Superior Industries International - Q1 2024
May 2, 2024
Executive Summary
- Q1 2024 was a transitional quarter: net sales declined to $316.3M and adjusted EBITDA fell to $30.8M (18% of Value-Added Sales) as European restructuring and deconsolidation effects weighed on results; management affirmed FY24 guidance and reiterated exit run-rate of ~$190M adjusted EBITDA tied to Poland ramp.
- Sequential profitability improved: adjusted EBITDA margin expanded by >400 bps vs Q4 2023 (18% vs 14%) on similar volume/value-added sales, reflecting early benefits from the transformation and cost mix.
- Cash generation slowed: CFO was $3.5M and unlevered FCF $7.6M, impacted by higher net loss (including $18M non-cash tax restructuring) and working capital movements; net debt was $439.1M with ample cash of $191.1M.
- Guidance maintained: FY24 outlook unchanged at net sales $1.38–$1.48B, VAS $720–$770M, adjusted EBITDA $155–$175M, unlevered FCF $110–$130M, capex ~$50M; management continues to expect exit-2024 adjusted EBITDA run-rate ~$190M as Poland fully absorbs transferred volumes.
- Stock narrative catalyst: completion of European manufacturing transfer (Germany → Poland), narrowing EU/N.A. margin gap, and capital structure progress (refinancing planning underway), with second-half uplift supported by OEM production normalization and customer recoveries.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Completed exit of high-cost German facility and relocated production to Poland without delivery disruptions; management positions this as “one-of-a-kind” execution enabling a 100% low-cost local footprint and structurally higher profitability.
- Sequential margin improvement: adjusted EBITDA margin expanded >400 bps QoQ to 18%, despite similar volume/value-added sales to Q4; management expects further margin uplift in H2 2024 from Poland cost absorption and SG&A consolidation.
- Guidance affirmed with stronger exit run-rate: FY24 guide maintained, and exit-2024 adjusted EBITDA expected near ~$190M, driven by the Poland ramp and margin convergence in Europe.
Quote: “We expect Superior to exit 2024 as a business generating approximately $190 million of Adjusted EBITDA on unit sales of just over 15 million” — Majdi Abulaban, CEO.
What Went Wrong
- Top-line and profitability pressure YoY: net sales fell to $316.3M (from $381.0M), adjusted EBITDA to $30.8M (from $45.5M), and net loss widened to $32.7M (from $4.0M), driven by lower aluminum pass-throughs, lower cost inflation recoveries, and lower unit shipments.
- Cash flow compression: CFO dropped to $3.5M (from $38.7M) and free cash flow was negative (-$7.5M) due to higher net loss (including non-cash taxes), weaker payables, and other working capital shifts.
- Non-cash tax restructuring charge: income tax provision rose to $16.6M (vs $3.3M) on an $18M non-cash tax restructuring, further depressing GAAP earnings in Q1.
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Welcome to Superior Industries first quarter 2024 earnings call. We are joined this morning by Majdi Abulaban, President and CEO, Tim Trenary, Executive Vice President and CFO. My name is Alan. I'll be your coordinator for today's event. Please note this call is being recorded, and for the duration, your lines will be on listen only. However, you will have the opportunity to ask questions at the end. This can be done by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. If you require assistance at any time, please press star zero and you'll be connected to an operator. Call will start with Tim Trenary. I now hand over to Tim Trenary.
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
Good morning, and welcome to our first quarter 2024 earnings call. During our call this morning, we will be referring to our earnings presentation, which, along with our earnings release, is available on the investor relations section of Superior's website. I am joined on the call by Majdi Abulaban, our President and Chief Executive Officer. Before I turn the call over to Majdi, I remind everyone that any forward-looking statements contained in this presentation or commented on today are subject to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Please refer to slide 2 of this presentation for the full safe harbor statement and to the company's SEC filing, including the company's current annual report on Form 10-K, for a complete discussion of forward-looking statements and risk factors. We will also be discussing various non-GAAP measures today.
Non-GAAP measures exclude the impact of certain items and therefore are not calculated in accordance with US GAAP. Reconciliations of these measures to the most directly comparable US GAAP measures can be found in the appendix of the presentation. I now turn the call over to Majdi to provide a business and portfolio update.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Thanks, Tim, and thanks, everyone, for joining our call today to review our Q1 2024 results. I will start on slide 5. I am pleased to share with you today that the Superior team has delivered on our announced strategic action in Europe as planned. In the first quarter, we successfully exited our high-cost German operations and relocated production to Poland. Now, in my almost 40 years experience in automotive, this stands out as a one-of-a-kind level of execution in manufacturing transformation in a challenging market. One carried out with precision and teamwork, with outstanding collaboration with our customers, and with no disruptions or impact on deliveries. This will not only provide a significant profitability uplift, but has also advanced our Local-for-Local footprint footprint to a 100% low-cost manufacturing.
In addition, we are well positioned to deliver value to our OEM customers seeking localized de-risk supply chains. With this milestone of the transformation completed, we expect to exit the year with substantially improved earnings power, along with a strengthened competitive footprint that no other supplier can offer. Looking at our broader operating environment, industry production declined 2% in our markets, and production at our top customers actually declined 8%. While value-added sales and Adjusted EBITDA were pressured in the quarter due to lower volumes as well as lumpy customer recoveries, in fact, and encouragingly, we saw more than 400 basis points sequential margin improvement in Adjusted EBITDA on similar volume and value-added sales to Q4 of last year. Tim will provide more color on this.
I would further note that our results in the quarter on a year-over-year basis have been temporarily distorted by the transformation. The transfer of wheels to Poland impacted content, cost absorption, and volumes. For example, high-value wheels in Germany are temporarily deconsolidated from our figures until we complete the transfer to the Polish facility. We were also impacted by costs associated with the reorganization of our European administration and logistics functions. We anticipate these factors to dissipate in the coming quarter. Our team continues to do an exceptional job with continued focus on cash generation through working capital management and capital prudence. Despite the actions in Germany, which require temporary safety inventory that is being drawn down as we speak, and contraction of supplier terms, our net debt of $439 million remains a near historical low.
Further, we maintained ample liquidity and we're also gaining traction with our pursuit of refinancing and capital structure solutions. We are affirming our guidance for 2024 despite declining industry volumes for the full year. In this regard, as we previously stated, we are on track to see significant improvement in margins in the back half of 2024. Slide 6 highlights the significant uplift in profitability that results from the completion of the European transformation. Our guide assumes $165 billion in Adjusted EBITDA generation in 2024 at the midpoint. However, with the transformation having been completed in the first half, we expect an improved run rate of approximately $190 million in Adjusted EBITDA upon exiting 2024. This significant improvement will be driven largely by low-cost wheel manufacturing at our Polish facilities.
We will also achieve cost savings via consolidated administrative functions in Europe and overall improved utilization in Poland. Turning on to slide 7, which highlights the progress of our European transformation in more detail. As we ramp up production in Poland, we will be closing the margin gap between North America and Europe in the second half of the year. We expect to see approximately a $23 million-$25 million in annualized EBITDA uplift. We also anticipate a cash benefit as we continue unwinding $12 million in safety stock, while recovering $15 million in supplier terms. We will transfer benefits from higher cost absorption and improvement in our Polish operations. In addition, we are continuing to improve our overall cost structure in Europe by consolidating aftermarket warehouses and rationalizing overhead.
We are making progress in our conversations with key customers regarding further cost recoveries for labor and energy inflation. This is in addition to costs already recovered, associated with the transformation. Lastly, we feel good about the current portfolio we have in this region, in Europe, now that we have exited underperforming programs. Turning on to slide eight, with an overview of our current operating environment. As I mentioned earlier, industry production in our regions is down 2%, while production declines with key customers such as GM and Audi are more pronounced. This, coupled with volume volatility, higher dealer inventories, and unfavorable production mix, has created a challenging backdrop. Now, despite these challenges, we feel good about the position we have created for our business through our successful transformation.
The tailwinds, including industry preference for localization and our portfolio of differentiated technologies, which are aligned with consumer preference for larger and light- and lighter premium wheels, will continue to play out. Further, we see further growth tailwinds as the average age of the USA car park is at historical lows. Slide nine provides an overview of Superior's growth compared to the industry in the quarter. In addition to industry production declining 2% in our markets, production in our top customers declined 8%, which was driven by launch delays and software issues at these OEMs. Our value-added sales adjusted for foreign exchange and deconsolidation was down 6%, which is generally in line with our customer mix. The impact of deconsolidation of our German operations and lumpier customer recoveries have also impacted our value-added sales.
Moving on to slide 10, which highlights the accelerated adoption of our portfolio of technologies. Larger and lighter wheels with premium finishes continue to make up a larger proportion of our launches. This will further drive content growth in the future and more technology applications. We're also highlighting a few launches in the first quarter, including the exciting Porsche Spyder and the GM Honda EV. The right side of the slide highlights the historical trend, with long-term content per wheel growth of 31% since 2019. I'd like to conclude with slide 11, which I shared with you during our last call. A powerful illustration of our competitive position, unmatched capabilities in many ways. Strong market leadership. We are a leader in Europe, and we are a leader in North America, with the most diversified customer base in the wheel space.
We are with the winning OEMs in both regions. Unrivaled manufacturing leadership. No other supplier, no other supplier can offer 100% low cost and local footprints. And finally, unparalleled technology and portfolio leadership, the broadest and most comprehensive portfolio in the industry. So we are excited about where we are. We have executed on a key milestone that has now culminated in a business that is well positioned for long-term profitable growth. And behind all this is a team delivering exceptional execution. I'd like to thank them all for their hard work and effort and for their results. Now, I will turn the call over to Tim to provide more detail on our financial results. Tim?
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
Thank you, Majdi. You'll recall that on August 31st of last year, we announced an important strategic action, the continuation of our local-for-local manufacturing footprint optimization strategy and the transformation of the remaining 6% of our manufacturing footprint to a more competitive cost structure. More specifically, our production facility in Berlin, Germany, otherwise known as Superior Industries Production Germany, or SPG, entered protective shield proceedings, a German court-administered reorganization process. Generally accepted accounting principles require that SPG's statement of operations and balance sheet, beginning with the commencement of the proceedings, be deconsolidated from Superior Industries financial statements. Accordingly, the income statement of SPG is excluded from the first quarter 2024 financial results, as is the balance sheet of SPG as of the end of the quarter. The deconsolidation affects the year-over-year comps.
More specifically, in the first quarter of 2023, approximately 255,000 wheels were produced at SPG. The associated net sales and value-added sales were $34 million and $21 million, respectively. Year-over-year, first quarter 2024 financial results, and therefore Adjusted EBITDA, capital expenditures, and working capital benefited from the closure of the facility. Adjusted EBITDA was $3 million more. Capital expenditures and working capital were $1 million and $15 million less, respectively. We sized the step change benefit of the transfer of wheels from Germany to Poland at $23 million-$25 million annually. Capital expenditures should be approximately $10 million less per year. Superior Europe variable contribution margin should approach that of Superior North America now. We expect the cost to complete the wheel transfer to be $20 million-$35 million. Let's look at the quarter on page 14.
First quarter 2024 financial summary. Net sales decreased to $316 million for the quarter, compared to $381 million in the prior year period. Normalization of the cost of aluminum and deconsolidation of SPG accounts for substantially all of this $65 million decline, or $52 million. Value-added sales decreased to $172 million for the quarter, compared to $203 million in the prior year period. The deconsolidation of SPG and foreign exchange accounts for $21 million of this $31 million decline. Adjusted EBITDA was $31 million. The associated margin, expressed as a percent of value-added sales, 18%. Color to follow momentarily. For the quarter, net loss was $33 million. The first quarter of 2024 year-over-year sales bridge is on page 15.
As I just mentioned, value-added sales declined $31 million compared to the prior year quarter, reflecting deconsolidation of SPG and lower unit sales. To the far right, aluminum costs passed through to customers was down $34 million because of the lower cost of aluminum, the consolidation of SPG, and lower unit sales. On page 16, first quarter of 2024 year-over-year Adjusted EBITDA bridge. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter decreased to $31 million, compared to $45 million in the prior year period. The Adjusted EBITDA margin for the quarter was 18%, compared to 22%. Lower unit sales, partially offset by favorable product mix, and to the far right, lower recovery of cost inflation from customers, partially offset by lower conversion costs, are the primary reasons Adjusted EBITDA declined.
The impact of foreign exchange and metal timing on the quarter compared to the prior year period was de minimis. An overview of the company's first quarter 2024 unlevered free cash flow is on page 17. Cash flow from operating activities was $4 million for the quarter, compared to $39 million in the prior year period. Lower earnings of $29 million, $14 million of which is higher non-cash taxes, and lower sources of cash provided by trade payables of $16 million and other assets and liabilities of $7 million, are the primary reasons for the decline in cash flow from operating activities. Cash used by investing activities for the quarter was $7 million, compared to $16 million in the prior year period. Capital expenditures were lower in the first quarter 2024.
Cash payments for non-debt financing activities were $5 million, comparable to the prior year period. Unlevered free cash flow for the first quarter of 2024 was therefore $8 million, a decrease of $26 million compared to the prior year period, primarily because of the lower cash flow from operating activities, offset in part by fewer capital expenditures. An overview of the company's capital structure as of March 31, 2024, may be found on page 18. Cash on the balance sheet at quarter end was $191 million. Funded debt was $630 million at quarter end, and net debt was $439 million. Deleveraging the balance sheet and therefore unlevered free cash flow remains a top priority. Superior's debt maturity profile as of March 31, 2024, is on page 19.
The revolving credit facility was undrawn at quarter end. We are in compliance with all loan covenants. The senior unsecured notes mature in a year. The company has engaged an independent financial advisor to advise on refinancing of the notes. In conjunction with our advisor, we are evaluating refinancing opportunities in the capital markets. It is too early in the process to discuss the capital structure this process might deliver. For the full year 2024, the full year 2024 financial outlook is on page 20. For the full year 2024, we expect net sales in the range of $1.38 billion-$1.48 billion and value-added sales in the range of $720 million-$770 million.
The sales reflect the impact of having addressed underperforming parts of the wheel portfolio, thereby optimizing the profitable utilization of our manufacturing capacity and light vehicle production in our markets, generally consistent with IHS forecasts. We expect Adjusted EBITDA of $155 million-$175 million. However, because of the Europe transformation, we expect to exit 2024 with Adjusted EBITDA of approximately $190 million. We anticipate the cost inflation, especially labor and energy, will persist. However, we have ongoing dialogue with customers to recover in wheel price their fair share of inflation. We expect to deliver on levered free cash flow in the range of one hundred and ten to one hundred and thirty million, highlighting the cash-generating power of the enterprise.
Finally, we expect approximately $50 million in capital expenditures as we strategically invest in our business, in particular in finishing and lightweighting capabilities. We modeled tax expense of approximately $30 million for the year. The tax provision for the year reflects the impact of $18 million tax restructuring charges in the first quarter. In closing, the strategic action to close SPG and transfer wheel production to Poland is expected to be significantly value accretive to the company. We're very pleased with our teams involved in this transaction, especially our operations and commercial teams. This concludes our prepared remarks. Majdi and I are happy to take questions. Alan?
Operator (participant)
Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question or make a contribution on today's call, please press star one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star two. We will take our first question from Michael Ward, Freedom Capital. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Thank you. Good morning, everyone.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Good morning, Mike.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Majdi. Doing okay. Thank you. Majdi, you talked about a couple of things with the European transformation. So operations were deconsolidated. When will they be put back in, in your numbers?
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
You mean when will the transfer of wheels begin to show up in our numbers, correct?
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay. So now, but it's deconsolidated, so it's out. So you took those numbers out, and when will you—when will they start showing back up in your numbers? Yes.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
They will begin to start showing up in Q2, and they will fully stabilize in Q3. Tim?
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
Yep, that's right.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay.
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
So the financial results of the German facility, SPG, are out forever, Mike. So now what we're doing, as we transfer that production,
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay.
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
over to Poland, the benefit will show up in our existing, in our remaining financial results.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay, got it.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Well, the benefit, Mike, the benefit, the revenue as well. And if you recall, when we talked previously, the German facility had an outsized number of wheels that are much, much higher content, so that'll show up as well, and that'll lead to our, our content per wheel.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay. And so, and then the $20 million-$35 million of cost to complete – that's just showing up on some of these revenue numbers, or is that actual? You know, how does that – how do we see that?
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
Yeah, those are restructuring. By and large, restructuring or other charges associated with this activity.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay.
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
So you will see that in. Yeah. Yeah. So they're not reflected in Adjusted EBITDA. We set them aside.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay, that's fine. German production was down, I think 8% in the first quarter, and you mentioned about your key customers and everything else. Was there something going on in Germany in January and February in particular, and-
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Yeah, no-
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
What are your customers telling you for the rest of the year?
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Yeah, Mike, I mean, the VW, I mean, this is public information. I'm not giving you anything, proprietary here.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Right.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
So the whole VW Group was down significantly. In fact, Audi, just by themselves, production-wise, were down 26%.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Wow.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Now, it's really a combination of factors, right? The major factor is disruption. The second one is, if you look at the launch cadence of the whole VW group, especially Audi and Porsche, it's quite front-loaded. Then you've got this other factor, dynamic on China and, you know, the imports of Porsche and high-end vehicles into China has been challenging for them. And the last piece is obviously no secret that the Chinese are taking share in Europe. That's not the major driver, but that's part of it as well.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay, so now the schedules they've given you, though, is that what gives you confidence in that, the stronger second half?
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
That's correct.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Well-
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
I mean, we look at IHS, Mike. Europe is supposed to be down in the first half. Probably Q2 is similar to Q1, a little bit better, but you'll see, you'll see them beginning to wrap up in the second half. And largely, again, in my view, because the supply chain disruptions will have been passed, but also the launches that I mentioned earlier. So in the second half, you'll see a little bit of growth versus prior year in both Europe, actually, and North America.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Okay, so in some respects, the timing of your transition was fortunate, with Germany being down.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
That's actually an excellent point. I mean, you know, like I said in my script, Mike, this is no simple undertaking, you know?
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Yeah.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
We have 550 people in Germany. You know, these are the most complex wheels we manufacture in the world. They're Porsche wheels, they're Audi wheels. You know, our customers have been absolutely impressed with the execution. In fact, the Porsche gentleman that was in our facility, you know, stated that it's the first time he's ever seen such a reorganization without disruption. So you hit the nail on the head, Mike. It's been, it's been an exciting story, but it's really a measure of the capability of this team at Superior and our ability to execute.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
So this second half, you get the combination of production coming back online, low-cost facility, getting rid of the inventory. 2, 3, 4 things start to really set up nicely late 2024 into 2025. That's the way you're looking at it.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
That is well said.
Michael Ward (Managing Director)
Well, thank you very much. Good luck with it.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Thank you, Mike.
Operator (participant)
We will take our next question from Gary Prestopino, Barrington Research. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Gary Prestopino (Managing Director)
Hey, good morning, all. A couple of questions here. First of all, I noticed that you didn't give units by region produced. Unless I'm missing it, there's a lot of information on both the press release and the deck. Do you have that handy, or is that something you're not gonna be giving?
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Gary, Gary, you're asking a very important question. Gary, you're asking a very important question is, as we have now completed the, you know, our transformation in Europe, our focus has always been, Gary, on content. You know, I, I cited an example where a suburban wheel is, could be 5x, say, a central wheel, right? So our focus really is not on on how many wheels we make. It's on making the right wheels, the wheels with the right contents and right technology and the right returns. So that's why you're seeing us back off content, back off putting units in the forefront. But if you go to the queue, you'll find the information there.
Gary Prestopino (Managing Director)
Okay.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
In terms of growth and focus, I think the focus, in my opinion, Gary, should be on sales and value-added sales. That's what we should focus on, but it's available.
Gary Prestopino (Managing Director)
Okay, that's fine. I just wanted to make sure that's something you hadn't pulled back on, because I still think it's important that you
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Understood
Gary Prestopino (Managing Director)
... use those numbers. And then if I look on page 5 here, of the deck, just to understand what's going on, you talk about the impact from deconsolidation of the German production facility. High-value wheels, I guess, that were produced in Germany in the quarter as you transferred everything, it really disrupted production and that's why, you know, we have-
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
No, no, Gary. All I'm, all I'm saying, all I'm saying here is that our numbers in the quarter do not include those wheels. So when you... Yes.
Gary Prestopino (Managing Director)
Okay.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
So what I'm saying is the numbers you see for the quarter here, they do not include—when you go to the Q, you asked about the number of wheels we produced. You'll see that those wheels, about 225,000 in Germany, are not included in those data, in that data. That distorts our growth. That's all we're saying. Then when you consider that those 200-some thousand wheels are significantly higher content in wheels, that also distorts our content per wheel and our value-added sales.
Gary Prestopino (Managing Director)
Okay. It's not included in what you, you know, put out here as the-
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Gary, Gary, it's Tim. If I may, if I could turn your attention to page 13. So this will help you with the disruption in the year-over-year comps. You know, in 2023, the first quarter of 2023, for example, the quarter... Can you hear me, Gary? Gary? You're not coming in, Gary.
Operator (participant)
We will take our next question from Mohammed Ter, Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Speaker 5
Hey, guys. Just on the costs of $20 million-$35 million for the transfer, just wanted to clarify, is that cash costs? If so, when is this going to be in the cash flow statement? Because you said you put them aside and it will not show up in the Adjusted EBITDA.
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
Right. They are all cash costs at the end of the day, and we are at the very end of those cash costs.
...There's very little yet to spend. You can get some idea of the impact of those now that if you look at the reconciliations to the GAAP measures, the net income to Adjusted EBITDA by period, they'll give you some indication of what those, the magnitude of those costs by period. So, yeah, when I said setting it aside, I just said for purposes of discussing Adjusted EBITDA, we set them aside, but they do affect our cash flows, obviously.
Speaker 5
Okay, great. And then, well, as I asked also in the previous calls about the refinancing process, as you also said, you're too early in the process to discuss the capital structure. But you dropped a narrative there where you said in the previous presentation that the refinancing of the notes is likely to involve preferred equity. Have you just? Is there a reason for the change in the wording, or can you give us some color there?
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
No, no. No, not really. I, you know, I don't know exactly how the refinancing of the notes may have any impact on other elements of the capital structure. So, you know, the discussions are ongoing. We have a complicated capital structure for our company. There's, you know, as you know, four stakeholders, the preferred equity, the secured debt, the term loan, the unsecured notes, and of course, our banks, we've all in current facilities. So I don't know exactly how all of those pieces will come together as we focus on the unsecured notes. And, yeah, the preferred equity could very well be a part of the transaction in some form or fashion.
Speaker 5
Okay. And then on the timing, since the bonds are becoming current in a few weeks of time, is it likely that you guys will be waiting for the second half of the quarter since volume's coming back and you will recap the German operations in Poland?
Tim Trenary (EVP and CFO)
Yeah. No, no, I would say that we are proceeding as rapidly as is prudent and practicable, and so we would like to get it accomplished sooner rather than later. We are not targeting any specific point in the back part of the year, for sure. And frankly, we'd like to get it done sooner rather than later, to be honest with you.
Speaker 5
Okay. Thank you.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Gary, are you back?
Operator (participant)
Yeah. I'm sorry, Gary's line is disconnected. There are no further questions-
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Okay.
Operator (participant)
-on the line, so I will now hand you back to Majdi Aboulaban for closing remarks.
Majdi Abulaban (President and CEO)
Thank you. Thanks, everyone, for joining our call today. Again, to the Superior team, thank you for your continued hard work and commitment to the success of our business. We look forward to continuing our momentum to deliver value for all stakeholders throughout 2024 and beyond. Have a great day, everyone.
Operator (participant)
Thank you for joining today's call. You may now disconnect.