Operator:
Greetings, and welcome to IDEX Corporation First Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to our host, Mike Yates, Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer. Thank you. You may begin.
Mike Yat
Mike Yates:
Thank you, Diago. Good morning, everyone. This is Mike Yates, Vice President and Chief Accounting Officer for IDEX Corporation. Let me start by saying thank you for joining us for a discussion of the IDEX first quarter 2020 financial highlights. Last night, we issued a press release outlining our companyâs financial and operating performance for the three months ending March 31, 2020. The press release, along with the presentation slides to be used during todayâs webcast, can be accessed on our companyâs website at www.idexcorp.com. Joining me today is Andy Silvernail, our Chairman and CEO; and Bill Grogan, our Chief Financial Officer. The format for our call today is as follows. Weâll begin with Andy providing an overview of IDEX performance drivers and addressing the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our operations, as well as the companyâs response to date. Bill will then discuss our first quarter 2020 financial results and walk you through an assessment of the companyâs liquidity and financial durability through several scenarios. And finally, Andy will conclude with our current framework for second quarter and closing remarks. Following our prepared remarks, we will open the call for your questions. If you should need to exit the call for any reason, you may access a complete replay beginning approximately two hours after the call concludes by dialing the toll-free number 877-660-6853 and entering conference ID number 13694804, or you may simply log on to our companyâs homepage for the webcast replay. Before we begin a brief reminder, this call may contain certain forward-looking statements that are subject to the Safe Harbor language in last nightâs press release and in IDEXâs filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. With that, Iâll turn the call over to our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Andy Silvernail.
Andrew Silvernail:
Thank you, Mike. I appreciate everyone joining the IDEX Q1 earnings call today. Iâm starting off on Slide 6. The world is spinning with great uncertainty. But as you leave this call today, I want you to feel certain about one thing, IDEX is well-positioned to survive and thrive through this COVID-19 crisis. We have the quality of businesses, we have the people, and we have the financial wherewithal. Weâve invested our company aggressively over the years to build a very special organization. Most important, weâve built the culture. We built a culture with incredibly talented teams who run great businesses that matter to the world. Our culture has helped us react very early to this crisis. Weâve made swift and smart decisions to keep our people safe, to keep our businesses moving and ensure liquidity, making sure that we do everything we can to help win this COVID-19 fight. IDEX has an important mission that we capture in four words, :trusted solutions, improving lives.â Our mission has never been more important. In a world consumed with physical, emotional, and the financial impact of COVID-19, IDEX plays a critical role in keeping people safe and healthy, while helping directly with the fight to defeat it. Iâm going to move now to Slide 7. There are so many ways that IDEX is in this fight. In our Fluid & Metering segment, we enable food, energy, and industrial supply chains. In Fire & Safety/Diversified, weâve acted swiftly to quadruple the production of our mobile medical tents used by hospitals as they struggle to handle the surge in COVID-19 cases. And in Health & Science Technologies, weâre making compressors used in ventilators, mobile carts that produce hospital grade air where itâs not available, and compressors for mobile disinfecting sprayers. And, of course, weâre also a critical supplier enabling the genetic sequencing that decoded the RNA of the coronavirus, enabling the development of tests for COVID-19 and its antibodies, as well as finding therapies and hopefully, an eventual vaccine. There are dozens more examples across the company where we bring essential products to a market in need. Iâm turning now to Slide 8. I want to pause here for a moment and thank all of our people across IDEX, especially those in manufacturing, shipping, and other roles that require a presence in our facilities. We have robust safety protocols at our sites worldwide to protect our people performing essential jobs. The safety of our people will always be the most important consideration as we continue in this new environment. In a crisis, especially one as devastating as this, your true values are exposed. Iâve never been prouder of the people of IDEX. From the first sign of the COVID-19 crisis in China, our teams have been collaborating, problem-solving, and acting. While great strategy is a product of this crisis, weâre also seeing the best in who we are. Iâm now moving on to Slide 9. On March 20, I held a conference call with investors, where I laid out our operating context and our priorities to steer IDEX successfully through this crisis. Much has changed in five weeks, but our point of view and our priorities remain the same. Weâve built our strategy and our operating plans based on four phases of this evolving crisis. I believe weâre now moving out of Phase 1, the acute phase; and into Phase 2, which will be a period of ongoing uncertainty and significant challenge for the next three to six months. Thereâll be a little visibility as quarantines are lifted, and we all work to gradually restart the economy safely. During this phase, we expect to see a significant drop in demand and production capability as customers, suppliers, and our own teams are regularly impacted by shutdowns and shortages. The third phase will be learning to live and work with COVID-19. This will require significant changes to much of what we do, and this period will extend until there is a solution that gives people confidence to engage socially and professionally without fear. While this phase will not be easy, weâve seen from our businesses in China, which have rebounded quickly that we can successfully pivot our approach. The final phase will be the post virus world. I know we all look forward to this day when normal returns. Iâm convinced, however, that normal will be redefined just as it has been another severe crisis. Like the Great Depression, the Second World War, 9/11, and The Financial Crisis, there will be significant and permanent societal and economic changes. The coronavirus will shape our lives and our economy in countless ways, some easily predictable and others yet unknown. Over the next 12 to 18 months, as we move through these phases, it is our job as leaders to successfully transverse phases one through three and enter Phase 4 with a company thatâs financially strong and an organization that is positioned to thrive. Iâm now turning to Slide 10. Weâve outlined four strategies that guide our way to a better future. Our top priority is safety, protecting our teams as we try to remain open to serve customers that are essential to our society. While we are normally highly decentralized, this is a time when we have carefully weighed safety protocols and mandated certain standards worldwide. These have included temperature checks at the beginning of all shifts, guidelines for face coverings, cleaning and sanitizing practices, and processes for addressing a variety of scenarios from COVID-19 cases to possible exposures. Our COVID-19 issues and response team has led the way and regularly provides guidance to our local sites as issues arise. And because of the strong procedures we have in place and the handful of incidences where employees have contracted the virus, few if any coworkers have been quarantined. Not only is this good for business, but itâs great for the health, well-being, and morale of our employees. Iâm glad to report that every IDEX employee who has contracted COVID-19 has so far recovered. To ensure business continuity, which is our second priority, we have developed plans for each site to use in the event of a ramp down of operations. We want to ensure these are handled smoothly and in a way that prepares the business to return quickly to operations. We are also regularly addressing supply chain concerns. While our supply chains are generally shorter than many of our other global manufacturers, we have quickly addressed issues from lockdowns and travel restrictions. So far, our business continuity planning, like our security plans, have helped us avoid more significant business disruptions. In the months ahead, we expect weâll be choppier. This extensive planning and support structure weâve built should serve our businesses well. Our third area of focus is liquidity. IDEX entered this time with a strong cash position and we have remained cash flow positive since the beginning of the crisis. Our goal is to remain so throughout, protecting our liquidity and our balance sheet. Weâre working with our businesses and finance leaders to help them manage through a period unlike anything theyâve seen in their careers. Bill Grogan, our CFO, has instituted daily cash management practices that he is working with all of our leaders across the globe. Finally, weâre playing offense. That means different things in different areas of our business. In some instances, it means pivoting to focus on the needs of customers who are now booming as theyâre selling essential products. In other instances, itâs meant helping businesses in need, like we did in Novotema thatâs just outside Bergamo in Italy that was closed. Our sister company, PPE in England, stepped in and produce seals for a medical ventilator manufacturer as the Novotema was struggling. Playing offense also means being prepared to accelerate acquisitions when the market unfreezes and a thoughtful approach to share repurchases. With that, Iâm going to pause here. Iâm going to turn things over to Bill, and he is going to walk you through an overview of our financials and liquidity.
William Grogan:
Thanks, Andy. Iâll start with our consolidated financial results on Slide 12. Q1 orders of $645 million were down 2% overall and organically. The slowdown in our industrial end markets that we discussed during our previous call was compounded by the impact of the pandemic in most of our geographies and end markets. However, there was positive momentum in our life sciences and pharma businesses. The backlog weâve built will help fill the decrease in orders we expect in Q2. First quarter sales of $594 million were 4% â were down 4% overall and 5% organically. Results early in the quarter were better-than-expected in most areas of the business outside of China. But as the impact of COVID-19 ramped, most of our businesses, with the exception of life sciences and pharma, took a negative turn and drove us to the low-end of our guide. Q1 gross margins expanded 10 basis points to 45.7% and were up in all three segments, primarily driven by strong price capture, continued productivity initiatives and discretionary cost control. These actions more than offset the negative margin impact of lower volume leverage. Operating margin was 23.5%, down 30 basis points from the prior year, mainly driven by the dilutive impact of the Velcora acquisition, which had op margin of 8%, but EBITDA margin of 25% and lower volume leverage. This was offset by our gross margin expansion and SG&A cost actions we took in the fourth quarter of last year. Our Q1 effective tax rate was 20%, which was higher than the 19.5% in the prior year due to a reduction in excess tax benefits related to share-based compensation. First quarter net income was $102 million, resulting in an EPS of $1.33, down $0.11, or 8% compared to the prior year EPS. Finally, free cash flow was $72 million, down 5% compared to the prior year, but was 71% of net income, compared to 69% last year. Turning to Slide 13, our liquidity. Free cash flow for the trailing 12 months ending March 31 was $473 million, or 113% of net income. We continue to be well-positioned to weather the current environment. IDEX has consistently generated positive free cash flow in excess of net income through margin expansion, ongoing working capital initiatives and an effective capital allocation philosophy. LTM adjusted leverage was 1.5 times, providing sufficient capacity to fund all of our business needs and allowing us to quickly pivot to offense as the economic environment improves. Leverage increased slightly in the quarter as we drew $150 million on our revolver in late March in response to temporary challenges in the short-term funding markets. Cash and cash equivalents totaled $569 million at the end of the quarter. We also have $642 million of availability under our $800 million revolving credit facility. With cash on hand, available financing and conservative leverage, we are confident in our ability to continue to meet our obligations, fund operations and make critical investments in the business. In relation to $300 million of notes due at the end of the year, we are currently exploring potential options, including availing ourselves to the capital markets. As Andy mentioned, we have put in place additional processes to enhance our focus on liquidity, and we are actively monitoring conditions with our customers and suppliers to ensure that weâre able to maintain positive cash flow and mitigate the impact of a challenging environment on cash and working capital. Weâre taking all necessary actions to make sure weâre appropriately positioned to operate effectively during this period. Moving on to Slide 14. While we believe that we are well suited to operate in this environment, weâre continually monitoring the impact of COVID-19 on our operations and are modeling a number of possible scenarios. These examples are meant to give our investors a picture of our durability, not a reflection of what we expect for full-year sales. Under our current cost structure, which reflects the structural actions we took in the fourth quarter of 2019, we believe that our annualized break-even revenue, the point at which we continue to generate positive cash flow, is approximately $1.8 billion, or 30% decrease to our 2019 sales results. To be proactive in this uncertain environment, we have developed a playbook with actions to reduce that break-even point. Weâve identified approximately $120 million worth of additional cost reductions, which will drive our break-even revenue closer to down 35%. This would include bonus actions, eliminating travel, marketing and supplies and many other discretionary cost items. If the conditions warrant it, weâre prepared to take structural cost actions and generate an additional $40 million of reductions, resulting in a break-even revenue point of down 40%. Lastly, although we intend to fund our dividend, if we were to suspend it, our break-even point would be as low as 50% down on an annualized basis. Weâre taking all prudent actions to manage discretionary spending, as we continue to gauge the impact of this volatile environment. At this point, we do not believe that further structural actions are necessary, but weâre staying closely tuned into our end markets and supply chains and are prepared to take additional steps if necessary. With that, Iâll turn it back over to Andy to review our current view on the second quarter.
Andrew Silvernail:
Thanks, Bill. Hey, everybody, Iâm on slide 15. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, we believe the next three to six months are going to be extremely challenging. Everyone will face the same uncertainty as we reopen the economy safely and execute environment, where COVID-19 exists and impacts operations potentially in waves. While we believe strongly in the IDEX business model and weâre very well-positioned, we acknowledge the challenges that we face across our business units. We expect revenue in the second quarter could be down as much as 15% to 25%. We know that some of our end markets will be significantly challenged, but those headwinds will be somewhat offset as we continue to deliver mission-critical components to essential customers worldwide. Weâve taken prudent actions to significantly reduce our discretionary cost across our businesses and the steps we took in the fourth quarter of 2019 have positioned us to react to a market that is significantly more challenging than we expected when we started the year. We are closely monitoring our markets and our businesses and we will react quickly to changes. To conclude, Iâm extremely proud of how our employees have responded to this crisis. And even though the next 12 to 18 months will be challenging for all of us, I know that we will meet this challenge and come out stronger on the other side. With that, let me pause here and turn it over to questions from the audience. Thank you.
Operator:
Thank you. At this time, weâll be conducting our question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Deane Dray with RBC. Please state your question.
Deane Dray:
Thank you. Good morning, everyone.
Andrew Silvernail:
Good morning, Deane. Hey, itâs great to hear the IDEX team, and Iâm wishing everyone the best. I appreciate the â all the details in terms of the potential scenarios this morning. And the first question really picks up where Bill left off on Page 14 on those scenariosâŚ
Deane Dray:
âŚbecause Andy, I want to say for the past year, youâve been asked about the IDEX playbook for a normal recession.
Deane Dray:
And it really feels like â I donât even know what that is anymore, because weâre far beyond that.
Andrew Silvernail:
Even do we, Deane.
Deane Dray:
So itâs just â the idea here, as you said, if things progress or get worse, it just feels like weâre already there.
Deane Dray:
So talk about it, and I know this is a tough conversation, but the deep â deeper cuts that youâre likely going to have to take, like is that $120 million of cost out, is that enough? Whatâs â what are the milestones that youâre looking for here and then maybe some comments on decrementals?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, you bet. So, first of all, that first look at the $120 million, that stuff that we are very actively putting our arms around and taking the cost out of. And obviously, you can see that it even impacted in a positive way to some degree in the first quarter, because we started those actions really as we are coming into February and early part of March, and so thereâs some benefits there. So, weâre grabbing that lever already, and weâre grabbing it very aggressively, Deane. So thatâs the first thing. One of the main priorities that I have going through this crisis is to maintain as much of the structure and the talent that we can in IDEX appropriately. And so, Iâm willing for a short period of time to eat some of the incremental costing to maintain that talent base and to position the company well. That being said, as you know, weâre a very diversified and decentralized business. And so, you have companies that â some companies are absolutely growing in this environment and some are really taking it on the chin. And so, weâll have to get the appropriate footprint in the appropriate places depending upon how much deeper and how much longer this goes. And â but our first priority is to certainly keep the integrity of IDEX intact as much as possible. So, I look at that that secondary group of actions, that the incremental $40 million as steps that we will take if we have to, but would prefer not to, Deane. In terms of decrementals, if you look at it on a sequential basis versus year-over-year, I think, thatâs probably a good way to look at it. Obviously, weâre a very high contribution margin company. So, weâre â we have contribution margins in the low-60s. And so, if we can offset a good chunk of that and end up in the 40s or 50s without having to make massive structural changes to the company, we would do so within the short term. But obviously, in the longer-term, youâve got to have the appropriate cost structure.
Deane Dray:
Thatâs really helpful. And then I just â I appreciate the four phases that youâve laid out. And I donât want to minimize how much heavy lifting, and frankly some pain to get through all four of these phases. But looking beyond into that new normal and maybe the idea of when you will start to shift to offenseâŚ
Deane Dray:
âŚand youâve got balance sheet now. You didnât chase expensive deals the last couple of years. When does M&A make sense? We know markets have to normalize a bit, but when do you start to flip the switch and play offense here?
Andrew Silvernail:
Well, some of that is in our control and some is not. In terms of overall playing offense, weâre doing some of it right now, Deane. We are â if you look across our businesses, those places where essential products are booming, so disinfection, many of our Health & Science markets, pharma reshoring, which we think is going to be a major trend. Weâre playing offense now. We have redirected our people and investment and are making sure that we can first and foremost help with this fight but also make sure that weâre doing the right things for our shareholders, our owners. And so, some of thatâs happening now. As it regards to M&A, there are really two challenges with M&A. First â the first one is having enough confidence in your own situation to deploy that liquidity in that balance sheet, and the second is that you have willing sellers. We are doing an awful lot of work right now on both sides of that equation. So let me talk about the liquidity side. So, thereâs liquidity that is to survive that a lot of people are having to utilize. And at the end of this, they will have a stretched balance sheet in the very difficult circumstances. That is not our situation, and I donât want it to be our situation. Our drive and why we have so much focus on this breakeven level of cash flow is because I want a balance sheet that is deployable â aggressively deployable as the world starts to settle itself. And so, if we can maintain this north of $1 billion of liquidity, as cash flows become more certain and the markets stabilizes, we will get aggressive, no doubt about that. Now the other side of that equation is who are the sellers. And so, as you can imagine right now, and you guys are talking to a lot of folks, thatâs frozen â itâs just a frozen marketplace. I think it will take through a quarter or so for that to start to unfreeze when Boards of Directors and families are going to look at this situation and recognize that itâs going to take a while and that an attractive price in this marketplace might make sense. But I think it will take a little bit of time, Deane.
Deane Dray:
Thank you, and best of luck to everyone.
Andrew Silvernail:
Thanks, Deane.
Operator:
Thanks. Our next question comes from Mike Halloran with Baird. Please state your question.
Michael Halloran:
Hey, good morning, everyone.
Andrew Silvernail:
Good morning, Mike.
William Grogan:
Good morning, Mike.
Michael Halloran:
So a couple of things. First, when you look at that down 15% to 25%, whatâs that predicated on? Is that based on what youâre seeing now? Are there signs of stability after that initial shock downward? Any kind of context on what kind of logic youâre using to get to the 15% to 25% down?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. So Iâd â what Iâd first say is that the 15% is our experience as March unfolded and what weâre seeing here in early April. And being a short cycle business, we certainly saw the reaction pretty quickly, both on the ups and the downs, by the way, in terms of the things that are struggling. The industrial businesses are certainly taking it on the chin, more so than other businesses. So if you look at FMT, thatâs just going to be more painful there. Youâve got the combination of the coronavirus impact and then, of course, whatâs happening in the energy world that thatâs unfolding. So that 15% is what weâve been experienced here for, call it, six, seven weeks, Mike. My view is, itâs likely to get worse than the 15%, and we see kind of slippage happening in a number of places that especially have more impact if youâve got, say, if youâre in energy, youâre in transportation, those places, in particular, are really getting pounded and others are holding up. So I feel pretty comfortable with that range, Mike.
Michael Halloran:
And then you alluded to it earlier, but maybe just talk about how you guys are thinking about what the structural changes could look like here? What are some of the things that youâre thinking you might rotate to, obviously, some of the pharma medical stuff youâve already mentioned?
Michael Halloran:
Anything else youâre thinking about? And then how do you prepare for it in the short-term here and bounce that with all the other things as you have up in the air?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. I think one of the things that really works in our favor in this environment is our structure. It could be an impediment. We put that rapid response team in place very early on, because we knew that, that our decentralization and in terms of kind of how weâre structured worldwide, we knew that we could end up with kind of 45 different answers. And so there were certain things that you just couldnât have 45 different answers on, and weâve been able to move very quickly. In this case, in terms of playing offense, Mike, our structure helps us a ton, because the places that are really struggling with massive demand falloffs, you can isolate them specifically and you can start redirecting resources to things that are exciting. Iâll give you an example. So in the world of Health & Science, we have a significant demand for engineering right now because of all the new things that are developing, whether itâs from testing, which youâre seeing PCR tests take off that weâre helping with, we needed engineering and we actually redirected engineering from our business in rescue to help our business in Health & Science. And so weâre doing a bunch of things like that, Mike. So weâre definitely moving to those opportunities and moving people and resources. In terms of the big structural changes that theyâre â I think theyâre going to happen around a lot of things touching our Health & Science world. I think if I think about, say, the food, supply chain, thatâs going to be an area that I think will be impacted. Thereâs a lot of talk of reshoring in terms of moving things out of more difficult or more risky environments. I think that will happen, that was already happening, but itâs not like a big boom, I think, itâs a relatively slow phase. But overall, I feel like weâre positioned well and our structure really helps us move to the areas where opportunity and demand are likely to be and move away from places theyâre likely to be hit harder.
Michael Halloran:
Thanks for that. And then one, just clarification on Slide 14, the break-even cash flow.
Michael Halloran:
Is that a free cash flow before CapEx or after CapEx?
Andrew Silvernail:
After. Correct, Bill?
Michael Halloran:
All right, great. Thank you. I appreciate it.
Andrew Silvernail:
Bill, thatâs right, isnât it?
Michael Halloran:
Yes, great. I thought, so I just want to make sure. I appreciate it.
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Thanks.
Operator:
Our next question comes from Scott Graham with Rosenblatt Securities. Please state your question.
Scott Graham:
Hey, good morning. And as usual, Andy, thank you for your frankness and clarity.
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Thanks, Scott.
Scott Graham:
Oh, sure. So I just want to make sure that, weâre â that Iâm at least thinking about what youâre saying about decrementals correctly. So if weâre at 15% to 20% thinking for decline in this quarterâs sales, if I choose the midpoint and say minus 20%, just for example sakeâŚ
Scott Graham:
âŚtaking that number, multiplying it by 50% and thatâs your decline in operating income this quarter, it is as simple as that, right?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, plus or minus. Yes.
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, thatâs close enough. Yes.
Scott Graham:
And within that, how much of the $120 million discretionary are we talking about? In other words, what Iâm trying to get to here is thatâŚ
Andrew Silvernail:
Oh, I gotcha. Yes.
Scott Graham:
âŚif itâs $50 million this quarter, next quarter, it could be $40 million and so on, that would be helpful?
Andrew Silvernail:
Okay. I think I understand your question, Scott. But if I donât get it, right, just reiterate or help me out here. So the $120 million is an annual number, right? And because weâre not that seasonal and our fixed cost structure doesnât â isnât that variable, you could basically take the $30 million a quarter. And that thatâs going to come out of there. And thatâs pretty much coming out now. It might be a little bit more as time goes on, but that â thatâs coming up pretty darn rapidly. And thatâs what enables you to go from instead of having to be a 62% or 63% negative flow through, thatâs what helps you kind of ratchet or ratchet that down over time. So, Bill, is there anything youâd add there?
William Grogan:
No, I think some of the items may be a little bit less in the second that would ramp up, but itâs close.
Scott Graham:
Okay, okay. ThatâsâŚ
Andrew Silvernail:
Does that answer your question, Scott?
Scott Graham:
Yes. For all intents and purposes, the $30 million quarterly is kind of the exit rate right now?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Itâs â I mean, weâve clamped down so hard here that weâre not spending money on things that donât have kind of a direct that arenât essential, right? That $120 million is really clamping that down.
Scott Graham:
Okay, gotcha. Two other questions. What would be the trigger for the $40 million? What level of sales? Is it this 35% to 40% decline in sales, thatâs the trigger for the structural?
Andrew Silvernail:
There is, to some degree, Scott, it is an amount. But more than anything else, itâs what we think the duration is going to look like, right? So if weâre going to reset the business, letâs just say, down 20%, letâs just use that number, just as an example. And youâre no longer a $2.5 billion company, youâre now a $2 billion company. You have to have a different cost structure, right, if you think thatâs going to be sustained for a period of time. And so thatâs what weâre really trying to evaluate is, what we think the duration and the depth is likely to be and itâs a combination of those two that would trigger us to look at the $40 million. We didnât feel like we had to do that today. We felt like we should buy ourselves some time, and we have with the $120 million. And so weâll continue to evaluate that, as you know, we took out a big chunk here. In the fall, we took out $15 million and we had another $5 million, which obviously weâve gone and got. So we were â although, we hadnât predicted this, we did predict a tough year. And so we went and proactively got that $20 million out. And so weâll decide on depth and duration here as we go through this quarter to figure out whether or not we want to take out the other $40 million.
Scott Graham:
Gotcha. Thatâs very clear. And then I think you actually in that answer, just answered my third question, which was sort of the way that Slide 14 was structured to do 30%, 35% and 40% and higher revenue declines, that is both depth and duration in these numbers, right?
Andrew Silvernail:
It is, yes.
Scott Graham:
Right, because your organic â youâre thinking for the second quarter if itâs minus 15% to 25%, even if it ends up at 25%, what youâre talking about here is, on an annualized basis, there would be a duration here that would get us to these numbers?
Andrew Silvernail:
Thatâs right, Scott. And I want to be very clear Bill said that in his remarks, but just so everyone hears this correctly. We are not â do not use these as guidance for where we think the world is going. This is really, for example, only, and weâre trying to get a couple of messages across here and I think probably theyâve landed, but just in case. Message one was, thereâs a lot that can happen in this world before we become â before we have a cash flow issue. And therefore, we donât have a liquidity issue. We have tons of liquidity, but weâre not going to â I donât believe weâre going to have to utilize that liquidity to stay afloat. I want to utilize that liquidity to play really aggressive offense. And so, hopefully, that came across the number one, weâre a great position from a cash flow standpoint; and number two, our liquidity is really being pointed towards playing offense from the moment is correct aggressively.
Scott Graham:
Yep. Page 14 is much clearer to me now. Thank you, guys.
Andrew Silvernail:
Great. Thanks, Scott.
Operator:
Our next question comes from Nathan Jones with Stifel. Please state your question.
Nathan Jones:
Good morning, everyone.
Andrew Silvernail:
Hey, Nathan.
Nathan Jones:
I guess, Iâll go a little further on the cash flow side. Slide 14, here, weâre looking at revenue changes and expense changes. Maybe we could look at the working capital side of this.
Nathan Jones:
I guess, you should clearly have some source of cash out of inventory.
Nathan Jones:
Maybe you can talk about, what youâre expecting there? If youâre seeing any slowdown in DSOs, or changes in receivable collections or any changes in customer behaviors, maybe theyâre getting stressed out? Any more color you can give us on that side of the equation?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Iâll comment on this and then Bill, Iâll let you comment on it also. From â in terms of how weâre managing this, I think this in a couple of ways. The first one is inventory. We got to make sure it comes out naturally, as volume gets affected, right? And that is â that has been a winning move in any slowdown for us. And historically, we have taken out inventory, and thatâs obviously had a very positive cash effect in any kind of slowdown. So you should expect us to continue to do that and take cash off the balance sheet, or cash out an inventory rather in â on the balance sheet. In terms of payables and receivables, my philosophy here is donât be the bank, meaning, we canât get caught between customers and suppliers. At the same time, I want to be very careful about not damaging customers and suppliers in here. So if we can end up neutral in that regard and really play that strategically, I think, thatâs important. Obviously, weâve got suppliers that we want to make sure they are healthy, theyâre our partners, this is not a time to beat on them when theyâre struggling, at the same time, we canât finance them. And so, as our customers are coming to us and asking for a relief, weâre really weighing that against what we can do across the working capital spectrum. And so, weâre being pretty firm. Weâve got excellent service levels, weâve got great lead times competitively. Weâre not going to become the bank.
Nathan Jones:
Okay. So the target, payables and receivables, net cash neutral and inventories at source?
Nathan Jones:
Okay. My second question is on pricing. You guys have reported positive net pricing every year for as long as I can remember, including 2009.
Nathan Jones:
This is clearly a little different thing, maybe a little steeper in the short-term here. Do you guys think you can still be net price positive or at least net price neutral in this kind of environment?
Andrew Silvernail:
Iâm pretty hopeful that we can stay positive. The price that we put out in the beginning of the year is â was already out and going. And so I donât see why that wonât stick. I think there will be some challenges next year as we think about pricing about whether or not we can â how aggressive we can be there. Bill, on those two topics, do you want to â you want to give your your view?
William Grogan:
Yes. I would say, our price capture in the first quarter was in line with what we experienced for most of last year. And I guess, my only comment on the working capital piece is, there are some selective businesses that took some actions to target to build some buffer stock relative to supply chains in certain countries that were shutting down. So first quarter inventory performance was good, impacted slightly based upon some of those builds. And to Andyâs point, we fully anticipate to bleed that off here in the second quarter. But price capture is still strong across the portfolio.
Nathan Jones:
Bill, whatâs your view of price here as we think about the â this year unfolds?
William Grogan:
I mean, obviously, weâll hear more challenging as we go through the balance of the year, as customers are more impacted. But I think our core pricing initiatives that we have across the portfolio will remain positive. Does it come down slightly potentially, but overall, price costs still positive for us.
Nathan Jones:
Yes. Okay, thanks a lot. Iâll pass it on.
Andrew Silvernail:
Thanks, Nathan.
Operator:
Our next question comes from Allison Poliniak with Wells Fargo. Please state your question.
Allison Poliniak-Cusic:
Hi, guys, good morning.
Andrew Silvernail:
Hey, good morning, Allison.
Allison Poliniak-Cusic:
So, Andy, I just want to talk maybe higher level. IDEX, you build a really solid foundation here, youâve talked about that.
Allison Poliniak-Cusic:
And then you mentioned through these phases, but particularly as we go to that normal â the new normal, is there anything thatâs really coming to light here in terms of portfolio growth? It sounds like youâre starting to pivot some of that near-term organic investment to some of these new applications. Iâm just trying to get a sense if thatâs temporary or if itâs sort of potentially a new direction here for IDEX?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. So I think â weâve had a lot of things come out of us, Allison, in terms of opportunities that â where people have come to us on trying to help with very specific things relative to the COVID-19 crisis. And as we have evaluated those, weâve been pretty careful. And what I mean by that is, what we donât want to do is take a bunch of people and resources and shift them to something where the lead time is so long, that effectively when you bring your solution to bear, it doesnât matter anymore. And so there are going be a bunch of boom and bust cycles in this â of different things that are coming to market, both because theyâre very effective and then theyâre just no longer needed, or they werenât particularly effective and they wash away. And so weâre trying to avoid those kinds of things. And weâre trying to move the portfolio to things that are really about helping a fight, where we have capabilities and we can ramp really quickly. And I use the the mobile medical tents out of our Vetter unit in Germany. We sold more in the month of March and we sold as much in the month of March, as we sold all of last year. And so weâve ramped that up. Theyâve literally quadrupled their overall capacity here as we go through the â with the rest of this year. And so that, that makes a ton of sense. It doesnât take any major investment or capability that we donât have. So weâre moving to those sorts of things very aggressively. As we think longer-term, I think there are some trends here that are very natural for us. So obviously, around global testing that was already a trend that was growing and it was what we had positioned ourselves behind an IDEX Health & Science, and that is going to accelerate, I think, thatâs indefinite. And what I mean by testing is testing to kind of anything and everything that analytical equipment is used for and biodiagnostic testing is used for. That stuff is just going to continue to grow very aggressively and weâre going to continue to position ourselves against that. And then things like, I think the pharma reshoring is the real deal. And so our material process business, as an example, will absolutely play in that. And I think thatâs going to be a long-term trend. Itâs going to take a long time for that to happen. But I believe that sort of thing is going to develop. And then you have kind of all those other trends that I think are going to get accelerated, because people frankly, have had to change their lives so much, that itâs going to be easier to move into some of these trends. Iâm thinking trends like digitization, mobile communications, and how that impacts even, say, a viking pump, where the customer is going to become a lot more comfortable utilizing and expecting digital results and information-based results, and I think that will move some of those things forward faster.
Allison Poliniak-Cusic:
Great. Thatâs helpful. And then you mentioned China, it sounds like itâs coming out of â itâs coming through this and going into the recovery phaseâŚ
Allison Poliniak-Cusic:
As this rolls through globally, any lesson learned or your approach has evolved differently as you hit each region based on whatâs been going on in China? Any color there?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, thatâs a great question, Allison. And I think kind of moving from East to West in terms of how this has â this crisis has unfolded, weâve been learning along the way and weâve done a few things. So our Chinese businesses, they really lead the way here in creating protocols for safe working. And we have every single one of our plants is up right now. Not everythingâs at full capacity, but even our places in Northern Italy are up and working. And Iâll give a lot of credit to that, because we learned very early on how to ramp down, how to ramp back up and how to work in an environment, where the virus is with you. And weâve created a protocol and a playbook out of that. We then changed that and augmented that for different parts of the world. And we actually very soon, we actually shared that with the Mapi Group, the Manufacturers Alliance for Productivity & Innovation, we shared with them that and they shared it with all of their members. And our team just did a great job putting that together. And so that thatâs the basis of that and weâre continuing to learn. We also here, I guess, it was last week, we did a general managers call, a global general managers and site managers call and we had four of our general managers from Italy on that call, taking people through their experience. And I mean, the physical experience of what theyâve gone through the emotional side of it, how to keep people safe, we did a kind of a virtual lunch and learn for everybody around those learnings. And so one of the things that weâre trying to leverage here is the network effect of having so many sites around the world, where we can learn and share and get the best practices out in peopleâs hands. So weâve been trying to do that really intently, Allison.
Allison Poliniak-Cusic:
It sounds great. Stay safe, everybody. Thanks.
Andrew Silvernail:
Thank you, Allison.
Operator:
Thank you. Our next question comes from Joe Giordano with Cowen. Please state your question.
Joseph Giordano:
Hey, guys, good morning.
Andrew Silvernail:
Good morning, Joe.
Joseph Giordano:
So you guys just closed an energy deal. I know itâs a kind of a specific niche technology. Can you just talk about your overall exposure there? What youâre seeing in the way you guys play in the energy markets?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. So, Joe, I think as you know, we are principally a midstream player. And so weâre not really anywhere near the wellhead, for the most part, we have some things here and there, but not a ton. Look, across the energy business, which today is sub-10% of our total portfolio, we have an expectation that thatâs really going to get hammered here. So far we havenât had that â it hasnât been as severe as we expected to be, but we are certainly seeing all of those indicators now on the order front. And so weâll have to get our cost structure right and our overall footprint right to make sure that we can sustain there. We â I think everybody learned the lesson in 2015, 2016 that the overall impact of capital spending and how the energy economy impacts the global economy canât be overestimated, right? Itâs â that thatâs going to be â obviously, itâs going to exacerbate this whole situation. And weâre going to have to make sure that our businesses are positioned correctly as we go forward. But thankfully, weâre not in the â on the wellhead and seeing some of these just ridiculous declines. And we will see declines, but it wonât be like weâre seeing upstream.
Joseph Giordano:
When you think about, I mean, itâs hard now to think about like new investments you have to make when youâre trying to rip out costs at the same time. ButâŚ
Joseph Giordano:
âŚas you think about your global footprint, does something like this make you have to step back and like rethink the way you even have your facility set up? Like does the workflow have to look different in the future? Do we have toâŚ
Joseph Giordano:
âŚthe headcount has to be totally different and it has to be more automated? Like what kind of â how do you just think about how your global plants look coming out of this?
Andrew Silvernail:
Joe, I think, that question as we move now through that, what I call Phase 3, is going to be one of the most important questions that weâre wrestling with, because when you think about a manufacturing facility, especially one that is principally assembly and test, I mean, obviously, we do have businesses that are more than that. But we tend to be like machining, assembly and test and we have a couple of businesses that have the foundries and thatâs pretty unusual, though. In a world like that, obviously, weâve all embraced lean manufacturing here for many decades. And the natural output of lean manufacturing is cellular manufacturing, which does not work with social distancing the way itâs constructed today, people are not six-feet apart. And so weâre already in the process of doing that is how do you see the elements, how do you keep the elements of lean manufacturing, which is the elimination of waste and bringing down lead times? How do you keep those while having the principles of social distancing in place, and thatâs something that weâre working on. I know a lot of people are. And weâre not going to move to batch manufacturing. Weâre not going to do that sort of thing and destroy three decades of great work. But it does change how people work and not just in the manufacturing environment, itâs going to change in the office environment, itâs going to change it how we interact with customers. So many things like that are going to change and tell people have that comfort to be closer together again.
Joseph Giordano:
Thanks for the color.
Andrew Silvernail:
Thank you, Joe.
Operator:
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Andrew Buscaglia with Berenberg. Please state your question.
Andrew Buscaglia:
Hey, guys.
Andrew Silvernail:
Hey, Andrew.
Andrew Buscaglia:
If you could talk â Iâm getting the sense directionally for the year, FMT gets hit probably the worst and then Fire & Safety maybe second worst and then Health & Science maybe third worst, because there are some partial offsetting factors. Would you agree with that?
Andrew Silvernail:
I would. Yes.
Andrew Buscaglia:
Okay. In those other segments, are there â weâre talking about some partially offsetting factors, maybe in Health & Science. Are there any in the other two segments? Is there anything else youâre seeing that could go the other way as a positive?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, yes. So I think, as you look at, say, letâs look at FMT first. I think that, obviously, the whole agricultural space has been really beaten up. But I do believe that the food supply chains are going to be continued to be really critical. And I think thatâs an overall a good trend as you talk about Ag in terms of where we play there. And that would be both for the material handling business, material process business and for Banjo. I put in both of those. Our ABS business, we are seeing some benefits of actually â thereâs some very interesting analytics that can be done for whatâs going on in sewer systems, believe it or not, I know that sounds incredibly strange. But thereâs a whole bunch of modeling that â and analytics that are allowed to or can happen because of our ability to monitor those systems. So our ABS business, we think will probably hold up pretty well in there. And then I think that the more industrial facing, kind of general industrial is going to have a bunch of things that are pretty negative, offset by small things that are positive. So, example, if youâre selling into the chemical industry, obviously, there are some chemicals around disinfectants and things like that, that are absolutely booming. And then you have other things that are going into large CapEx that are likely to really struggle. So there are a few trends there over and diversified. On the Fire side, the â interestingly enough, there are a number of applications, where you can use some of that technology for disinfectant. So youâll see some of that. Youâve got a really long â very, very long pipeline of â for â in the fire business for trucks in the U.S., particularly youâve got over a year of backlog. What we donât know yet is, whether or not weâll see cancellations. We have not seen that yet, but weâll have to monitor that pretty closely. The â weâve seen in China the rescue business pick back up aggressively has slowed down as tenders slowed down and then has picked back up aggressively. And so I think those hold up. BAND-IT and dispensing both, I think, take it on the chin here in the short-term because of their exposure one, around the retail space and for dispensing and then for BAND-IT, youâve got some exposure to transportation and oil and gas that will get hit, but other parts will do quite well.
Andrew Buscaglia:
Okay, yes, thatâs good â thatâs some good color.
Andrew Silvernail:
Thanks.
Andrew Buscaglia:
If you could â maybe just one last question on â same question, but related to margins. I would think FMT would get hit hardest, because it seems like in Fire & Safety, youâve got some â youâve made some changes there that structurally, and maybe those are okay or not okay, but fair better than FMT. Is that safe to say in terms of the decline weâll see?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, I think FMT will fair â will be the most challenged and then diversified and then Health & Science.
Andrew Buscaglia:
Okay, yes. Okay. Got it. Thank you.
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Thanks, Andrew.
Operator:
Our next question comes from Brett Linzey with Vertical Research Partners. Please state your question.
Brett Linzey:
Hey, good morning, everyone.
Andrew Silvernail:
Good morning, Brett.
Brett Linzey:
I wanted to come back to your comment on the past six to seven weeks, you mentioned youâre running down mid-teens.
Brett Linzey:
What does the range look like there? And then just thinking about the complexion across the geographies, as we do reopen commerce, how are you thinking about the pace of return between the U.S. and Europe?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Just to make sure I understand, Brett, the question youâre asking, are you asking kind of the range of outcomes kind of business-by-business, like how bad to how good? Is that what youâre asking?
Brett Linzey:
Well, I mean â yes, I mean, youâre saying on average things around mid-teens.
Brett Linzey:
I mean, thereâs probably some growth in there, which does imply â thereâs some businesses down 30%, 40%, is that the right way?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Weâve got a couple of businesses that we think are going to be down in that 40% range. Very few are â is that severe, but they â you do have a couple. And again, itâs energy, transportation exposure, we donât have really hospitality exposure, so to speak, so we donât have that. But we do have some businesses that are down there that much. And we expect weâll probably in the next quarter or two, weâll have that kind of impact. We donât think that will stay long. And I think that to your your question, our experience in China has been a very, very aggressive snapback and â but itâs actually bifurcated. You have businesses that are kind of COVID facing, so to speak, that are helping with the fight, that are growing like crazy. And then youâve got a few businesses that are kind of really in the dumpsters, but itâs actually come back pretty quickly. I donât think that thatâs the model for the rest of the world and for a number of reasons. Obviously, China has some very unique circumstances in how they are able to manage people and businesses and democracies just donât have those tools. And thatâs the cost of democracy, which is, I think, a good cost. And so I think itâs going to look a lot more like weâre seeing in Europe, which is, youâre going to see people starting to figure out how to live with this virus and figure out how can you still have social distancing, but get back to work, get back to friends and family. And so that means, it just takes longer, and thatâs what weâre seeing certainly in Italy and thatâs what I expect here. And just to be clear, our expectation here is that this is going to be fits and starts. Iâm not someone who has bought into a super aggressive, everything gets fine in the fall sort of thing. I think thatâs crazy talk. And I think we have to face the reality thatâs in front of us. And what if we get lucky and for some reason, this goes away with whether or something else or a vaccine is found more quickly than we think, or you have very, very effective treatments. Great news. I donât think anybody should bank on that, and I certainly wouldnât manage the company expecting that.
Brett Linzey:
Okay, great. No, I appreciate that.
Brett Linzey:
And then just one last one. I was hoping you could spend just a moment. On the evolution of the portfolio, not so much from a product standpoint, you gave a lot of good examples earlier. But just in terms of service or the recurring elements of the portfolio. whatâs that mix look like today? I mean, obviously, service is going to be impacted here near-term. But kind of in a new normal, what is the recurring alumni that looks like?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, weâve never been a company that has the classic sort of high recurring revenue, so to speak. And the reason I say that is that, we donât have a big parks business, but we tend to sell into like-for-like in a very, very high percentage of our applications. And so, Bill, I donât know, whatâs your estimate of total sort of recurring? How would you characterize that?
William Grogan:
Yes, itâs greater than 50%.
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, I agree with that. And so, look, when you had the financial crisis, our total business was down 14%. during that year right after that over the entire year. Our Health & Science business was down 5%, and I think our industrial businesses were down, say, 20% in those environments, which set itself off. We have a better portfolio positioning than we did then, meaning, itâs less cyclical and thereâs more Health & Science in the mix. And so I feel good about that. So overall, I think, our portfolio and our positioning is pretty good. Albeit, there will be a couple of places that will get hit really hard.
Brett Linzey:
Okay, great. I really appreciate all the detail. I hope everybody stay safe.
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Thank you.
Operator:
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Walter Liptak with Seaport Global. Please state your question.
Walter Liptak:
All right. Thanks. Good morning, guys.
Andrew Silvernail:
Good morning. Wal.
Walter Liptak:
I wanted to ask a question about the municipal businesses. Your comments so far that Fire okay, China picked up pretty quick. They wonder how the municipal businesses you think will do this time? Thereâs anything different, more challenging either financially or maybe benefits? I think you mentioned the sewer business could have some benefits. I wonder if we could just talk about muni?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. I think historically, the municipal businesses have had 18 months to two-year lag time compared to other businesses. And thatâs really driven by receipt, right, especially in the Western world. The â as you â as the receipts come in, that really sets the overall operating capital budgets. And so I expect there to be a little bit quicker reaction than you saw in the financial crisis. That â in the financial crisis, that took time, I remember that well, where the municipal businesses held up really well that we â as we went into that crisis. And then they started to really struggle as you got into 2008 â excuse me, 2010, 2011. It â that took some time for that to make its way through and then had â obviously had â has had a pretty strong overall run. I expect that will generally follow a similar path, although, I think itâll be more. I think people act faster just because itâs been such a shock to the global system and everybodyâs top of mind that municipalities are going to probably clamp down a little more quickly on their spending. I expect to see that, but I do think it will still lag the overall industrial economy.
Walter Liptak:
Okay, great. Thanks. And then last one for me just about the share buyback. I wonder if you can just remind us how much is leftâŚ
Walter Liptak:
âŚon the share repurchase authorization? And how youâre thinking about it in the second quarter and in the second-half?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes, you bet. So we did buy just over $100 million of shares. We had a 10b5-1 in place going into this, and so we did buy just over $100 million. We did shut that 10b5-1 down, as we looked at the value of liquidity and the uncertainty that we were in. We valued this certainty more than we did the incremental share buyback. So we did pause that. Look, I know thereâs going to be a lot of â people are going to be looking really hard at those who buy back shares and I know in some ways itâs turned into a political football. I donât think that we are in that category number one, obviously, weâre kind of pretty low on the overall visibility food chain here, so I donât worry too much about that. Second, weâre not going to be a company that takes cash from the government, I canât see where weâre going to do that in a way that restricts us in any way to our behaviors. And then finally, look, we are going to utilize our liquidity the best way we can to help all of our stakeholders. And if what that means is to buy back shares, then we will do so appropriately. In terms of what we have in total, I can honestly say, we only have the $500 million that we got authorization for back a few weeks ago, plus you add that on, I think, Bill, to what about?
William Grogan:
Itâs a little over $700 million.
Andrew Silvernail:
YesâŚ
William Grogan:
âŚ.yes, a little over $700 million.
Walter Liptak:
Okay, great. Okay. Thanks, guys.
Andrew Silvernail:
Thank you.
Operator:
Thank you. Our next question comes from Matt Summerville with D.A. Davidson. Please state your question.
Matt Summerville:
Thanks. Just a quick one. Most of mine have been answered. But just with respect to life sciences and pharma, the strength youâre seeing thereâŚ
Matt Summerville:
âŚis that COVID-19-related, or is that something else? And could you put that in the context of the $50 million improvement, I believe, you saw in overall backlog? How that component plays out looking forward?
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. Youâve got â there are two stories in there, Matt. So the first one is yes, there is absolutely a pickup from COVID-related activities. Thereâs no doubt about that, that weâre seeing in life sciences. But also, we have a number of very important customers that have programs that are ramping. And we have won some substantial business and we had some really nice orders here in the quarter relative to that. And so thatâs been strong. So itâs both ongoing programs that are really important and then youâve got the impact of COVID-19 to get two things going at once. And, Bill, I donât know what â in total, what does that make up of the $50 million of backlog, Bill?
William Grogan:
It was a little over $30 million from HST.
Andrew Silvernail:
Yes. So that will give you a sense, Matt.
Matt Summervill:
Thank you.
Operator:
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, there are no further questions at this time. Iâll turn it back to management for closing remarks.
Andrew Silvernail:
Great. Thank you very much, and thank you all for being on the call. I know that weâre sitting in a time that has shaken us in many ways. And I think Iâd like to close with a couple of comments. My first one is that, as I said in my prepared remarks, I could not be more proud of how the team here at IDEX has handled this. I have seen a level of collaboration and teamwork and positivity that â it really warms the heart. Itâs just incredible. And when you see that, sometimes the news cycles have a tendency to get you down. And â but when you see how people are coming together in the real world and tackling this, it is awesome, and itâs why Iâm in business. I believe that the purpose of business is to make life better, and I could not be more proud of the team at IDEX for what theyâve done. Itâs just remarkable. Second, Iâd like to say thank you to, everybody, who is on this call and your interest in IDEX. We â while the IDEX brand is not well-known in the consumer world, we play a very important role in a lot of places that really do matter. And that mission that I talked about trusted solutions and improving lives, we live that here at IDEX. And weâre seeing in this crisis in this fight with COVID-19 how important that is. And I want to thank the people who are investors in the company and prospective investors for your support, your partnership as we move through this, and we will move through this and we will get to the other side and we will have a very strong company thatâs positioned extremely well. So thank you, everybody. I appreciate it and look forward to discussions as we go forward. Take care.
Operator:
Thank you. This concludes todayâs conference. All parties may disconnect. Have a great day.