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NORTHWEST PIPE CO (NWPX)·Q3 2018 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q3 2018 marked a sharp rebound: net sales rose to $52.5M (+82% q/q, +35% y/y) with gross margin at 9.9%; GAAP diluted EPS printed $2.86 aided by a $21.9M bargain purchase gain and a $2.8M Houston real estate gain; adjusted diluted EPS was $0.21, turning positive versus a year-ago loss .
  • Backlog including confirmed orders jumped to $201M, the highest since Q3 2012, driven by improved bidding and the Ameron acquisition; management expects revenues and margins to continue improving in Q4 and into 2019 .
  • Ameron added ~$11.1M to Q3 sales; integration is underway with bidding unified across the combined footprint; near-term synergies targeted and focus on margin over volume reiterated .
  • Liquidity bolstered by a new $60M revolver (accordion to $100M) executed Oct 25; CFO confirmed structure on the call, supporting working capital needs for multi-year program ramps .
  • Key stock narrative catalysts: record backlog and visible program pipeline (Houston, Lower Bois d’Arc, Atoka), offset by non-recurring EPS boost; investors should assess adjusted earnings trajectory and integration execution .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

  • What Went Well

    • “As of September 30th, 2018, our combined backlog including confirmed orders was $201 million, the highest backlog since the third quarter of 2012,” with strong bidding into Q4 and expectations of continued improvement in 2019 .
    • Pricing/mix improved: selling price per ton rose ~35% y/y, lifting gross margin to 9.9% despite lower tons produced; Ameron facilities also contributed to margin improvement .
    • Strategic progress: Ameron integration launched with unified bidding and job allocation to best-fit sites; management emphasized cost synergies and a disciplined, margin-over-volume approach .
  • What Went Wrong

    • Q2 weakness lingered in the comp base: sequential rebound came off a very weak Q2 marked by less value-added mix and under-absorption of fixed overhead .
    • Non-recurring items dominated GAAP EPS: $21.9M bargain purchase gain (Ameron) and $2.8M Houston sale gains drove $2.86 diluted EPS; adjusted diluted EPS was $0.21, highlighting still-early stage of turnaround .
    • SG&A was elevated by acquisition-related costs (+$1.9M), and Monterrey shutdown drove restructuring charges; CFO flagged minor amounts to come as assets are prepped for sale .

Financial Results

MetricQ3 2017Q1 2018Q2 2018Q3 2018
Revenue ($USD Millions)$38.804 $33.365 $28.785 $52.455
Gross Margin (%)5.1% 4.0% (4.3%) 9.9%
Operating Income (Loss) ($USD Millions)$(1.430) $(2.342) $(5.827) $2.497
Net Income (Loss) - Continuing Ops ($USD Millions)$(1.587) $(1.951) $(5.686) $27.801
Diluted EPS - Continuing Ops ($USD)$(0.16) $(0.20) $(0.59) $2.86
Adjusted Diluted EPS ($USD)$(0.16) $0.21

Segment/Contributions (Q3 2018):

  • Ameron contribution to net sales: ~$11.1M .
  • Ameron operations (incl. acquisition-related costs): ~$0.7M loss in Q3 .

KPIs and Backlog:

KPIQ3 2017Q1 2018Q2 2018Q3 2018
Backlog ($USD Millions)$52 $41 $58 $100
Backlog incl. Confirmed Orders ($USD Millions)$109 $87 $122 $201
Backlog Conversion to Next Quarter (%)~30–45% expected, lower end near-term given mix

Operational/mix notes (Q3 2018 vs Q3 2017):

  • Selling price per ton: +35%; tons produced: −21%, with mix shift to higher-value work .

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Revenues/MarginsQ4 2018 and into 2019Stronger 2H expected; improvement with Ameron impact (Q2 release) Continued improvement in Q4; positive trend into 2019 Raised qualitatively
Capital ExpendituresFY 2018~$8M (Q1), then ~$6M (Q2) ~$5M for 2018; mostly maintenance Lowered
Backlog trajectory2H 2018 → 2019Improving bid schedule; higher backlog expected Record backlog; further improvement expected with multi-year programs Raised qualitatively
LiquidityCurrent$60M revolver with accordion to $100M ; CFO reaffirmed New facility supports growth

Note: No formal quantitative revenue/EPS guidance was issued; management commentary remains directional .

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q1 & Q2 2018)Current Period (Q3 2018)Trend
Backlog & biddingLull into March; backlog incl. confirmed orders $87M (Q1) → $122M (Q2); major programs (Houston, Lower Bois d’Arc, Atoka) expected to drive 2H Backlog incl. confirmed orders $201M; largest since 2012; heavy Q4 bidding; multi-year programs underpin 2019 Strongly improving
Integration of AmeronAcquisition announced; synergy and product diversification (concrete pipe) expected; carve-out complexity flagged Bidding unified; jobs allocated across footprint; Ameron accretive excluding acquisition costs; focus on synergies Advancing integration
Pricing/steel tariffsConcern for volatility; goal is price pass-through; coil up ~50% vs end-2017; margins pressured in Q2 Steel up ~35% y/y; preference for stability; plate ~$1,000/ton; no significant project deferrals seen Pricing improving; volatility moderating
Labor availability/costsNot highlighted earlierSkilled labor (welders) tight; rising labor costs; training/apprenticeship emphasized Tightening labor market
Credit facility/liquidityNot highlighted earlier$60M revolver (accordion to $100M) secured; CFO confirms structure Enhanced liquidity
Regulatory/macroCA Prop 3 failed; prior Prop 1 funds likely aiding; potential federal infrastructure focus over multi-year horizon Neutral-to-positive long term

Management Commentary

  • “As of September 30th, 2018, our combined backlog including confirmed orders was $201 million, the highest backlog since the third quarter of 2012… we expect to see a continued improvement in the backlog which should result in positive trend for revenue and margins that will continue through the fourth quarter and into 2019.” – Scott Montross, CEO .
  • “Immediately upon acquisition all bidding and job decisions were combined… we are bidding everything as a combined entity… produced where it best fits our strategic goals.” – Scott Montross on Ameron integration .
  • “Gross profit as a percent of sales improved with the increases in selling prices per ton… Ameron has been accretive to Northwest Pipe's income in the third quarter [excluding acquisition costs].” – Robin Gantt, CFO .
  • “We like high steel prices, but we like stable steel prices… coil pricing ~$820–$825/ton; plate ~$1,000/ton.” – Scott Montross on steel .

Q&A Highlights

  • Weather/schedule impacts: Minor delays noted; no expectation of material deferrals on larger projects (e.g., Lower Bois d’Arc) .
  • Backlog conversion: Typical 30–45% conversion to next quarter; Q4 likely at lower end due to longer-lead tunneling mix; expected to pick up into 2019 .
  • Bidding environment: 2018 is “a pretty huge bidding year,” stability across markets with disciplined players and improved pricing/margins as industry-wide backlogs rise .
  • Asset monetization: Monterrey property sale in process; no other asset sales planned tied to Ameron integration; ongoing portfolio optimization if underperformance arises .
  • Legislative/regulatory: CA Prop 3 failed; prior Prop 1 likely aiding growth; potential federal infrastructure focus under a Democratic House could be supportive, but timelines are multi-year .
  • Credit facility clarification: CFO confirmed $60M revolver with $100M accordion, consistent with prior facility flexibility .

Estimates Context

  • Wall Street consensus estimates (S&P Global Capital IQ) for Q3 2018 EPS and revenue were not available via the tool at the time of analysis; therefore, comparison to consensus could not be performed. Investors should note the significant non-recurring items in GAAP results when evaluating core performance [Tool error: GetEstimates].

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Core turnaround underway: Adjusted diluted EPS turned positive ($0.21) with strong pricing/mix and backlog momentum; monitor adjusted metrics and gross margin sustainability as Ameron integrates .
  • Backlog strength provides visibility: $201M backlog incl. confirmed orders and multi-year programs (Houston, Lower Bois d’Arc, Atoka) underpin 2019 revenue/margin trajectory .
  • Non-recurring boosts skewed GAAP EPS: Bargain purchase and asset sale gains drove $2.86 EPS; use adjusted figures for run-rate assessment .
  • Integration execution is key: Unified bidding and footprint optimization should unlock synergies; watch SG&A normalization as one-time acquisition costs roll off .
  • Pricing tailwinds vs input volatility: Steel pricing remains elevated; stability supports bidding confidence and margin capture; no widespread project deferrals observed .
  • Liquidity supports growth: New $60M revolver (accordion to $100M) enhances flexibility for working capital and program ramps .
  • Near-term trading: Record backlog and qualitative guidance for improving Q4 may support positive sentiment; focus on sequential adjusted margins and backlog conversion, while discounting non-recurring GAAP EPS effects .