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Atkore Inc. (ATKR)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 came in within management’s updated expectations, but year-over-year declines persisted as pricing normalization and solar-credit transfers weighed on results; net sales fell 9.4% to $788.3M, Adjusted EBITDA fell 39.6% to $140.2M, and Adjusted EPS was $2.43 versus $4.21 last year .
- The Electrical segment saw double-digit sales and margin compression on PVC and steel conduit pricing pressure; Safety & Infrastructure posted modest sales growth but EBITDA was roughly flat, with an operational headwind from material conversion/over-consumption flagged on the call as a one-time zinc issue .
- FY 2025 guidance was introduced: net sales $2.9–$3.2B, Adjusted EBITDA $475–$525M, Adjusted EPS $7.80–$8.90; Q1 2025 Adjusted EBITDA $95–$105M and Adjusted EPS $1.45–$1.65. Bridging assumptions point to continued price vs. cost headwinds (down $285–$305M to EBITDA) partially offset by low/mid single-digit volume growth .
- Management emphasized secular megatrends (data centers, grid hardening, electrification), ramping solar torque tube output, and expansion into PVC/HDPE water markets as 2025–2026 growth drivers; pricing stabilization and potential tariff actions on steel imports were cited as upside variables .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Organic volume growth: company-wide volumes rose 3.5% for FY 2024, with contributions across product areas; Q4 volumes up despite pricing declines .
- Strategic initiatives progressing: solar torque tube sales posted double-digit sequential growth, Hobart facility operating better; water-related PVC/HDPE offerings and regional service centers expanded footprint .
- Capital deployment: ~75% of operating cash flow returned via buybacks and dividends in FY 2024 ($381M repurchases; $34.5M dividends); quarterly dividend declared again in November .
- Quote: “We returned approximately 75% of cash generated from operating activities to shareholders in the form of dividends and share repurchases.” – CEO Bill Waltz .
What Went Wrong
- Pricing normalization and solar-credit impacts: Q4 net sales down 9.4% driven by $104.1M lower average selling prices and $5.4M solar credits transferred; gross margin fell 730 bps to 27.4% .
- Electrical margin compression: Adjusted EBITDA margin dropped to 25.8% (from 36.6% YoY), as lower average selling prices outpaced input cost declines; steel conduit faced import competition .
- S&I operational headwinds: one-time material conversion/over-consumption (zinc galvanization) reduced segment profitability sequentially; management classified it as a catch-up recorded in Q4 .
Financial Results
Consolidated Performance vs Prior Year and Prior Quarter
Notes:
- Q4 decline primarily from pricing normalization ($104.1M) and solar credits ($5.4M), partially offset by volume (+$26.9M) .
- Estimates context: Wall Street consensus via S&P Global was unavailable for Q4 due to data request limits; estimate comparisons are therefore not provided (S&P Global unavailable).
Segment Breakdown
KPIs (Full-Year)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy and secular tailwinds: “We remain focused on Atkore's ability to participate in long-term trends related to the adoption of renewable energy, grid hardening, digitization and the surging demand for electrification.” – CEO Bill Waltz .
- Pricing and competitive dynamics: “Pricing for our PVC conduit continues to be challenged… additional new domestic competition entering the market. Secondly, steel conduit continues to face pressure from import competition.” – CFO John Deitzer .
- Capital returns: “Since November 2021, we repurchased… over 20% of Atkore's stock or over $1.3 billion, underscoring our confidence in the future of our business.” – CEO Bill Waltz .
- Growth initiatives: “We have an opportunity to leverage our existing construction services capability to support growing demand for global mega projects… data centers, chip manufacturing plants.” – CEO Bill Waltz .
Q&A Highlights
- Pricing bridge reset: Management revised the FY25 price vs. cost headwind higher than previously expected, driven predominantly by PVC; steel pricing declines continue but may moderate, with potential tariff upside in back half/FY25 or FY26 .
- Volume vs initiatives: FY25 low/mid single-digit volume growth expected with approximately 50/50 contribution from end-market demand and initiatives (solar, water, megaprojects) .
- S&I one-time issue: Material conversion/over-consumption (zinc galvanization) identified and recorded in Q4; characterized as one-time .
- Seasonality and Q1 setup: Tough YoY comp in Q1, seasonally weaker first half; ramp expected in back half on volume and project timing .
- Hobart/IRA sensitivity: Hobart torque tube facility economics viable without IRA incentives; majority tax-credit benefits pass through to end customers; China imports deterred by 50% tariffs .
- Steel import mix: Mexico ~20% of steel conduit market; all imports slightly below ~25% YoY, with recent month-over-month declines; China imports down on tariff increases .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q4 2024 EPS, revenue, and EBITDA was unavailable due to data request limits at time of analysis; as a result, explicit beat/miss versus consensus cannot be provided (S&P Global unavailable).
- Based on management’s prior Q4 guidance, actual Q4 results were within ranges for Adjusted EBITDA ($140.2M vs $140–$150M) and Adjusted EPS ($2.43 vs $2.32–$2.54), and slightly above the upper end for net sales ($788.3M vs $725–$775M) .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- The core pressure remains pricing normalization in PVC and steel conduit; FY25 guidance embeds sizable price vs. cost headwinds, with volume growth and productivity actions working to offset .
- Strategic growth vectors (solar torque tubes, data centers megaprojects, PVC/HDPE water) are gaining traction and should become more visible into 2H FY25 and FY26, supporting medium-term mix and margin resilience .
- Capital returns remain robust with ongoing buybacks and the instituted quarterly dividend, supported by strong liquidity and modest leverage (~1x total debt/TTM EBITDA FY2024) .
- Q1 FY25 will be seasonally and comp-driven soft; sequential improving trajectory in the back half is the internal plan, making intra-year execution and project timing important trading catalysts .
- Potential regulatory/tariff support for domestic steel conduit could ease import pressure; any clarity or action would be a positive sentiment driver, particularly for 2H FY25/FY26 .
- Watch solar credit accounting and any pass-through effects; management indicates limited net benefit to Atkore and operational progress at Hobart, reducing risk to margins from credits .
- With consensus data unavailable, monitor sell-side revisions post-guide reset; management’s ranges suggest downside from FY24 levels but a path to stabilization as initiatives scale .