Investor Presentation May 2020 Greg Yull | President & CEO Jeff Crystal | CFO
Investor Presentation Greg Yull | President & CEO May 2020 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Investor Presentation Greg Yull | President & CEO May 2020 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Investor Presentation Greg Yull | President & CEO May 2020 Jeff Crystal | CFO SAFE HARBOR STATEMENT Certain statements and information included in this presentation constitute "forward-looking information" within the meaning of
SAFE HARBOR STATEMENT
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Certain statements and information included in this presentation constitute "forward-looking information" within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation and "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (collectively, "forward-looking statements"), which are made in reliance upon the protections provided by such legislation for forward- looking statements. All statements other than statements of historical facts included in this presentation, including statements regarding the Company’s essential elements in place for its path forward, including the health and safety of its team, the protection of its assets, and the protection of its customers and suppliers, the end market trends in the Company’s end markets resulting from COVID-19, the Company’s second quarter outlook, including revenue and Adjusted EBITDA, the Company's fiscal year 2020 outlook, including capital expenditures, effective tax rate and income tax expenses, the Company’s measures to manage demand trends through COVID-19, including its highest growth e-commerce categories, the shift in retail behavior, its growth strategies, its order book, its cash management prioritization, its cost mitigation strategies, its flex production, and raw material pricing, the flexibility of the Company’s financial position, and the Company’s merger and acquisition strategy, may constitute forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are based on current beliefs, assumptions, expectations, estimates, forecasts and projections made by the Company's management. Words such as "may," "will," "should," "expect," "continue," "intend," "estimate," "anticipate," "plan," "foresee," "believe," or "seek" or the negatives of these terms or variations of them or similar terminology are intended to identify such forward- looking statements. Although the Company believes that the expectations reflected in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, these statements, by their nature, involve risks and uncertainties and are not guarantees of future
- performance. Such statements are also subject to assumptions concerning, among other things: business conditions and growth or declines in the Company's industry, the Company's customers' industries and the general economy, including as a
result of the impact of COVID-19; the anticipated benefits from the Company's greenfield projects and manufacturing facility expansions; the impact of fluctuations in raw material prices and freight costs; the anticipated benefits from the Company's acquisitions and partnerships; the anticipated benefits from the Company's capital expenditures; the quality and market reception of the Company's products; the Company's anticipated business strategies; risks and costs inherent in litigation; legal and regulatory developments, including as related to COVID-19; the Company's ability to maintain and improve quality and customer service; anticipated trends in the Company's business; anticipated cash flows from the Company's operations; availability of funds under the Company's 2018 Credit Facility; the Company's flexibility to allocate capital as a result of the Senior Unsecured Notes offering; the Company's ability to continue to control costs; and other factors beyond the Company's control. The Company can give no assurance that these statements and expectations will prove to have been correct. Actual outcomes and results may, and often do, differ from what is expressed, implied or projected in such forward-looking statements, and such differences may be material. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking statement. For additional information regarding important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in these forward-looking statements and other risks and uncertainties, and the assumptions underlying the forward- looking statements, you are encouraged to read "Item 3. Key Information - Risk Factors," "Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects (Management's Discussion & Analysis)" and statements located elsewhere in the Company's annual report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2019 and the other statements and factors contained in the Company's filings with the Canadian securities regulators and the US Securities and Exchange Commission. Each of these forward- looking statements speaks only as of the date of this presentation. The Company will not update these statements unless applicable securities laws require it to do so. This presentation contains certain non-GAAP financial measures as defined under applicable securities legislation, including Adjusted EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA Margin, Adjusted Net Earnings, Adjusted Earnings Per Share, Secured Net Leverage Ratio, Total Leverage Ratio and Free Cash Flow. The Company has included these non-GAAP financial measures because it believes such non-GAAP financial measures improve the period-to-period comparability of the Company’s results and provide investors with more insight into, and an additional tool to understand and assess, the performance of the Company's ongoing core business operations. The Company has included adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin because it believes that they allow investors to make a more meaningful comparison between periods of the Company’s performance, underlying business trends and the Company’s ongoing operations. The Company further believes these measures may be useful in comparing its operating performance with the performance of other companies that may have different financing and capital structures, and tax rates. Adjusted EBITDA excludes costs that are not considered by management to be representative of the Company’s underlying core operating performance, including certain non-operating expenses, non-cash expenses and, where indicated, non-recurring expenses. In addition, adjusted EBITDA is used by management to set targets and is a metric that, among others, can be used by the Company’s Human Resources and Compensation Committee to establish performance bonus metrics and payout, and by the Company’s lenders and investors to evaluate the Company’s performance and ability to service its debt, finance capital expenditures and acquisitions, and provide for the payment of dividends to shareholders. The Company has included Adjusted Net Earnings and Adjusted Earnings Per Share because it believes that they permit investors to make a more meaningful comparison of the Company’s performance between periods presented by excluding certain non-operating expenses, non-cash expenses and, where indicated, non- recurring expenses. In addition, Adjusted Net Earnings and Adjusted Earnings Per Share are used by management in evaluating the Company’s performance because it believes they provide indicators of the Company’s performance that are often more meaningful than GAAP financial measures for the reasons stated in the previous sentence. The Company has included Free Cash Flows because it is used by management and investors in evaluating the Company’s performance and liquidity. The Company has included Secured Net Leverage Ratio and Total Leverage Ratio measures because it believes that they allow investors to make a meaningful comparison of the Company’s liquidity level and borrowing flexibility. In addition, Total Leverage Ratio and Secured Net Leverage Ratio are used by management in evaluating the Company’s performance because it believes that they allow management to monitor the Company's liquidity level and borrowing flexibility as well as evaluate its capacity to deploy capital to meet its strategic objectives, and are used by the Company’s lenders to evaluate the Company’s performance and ability to service its debt. As required by applicable securities legislation, the Company has provided definitions of these non-GAAP financial measures contained in this presentation, as well as a reconciliation of each of them to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure, on its website at http://www.itape.com under “Investor Relations” and “Events and Presentations” and “Investor Presentations”. You are encouraged to review the related GAAP financial measures and the reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measures set forth on the website and should consider non-GAAP financial measures only as a supplement to, not as a substitute for or as a superior measure to, measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. Variance, ratio and percentage changes in this presentation are based on unrounded numbers.
HEALTH & SAFETY OF TEAM: TOP PRIORITY
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Culture of safety being uniformly engrained across operations
Adhering to CDC and public health agencies’ protocols
Increased employee communication Culture of safety engrained in normal operations
Relatively low labor intensity operations
Enables social distancing on plant floor Absenteeism low, monitoring continuously
Cleaning
Increased sanitization and cleaning practices in place on plant floor
Mitigating factors
Frequent interviews for all employees prior to entry Work from home in place for non-essentials No travel policy, no third- parties in plants
DIVERSE PRODUCTION BASE PROVIDES FLEXIBILITY
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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NORTH AMERICA ASIA EUROPE
World-class, low-cost asset base a competitive advantage
All 27 plants in operation Flex production to align with demand
In operation In operation at partial capacity
PRODUCTION ALTERNATIVES WITH MULTIPLE LINES AVAILABLE FOR KEY APPLICATIONS Water-activated tape: Midland, Menasha Stretch film: Danville, Tremonton Shrink film: Tremonton, Porto Masking tape: Marysville, Blythewood, Carbondale Carton sealing tape: Danville, Carbondale, Brighton, Daman, Dahej Protective packaging: Seven Polyair plants Woven: Springfield, Truro, Delta, Chopanki, Karoli
Air pillows Bubble cushioning Foam Mailers Paper void fill
COMPREHENSIVE & DIVERSE PRODUCT BUNDLE
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Hot melt Acrylic Natural rubber Water-activated Paper Flatback Filament Sheathing Stencil Carton sealing Industrial & Speciality Stretch Shrink Structure fabrics Woven coated geomembrane Hay cover fabric Poultry fabric Lumber wrap
Tapes 58%
Films 16%
Protective packaging
12%
Note: Based from 2019 revenue
Woven
14%
DESIGNING A PRODUCT BUNDLE FOR OUR CUSTOMER
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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SCALE INVENTORY TURNOVER LOYALTY PROGRAMS BREADTH
DIFFERENTIATED APPROACH TO THE CUSTOMER
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Intertape’s comprehensive product bundle
DELIVERY PER
week
- ne
month
- ne
DELIVERY PER
Unique product bundle
More trips More SKUs
DIVERSE CUSTOMER BASE AND END MARKETS
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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E-commerce vertical provides greater diversity compared to 2008
2019 End market diversity1 COVID-19 Product trends2
Protective Woven
1) Management estimates for twelve months ending December 31, 2019, due to the proportion
- f sales through distributors, direct point of sale information is not available
2) Sales data through May 8, 2020 and order book data for second quarter 2020
General Manufacturing Fulfillment / Ecommerce Food & Beverage Building & Construction Other Retail Transportation
Water-Activated Tape Machines Carton Sealing Tapes
(excluding water activated)
Industrial Tapes Films
GROWTH STABILITY NEGATIVE
SUPPLY DYNAMICS AND COST STRUCTURE PROVIDE FLEXIBILITY
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Focused on gross profit dollars not margin
Cost Structure: Flexibility provided due to overweight variable vs. fixed
PERCENTAGE OF COST OF GOODS SOLD DOLLAR
60%
Resin, 32% Adhesive, 18% Paper, 19% Other, 31%
1) Based on purchases of raw materials in 2019 2) Other includes but is not limited to Latex, Fiberglass and Starch 2
Raw materials Labour Freight Remainder is overhead (mix of fixed and variable)
6% 6-7%
Essential good or service qualifies entire supply chain as essential No major raw material constraints currently Oil pricing expected to result in raw material pricing drop
- Falling raw material
environment: manage to dollar contribution – retain spread
- Potential to reduce working
capital requirements
MAJOR RESIN INPUTS:
Polyethylene – films, woven Polypropylene – tapes, woven
Supply chain visibility Raw material inputs1
PRIORITY: TRACKING OUR E-COMMERCE CUSTOMERS' GROWTH
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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IPG benefits from outsized market share in e-commerce
HIGHEST GROWTH CATEGORIES: Water-activated tape Air pillow systems Mailers
Shift in retail behavior potential long- term tailwind
GROWTH STRATEGIES INTACT:
Track e-commerce customers in North America and around the globe New product
- fferings, including
sustainability benefits & automation
MARKET TREND:
Midland achieved investment threshold hurdle rates, prior to advent of COVID-19
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Innovation that addresses the needs of e-commerce
EMBRACING SUSTAINABILITY WITH ACTIONS
- Mailer
- Water-activated tape
(reinforced and non-reinforced)
- Paper void fill
- Hexcel paper cushioning
- Chill-R cold chain insulation
CURBYTM LINE OF PRODUCTS
Sustainably sourced material Curbside recyclable Protective packaging
LAUNCHING CURBYTM MAILER: A NEW PROPRIETARY, CURBSIDE RECYCLABLE PROTECTIVE MAILER
- Collaborating with William McDonough
- f McDonough Innovation
- Strategic advice on design, manufacture and delivery
- f packaging and protective solutions grounded in
the Cradle to Cradle Design™ framework
- Achieved Cradle to Cradle Certified™ Bronze level for
water-activated tape
- Certified recyclability of water-activated tape by
passing Western Michigan University Old Corrugated Cardboard Equivalency testing protocol
- Published first annual Sustainability Report in 2019
SUSTAINABILITY HIGHLIGHTS
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Our primary focus: accretive Adj. EPS & Adj. EBITDA dollars
Adj EBITDA(1,2) and Free Cash Flow (1) Profile
(USD millions, percentage margin)
(USD millions) Q1 2020 Q1 2019 Change % 2019 2018 Change % (except per share amounts)
Revenue $278.9 $277.8 0.4% $1,158.5 $1053.0 10% Gross Profit $58.9 $57.8 1.9% $246.9 $218.9 12.8% Gross Margin 21.1% 20.8% 32 bps 21.3% 20.8% 52 bps Free Cash Flow(1) $(23.5) $(36.3) 35.3% $86.8 $15.0 479% IPG Net Earnings $14.2 $10.5 35.7% $41.2 $46.8 (11.8)% IPG Adj Net Earnings(1) $12.9 $12.2 5.8% $57.8 $62.2 (7.1)% Adj EBITDA(1,2) $37.5 $38.3 (2.0)% $172.2 $140.9 22.2% Adj EPS, fully diluted(1) $0.22 $0.21 5.6% $0.98 $1.05 (6.9)% Effective tax rate 18.6% 27.9% (929) bps 28.3% 17.4% 1098 bps
(1) Non-GAAP financial measure. Please see “Safe Harbor Statement” for an explanation of the Company’s use of this measure and a cross-reference to a reconciliation to its most directly comparable GAAP measure. (2) Includes the favourable impact of operating lease payments, totalling $7.1 million in the 12 months ended December 31, 2019, that were capitalized in accordance with new lease accounting guidance implemented on January 1, 2019.
122 129.6 140.9 172.2 38.3 37.5 58.2 6.8 15 86.8
- 36.3
- 23.5
15.1% 14.4% 13.4% 14.9% 13.8% 13.4% 0.0% 2.0% 4.0% 6.0% 8.0% 10.0% 12.0% 14.0% 16.0%
- 50
50 100 150 200
FY2016A FY2017A FY2018A FY 2019A Q1 2019 Q1 2020 Adj EBITDA Free Cash Flow Adj EBITDA margin
STRONG FINANCIAL POSITION DUE TO CONSERVATIVE CAPITAL STRUCTURE
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Secured net leverage ratio ceiling of 3.7x de-risks balance sheet
- $329M cash and loan availability(1)
- 1.8x Secured Net Leverage Ratio(1,2)
(3.7x covenant ratio ceiling)
- 3.4x Total Leverage Ratio(1,2)
(no maintenance covenant)
- $250M senior unsecured notes
issued at 7% in Oct 2018 (unsecured notes do not count toward maintenance secured net leverage ratio)
Key Considerations Seasonality Analysis
1) As of March 31, 2020. 2) Non-GAAP financial measure. Please see the “Safe Harbor Statement” for an explanation of the Company’s use of these measures and a cross-reference to a reconciliation to their respective most directly comparable GAAP measure.
Improved Flexibility since 2008
Illustrative Free Cash Flow2 by quarter
- 20%+ gross margin in 2019 double the
2008 levels
- Strong balance sheet entering period
- E-commerce provides greater diversification
- Major capex investment cycle completed;
- utlook reduced to $30-40M for 2020
- Flexibility on SG&A: all major incremental
spending eliminated
- Raw material pricing expected to reduce
working capital requirements
- 30
- 10
10 30 50 70
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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positioned to perform
conservative capital structure
essentials
health & safety top priority production ongoing across all facilities
COMPANY OVERVIEW
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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TSX Symbol ITP Shares Outstanding
(as of 3/31/2020)
59.0M Market Capitalization
(as of 5/11/2020)
CDN $792M Net Debt
(as of 3/31/2020)
USD $575M Available Liquidity
(as of 3/31/2020)
USD $329M
OPERATIONAL EXPERIENCE THROUGH MARKET CYCLES
INTERTAPE POLYMER GROUP
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Greg A.C. Yull, President & CEO
Joined Intertape Polymer Group (IPG) in 1991, formerly President Tapes and Films Division, EVP of Industrial Business Unit, and roles in Sales and Product Management.
Jeffrey Crystal, CPA, CA, CFO
Joined IPG in 2014, formerly CFO, American Iron & Metal, VP of Finance of Optimal Payments and Audit Manager, Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton LLP.
Douglas Nalette, SVP Operations
Joined IPG in 1999, formerly Director Carton Sealing Manufacturing, IPG, formerly with Central Products Company, Arkwright Advanced Coating and Venture Tape.
Shawn Nelson, SVP Sales
Joined IPG in 1995, served within several sales roles in the company, formerly Regional Sales Manger of Polychem.
Joseph Tocci, SVP Global Sourcing and Supply Chain
Joined IPG in 2005, in the Supply Chain Management group, formerly with Polo Ralph Lauren, The Home Depot, Atari and Nabisco.
Randi Booth, SVP & General Counsel
Joined IPG in 2015, formerly VP and Counsel at Deutsche Bank, formerly with Arnold & Porter LLP and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP.
Mary Beth Thompson, SVP Human Resources
Joined IPG in 2017, formerly global HR director with Sonoco Products Company.
Silvano Iaboni, GM Engineered-coated Products (Woven)
Joined IPG in 1993, roles of progressive responsibility primarily in operations management and engineering.
James Pantelidis, Chair of the Board
Chairman, Parkland Fuel Corporation, former Chairman, EnerCare Inc., former board member of RONA Inc., IA Insurance and Financial Services, Equinox Minerals Ltd. among others.
Greg A.C. Yull, President & CEO Robert M. Beil
32 years with The DOW Chemical Company including various roles in Executive Management, Sales and HR.
Robert J. Foster
President and CEO, Capital Canada Limited, former board member of CHC Helicopters, Golf Town Income Fund, Cargojet, Canada 3000 and Canadian Airlines Regional among others.
Dahra Granovsky
CEO Beresford Accurate Folding Cartons, a folding carton packaging company, Managing Director of Chem- Ecol, a lubricant company, board member for Hammond Power Solutions and Atlantic Packaging Product Ltd, former board member of Redknee Solutions.
Jorge N. Quintas
President of Nelson Quintas SGPS, SA, a holding company for the manufacturing of electrical and telecommunications cables, hazardous waste treatment, telecommunications networks and real estate.
Mary Pat Salomone
Former SVP & COO of Babcock Wilcox Company, board member of TransCanada Corporation and Herc Holdings, Inc.
Frank Di Tomaso, FCPA, FCA, ICD.D
Former Partner and Advisory Partner at Raymond Chabot Grant Thornton LLP, board member of ADF Group Inc., Birks Group Inc., National Bank Trust, National Bank Life Assurance and Laurentian Pilotage Authority.
Melbourne F. Yull
Founder and former Chairman and CEO of IPG, and President, Sammana Properties LLC and Affinity Kitchen & Bath LLC.
MANAGEMENT: BOARD OF DIRECTORS: