and storage by approximately 67%. Feedback from our recently introduced CraftSmart FiberFirst pedestal and also the FieldSmart FiberFlex active cabinet designed to be installed in rural areas, has been exceptionally positive. Both products are now shipping and reflect another step toward our goal of providing our customers with alternative choices that continue to streamline fiber deployment. In addition, we are working to ensure these products and all other first-world product offerings will be compliant with Buy America, Build America, known as BABA, as the bead awards are expected to translate to initial deployments
speaker
Dan
near the end of this calendar year.
speaker
Dan
As shown on slide 5, recently published data from RBA, an independent research firm analyzing data in the North American fiber broadband industry, recently reported that the industry passed 9 million households in 2023, nearly a million more than the year before. Furthermore, this total included 3 million households which already had access to one fiber service provider. The fact that approximately 35% of the households passed in 2023 already had access to one fiber provider confirms our view that the competitive landscape for broadband service is healthy and that our total addressable market is larger than a single fiber connection for each U.S. household. As many of you know, the $42.5 billion BEAD program is now underway with the maps released and the value of the monetary award divided per state. Slide 6 illustrates the relationship between the government disbursement and service provider deployment. As you can see, the year is projected to be the largest disbursement year of government funding. However, we expect these funds to translate into deployments and revenue over the next several years. As illustrated on slide seven, industry forecasts from RBA indicate that the next five-year period will see up to 12 million additional homes passed with fiber because of the federal funding initiative. These programs will bring high-speed internet access to unserved and underserved areas that will boost the forecasted total homes passed in the next five years in the U.S. market to over 57 million homes. Coming back to Clearfield's performance, I'd now like to pass the call over to our CFO, Dan Herzog, who will walk us through our financial results for the fiscal first quarter of 2024.
speaker
Clearfield
Thank you, Sherry, and good afternoon, everyone. Please turn to slide 9 to look at our fiscal first quarter 2024 results in more detail. Consolidated net sales in the first quarter of fiscal 2024 were $34.2 million, a 60% decrease from $85.9 million in the same year-ago period. The year-over-year decrease in total net sales was due to the ongoing industry dynamics that we commented on throughout the past year and that our peers in the marketplace have reported over the last several quarters. We remain focused on reducing costs and improving margins at Nestor by investing in more efficient manufacturing equipment and introducing higher margin plug-and-play connectivity products. We continue to be focused on labor utilization as well as driving efficiencies for enhanced productivity in order to improve gross margins at all our manufacturing locations. Order backlog declined 68% to $43.5 million on December 31, 2023, from $57.3 million on September 30, 2023, and $136.3 million on December 31, 2022. As our visibility remains limited, we continue to collaborate with our customers to align their open orders with their deployment schedules. As a reminder, the winter season is typically our lower order booking and revenue quarters. Our lead times are now less than four weeks across most product lines, We continue to expect backlog to become less of an indicator for future sales, as most orders will be fulfilled within the quarter they are received.
speaker
Sherry Baranek
Turning to slide 10, I will now review net sales by our key markets.
speaker
Clearfield
Sales to our primary market, community broadband, comprised 36% of our net sales in the first quarter of fiscal 2024, In Q1, we generated net sales of approximately $12.3 million in community broadband, down 67% from the same period last year. Net sales for the first quarter in our large regional service providers market were $7.9 million, comprising 23% of our total net sales, and declined by approximately 47% in the first quarter of this fiscal year versus the prior year first quarter. Net sales in our MSO business were $5.2 million and comprised 15% of our net sales in the first quarter.
speaker
Sherry Baranek
Net sales declined by approximately 75% in the first quarter of this fiscal year versus the prior year first quarter. Net sales in our national carrier market for the first quarter decreased to $1.3 million, accounting for 4% of total net sales
speaker
Clearfield
and declined by approximately 48% in the first quarter of this fiscal year versus the prior year first quarter. Finally, net sales in our international market were $6.7 million and comprised 19% of total net sales in the first quarter.
speaker
Sherry Baranek
Net sales in this market decreased by approximately 35% in the first quarter of fiscal 2024 versus the prior year first quarter.
speaker
Clearfield
As detailed on slide 11, gross profit margin in the first quarter declined to 13.7% of net sales from 35.7% of net sales in the same year-ago quarter. Our gross margin continues to be impacted by unabsorbed overhead in our manufacturing facilities due to lower levels of demand and winter seasonality. The company continues to adjust its production capacity to align to current demand and market conditions. In addition, gross margin was negatively impacted by an increase in reserves for excess inventory, primarily resulting from the low in demand. We continue to expect revenue and gross margins in the first half of fiscal 2024 to be impacted by the continued inventory digestion at our customers, as well as normal seasonality. As we enter the build season in the second half of fiscal 2024, we anticipate an uptick in demand, which should lead to an increase in capacity utilization that should result in an improvement in gross margins.
speaker
Sherry Baranek
We continue to work to uphold price discipline as well, while also ensuring the preservation of our long-term customer relationships. Moving forward, we will remain thoughtful in how we address pricing with our customers. Now please turn to slide 12.
speaker
Clearfield
Operating expenses for the first quarter were $12.9 million, which were consistent with $12.8 million in the same year-ago quarter. The company remains committed to servicing its customer base and enhancing its long-term market position as seen by the consistency in year-over-year expense, which reflects our continued investment in our operations. As a percentage of net sales, operating expenses for the first quarter were 37.6% up from 14.8% in the same year ago period due to lower sales volumes.
speaker
Sherry Baranek
Turning to slide 13, net loss in the first quarter was $5.3 million compared to net income of $14.3 million the same year ago period and net income of $2.7 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2023. Our net income is heavily affected by our reduced volume levels, which in turn results in lower gross profit percentage.
speaker
Clearfield
As illustrated on slide 14, our balance sheet remains strong with $169 million of cash, short-term and long-term investments, and just $2 million of debt. We had $2.4 million in capital expenditures in the quarter, mainly to support our manufacturing operations. Our inventory balance decreased from $98.1 million at fiscal 2023 year-end to $94.6 million in the first quarter of fiscal 2024. Our cash, short-term, and long-term investments reflect a reduction of just $5 million from September 30th, even though $12 million was used for the repurchase of shares in the first quarter. We recorded a cash flow from operations of positive $7.8 million in the quarter. Our strong balance sheet ensures that we are well positioned to effectively compete for larger customer opportunities and to pursue strategic opportunities to enhance our market and product portfolio. Likewise, our strong cash balance positions us to manage the business for the long term and, through our share repurchase program, reinvest for the long term. Please turn to slide 15. Due to limited visibility related to the reasons we've discussed over the last several quarters, we will continue to provide quarterly guidance. We anticipate the second quarter of fiscal 2024 net sales to be in the range of $29 to $33 million. We expect to generate a net loss per share in the range of 49 cents to 55 cents. This increased loss over the prior quarter is due to increased inventory reserves for excess inventory primarily resulting from the lull in demand.
speaker
Sherry Baranek
This loss per share range is based on the number of shares outstanding at the end of the first quarter and does not reflect share repurchases in the second quarter.
speaker
Clearfield
As I indicated earlier, we repurchased $12 million in stock as part of our share buyback program in the first quarter. which represented 436,000 shares at an average price of $27.69, leaving approximately $21 million available for additional repurchases. The significance of our buyback underscores our clear and proactive commitment as we believe in the enduring strength and potential of our company and this market. In the coming quarters, we will continue to make thoughtful and strategic decisions regarding share repurchases, driven by our strong conviction that our current share price is not reflective of our long-term opportunity. That concludes my prepared remarks for our fiscal first quarter 2024. We appreciate the support of our investors as we continue to work to drive shareholder value.
speaker
Sherry Baranek
I will now turn the call back over to Sherry.
speaker
Dan
Thanks for the financial update, Dan.
speaker
Dan
Turning to slide 17, I would now like to provide a brief update on our multi-year strategic plan, which we have labeled LEAP. LEAP is our roadmap for how we intend to capitalize on the significant opportunities ahead when industry demand returns to a more normalized cadence. Over the last 12 months, Clearfield's performance has been negatively affected by a misalignment between our capacity and market needs. We view this mismatch between supply and demand as a temporary challenge that we have addressed through reductions in variable costs. Yet we must and will continue to execute at the highest level. Rural broadband is in our DNA and the reason we are the leading provider to this customer segment. As I highlighted earlier, we're not sitting still. Rather, we continue to develop new labor-saving products and align our sales and support staff to the markets where fiber is being deployed. Expect more product announcements to come highlighting these attributes. Listening to our customers and then delivering to their needs is the foundation upon which our North American business was built. Recently, we hired an executive with significant connectivity experience for our European operations who will work alongside our existing European team to lead our initiatives to cross-sell extensions of Clearfield connectivity products. We have also recently hired a senior-level operations executive to lead our North American manufacturing and procurement programs as part of our ongoing operational initiative to drive cost reduction, align capacity to near-term demand, and to convert inventory to cash. In addition of this edge strength to Clearfield's management team is an investment that will accelerate our ability to deliver strong earnings as market dynamics return to a more normalized pattern. While the near-term industry dynamics remain challenging, we also remain confident that the future growth in fiber is absolute and the value proposition that Clearfield brings to the market is as strong as ever.
speaker
Dan
And with that, we will open the call to your questions.
speaker
Operator
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, you may press star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star key. Our first question comes from the line of Scott Searle with Roth. Please proceed with your question.
speaker
Scott Searle
Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. Sherry, maybe just to dive in in terms of some of the government funding, earlier in the week, Calix was indicating that there had been some delays in deployments as customers were evaluating the BEAD programs. I'm wondering if you could comment on that, if you're seeing a similar type of slowdown with your customers, and then also more specifically in some of the BEAD programs funding an award themselves. I appreciate the detail in the slides, but when do you expect to see awards to start to happen, and when would you expect those to materialize in orders benefiting Clearfield. Is that still on track for the, you know, first calendar quarter of 25? Or is there the potential for some of this to slip?
speaker
Dan
Yeah. Yeah. Hi, Scott. You know, listening to the Calix world, I mean, that's really consistent with our world and really probably consistent with what we've been saying, you know, for a couple of quarters now that, you know, as people put together their plans and their engineering directives, and how it relates to what's coming with BEAD, there needs to be a choice. And so there has been less revenue, less activity than one might expect. There are only so many engineering companies to go around. And so they're engineering for potential BEAD awards and not necessarily for deployments this year. And we've also talked about that the balance sheet needs to be in a good place for when they go after the BEAT funding because they're competing with others. And there's a level of financial match that's necessary as well. It really doesn't change our outlook that the BEAT initiatives will start to see being rolled out now in late 24. And consistent with what we've said in the past and what Kellex has said, is that's meaningful, you know, in 25 and for the next three to five years as those programs are put into place. The one thing that I want to make sure that we talk through, though, as well is, you know, when we look at one of the slides, you know, earlier in the presentation, you know, is that the number of homes passed in the next five years, even without BEAD, you know, is going to be close to 35% higher than it was in the previous five years. It's just really a timing of the quarters and how we can put this all together. So I'm not anticipating that B is going to slip as much as I think it is a disciplined manner of getting everyone's kind of act together.
speaker
Scott Searle
Okay, very helpful. And if I could, for a follow-up, looking into your guidance into the March quarter, a couple of items. I'm wondering if you could quantify the inventory charge. It looks like it's probably somewhere in the two-plus million range. Just wanted to get a handle on that. And in terms of March sales outlook, are you comfortable that this is marking the bottom and we should see sequential improvement through the course of this year? And I know it's a little bit early, but I'm wondering what's the timeline that you would expect kind of quote unquote normalization of your revenue stream where demand is, your shipments are more in line with end market demand? Thanks.
speaker
Dan
Right. I'll take the second half and I'll have Dan talk to the inventory reserves Yeah, as we look at the quarter in March, that's still the winter seasonality. And so beyond the BEAD program and beyond the issues associated with inventory overhang, we are going through winter issues, although it doesn't look like it here in Minnesota. It's 50 degrees today and not any snow. So we're actually hopeful that we might get a with so much warm weather across the country that we might get an early spring and an early build. And that, I think, is one of the factors that I think we're going to see. The March quarter would be my expectation that it'll be part of that. It'll be kind of the bottom of our U. I've talked previously about a U-shaped recovery. And I think we're going to start to see, you know, more of a normalized world and a normalized pattern closer to, you know, this you know, we're still in this winter and pulling down the backlog right now, but we'll see closer to that one-to-one book-to-bill ratio that we kind of, you know, we're famous for as we get into the summer months and we expect our revenues to increase. We just don't have a forecast at this point to what level. Dan, do you want to address inventory?
speaker
Clearfield
Right. So, yeah, Scott, hi. So we've, Tried to conservatively estimate and it's somewhere in the area of like about five and a half million for the upcoming quarter. Those are hard to estimate. You kind of got to get through the quarter and see what relieves in the quarter. So that's an estimation right now. Clearly, those things are going to be prevalent in the market. You probably hear more people talking about that, but As people are stocked up for longer term demand, but we have to get through this pause and everybody else reducing their inventories you're going to probably see this more so it's you know we can look at people's inventory to their revenue. numbers, you can you can kind of anticipate those things are going to happen so it's important to note that these aren't things that were absolutely these are not things that we're putting in the dumpster. The words we're using are on its reserves and it's on excess inventory, meaning we just have too much of what we make. We don't stock up a lot on finished goods. We're pretty much doing components or sub-assemblies that will eventually go to those finished goods. But we are not, this to us looks, it's kind of like a non-cash charge that we expect that when markets return and demand returns will be used. And at that point in time, you get recoveries back on those and it actually helps improve the reserve. So looking at this as a timing thing.
speaker
Scott Searle
Great. Thanks. I'll get back in the queue, and Sherry, please send that warm weather east. Thanks. Thank you.
speaker
Sherry
No.
speaker
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Ryan Kuntz with Needham & Company. Please proceed with your question.
speaker
Ryan Kuntz
Thanks for the question. On your customer segments here with the step down in community broadband, it's definitely at a multi-year low pre-pandemic. And I wonder if you thought about, you know, if you parsed out the results you had in December and thought forward at least into March, what the impact, what the headwind is there specifically in community broadband? Is it dominantly inventory? Is it dominantly conservation of capital and resources to plan for Bede. If you can help us there, that would be really helpful. Thank you.
speaker
Dan
I think it's a combination of all of the above. I mean, mostly community broadband did not have a strong inventory position. The higher level of inventory being held is at the large regional providers. And so with those regional providers now starting to kind of work through their mix, That's actually a really positive sign for us. I think the community broadband numbers are very relative to what others in the industry is. As Scott said from Ross, the Calix announcements earlier this week, it's very consistent. Community broadband is holding back, evaluating what they're going to do, making sure they have the right funding and they're going to be able to have their engineers in the right place for where they get their funding or where they don't. So, I mean, those of us who have been in this market for a long time know that government funding is fabulous, but it also is frustrating because, you know, back in 2008 when we probably got the previous time that we got a chunk of money into this market, you know, it put a lull in our business for probably close to nine months. And so this is no different. So we're confident it'll come back. It is just a reflection of people evaluating their options.
speaker
Ryan Kuntz
Great. And it sounds like, from your comment there, the regionals, you're seeing some improvement in the inventory situation at your regionals and a little more pull. Is that accurate?
speaker
Dan
Right. I think it's the standpoint of the analogy I've used. I think it's very descriptive of forks and knives. You know, they've got all the forks they need, but now they're finding out they need more knives. And so that's a really good sign that it's starting to kind of work itself out and that, you know, they made estimates upon what they're going to need, and they made estimates in regards to the mix of what they're going to need. So it is definitely starting to improve, and I think it's important to note that we did have a record high in the number of homes passed last year. And so this disconnect between the number of homes actually connected and the number of the dollar signs being shown by the manufacturers is a mismatch at the moment. I think that's really the best reflection or answer to your question.
speaker
Clearfield
Okay, great. Great, that's all I have. Our next question comes from the line of Tim Savagino with Northland Capital Markets.
speaker
Operator
Please proceed with your question.
speaker
Clearfield
Hi, good afternoon.
speaker
Sherry
I think you might have touched on this a little bit, but I did note a little uptick, at least sequentially, amongst the larger regional players. And I guess as you look forward, here for your guide for fiscal Q2 or even farther out, what do you expect to see from that cohort? And is there any reason that that would diverge from what you're seeing from your broader community broadband market? And I'll follow up from there.
speaker
Dan
I wouldn't call it diverge. I mean, I think what we're seeing is Clearfield has been strong for a decade in community broadband, but is emerging as a presence in the large regional providers in that we took share during the pandemic period. We're working very hard during that time and now to ensure the stickiness of that relationship, the partnering that we're doing to help them manage their inventory. to help them reduce the cost of their deployment by taking out labor. So I think it'll be an increasing part of our business, but it could be lumpy because, you know, you get an order from a large regional provider that can dwarf some of the other business and maybe put it out of perspective. So I wouldn't read into a single quarter at this point in time. But I think it's good for all of us to see the level of activity underway and the pull-through that we're starting to see.
speaker
Clearfield
Okay, great.
speaker
Sherry
And, you know, obviously I think you saw a seasonal downturn on the international side. I imagine that will – do you expect that to continue to decline into a Q2 or – Oh, very much so. I apologize for interrupting.
speaker
Dan
Yeah, no, I apologize for interrupting, Kim. Very seasonal, and it's very cold in Northern Europe, even colder than a normal year, so lots of... And the winter started very early as well. So, no, the first quarter down in international sales is very... and I fully expect that to be a better number next quarter.
speaker
Clearfield
Okay, and last one for me, and you may have touched on this.
speaker
Sherry
Apologies if you did, but given the bottom line guide, I'm assuming you're looking for a little more pressure on the gross margin front in Q2, but if you have any specifics you want to share there. That would be great. Thanks.
speaker
Clearfield
Yeah, you know, kind of consistent with where we finished, you know, our Q1 in revenue. So we're not forecasting going up on that. So you'd see, you know, you're kind of seeing it slightly lower, the range that we provided. So that's there. And then, you know, it's predominantly related to the non-cash inventory reserves that we'd be taking. So like I mentioned to Scott, like five and a half. on that so you know that puts pressure on us obviously the lower volume is there that's that's just going to be a given anytime that we're you know let's say below our higher higher revenue quarters so that's a given but the big change is related to the excess inventory reserves and that's what pushes the margin down got it thanks very much
speaker
Operator
As a reminder, it is Star 1 to ask a question. Our next question comes from the line of Jason Schmidt with Lake Street. Please proceed with your question.
speaker
Jason Schmidt
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just a few questions on Nestor. I think previously there was the expectation for the Nestor business to be able to ramp to that $15 million range in the summer months. Is that still possible?
speaker
Dan
We're not providing guidance that far out, and so I'd say there is an opportunity in that we're building a company to be able to address that, and we're building capacity to address that. One of the enhancements that we've made over the course of the last year is the expansion of the amount of my product that we're able to provide. And what's exciting about microDAC, not only that it increases the revenue and increases the margin, but it also is a precursor to future connectivity sales, so it gives you an early indicator. And the addition of resources there for connectivity, someone who has a strong background in connectivity and understands the differences and nuances of the types of connectivity solutions that are necessary, certainly will help us pull that through. I'd say don't get, again, it's more of a trend line there, I think, for us rather than a specific target for the summer months. And because of the fact that the rockiness or the lumpiness of their seasonality, $15 million is possible, but not a forecast from us.
speaker
Jason Schmidt
Okay, that's fair. And then can you update us on the timeline on where you're at from being able to manufacture the Nestor product line in the Mexico facility?
speaker
Dan
We're already doing that. So the only issue we have is the availability of PVDF materials. And so we are fully manufacturing in Mexico with a the nester product types. Mostly what I think is important though there is that we're not intending to manufacture high count fiber for the US market. That tends to be a commodity level product line and so we aren't going to make the capital equipment investment for that. but certainly all of the products that Nestor made for Clearfield were able to do in the Mexico facility. And we'll be able to do with the expansion of our manufacturing lines and the new cable lines that we're putting into one of our Brooklyn Park facilities, we'll be able to do all of the previously Nestor supplied equipment in Minnesota as well.
speaker
Clearfield
Okay, perfect. Thanks a lot, guys. There are no further questions in the queue.
speaker
Operator
I'd like to hand the call back to management for closing remarks.
speaker
Dan
Thanks for the opportunity to spend some time with you all at this period of time and to really help to provide, I think, some insight behind a long-term investment opportunity. We are at an amazing time right now in the U.S. market and on the brink of really becoming a fiber-rich company. country and the opportunities that that presents for us and the economy that it will build is certainly a strong one. The Clearfields opportunity here remains the same. Our value proposition is exactly built for this time and I welcome the opportunity for you to join me in recognizing some of the benefit that fiber is going to provide and hopefully you see that and want to participate in that as being a shareholder official.
speaker
Clearfield
Ladies and gentlemen, this does include today's teleconference.
speaker
Operator
Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and have a wonderful day.
Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

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