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Operator
Good day, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the E-plus Earnings Results Conference Call. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. I would like to introduce your host for today's conference, Mr. Clay Parkhurst, SVP.
Clay Parkhurst
Sir, you may begin.
Elaine Marion
Thank you for joining us today.
spk08
On the call is Mark Maron, CEO and President, Elaine Marion, CFO, and Erica Stoker, General Counsel. I want to take a moment to remind you that the statements we make this afternoon that are not historical facts may be deemed to be forward-looking statements and are based on management's current plans, estimates, and projections. Actual and anticipated future results may vary materially due to certain risks and uncertainties detailed in the earnings release we issued this afternoon and our periodic filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our Form 10-K for the year ends March 31, 2022. and a Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2022, when filed. The company undertakes no responsibility to update any of these forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. In addition, during the call, we may make reference to non-GAAP financial measures, and we've included a GAAP financial reconciliation in our earnings release, which is posted on the Investor Information section of our website at www.eplus.com. And now I'd like to turn the call over to Mark Marin. Mark?
Mark Maron
Thank you, Clay, and thank you, everyone, for participating in today's call to discuss our results for the second quarter of fiscal 2023. Building on our first quarter performance, Eplus generated solid second quarter results with nearly 8% consolidated net sales growth and adjusted gross billings growth of more than 15%. We saw growth in most vertical markets and customer sizes, driven primarily by increased demand for our data center, cloud computing, networking, and security solutions, with particular strength from our mid- to enterprise-sized customers. We believe our solutions, services, and continued focus on our strategy plans has allowed us to continue to capture market share. I'm also proud of our team, which continues to execute at a high level, delivering strong top-line growth while meeting our customers' needs despite persistent supply chain constraints. Our services business remains an important growth driver and an area of continued investment focus as our customers adopt a broad range of technologies to enhance productivity, increase profitability, and drive revenue. Services grew 7.1% primarily due to our managed services, which encompass our on-premise, remote, and cloud offerings. Our managed service business produces consistent annuity quality revenue, reducing quarter-to-quarter variability in our revenue stream. For our clients, managed services provide holistic IT solutions that can optimize their IT platforms, supplement scarce IT personnel, especially in the most sought-after areas, and reduce operating costs. We continue to see an uptick in demand for our annuity services and our cloud and security advisory services. Some of our new offerings in the space include our E-plus lifecycle services support. ELSS was developed to centralize and streamline the technical support experience by providing first call, multi-product, multi-vendor architecture support for Cisco and adjacent technologies. In addition, our E-plus Azure assessments are designed to focus on high-profile security and configuration risks and areas of cost and efficiencies in our customers' current Azure deployments. I am particularly pleased with the growth in our security business. On a trailing 12-month basis, security is now 22% of our adjusted gross billings. The security market continues to outpace our overall top-line and adjusted gross billings growth, as our customers prioritize investments to protect against escalating cybersecurity risks. In fact, we are seeing the cybersecurity market shift from traditional compliance-only based approaches to more comprehensive enterprise security strategies that provide a higher level of protection against threats. This trend can further drive growth at E+, as we can provide a broader range of innovative security solutions and can also strengthen our customer relationships over a longer time period via managed services and multi-year contracts. Net sales in our financing segment were up slightly to $22.2 million compared to $21.7 million in the prior year period. As expected, Q2 financing segment operating income declined due to tough year-over-year comparisons, which reflect the variable nature of this business from quarter to quarter. Despite the lumpiness inherent in this business, we believe our financing business remains an important competitive differentiator, particularly in today's economic environment where payment flexibility offers an attractive option. Second quarter gap earnings per share decreased 8.5% to $1.07, reflecting investments in customer-facing personnel and investments in our internal IT capabilities to help us scale, increases in reserves, and foreign currency translation losses, and a challenging year-over-year comparison in our financing segment that we called out on our last earnings call. Excluding the effects of foreign currency translation losses and acquisition expenses, non-GAAP earnings per share of $1.29 was essentially flat. Most importantly, we remain committed to investing in our people, tools, and processes not only to meet our customers' current needs, but also to build the foundational capabilities to be their partner of choice in the future as well. We added 175 employees year over year, which includes the addition of the future comm team members during the second quarter. The majority of our new hires have been for customer-facing roles, highlighting our growing business opportunities, particularly in our focus solution areas. These customer-facing hires have strengthened our sales, cloud, and security practices, providing the necessary capabilities to deliver on our increased services revenue and backlog. We have added significantly to our workforce, particularly for new specialized talent in professional and annuity services, in order to fulfill current and anticipated future demand. These hires plus increased third-party costs and overall services mix affected our services margins. We are continuing to monitor and manage expenses and aligning our project and services pricing to reflect market costs. Due in part to supply chain delays, our professional services backlog is up over 68% year over year. Now turning to our outlook. Despite increasing economic uncertainty over the past several months, the outlook for IT spending is solid across most market segments. While E-plus is not recession-proof, our business is recession-resilient, supported by our financial strength and the nature of the mission-critical technology we sell and support. We have continued to experience broad-based demand across end markets and customer size segments, underscoring our ability to address our customers' critical needs from managing cybersecurity risks to enabling digital transformation. These positive demand trends are reflected in our high level of open orders that are up 42% over last year, as well as our backlog, all of which support our confidence in the outlook for the second half of our fiscal year. Our favorable view is balanced against the challenges we continue to see in the supply chain, where limited product availability has led to extended customer project implementation timelines. Our inventory levels, which are up over 100% from last year, reflect these supply chain constraints, as well as a developing trend towards larger, more complex customer projects that cannot be fully deployed until all the necessary equipment are procured. In closing, I would like to commend the entire Eplus team for their dedication to providing the highest level of service to our customers every day. We are successfully executing on our strategy, generating solid sales and adjusted growth billings growth in our focus markets, while maximizing our long-term opportunity through continued investment in our employees and in our capabilities. I will now turn the call over to Elaine Marion, our CFO, to provide details on our second quarter financial results.
Elaine Marion
Elaine?
spk03
Thank you, Mark, and good afternoon, everyone. I will review our financial performance in the second quarter of fiscal 2023 and year-to-date. Net sales were up 7.8% year-over-year, totaling $493.7 million in the second quarter. As Mark mentioned, we saw an expansion across the majority of our end markets and customer segments, demonstrating that we are focusing on the right growth areas. Net sales in the technology segment increased 8.1% to $471.5 million. To be more specific, product and service revenues increased 8.2% and 7.1% year-over-year to $406.3 million and $65.2 million, respectively. We were pleased with the growth in adjusted gross billings of 15.3%, amounting to $765.8 million, compared to $664.1 million reported in the year-ago quarter. The adjusted gross billings to net sales adjustment increased 413 basis points to 38.4% compared to 34.3% in the second quarter of fiscal 2022. As we look deeper into our end market sales in our technology segment on a trailing 12-month basis, we see similar trends to the prior quarter with telecom, media, and entertainment and technology, our largest markets, representing 29 and 16% of segment net sales respectively. Healthcare, SLED, and financial services accounted for 14%, 13%, and 9% respectively, with the remaining 19% representing other customer types. As of September 30, 2022, our customers totaled approximately 4,200. I just want to note that we now calculate our customer count as discrete customers who have purchased over the past 24 months rather than the prior 12 months used in previous communications due to lengthened customer buying cycles and supply chain delays. Our financing segment revenue is $22.2 million compared to $21.7 million in last year's second quarter as a result of higher proceeds from sales of leased equipment offsetting lower portfolio earnings and transactional gains. As we move to our consolidated gross profits, We reported 8.4% growth to $133.3 million in the second quarter compared to $123 million reported last year. Consolidated gross margin increased 10 basis points to 27%. Gross profit in the technology segment was up 10.7% to $116.3 million. Technology segment gross margin increased 60 basis points to 24.7%. as higher product margins more than offset lower service margins. Product gross margin expanded 150 basis points to 23.2% as we benefited from a higher proportion of sales of third-party maintenance, subscriptions, and services, which are recorded on a net basis. While our service margin was 33.6% compared to 38.6% in the second quarter of fiscal 2022, As Mark mentioned, this was primarily due to higher third-party costs related to our professional services and several large project-related contracts that were competitively priced, which blended down our service margins, as well as an increase from managed services costs. Gross profit in the financing segment totaled $17 million compared to $17.9 million reported in the second quarter of fiscal 2022. As a reminder, last year's quarter had several large transaction gains, which did not replicate. However, this year's quarter contained several early lease buyouts, which partially offset the lower transaction gains compared to the last year. Early lease buyouts are customer-driven events that pull forward future earnings from the underlying leases. During the quarter, we saw increases in salaries and benefits. Our investments in personnel are evident in the headcount increase to 1729 at the end of September 2022, which includes 25 employees from the July 2022 acquisition of FutureCom compared to 1554 in the prior year. The quarter-over-quarter increase contains 48 sales-related roles and 100 professional services and technical support personnel as we experienced an increase in demand for our services. As you think about these investments, please keep in mind there is some lag between the upfront costs and the revenue generation. In addition, we saw increases in variable compensation tied to our gross profit performance and had higher travel expenses related to the resumption of customer and in-person meetings. We also reported an increase in interest expense related to our higher borrowing on our credit facility and a change in reserves due to an increase in exposure across our receivables. Our reserve calculation methodology did not change. All of these factors together drove an increase in consolidated operating expense of 13.3% year over year to $89.2 million. Although we made significant investments in personnel, operating income for the quarter was $44.1 million. essentially flat compared to the exceptionally strong level of $44.3 million reported in the second quarter of 2022, which benefited from several outside transactions in our financing segment. The effective tax rate was 29.3% compared to 28.6% in the year-ago quarter. Including foreign currency translation losses from U.S. dollar-denominated loans with our subsidiaries in the United Kingdom that totaled $3.9 million, Consolidated net earnings in the second quarter of fiscal 2023 were $28.5 million, or $1.07 per diluted share, compared to $31.4 million, or $1.17 per diluted share, in the last year's second quarter. Non-GAAP diluted earnings per share were $1.29 compared to $1.30 in the year-ago quarter. Last year's EPS is adjusted to reflect the stock split in December 2021. Our diluted share count at the end of the quarter was 26.6 million compared to 26.9 million in the second quarter of fiscal 2022. Adjusted EBITDA was 50.3 million, slightly ahead of 50.2 million in the comparable quarter in fiscal 2022. Just to briefly recap our financial performance year to date, net sales for the first six months of fiscal 2023 increased 8.8% to 952.1 million, driven by net sales growth of 10% in the technology segment to $920.3 million. Adjusted gross billings were up 13.2%, reaching $1.47 billion. Consolidated gross profit increased 8% to $246.8 million. Consolidated gross margin was 25.9% compared to 26.1% a year ago. However, our technology segment gross margin increased 10 basis points to 24.1%. Net earnings totaled $50.8 million, or $1.91 per diluted share, compared to $54.9 million, or $2.04 per diluted share, respectively, adjusted for the stock split affected in December 2021. Adjusted EBITDA was up 0.2% to $88.6 million, and non-GAAP diluted earnings per share was flat year over year at $2.28 per diluted share. Our healthy balance sheet enables us to execute our strategy effectively. Cash and cash equivalents were $99.5 million at September 30, 2022. On Tuesday, we announced the expansion of our credit facility, agented by Wells Fargo Bank, from $375 million to $425 million. The expanded credit line will help facilitate and support our growth strategy effectively. and we are grateful for the long-term support of Wells Fargo and the participant banks. We continue to experience supply chain challenges and have ongoing delays to deliver completed orders and corresponding services, which resulted in inventory increasing 77.3% to $274.9 million at the September quarter end compared to the end of fiscal 2022. As a reminder, our inventory is primarily related to committed orders by our customers. This variation also explains the increase in our cash conversion cycle to 54 days compared to 35 days in the year-ago quarter. However, we expect our cash conversion cycle to improve as supply chain constraints ease. Despite the near-term economic uncertainty, we believe that our strategic focus on the right technologies positions Eplus well for the future. With that, I will now turn the call back to Mark. Mark? Thank you, Elaine.
Mark Maron
To recap, Eplus recorded a solid quarter in both business segments. With strong levels of open orders, backlog, and inventory, we are well positioned to have a solid second half despite heightened economic uncertainty. In light of escalating cyber threats, our flexible and evolving security solutions are proving more critical to customers than ever. Supply chain constraints continue to be a challenge, variously affecting revenue margins and operating expenses in many of our solution areas for both product and services. We continue to monitor and adjust to fill our customers' critical IT needs. In closing, we are well-positioned to capture future growth while defending against recessionary risks, given our strong balance sheet, excellent vendor and customer relationships, and our talented and dedicated workforce. Operator, I would now like to turn the call over for questions.
Operator
At this time, I would like to inform everyone, if you would like to ask a question, please press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad.
Clay Parkhurst
We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of met, Sharon with Stifel.
Sharon
Yes, thank you. Hello, everyone. Um, just, uh, first question, just on the, the strength of the gross profit, um, uh, in, in the technology segment. Um, I think you called out, um, higher hardware product sales because of the third party warranty, um, sales and the seasonality of that business. Is that right?
Mark Maron
Yeah, Matt, our gross to net was, I think up, uh, just about 400 basis points. So on our gross margins, there's a couple of things. One, the gross to net affected the margins in a positive way. Our product margins were actually up, too, based on some of the more mission-critical technology that we sold. Where we took a little bit of a hit was on our services margins, and that really had to do with product delays with some of the supply chains. So it's really just a timing thing. And then the other thing I'd just highlight, if you look at it, the tech GM was up 60 basis points. And I believe we're some of the highest in the industry where we wound up on a consolidated basis at 27% on gross margins.
Sharon
No, I understand. What I was getting at is how sustainable is that and how much of that is seasonal. I mean, last year in the September quarter, you were up 400 basis points or so. So that seems like a seasonally stronger quarter. In other words, I mean, should we be modeling these levels or not? Is there a seasonal decline in the December quarter because of a change of some of the products like the third-party warranties?
Mark Maron
Yeah, and now I got you, Matt. So sorry about that. So yeah, it's more seasonal. So a lot of this has to do in this quarter where we get the uptick is due to Cisco's fiscal year-end, where there's a lot of third-party maintenance and software that goes from a gross-to-net perspective. So This is traditionally a higher quarter than the other three quarters within the plus.
Sharon
Okay. And on the expense side, it sounds like you're making some prudent investments in various resources, particularly on the technical side. So how should we think about that going forward in terms of OPEX increasing revenue How should we think about that?
Mark Maron
Yeah, that's fair. So let me give you a little detail, Matt, and then maybe I'll try to help you fence it in a little bit. So from a OPEC standpoint, there's a couple different things. The big investment is in headcount. What we're seeing based on some of the market share that we're grabbing specifically in the services, annuity services specifically, security and cloud, we're adding headcount in that space. For example, We hired a bunch of junior associates in the security space that we've trained over the last five to six weeks that we're then going to be customer facing. So we're kind of making those investments. We see the OPEX up a little bit this quarter. It kind of takes time, not only for the security folks I mentioned, but others to get productive. The other thing we saw was our annuity bookings were up, I think it was 36% year over year in terms of our annuity bookings. We had a few large service desk deals that we actually had to hire addition talent to meet the SLAs with those services. So those are some of the things that built up our OpEx from an investment standpoint. We do think that the revenue will catch up to the expense over time. If I were modeling at a very high level, I would say this is probably a decent model in terms of from an OpEx going forward. We're going to We're going to diligently manage the business and add hires as needed.
Sharon
Oh, so stable from here?
Mark Maron
That's fair.
Sharon
Yeah. Okay. And just lastly, on the inventory build and the product constraints, it looks like you had some upside in the quarter, so it looks like you may have benefited from some improving supply or perhaps the inventory build that's been going on. But are you encouraged at all in terms of things opening up at all? And is that going to limit perhaps upside in the December quarter where in previous years you've been up mid to high single digits sequentially?
Mark Maron
Yeah. So, Matt, a couple things there. One, this is still very fluid, as you know. So, you know, we're hearing different things from the OEMs in terms of timing and of when things will be getting out. So it's still very fluid. So it's not an easy answer on this one. What I would tell you to look at, our open orders were up 42% over last year for one. Second, I think Elaine touched on it, our inventory was up 100%. And I think it's up 77% since March alone. So what we're seeing is we are grabbing market share. Our adjusted gross billings continue to grow both in the quarter as well as the half. And then some of this is a timing to get out the door, but it's positive in the long run, but it's not a simple, easy answer since we don't control when some of these things are gonna get out.
Elaine Marion
Okay, okay, thanks a lot, Mark. All right, Matt, we'll see you soon.
Clay Parkhurst
Your next question comes from the line of Maggie Nolan with William Blair.
William Blair
Hi, this is Jesse on for Maggie. Thanks for taking our questions. I wanted to start off with revisiting product margins. So can you talk about some of the puts and takes there? Are you able to achieve higher pricing for, you know, those mission-critical products you mentioned? And what are your expectations going forward?
Mark Maron
Yeah, that's – hey, Jesse, thanks. So two things that affected. One, which I talked about, was the gross to net. So having more third-party – software SAS plays that are recognized on a net and or ratable basis depending on the technology and how the term on the product side yes we've seen a little bit of an uptick on the product margins based on the technology we sell I will remind you if you think about it we kind of sell more value selling services mission critical technology we don't play in the PC device space as much as some of the others We do sell in that space for some of our bigger customers, but it's not a big focus. So traditionally, we'd see our product margins be a little bit higher based on selling storage, security, and some of the other technologies that get a higher gross margin.
Elaine Marion
And then a quick follow-up to that.
William Blair
Are you able to achieve better pricing as customers seek these solutions more quickly and would you expect that to change as supply eases?
Mark Maron
Well, I don't know if it'd be more quickly, Jesse. I think it's more along the lines of if we go in here, I'll take a step back for you. We've kind of made our mantra as customer first, services led, results driven. And what that means is we're leading with our consultative and advisory services in the hopes that We're helping our customers understand what security posture they have to put in place, what security you have to do from a ransomware or risk mitigation and things along those lines. So normally if you do that upfront work and you show the value, potentially you should be able to get increased margin based on the value that you're seeing both from a product and from a services perspective. I don't know if it's a timing thing. There may be some customers that are buying from us that have a very tight timeframe and they're worried about supply chain and they're not worried about cost, but I don't think that's the driver on the gross margin for us that much.
Elaine Marion
Okay. That's helpful.
William Blair
And then the last, I had one last question. So net headcount additions, they seem strong in the quarter, even when you exclude the impact from future comp. So how are you thinking about the cadence throughout the rest of the year and implications for the business?
Mark Maron
Yeah, good question, Jesse. So of the roughly 175 heads, you know, approximately 25 to 30 was FutureCom. The other 145, most of those were customer facing, and I'd say the majority in the services space. And when I say that, both the service desk annuity plays that I talked about that we had to head count to meet certain SLAs for customers, and also in pre-sales and delivery for cloud and our security practices. So I will continue to monitor and manage that. So we'll manage the business tightly and add the headcount as we need it as we see the net sales and AGB adjust upwards, if you will.
Elaine Marion
Understood. Thank you. All right. Thanks, Jesse. Tell Maggie we said hello.
Operator
Once again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. At this time, there are no further questions. I would like to turn the call back over to Mr. Martin Marin for closing remarks.
Mark Maron
Okay, thank you. Just want to say thank you for everybody for joining us today for our Q2 session. call, earnings call. I wish everybody a happy and healthy holiday season for Thanksgiving and every other holiday season that's out there between now and our next earnings call. Take care and thanks for joining.
Operator
This concludes today's conference. You may now disconnect.
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