WI
WESCO INTERNATIONAL INC (WCC)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 revenue and earnings recovered: Net sales rose 0.5% year over year to $5.50B; diluted EPS was $3.03 and adjusted diluted EPS increased 19% YoY to $3.16, driven by strong Data Center (+70% YoY) and Broadband (+20%) within CSS, partly offset by UBS weakness and late-December industrial softness .
- Margins mixed: Gross margin declined 20 bps YoY to 21.2% on lower CSS project mix; adjusted operating margin was 5.7% and adjusted EBITDA margin 6.7% in Q4 .
- Cash generation and capital allocation: Record FY24 operating cash flow of $1.10B and free cash flow of $1.05B (154% of adjusted net income); net debt reduced by $431M; $425M of buybacks executed .
- 2025 guidance and catalysts: Management guided to organic sales growth 2.5%–6.5%, adjusted EPS $12.00–$14.50, FCF $600–$800M, and expects H2 utility recovery; plans to redeem preferreds in June and increase common dividend ~10% to $1.82 per share; January sales per workday were preliminarily +5% YoY .
- Street context: S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates were unavailable at time of analysis; comparisons to consensus cannot be made.*
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Data Center and Broadband strength: “More than 70% growth year-over-year in our global Data Center business” and “20% growth in Broadband Solutions,” fueling CSS double-digit growth .
- Return to growth in EES: “Renewed positive sales momentum in Electrical and Electronic Solutions… our first quarter of growth since early 2023” .
- Cash flow and working capital: Q4 free cash flow of $268M (156% of adjusted net income), FY24 FCF >$1B; net working capital intensity improved by 160 bps in 2024 .
What Went Wrong
- CSS margin pressure: Lower gross margin due to large direct-ship project mix; CSS adjusted EBITDA margin down 150 bps YoY .
- UBS softness: Utility market demand weakness (destocking, lower project activity) kept UBS down HSD in Q4; backlog down 25% YoY .
- Late-December slowdown: Organic sales tracked mid-single-digit through November but dropped high-single digits in final two weeks of December, impacting Q4 .
Financial Results
Consolidated metrics across recent quarters
Segment sales and margins
KPIs and balance sheet
Estimates (S&P Global) vs actuals
- S&P Global consensus for Q4 2024 EPS, Revenue, and EBITDA was unavailable at time of analysis; therefore, we cannot present a vs-consensus comparison.*
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We’re pleased with our return to sales growth in the fourth quarter sparked by more than 70% growth year-over-year in our global Data Center business, 20% growth in Broadband Solutions, and renewed positive sales momentum in Electrical and Electronic Solutions.” — John Engel, CEO .
- “Gross margin was stable on a full-year basis although we experienced some pressure in Communication and Security Solutions as sales ramped to customers on project deployments.” — John Engel .
- “Adjusted earnings per share of $3.16 was up 19% from prior year… Gross margin was down 20 basis points from the prior year, including a headwind of approximately 30 basis points from lower supplier volume rebates.” — David Schulz, CFO .
- “We expect adjusted EBITDA margin to be in the range of 6.7% to 7.2%… cloud computing expense will be approximately $40 million in 2025, up from $14 million in 2024.” — David Schulz .
Q&A Highlights
- Utility recovery timing: New customer wins ramp in H1, with purchasing resuming and H2 growth expected amid secular power demand; visibility supported by customer discussions and inventory normalization .
- Gross margin outlook: Management expects gross margins up slightly in 2025, aided by higher supplier volume rebates and mix improvement .
- Segment disclosure: New SEC requirement to disclose segment-level gross profit and adjusted SG&A; will include three years in 10-K .
- Preferreds: Outlook assumes two quarters of preferred dividends then redemption in June; funding options include cash, facilities, or notes, with interest cost range assumptions baked in .
- January cadence and mix: Preliminary January sales/workday +5% ex-M&A; stable mix; strong bookings (book-to-bill >1.0) and FX headwinds noted .
- Tariffs: Proven playbook to pass through supplier-driven inflation; margin protection history reiterated .
- Data center margins: Early-phase direct-ship projects carry lower margins; margins normalize as services/products attach over time .
- Working capital: Expect NWK to grow at half the rate of sales in 2025; some lumpiness in Q1 to seed new utility accounts .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates for Q4 2024 EPS, Revenue, and EBITDA were unavailable at time of analysis; we cannot assess beats/misses vs Street.*
- Implication: Given adjusted EPS +19% YoY and segment mix, Street may lift 2025 CSS margin recovery assumptions and H2 UBS volume trajectory; but confirmation awaits updated consensus.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Data Center secular tailwind is intensifying, now a ~40% mix in CSS with multi-year project visibility; expect near-term margin normalization as service attachment rises .
- Watch CSS margins: Management targeting improvements in 2025 after Q4 mix-driven compression; supplier volume rebates are a tailwind .
- UBS is poised for H2 inflection as destocking ends and new wins ramp; first-half likely remains soft, aligning with guidance phasing .
- Strong FCF and balance sheet flexibility underpin capital allocation (dividend increase, buybacks, preferred redemption), supporting EPS accretion and lower financing costs .
- 2025 guidance (organic 2.5%–6.5%, adj EPS $12–$14.50) implies operating leverage on modest growth and margin recovery; January +5% per workday is a constructive start .
- Risks to monitor: Tariff/inflation pass-through execution, FX headwinds (~1.5% to sales), and timing of utility recovery; management cites a tested playbook and confidence in H2 trajectory .
- Near-term trading setup: Positive data center narrative and dividend/preferred catalysts vs margin-watch in CSS and macro utility timing; any confirmation of H1-to-H2 phasing could re-rate shares toward upper end of guidance assumptions .
Footnotes:
- S&P Global consensus data was unavailable at time of analysis; therefore, estimate comparisons could not be performed.