Zurn Elkay Water Solutions Corporation (NYSE:ZWS) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript November 1, 2023
Operator: Good morning. And welcome to the Zurn Elkay Water Solutions Corporation Third Quarter 2023, Earnings Results Conference Call. Todd Adams, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Mark Peterson, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Dave Pauli, Vice President of Investor Relations for Zurn Elkay Water Solutions. This call is being recorded and will be available for one week. The phone numbers for the replay can be found in the earnings release the company filed in an 8-K with the SEC yesterday, October 31. At this time for opening remarks and introduction, I’ll turn it over to Dave Pauli.
David Pauli: Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us on the call today. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that this call contains certain forward-looking statements that are subject to the safe harbor language contained in the press release that we issued yesterday afternoon, as well as in our filings with the SEC. In addition, some comparisons will refer to non-GAAP measures. Our earnings release and SEC filings contain additional information about these non-GAAP measures why we use them and why we believe they’re helpful to investors and contain reconciliations to the corresponding GAAP information. Consistent with prior quarters, we will speak to certain non-GAAP metrics as we feel they provide a better understanding of our operating results.
These measures are not a substitute for GAAP and we encourage you to review the GAAP information in our earnings release in our SEC filings. With that I’ll turn the call over to Todd Adams, Chairman and CEO of Zurn Elkay.
Todd Adams: Thanks, Dave. And good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the time to join us this morning. To jump right to it, we had a really strong Q3 operating performance, margins improved to 24.1%, up 410 basis points over the prior year. We also delivered record free cash flow in the quarter of almost $100 million, bought back another 445,000 shares and increased our dividend 14%. As we highlighted in our earnings release and one year into the Zurn Elkay combination, we’re really hitting our stride in terms of the benefits from the transaction, both from its energy savings as well as capturing the enormous secular growth opportunity we see in clean filtered drinking water. Over the next 12 months, we will be introducing more new products in the drinking water category than at any point since Elkay developed the category just over a decade ago.
This is both on the filter side as well as the filtration side. And all this is happening as we see continued positive momentum on the legislative front, as well as traction from the significant internal investments we’ve made to drive growth to grow the overall category. One year in we’ve accelerated the growth rate of drinking water, and now expect mid-teens organic growth for drinking water in 2023. In terms of the underlying market, while we grew in line with our Q3 guidance, we were expecting a little better internally after a pretty good start to July and August, which was offset by a so, so September, I’ll dive into what we’re seeing from a market perspective a little bit later. But as we look at how the years unfolded, it’s not hard to see from all the external data as well as our internal data that the market has more uncertainty in it than any point in over the last year.
What also covers we don’t believe that this is some sort of apocalyptic issue for ’24 and ’25. Now I’ll turn it over to Mark.
Mark Peterson : Thanks, Todd. Please turn to Slide number 4. Our third quarter sales were $398 million and on a proforma basis increased 100 basis points year-over-year. As we discussed during our last quarter, our year-over-year third quarter core sales growth was impacted by the timing of orders and shipments in the prior year because we were working on an elevated backlog in the third quarter of 2022. Breaking down our proforma core sales growth percentage a bit, our mid-single digit increase in core sales growth to a non-residential end markets was partially offset by a mid-teens decline in sales growth to a residential end market. With respect to orders, our proforma orders increased high single digits’ year-over-year, non-residential order growth was above the fleet average with balanced growth across drinking water, low control, water safety and control and hygienic environmental while year-over-year order growth in our residential end market was below the fleet average.
Turning to profitability. Our third quarter adjusted EBITDA increased 15% in the prior year third quarter to $96 million. And our adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 410 basis points year-over-year to 24.1% in the quarter. Looking at our margins sequentially, we set up 250 basis points from the second quarter of 2023. And as we had been discussing all year, the benefits of our price realization and our productivity initiatives inclusive of the cost synergies that are little over $6 million each quarter in calendar year 2023 fully read through in the third quarter with the impact of the sell through of higher cost inventory completely behind us. Please turn to Slide 5, and I’ll touch on some balance sheet and leverage highlights. With respect to our net debt leverage, we ended the quarter with leverage at 1.2 times, inclusive of deploying $100 million of cash to repurchase common stock during the first nine months of 2023.
In early October, we paid down $60 million of our term loan eliminating all future required principal payments, and generating approximately $4.5 million of annual interest expense savings going forward. Given the balance sheet position, and our strong free cash flow generation, we have good capital allocation optionality going forward. Turning the call back to Todd.
Todd Adams: Thanks Mark, and I’m on Page 6. Our ability to deliver tangible results that have an impact on the environment continues to compound as we execute our fundamental business strategy, which happens to have amazing symmetry with what our customer’s goals are to do the right thing for the environment, as well as human health and safety. Benefits like 14 billion single use plastic water bottles avoided through the use of our Elkay bottle fillers. Which is about 8% over the past year, and will easily be up double digits next year, as well as 23 billion gallons of water saved through our Zurn products like low flow faucets, fixtures, and sensors. The rating agencies around sustainability have also taken notice of the meaningful improvements, and it shows in their most recent ratings of our overall profile.
Sustainalytics ranks Zurn Elkay sustainability program in the top 3% of our industry and the top 7% of the more than 15,000 companies they rank each year. With MSCI we have a AA rating, which puts us in the top 10% of our industry. And lastly, S&P Global has rated us in the top 8% of our industry. When you step back from it the one thing to take away from all of this, is that our core or in this case 84% of our total revenues is that we really attack the climate risk of water scarcity, whether that’s low water consumption valves, or providing point of views filtered drinking water, our products, protect, conserve and manage the water we all depend on. The world faces an array of climate and water related crises, including flooding and drought events driven and exasperated by climate change water pollution, and its impact on biodiversity and human health and aging infrastructure that can contaminate water supplies.
Our continued investment in engineering and R&D allows us to focus on addressing these crises, which are essential to sustainability and an essential part of how we drive our business forward. I’ll move to Page 7. We’re seeing serious momentum on the filtration side of our business. As our installed base of filtered enabled drinking water dispensers continues to grow as customers shift more and more to filtered solutions. Combined with an increase in filter replacement rates as awareness around the dangers of lead and other harmful contaminants in drinking water continues to build. Coupled with legislation and regulatory requirements that are beginning to be implemented. Not only are we seeing legislation passed in Michigan related to filter first, we’re launching new products that continue to increase the contaminants our filters are certified to reduce, ultimately protecting students, patients, and the overall public against ingesting more potentially harmful contaminants by providing continuous safe clean drinking water with our filtration solutions.
Today we’re announcing the launch of our very first PFAS filter on the market, that’s integrated into bottle fillers and drinking water dispensers. This filter will continue to do what our filters do today in filtering outlet and other contaminants. That now adds the two most prevalent PFAS contaminants to what it effectively filters. PFAS consumption has been linked to a number of serious health concerns, which makes effective filtration from drinking water a big deal and something we’re excited about to be the first to market in offering our customers and users. Our solution utilizes highly engineered activated carbon which absorbs these contaminants. This technology is the most water efficient solution in effectively filtering PFAS, and is done in our case proprietary filler footprint which is a smallest footprint on the market.
To give you some sense of how difficult it is to launch a filter like this, these filters have to reduce the PFAS chemicals down to a concentration that is 250 times less than with lead. We expect regulations will continue to evolve as the public learns more about PFAS, but by being first in providing effective and certified filtration against these two most prevalent PFAS chemicals. We believe we provided a great upgrade to schools, universities, and even homes in our never ending pursuit to provide the safest and cleanest drinking water for everyone. The Elkay filtration line of products is truly market leading, with the longest lasting lead filter on the market certified to 6000 gallons, along with the most comprehensive contaminants claims on the market.
The beauty of our filtration business is that it will continue to compound well into the future as we continue to build the installed base while capturing an increasing level of replacement. I’ll move on to Page 8. There’s been a lot of discussion throughout the year related to the non-residential construction market and its imminent demise. I’m joking a bit. But I think it’s important to understand a little bit of how we look at — look at it in total beyond the headline numbers. On this chart, on the upper left, is actual and projected institutional starts, on a square footage basis. Below is the same for commercial starts. A couple of things to point out, roughly 50% of our total business is leveraged to the institutional end markets and verticals, specifically education and healthcare.
Generally, institutional starts average somewhere in the neighborhood of 80 to 90 million square feet per quarter over the past five years. Another thing to point out is that generally speaking, this segment hasn’t been particularly interest rate sensitive, at least historically. What’s been grabbing a lot of the headlines in the commercial part of non-residential construction, which by order of magnitude from a square footage perspective is three to four times bigger than institutional, that represents only about 30% of our business. What’s happening here is the massive build out of warehouse space and some automotive expansions is creating large downdraft in the overall actual and projected starts on a square footage basis throughout 2023 and into 2024.
As an aside, our best estimate is that warehouse represents less than 5% of our overall sales, meaning we’ve not really benefited much from that massive build up, nor will it be devastating if it’s down a bunch, again, not the greatest of news, but the downside is capped and we have plenty of areas to find growth. On the upper right is the average non-residential backlog — non-residential construction backlog, for only the commercial and institutional end markets, which excludes infrastructure, which can skew the backlog significantly. And as you see, the backlog for commercial and institutional has been relatively steady in terms of months at about nine and below is the Dodge Momentum Index, which is a monthly measure in dollars of the initial report of non-residential building projects and planning, and is a leading indicator for construction spending approximately one year out.
The reason to take everyone through this is to highlight there are a ton of facets to understand the underlying non-residential construction market in the U.S. On top of this, we also have access to and leverage internal bid and by code information across our own portfolio, as well as some of our large wholesale partners. Finally, I think it’s incredibly important understand how hyper-local it is. What’s happening or not happening in the bay area, can be totally different than what’s happening in the Carolinas, particularly when the build cycle typically spreads over the course of 12 to 18 months. Lastly, it’s important to recognize that new construction represents about 55% of our overall business, with 35% happening outside of what we see on this page in a somewhat orderly retrofit replacement, and break fix market.
The vast majority of questions we’ve got over the course of the year have been about the market, our exposures and what it means to growth going forward. We’re not trying to guide for 2024 at this point. But we wanted to provide a little bit more context as we all sort through how to think about the economy and where it’s headed. Before I turn it over to Mark, I’ll make just a few quick points on Page 9. Taking into account everything I just talked about, here’s a look at our 10-year core growth profile at 6% compounded. I’ll also point out that over the course of the last 51 quarters, that’s 12 years and three quarters, we’ve only had four negative core growth quarters, with the largest coming in June of 2020, which was down 5%. With all the bumps in the road and challenges over the past 10 years, hopefully you can see how the mosaic of the realities of the end market dynamics I went through on the prior slide, coupled with our historical growth algorithm of market plus price, plus share translate into a more resilient scenario than meets the eye.
And it’s back tested against our results that you see here. That doesn’t mean a scenario we face today with interest rates and the types of uncertainties that are out there are exactly the same as any point in the last 10 years. But what also is different, is that our growth algorithm now includes market price share and category growth in drinking water and filtration, which is something we saw in Elkay and it’s why we’ve attacked the opportunity show aggressively over the past year. Last couple of points for me are on ZEBS and our fundamental business model. From a business perspective what a terrific place. We see a clear path to profit and margin expansion in an uncertain environment with the incremental $25 million of synergies we’ll be delivering throughout 2024.
The momentum around filtered drinking water breakthroughs will only gain momentum over the next 12 months. And it provides an idiosyncratic growth driver that is new to us and still very early in its runway. Our business system and relentless focus on simplification and continuous improvement give us a ton of confidence that we can continue to create margins and cash flow to invest back into growth. And finally, we’ve cultivated and created a business model built to be agile with a highly variable cost structure, low CapEx that generates consistently high free cash flow year in and year out. That coupled with a great balance sheet gives us considerable optionality to drive shareholder value over the coming years. And with that, I’ll turn it back to Mark.
Mark Peterson: Thanks, Todd. Please turn to Slide number 10, I’ll cover the highlights of our outlook for the fourth quarter. The fourth quarter of 2023, we were projecting sales to be around $351 million, which gets you to the endpoint of our initial outlook for the year at $1.5 to $5 billion. We anticipate our adjusted EBITDA margin to be in the range of 23% to 23.5% for the quarter, which translates to approximately $336 million to $338 million for the year. For the effective free cash flow, we’re increasing our full-year outlook to approximately $230 million and the $250 million we highlighted 90 days ago. A few highlights led to our outlook. First, our fourth quarter outlook reflects our best cut of the market based on what we saw later in the third quarter and into October, as well as the traditional seasonal decline in sales in the fourth quarter and if you are shipping days in the fourth quarter compared to the third quarter.
Next, we recently completed a product line review with a residential sync customer, after extensive negotiations, a level of profitability was not going to be acceptable to us. So we decided to phase out our supply ascertain whether it’s the things to this customer. As a result, our fourth quarter sales will be impacted by approximately $3 million to $4 million with really no impact on our earnings. Finally, given the momentum we have with our Filter drinking water growth initiative, coupled with the launch of our new PFOS filter and the recent passing of the Michigan filter first legislation, which requires all K-12 schools and childcare facilities in Michigan to provide filtered drinking water to students. We have accelerated a few million dollars of drinking water growth investments into our fourth quarter.
Before we open the call for questions, just a reminder that we have included on page 10, our fourth quarter outlook assumptions for sales growth for non-residential and residential product categories, interest expense, non-cash stock compensation expense, depreciation and amortization, adjusted tax rate and diluted shares outstanding. We’ll now open the call up for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Bryan Blair, with Oppenheimer. Your line is open.
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Q&A Session
Follow Zurn Elkay Water Solutions Corp (NYSE:ZWS)
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Bryan Blair: Thank you. Good morning, guys. It’s encouraging to hear about the mid-teens core growth in drinking water for the year. As we look to ’24 the less certain market environment overall, is there anything you’re seeing that would prevent continued growth there? And given the growth that you have achieved this year, I assume momentum into next year, more favorable cost position? What is the run rate margin for drinking water? And as we look forward and include the ramp of filtration sales, which I assume will be marked and created in time, where should that margin profile be over the coming years?
Todd Adams: Yes, I mean, to, to sort of take it piece by piece. I don’t think that there is anything that we see that would rest or slowdown the growth in drinking water. In fact, you know, I think that, all the work we’ve done and the investments we’re making, give us I think high confidence that we can continue to grow at a very high clip in drinking water next year. Obviously, the algorithm around more units, higher attachment rate, that’s all beneficial and compounds over time, Bryan, so that, that is one that we feel really good about. As it relates to the margins, obviously above the fleet average, we’re not going to decipher exactly what that is, but above the fleet average. And I don’t think that, we see any challenge or risk to that either.
So I think we feel really good about, the last 12 months, as I mentioned, we’ve got a pipeline of new products over the next 12 months. That is going to dwarf, anything that we’ve ever done from an introduction standpoint. So that’s where we’ve spent the last year and I think it’s, it’s reading out in the first year nicely and I think that we have a strong momentum heading into ’24 and beyond.
Bryan Blair: That’s helpful. Thank you. I mean you walked through your portfolio exposures and the resilience you’ve had historically, confidence looking forward. I was hoping you could offer a little more detail some finer points on, how your team is thinking about the puts and takes of new institutional versus commercial non res exposures ready positioning price cost, follow-on synergies. As we think about 2024, in the prospects for earnings growth?
Todd Adams: Yes, I mean, we’ve highlighted, I think, a compelling case around the drinking water growth for next year at very high margins, we have 25 million of synergies that will read through. I think in terms of commercial, I think it’s clear to us that it’s going to be down a little bit, we don’t think that it’s huge, but it’ll be down. That’s on the new construction, side. Break fix, we think is sort of plus or minus a little bit, because a lot of that is actually planned retrofit, replace, and or just simply break fix. And then, I’m guessing, we probably thought that resi was going to inflect, a little bit earlier this year than it has, it’s not getting worse, but it hasn’t improved a whole lot. So I think we probably transition to flattish into next year.
And then we’ll see around waterworks, which is only 7% or 8%. But, I think there is a path to growth for sure, and a path for significant margin expansion, again, as we look at ’24. But, I think, as we look at the market, September, while still growing was less than what we thought, October, was probably a bit ahead of what we baked into our quarter. But I think there’s room for some uncertainty as you head into November, in December and in January. So I think we’re trying to be cautious with the way we’re providing the outlook. But I think the profitability, and the cash flows are going to be exceptional. And I think the resilience of the portfolio has proven itself over time. And we just have to continue to invest in our key breakthroughs.
I mean, that’s really the game. So I think we feel pretty good about where we’re at, one year into the combination. And we’ll see what ’24 looks like when we get there. But taken as a whole, I think we feel pretty good about where we’re at.
Bryan Blair: Very helpful color. I will leave it there, guys. Thanks.
Operator: And the next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Hammond, with KeyBanc Capital Market, your line is open.
Jeffrey Hammond : Good morning, everyone. Just maybe on September, coming in below where maybe unpack that a little more, and where you’re seeing maybe some softness relative to what you thought?
Todd Adams: Yes, I think we look at it in a number of different ways, Jeff. But I think if I had to distill it down, it was probably more of the flow business, sort of the retrofit, replace, ordinary course, brake fix stuff, specifically in the Northwest, and a little bit across New England. And I think when we look at that, in aggregate it was probably $3 million to $5 million bucks, less than maybe what we had targeted heading into the quarter. And obviously, I think we had a view that we started to see resi deteriorate towards the end of last year, and we sort of had to assume that would begin to inflect up a little bit. It really hasn’t inflected up maybe to the degree that that we had we had thought given how sharply it fell last year.
But I would say that, I think taken as a whole none of these things are falling knives by any stretch of the imagination. And the reality is when you look at our Q4, we’re seeing 6% pro forma core organic growth. So maybe just a little bit less than what we were assuming, but taken as a whole still pretty good.
Jeffrey Hammond: Okay, that’s great color. Just on the puts and takes on the profit side into ’24 I guess, you feel pretty good about the ’25 incremental synergies, I think you got 10 to 15 million absences, kind of higher cost inventory. Other tailwinds or headwinds to think about as you think about that profit bridge, obviously, outside of what the growth might be?
Todd Adams: I think that, if you take a look at the overall model its highly variable, so we’re capturing all the benefit of lower input costs. We only have 2004 and 41 employees, so from a wage inflation perspective, we are well insulated. And so I think that we’re in a great place, we’ll capture any sort of deflation. We think that there is some modest price opportunities in certain categories, specifically in and around drinking water. And so no big moving parts in ’24 as it relates to our cost structure. I think that one that is emerging is, we see some significant supply chain opportunities that we’ll be working on over the course of ’24 that are probably worth in excess of $10 million into ’25. So I think that we’ve got a good path for margin expansion in ’24. And we’ve got some follow on that gives us a little more tailwind into ’25. So, nothing unusual in terms of tailwinds or headwinds beyond what we’ve talked about.
Jeffrey Hammond: Okay, last one, cash flow has been great. I know, it was supply chain kind of working capital was a big use, it’s kind of through that supply chain tightness, and it seems to be coming back in balance. But I’m just wondering, kind of where you think working capital is in terms of quote normal, and whether you see that as another big tailwind into ’24 back to neutral.
Todd Adams: I don’t know that it’s a big tailwind into ’24, I just think that our working capital will continue to be very efficient. I think that some of the costs save that I highlight in ’25 comes with incremental benefits of working capital, by collapsing the length of the overall supply chain. So, I think we’ll continue to be efficient users there. But again, I think that from where lead times are, where service levels are, where cost is, where freight and transportation costs are, I think we’re really well positioned to turn in another really, really strong cash flow year in ’24. And, frankly, sort of like we always do. I mean, I think when you look over time, the cash flow year in year out sort of always shows up, just primarily because of the business model we have. So, there’s one number we’re not particularly concerned about is our ability to generate really, really good free cash flow in whatever the environment.
Jeffrey Hammond: Great, appreciate the color. Thanks, Todd.
Operator: And the next question comes from the line of Andrew Krill, with Deutsche Bank, your line is open.
Andrew Krill : Hey, thanks. Good morning, everyone. Wonder, I circle back to like all the new products. I just like, can you quantify it all maybe like how much of a tailwind you think that might be for 2024? Or just in kind of a medium term and how that compares to the prior run rate? And then if you’re measuring it with things like your new product vitality index?
Todd Adams: Yes, I mean, I think the way to think about it, Andrew, is we’re — we’ve gone out over the course of the last year and done a ton of work on understanding what are the unmet needs of our customers, and done an enormous amount of voice of the customer. And that’s, at a lot of levels, what our elementary schools looking forward, or what’s higher Ed looking for. And in all those cases, it’s leading us to a lot of ideas that will only enhance the penetration rate and increase the points of use, we hope. And so I don’t know that we can quantify it exactly other than to say, these new product launches are going to be really spot on from what the market is wanting. It’s a category that’s really developed over the past 10 years.
But I think the next evolution of this is going to be very much targeted at, what people have learned, how the adoption of point of views, and bottle fillers is really going to be evolving based on the needs of what customers want. So I don’t know that we’re going to quantify for you, I think it’s embedded in this notion of having a very high share, and a category that’s growing and we’re going to continue to create opportunities for ourselves to grow that installed base. And when you do that, obviously, the filtration comes right behind it. And it’s also things like, improving the access, and the ability to change filters and change filters more frequently. So those are all things that are part of the overall trajectory and growth that we see going forward.
Andrew Krill: Okay, great. And then my follow up just on the investments called out for the fourth quarter. Just, can you give a little more detail on what those were, just can you like confirm are they confined to the fourth quarter? And then like any benefits you’d expect from them? Thanks.
Todd Adams: Yes, I think when you looked at what we were going to invest in, whether that’s personnel channel, some of the marketing work, some of the Intel over the next year, we just took a look at it and said, well, let’s pull some of it forward. We really are growing at the rate we are and believe we can continue to expand upon that, let’s pull some of that into the fourth quarter, so that we get the benefit sooner. The order of magnitude is, plus or minus 3 million bucks. So not crazy, but it’s really more of a pull forward than it is anything else. So, we would expect to perhaps spend 3 million less next year, but over the 15 months, roughly the same amount of money.
Andrew Krill: Alright, thank you.
Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Mike Halloran, with Baird, your line is open.
Michael Halloran : Good morning, everyone. Thanks for the time. So, couple of questions here. First time on slide 8, I really appreciate the context and the color there. Could you put in context, what the typical lag is for you, both on the institutional side and the commercial side versus those start numbers? In other words, how far out does it take for your content to get in? And then you look back historically, what’s the risk profile been for cancellations? I’m guessing not that high on the institutional side and maybe a little more vulnerable on the commercial side. But any help would be great.
Todd Adams: It’s a good question, Mike. I think when you think about what’s embedded in an institutional start, it’s a school, it’s a university building, it’s a hospital, it’s a health care facility. And so the build cycle, from start to finish, your occupancy is somewhere on average, 12 to 18 months. Maybe some complicated hospitals or universities take a little bit longer, but I think 12 to 18 months is the right way to think about it. And our content is spread almost randomly, a third, a third, a third. So when you think about that, we really participate over that 12-month build cycle somewhat ratably. So if we’re going to spend — if it’s $100 of content, into that, a third will come in the first three to four months, a third will come in the second three to four months, and the remainder will come towards the end. So it’s fairly ratable over the course of that build that 12 to 18-month build cycle.
Michael Halloran: And then the cancellation risk, pretty low, right? I mean the institution [multiple speakers] less so.
Todd Adams: Yes. I mean, again, when you think about these things, particularly in education is a perfect example. That’s usually some sort of referendum that virtually never, never gets gains. Same as whoop, same is true with healthcare, healthcare, facilities, hospitals, things in the like. So, I’d be lying to say that I can recall a scenario where something like that has been canceled once, once it’s sort of worked its way through the restart process.
Michael Halloran: As Jeff said, good cash flow, obviously, strong balance sheet. How are you thinking about, willingness to be more aggressive there, you’ve got a large authorization on the buyback side. What are your thoughts on leaning in on that a little bit more resulting in next year? And then any thoughts on how you look at the M&A funnel and how actionable it is?
Todd Adams: Yes, I mean, I’ll hit M&A first. Obviously, we’re continuing to cultivate proprietary ideas. We continue to think that, we’ll see some conversion over the course of the next 12 months, and some things and categories that we’re very close to. And as it relates to buyback, look, I think, we take a pretty pragmatic approach, we take a look at what we think the intrinsic value of our projections are and look at where the stock price is, and we’ll be more aggressive if we think that there’s any sort of dislocation that we want to take advantage of, and obviously, we have this cash flow, and the confidence in the cash flow to do that, as well as the balance sheet. So, we’ll see. I think we’ve been, if you look at pattern recognition, when the stock was 21 to 22, we bought a lot when it was 29 or 30. We bought some, but we bought a little bit less. And so I think, we absolutely will continue to follow that philosophy going forward.
Michael Halloran: Thank you. Really appreciate the context.
Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Nathan Jones with Stifle. Your line is open.
Nathan Jones: Good morning, everyone. I’d like to talk a little bit more about the business model and how that’s likely to protect the margins. I think most of us are probably used to more heavy manufacturing companies and your business model is a fair bit different here with the design source kind of business model. So could you talk about in the potential for a downturn, let’s say revenue is down more than expected in 2024? What kind of variable margins what kind of detrimental margins we should expect on that, just given that that business model is more flexible for you?
Todd Adams: Yes, I think. So in terms of as you point out, our model is highly variable. From an employee standpoint, we have 2441 employees, which is about, I think, $625,000 per employee, plus or minus, so very productive and efficient. We go to market through third party reps that are 100% commission based. So to the degree we see a sales decline the flex on our selling expensive is perfect. And, obviously, I think when we see capacity requirements on the growth side, we’re not spending a penny on capital. And the same is true on the downside, we’re not having to flex out a whole bunch of fixed costs. So I think by design, the agility that we’ve created and cultivated in the business model, is built for a little bit of uncertainty on the upside, and the downside, so I think, are detrimental margins.
And again, they’ll depend on the product category. We’ll be very, let’s just say efficient on the downside, we obviously have high margins, so that’s not something that we can avoid. But, I think it’ll be very efficient in the scenario where we see declines. And that’s, without question.
Nathan Jones: Yes, I think that’s important point to make. And then I’d like to follow up on the comment you made about supply chain savings of up to $10 million into 2025. Maybe there’s some moved to Mexico, some reshoring a supply chain. If you could provide some color on, on what you’re looking at doing there, and how those savings are to be generated?
Todd Adams: Yes, and we’ve been working at it now for probably six to nine months. And we’re in a position today to see the benefit in excess of $10 million from a runway perspective, beginning in ’25. That’s a combination of some incremental level of outsourcing and categories that we currently are more vertically integrated in, as well as some repositioning of certain suppliers, to regions that perhaps are a little bit closer from a lead time perspective, as well as favorable from a tariff perspective. So those are I think, relatively large digital things that we see. But again, just go into building more resilience into our business model. So those are things that we are well underway on there’s a chance we get some of it at the end of ’24. But I think the way to think about it is, we’ve got 25 million of synergies rolling through in 2024. And we’ve got an incremental 10 plus coming from this supply chain activity in 2025.
Nathan Jones: Great, thanks for taking my questions.
Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Joe Ritchie, with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Joseph Ritchie : Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Can we maybe just touch on the SKU rationalization for a second, so it looks like it’s going to be about a 3 to 4-point impact in the fourth quarter? As you kind of think about 2024, what’s kind of the right framework for that piece impacting potential your organic growth in 2024?
Mark Peterson : Yes, Joe, it’s Mark. I think that the impact in next year will be modest. We said three to four this quarter, think about next year, it’s in that $9 to $12 million range next year. So think about it as sort of quarter of it hitting this year and three quarters of a next year. So, overall about under a point of growth impact next year.
Joseph Ritchie: Okay. All right, great. Thank you. And then, just my quick follow up question. So clearly, it seems like the water business is been growing at a nice clip for you. I think you guys are — you sound pretty happy regarding the Elkay integration at this point, I guess, can you kind of help level set for Elkay? What’s the business, what’s kind of the revenue baseline exiting 2023? And then how are you guys kind of thinking about, again, kind of the growth framework for Elkay in 2024?
Todd Adams: Yes, I mean, we’re obviously well past the point of being able, or frankly, wanting to discreetly identify, what was okay, what was legacies earn, in part, because we’ve already done a ton of integration, particularly around the commercial sync business going forward. But suffice it to say that, the margins of the Elkay piece on a standalone basis are at or above that fleet average today, on the backs of a highly profitable drinking water business. And — which is a massive change from the roughly 13% business, that it was in ’21. So, when you think about in essentially 12 months of owning the business, we’ve taken a business that was running somewhere in the 13% range, on a true organic basis, and turn it into something as 24 plus, with, I would say, an even better growth profile, as a result of the exits, and the investments we’ve made in drinking water, and the benefit of all the synergy work that we’ve been doing.
So, I don’t think I shouldn’t be lost on anybody that the acquisition at the time, or the merger at the time was good. But it’s for environments like this, when you have the drinking water franchise that we have, and the opportunity for secular growth and category growth, that’s going to protect the overall top line in a way that I don’t think people fully realize at this point. And that’s why we’ve been so aggressive in getting out of the things that we don’t want to invest in and investing in things that can grow this category and grow our business in a meaningful way over time. So didn’t answer your question specifically. But I think we feel really good about it.
Joseph Ritchie: Okay, no, that’s super helpful. If you don’t mind, I’m going to try to sneak one more in here. Just in the context of what can be a bit of a slower growth environment. One of the questions we get a lot on potentially negative volume environment, like, what does pricing do for your business next year, given what you already know in where your raw material costs are today, would you expect to get some pricing in 2024?
Todd Adams: I think that there are opportunities that we will see some price. Particularly, we have strong specifications, leading shares, innovation, new products, things like that. I don’t know, there’ll be a ton, there’ll be some, and I don’t see a scenario where we are giving back price. I think that when you look at the overall increases that we passed along, over time, they were relatively small in the grand scheme of things. And so if anything, our pricing from a market standpoint is in a good place. We obviously have leadership positions and high specifications and some unique value props that are going to allow us to take some modest price. But I don’t see a scenario where we’re giving back price. So, I think it’s a unique environment, for sure, but I think we feel good about where we are, with some incremental opportunity in the 2024.
Joseph Ritchie: Got it. Thank you.
Operator: There are no further questions at this time. Dave Pauli, I’ll turn the call back over to you.
David Pauli: Thanks, everyone, for joining us on the call today. We appreciate your interest in Zurn Elkay and look forward to providing our net next update when we announce our fourth quarter results in early February. Have a good day.
Operator: And this concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect.