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Watchlist
Account
IDEX
IEX
#1460
Rank
$14.94 B
Marketcap
๐บ๐ธ
United States
Country
$198.55
Share price
-0.59%
Change (1 day)
-8.59%
Change (1 year)
IDEX Corporation
, is an American company founded in 1988 that develops, designs and manufactures fluidic systems and specialty technical handling.
Market cap
Revenue
Earnings
Price history
P/E ratio
P/S ratio
More
Price history
P/E ratio
P/S ratio
P/B ratio
Operating margin
EPS
Stock Splits
Dividends
Dividend yield
Shares outstanding
Fails to deliver
Cost to borrow
Total assets
Total liabilities
Total debt
Cash on Hand
Net Assets
Annual Reports (10-K)
IDEX
Quarterly Reports (10-Q)
Financial Year FY2016 Q3
IDEX - 10-Q quarterly report FY2016 Q3
Text size:
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Table of Contents
UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
_____________________________
Form 10-Q
þ
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended September 30, 2016
OR
¨
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Commission file number 1-10235
IDEX CORPORATION
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
Delaware
36-3555336
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
1925 West Field Court, Lake Forest, Illinois
60045
(Address of principal executive offices)
(Zip Code)
Registrant’s telephone number: (847) 498-7070
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant: (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
Yes
þ
No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files).
Yes
þ
No
¨
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one):
Large accelerated filer
þ
Accelerated filer
¨
Non-accelerated filer
¨
Smaller reporting company
¨
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).
Yes
¨
No
þ
Number of shares of common stock of IDEX Corporation outstanding as of
October 18, 2016
:
76,242,245
.
Table of Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Part I. Financial Information
Item 1.
Financial Statements
1
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
1
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations
2
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
3
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity
4
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
5
Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
6
Item 2.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
24
Cautionary Statement Under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act
24
Overview and Outlook
24
Results of Operations
26
Liquidity and Capital Resources
31
Non-GAAP Disclosures
32
Item 3.
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
36
Item 4.
Controls and Procedures
36
Part II. Other Information
Item 1.
Legal Proceedings
37
Item 2.
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
37
Item 6.
Exhibits
37
Signatures
38
Exhibit Index
39
Table of Contents
PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1.
Financial Statements.
IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(in thousands except share and per share amounts)
(unaudited)
September 30, 2016
December 31, 2015
ASSETS
Current assets
Cash and cash equivalents
$
239,397
$
328,018
Receivables, less allowance for doubtful accounts of $8,753 at September 30, 2016 and $7,812 at December 31, 2015
287,329
260,000
Inventories — net
276,013
239,124
Other current assets
54,614
35,542
Total current assets
857,353
862,684
Property, plant and equipment — net
261,092
240,945
Goodwill
1,662,892
1,396,529
Intangible assets — net
462,430
287,837
Other noncurrent assets
18,697
17,448
Total assets
$
3,262,464
$
2,805,443
LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Current liabilities
Trade accounts payable
$
117,430
$
128,911
Accrued expenses
160,816
153,672
Notes payable and current portion of long-term borrowings
1,171
1,087
Dividends payable
25,940
25,927
Total current liabilities
305,357
309,597
Long-term borrowings
1,099,601
839,707
Deferred income taxes
182,688
110,483
Other noncurrent liabilities
120,075
102,365
Total liabilities
1,707,721
1,362,152
Commitments and contingencies
Shareholders’ equity
Preferred stock:
Authorized: 5,000,000 shares, $.01 per share par value; Issued: None
—
—
Common stock:
Authorized: 150,000,000 shares, $.01 per share par value
Issued: 90,202,449 shares at September 30, 2016 and 90,151,131 shares at December 31, 2015
902
902
Additional paid-in capital
692,730
679,623
Retained earnings
1,803,060
1,666,680
Treasury stock at cost: 13,907,807 shares at September 30, 2016 and 13,616,592 shares at December 31, 2015
(794,364
)
(757,416
)
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
(147,585
)
(146,498
)
Total shareholders’ equity
1,554,743
1,443,291
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity
$
3,262,464
$
2,805,443
See Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
1
Table of Contents
IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(in thousands except per share amounts)
(unaudited)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Net sales
$
530,356
$
503,791
$
1,582,624
$
1,520,870
Cost of sales
299,467
280,531
884,342
839,954
Gross profit
230,889
223,260
698,282
680,916
Selling, general and administrative expenses
119,965
114,794
371,825
360,784
Restructuring expenses
—
4,723
—
4,723
Loss (gain) on sale of businesses - net
2,067
(18,070
)
2,067
(18,070
)
Operating income
108,857
121,813
324,390
333,479
Other (income) expense - net
(2,364
)
(693
)
(4,982
)
(1,589
)
Interest expense
11,913
10,229
33,607
31,410
Income before income taxes
99,308
112,277
295,765
303,658
Provision for income taxes
29,435
32,772
82,003
88,614
Net income
$
69,873
$
79,505
$
213,762
$
215,044
Basic earnings per common share
$
0.92
$
1.03
$
2.81
$
2.77
Diluted earnings per common share
$
0.91
$
1.02
$
2.78
$
2.75
Share data:
Basic weighted average common shares outstanding
75,819
76,831
75,753
77,431
Diluted weighted average common shares outstanding
76,880
77,646
76,742
78,266
See Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
2
Table of Contents
IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
(in thousands)
(unaudited)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Net income
$
69,873
$
79,505
$
213,762
$
215,044
Other comprehensive income (loss)
Reclassification adjustments for derivatives, net of tax
1,082
1,114
3,272
3,370
Pension and other postretirement adjustments, net of tax
594
818
1,856
2,418
Cumulative translation adjustment
353
(16,936
)
(10,473
)
(49,830
)
Reclassification of foreign currency translation to earnings upon sale of subsidiaries
4,258
(4,725
)
4,258
(4,725
)
Other comprehensive income (loss)
6,287
(19,729
)
(1,087
)
(48,767
)
Comprehensive income
$
76,160
$
59,776
$
212,675
$
166,277
See Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
3
Table of Contents
IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF SHAREHOLDERS’ EQUITY
(in thousands except share amounts)
(unaudited)
Accumulated Other Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
Common
Stock and
Additional
Paid-In Capital
Retained
Earnings
Cumulative
Translation
Adjustment
Retirement
Benefits
Adjustment
Cumulative
Unrealized Gain (Loss) on
Derivatives
Treasury
Stock
Total
Shareholders’
Equity
Balance, December 31, 2015
$
680,525
$
1,666,680
$
(92,979
)
$
(30,901
)
$
(22,618
)
$
(757,416
)
$
1,443,291
Net income
—
213,762
—
—
—
—
213,762
Cumulative translation adjustment
—
—
(6,215
)
—
—
—
(6,215
)
Net change in retirement obligations (net of tax of $964)
—
—
—
1,856
—
—
1,856
Net change on derivatives designated as cash flow hedges (net of tax of $1,872)
—
—
—
—
3,272
—
3,272
Issuance of 447,378 shares of common stock from issuance of unvested shares, performance share units and exercise of stock options
251
—
—
—
—
22,901
23,152
Repurchase of 738,593 shares of common stock
—
—
—
—
—
(54,950
)
(54,950
)
Unvested shares surrendered for tax withholding
—
—
—
—
—
(4,899
)
(4,899
)
Share-based compensation
12,856
—
—
—
—
—
12,856
Cash dividends declared - $1.02 per common share outstanding
—
(77,382
)
—
—
—
—
(77,382
)
Balance, September 30, 2016
$
693,632
$
1,803,060
$
(99,194
)
$
(29,045
)
$
(19,346
)
$
(794,364
)
$
1,554,743
See Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
4
Table of Contents
IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
(in thousands)
(unaudited)
Nine Months Ended September 30,
2016
2015
Cash flows from operating activities
Net income
$
213,762
$
215,044
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:
Loss (gain) on sale of businesses - net
2,067
(18,070
)
Depreciation and amortization
28,360
26,634
Amortization of intangible assets
35,964
31,340
Amortization of debt issuance costs
1,150
1,233
Share-based compensation expense
15,325
14,735
Deferred income taxes
4,880
1,473
Excess tax benefit from share-based compensation
—
(4,350
)
Non-cash interest expense associated with forward starting swaps
5,144
5,287
Changes in (net of effect from acquisitions and divestitures):
Receivables
(2,178
)
(1,417
)
Inventories
22,250
(6,474
)
Other current assets
(18,276
)
(2,742
)
Trade accounts payable
(16,696
)
(4,002
)
Accrued expenses
(2,982
)
2,067
Other - net
(4,446
)
1,023
Net cash flows provided by operating activities
284,324
261,781
Cash flows from investing activities
Additions of property, plant and equipment
(28,642
)
(32,611
)
Acquisition of businesses, net of cash acquired
(510,001
)
(193,163
)
Proceeds from sale of businesses, net of cash sold
32,529
27,677
Other - net
(73
)
647
Net cash flows used in investing activities
(506,187
)
(197,450
)
Cash flows from financing activities
Borrowings under revolving facilities
460,524
383,621
Proceeds from 3.20% Senior Notes
100,000
—
Proceeds from 3.37% Senior Notes
100,000
—
Payments under revolving facilities
(402,172
)
(295,934
)
Payment of 2.58% Senior Euro Notes
—
(88,420
)
Debt issuance costs
(246
)
(1,698
)
Dividends paid
(77,367
)
(71,673
)
Proceeds from stock option exercises
23,154
15,167
Excess tax benefit from share-based compensation
—
4,350
Purchase of common stock
(57,272
)
(177,772
)
Shares surrendered for tax withholding
(4,899
)
(3,217
)
Net cash flows provided by (used in) financing activities
141,722
(235,576
)
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents
(8,480
)
(31,410
)
Net increase (decrease) in cash
(88,621
)
(202,655
)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year
328,018
509,137
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period
$
239,397
$
306,482
Supplemental cash flow information
Cash paid for:
Interest
$
18,261
$
18,069
Income taxes - net
77,250
70,217
Significant non-cash activities:
Contingent consideration for acquisition
—
4,705
See Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
5
Table of Contents
IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
1. Basis of Presentation and Significant Accounting Policies
The Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements of IDEX Corporation (“IDEX,” “we,” “our,” or the “Company”) have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“U.S. GAAP”) applicable to interim financial information and the instructions to Form 10-Q under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The statements are unaudited but include all adjustments, consisting only of recurring items, except as noted, that the Company considers necessary for a fair presentation of the information set forth herein. The results of operations for the three and
nine months ended
September 30, 2016
are not necessarily indicative of the results to be expected for the entire year.
The Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements and Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations set forth in this report should be read in conjunction with the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2015
.
Recently Adopted Accounting Standards
In March 2016, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) 2016-09,
Improvements to Employee Share-Based Payment Accounting
, which simplifies several aspects of the accounting for employee share-based payment transactions, including the accounting for income taxes, forfeitures, and statutory tax withholding requirements, as well as classification in the statement of cash flows. The Company elected to early adopt this standard in the quarter ended March 31, 2016. The Company applied this standard prospectively and thus, prior periods have not been adjusted.
The impact of the adoption resulted in the following:
•
The Company recorded a tax benefit of
$1.2 million
and
$5.4 million
within Provision for income taxes for the
three and nine
months ended
September 30, 2016
, respectively, related to the excess tax benefit on stock options, restricted stock and performance share units. Prior to adoption this amount would have been recorded as a reduction of additional paid-in capital. This change could create volatility in the Company’s effective tax rate.
•
The Company elected not to change our policy on accounting for forfeitures and continued to estimate the total number of awards for which the requisite service period will not be rendered.
•
The Company no longer reclassifies the excess tax benefit from operating activities to financing activities in the statement of cash flows.
•
The Company excluded the excess tax benefits from the assumed proceeds available to repurchase shares in the computation of our diluted earnings per share for the three and nine months ended
September 30, 2016
. This increased our diluted weighted average common shares outstanding by
198 thousand
and
174 thousand
shares for the
three and nine months ended
September 30, 2016
, respectively.
Recently Issued Accounting Standards
In August 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-15,
Classification of Certain Cash Receipts and Cash Payments
(a consensus of the FASB Emerging Issues Task Force). This ASU addresses the following eight specific cash flow issues: Debt prepayment or debt extinguishment costs; settlement of zero-coupon debt instruments or other debt instruments with coupon interest rates that are insignificant in relation to the effective interest rate of the borrowing; contingent consideration payments made after a business combination; proceeds from the settlement of insurance claims; proceeds from the settlement of corporate-owned life insurance policies (including bank-owned life insurance policies); distributions received from equity method investees; beneficial interests in securitization transactions; and separately identifiable cash flows and application of the predominance principle. This standard is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017. The Company does not believe the guidance will have a material impact on our consolidated financial statements.
In February 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-02,
Leases
, which introduces a new lessee model that will require most leases to be recorded on the balance sheet and eliminates the required use of bright line tests in current U.S. GAAP for determining lease classification. This standard is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2018. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of the new guidance on our consolidated financial statements.
6
Table of Contents
IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
In May 2014, the FASB issued ASU 2014-09,
Revenue from Contracts with Customers
, which introduces a new five-step
revenue recognition model. Under ASU 2014-09, an entity should recognize revenue to depict the transfer of promised goods or services to customers in an amount that reflects the consideration to which the entity expects to be entitled in exchange for those goods or services. This ASU also requires disclosures sufficient to enable users to understand the nature, amount, timing, and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows arising from contracts with customers, including qualitative and quantitative disclosures about contracts with customers, significant judgments and changes in judgments, and assets recognized from the costs to obtain or fulfill a contract. This standard is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2017, using either of the following transition methods: (i) a full retrospective approach reflecting the application of the standard in each prior reporting period with the option to elect certain practical expedients, or (ii) a retrospective approach with the cumulative effect of initially adopting ASU 2014-09 recognized at the date of adoption. The FASB has also issued the following standards which clarify ASU 2014-09 and have the same effective date as the original standard: ASU 2016-08,
Revenue from Contracts with Customers: Principal versus Agent Considerations (Reporting Revenue Gross versus Net)
; ASU 2016-10,
Revenue from Contracts with Customers: Identifying Performance Obligations and Licensing
; and ASU 2016-12,
Revenue from Contracts with Customers: Narrow-Scope Improvements and Practical Expedients
. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of the new guidance on our consolidated financial statements and has not yet determined the method by which we will adopt the standard in 2018.
2. Acquisitions and Divestitures
All of the Company’s acquisitions have been accounted for under FASB Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”) 805,
Business Combinations
. Accordingly, the accounts of the acquired companies, after adjustments to reflect fair values assigned to assets and liabilities, have been included in the Company’s consolidated financial statements from their respective dates of acquisition.
The Company incurred
$1.6 million
and
$0.9 million
of acquisition-related transaction costs in the
three months ended September 30, 2016
and
2015
, respectively, and
$4.0 million
and
$2.1 million
in the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
and
2015
, respectively. These costs were recorded in Selling, general and administrative expenses and were related to completed transactions, pending transactions and potential transactions, including transactions that ultimately were not completed. During the three and
nine
months ended
September 30, 2016
, the Company recorded
$4.6 million
and
$10.4 million
, respectively, of fair value inventory step-up charges in Cost of sales associated with the completed 2016 acquisitions. During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2015, the Company recorded within Cost of sales
$2.7 million
and
$3.4 million
, respectively, of fair value inventory charges associated with completed 2015 acquisitions.
2016 Acquisitions
On March 16, 2016, the Company acquired the stock of Akron Brass Holding Corporation (“Akron Brass”), a producer of a large array of engineered life–safety products for the safety and emergency response markets, which includes apparatus valves, monitors, nozzles, specialty lighting, electronic vehicle–control systems and firefighting hand tools. The business was acquired to complement and create synergies with our existing Hale, Class 1, and Godiva businesses. Headquartered in Wooster, Ohio, Akron Brass had annual revenues in its most recent fiscal year of approximately
$120 million
and operates in our Fire & Safety/Diversified Products segment. Akron Brass was acquired for cash consideration of
$221.4 million
. The purchase price was funded with borrowings under the Company’s revolving facilities. Goodwill and intangible assets recognized as part of the transaction were
$125.1 million
and
$90.4 million
, respectively. The goodwill is not deductible for tax purposes.
On July 1, 2016, the Company acquired the stock of AWG Fittings GmbH (“AWG Fittings”), a producer of engineered products for the safety and emergency response markets, including valves, monitors and nozzles. The business was acquired to complement and create synergies with our existing Hale, Class 1, Godiva and Akron Brass businesses. Headquartered in Ballendorf, Germany, AWG Fittings had annual revenues in its most recent fiscal year of approximately
$40 million
and operates in our Fire & Safety/Diversified Products segment. AWG Fittings was acquired for cash consideration of
$47.5 million
(
€42.8 million
). The purchase price was funded with cash on hand. Goodwill and intangible assets recognized as part of the transaction were
$22.7 million
and
$10.3 million
, respectively. The goodwill is not deductible for tax purposes.
On August 31, 2016, the Company acquired the stock of SFC Koenig AG (“SFC Koenig”), a producer of highly engineered expanders and check valves for critical applications across the transportation, hydraulic, aviation and medical markets. Headquartered in Dietikon, Switzerland, SFC Koenig had annual revenues in its most recent fiscal year of approximately
$63 million
and operates in our Health & Science Technologies segment. SFC Koenig was acquired for cash consideration of
$241.1 million
(
€215.9 million
). The purchase price was funded with cash on hand and borrowings under the Company’s revolving
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
facilities. Goodwill and intangible assets recognized as part of the transaction were
$132.4 million
and
$114.7 million
, respectively. The goodwill is not deductible for tax purposes.
The Company made initial allocations of the purchase price for the Akron Brass, AWG Fittings and SFC Koenig acquisitions as of the acquisition date based on its understanding of the fair value of the acquired assets and assumed liabilities. As the Company obtains additional information about these assets and liabilities and learns more about the newly acquired businesses, we will refine the estimates of fair value and more accurately allocate the purchase price. Only items identified as of the acquisition date are considered for subsequent adjustment. The Company will make appropriate adjustments to the purchase price allocation prior to the completion of the measurement period, as required.
The preliminary allocation of the acquisition costs to the assets acquired and liabilities assumed, based on their estimated fair values, are as follows:
Akron Brass
AWG Fittings
SFC Koenig
Total
Current assets, net of cash acquired
$
44,126
$
18,317
$
35,568
$
98,011
Property, plant and equipment
12,195
6,847
6,566
25,608
Goodwill
125,090
22,733
132,381
280,204
Intangible assets
90,400
10,279
114,737
215,416
Deferred income taxes
—
2,524
—
2,524
Total assets acquired
271,811
60,700
289,252
621,763
Current liabilities
(7,081
)
(4,762
)
(12,858
)
(24,701
)
Deferred income taxes
(36,886
)
—
(29,809
)
(66,695
)
Other noncurrent liabilities
(6,445
)
(8,444
)
(5,477
)
(20,366
)
Net assets acquired
$
221,399
$
47,494
$
241,108
$
510,001
Acquired intangible assets consist of trade names, customer relationships and unpatented technology. The goodwill recorded for the acquisitions reflect the strategic fit, revenue and earnings growth potential of these businesses.
Of the
$215.4 million
of acquired intangible assets,
$28.8 million
was assigned to the Akron Brass trade name and is not subject to amortization. The acquired intangible assets and weighted average amortization periods are as follows:
Total
Weighted Average Life
Trade names
$
14,423
15
Customer relationships
130,598
13
Unpatented technology
41,595
13
Amortized intangible assets
186,616
Indefinite lived - Akron Brass trade name
28,800
Total acquired intangible assets
$
215,416
2015 Acquisitions
On May 29, 2015, the Company acquired the stock of Novotema, SpA (“Novotema”), a leader in the design, manufacture and sale of specialty sealing solutions for use in the building products, gas control, transportation, industrial and water markets. The business was acquired to complement and create synergies with our existing Sealing Solutions platform. Located in Villongo, Italy, Novotema operates in our Health & Science Technologies segment. Novotema was acquired for cash consideration of
$61.1 million
(
€56 million
). The entire purchase price was funded with cash on hand. Goodwill and intangible assets recognized as part of this transaction were
$34.3 million
and
$20.0 million
, respectively. The
$34.3 million
of goodwill is not deductible for tax purposes.
On June 10, 2015, the Company acquired the stock of Alfa Valvole, S.r.l (“Alfa”), a leader in the design, manufacture and sale of specialty valve products for use in the chemical, petro-chemical, energy and sanitary markets. The business was acquired
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
to expand our valve capabilities. Located in Casorezzo, Italy, Alfa operates in our Fluid & Metering Technologies segment. Alfa was acquired for cash consideration of
$112.6 million
(
€99.8 million
). The entire purchase price was funded with cash on hand. Goodwill and intangible assets recognized as part of this transaction were
$69.6 million
and
$32.1 million
, respectively. The
$69.6 million
of goodwill is not deductible for tax purposes.
On July 1, 2015, the Company acquired the membership interests of CiDRA Precision Services, LLC (“CPS”), a leader in the design, manufacture and sale of microfluidic components serving the life science, health and industrial markets. The business was acquired to provide a critical building block to our emerging microfluidic and nanofluidics capabilities. Located in Wallingford, Connecticut, CPS operates within our Health & Sciences Technologies segment. CPS was acquired for an aggregate purchase price of
$24.2 million
, consisting of
$19.5 million
in cash and contingent consideration valued at
$4.7 million
as of the opening balance sheet date. The contingent consideration was based on the achievement of financial objectives during the 12-month period following the close. Based on potential outcomes, the undiscounted amount of all the future payments that the Company could have been required to make under the contingent consideration arrangement was between
$0
and
$5.5 million
. During the six months ended June 30, 2016, the Company re-evaluated the contingent consideration arrangement and fully reversed the
$4.7 million
liability based on CPS’s actual operating results from July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016. The
$4.7 million
reversal was recognized as a benefit within Selling, general and administrative expenses, of which
$3.7 million
was recognized in March 2016 and the remaining
$1.0 million
was recognized in June 2016. The entire purchase price was funded with cash on hand. Goodwill and intangible assets recognized as part of this transaction were
$9.7 million
and
$12.3 million
, respectively. The
$9.7 million
of goodwill is deductible for tax purposes.
On December 1, 2015 the Company acquired the assets of a complementary product line within our Fluid & Metering Technologies segment. The purchase price and goodwill associated with this transaction were
$1.9 million
and
$0.7 million
, respectively.
2016 Divestitures
The Company periodically reviews its operations for businesses which may no longer be aligned with its strategic objectives and focus on core business and customers. Any resulting gain or loss recognized due to divestitures is recorded on the Consolidated Statement of Operations within Loss (gain) on sale of businesses - net.
On July 29, 2016, the Company completed the sale of its Hydra-Stop product line for
$15.0 million
in cash, resulting in a pre-tax gain on the sale of
$5.8 million
. In addition, the Company can earn up to
$2 million
based on the achievement of financial objectives for net sales in 2016 and 2017. The results of Hydra-Stop were reported within the Fluid & Metering Technologies segment, as part of the Water platform, and generated
$7.5 million
of revenues in 2016 through the date of sale.
On September 9, 2016, the Company completed the sale of its Melles Griot KK subsidiary for
$17.5 million
in cash, resulting in a pre-tax loss on the sale of
$7.9 million
. The results of Melles Griot KK were reported within the Health & Science Technologies segment, as part of the IDEX Optics and Photonics platform, and generated
$13.1 million
of revenues in 2016 through the date of sale.
2015 Divestitures
On July 31, 2015, the Company completed the sale of its Ismatec product line for
$27.7 million
in cash, resulting in a pre-tax gain on the sale of
$18.1 million
. The results of Ismatec were reported within the Health & Science Technologies segment, as part of the Scientific Fluidics platform, and generated
$5.3 million
of revenues in 2015 through the date of sale.
3. Business Segments
The Company has
three
reportable business segments: Fluid & Metering Technologies, Health & Science Technologies and Fire & Safety/Diversified Products.
The Fluid & Metering Technologies segment designs, produces and distributes positive displacement pumps, flow meters, injectors, and other fluid-handling pump modules and systems and provides flow monitoring and other services for the water and wastewater industries. The Health & Science Technologies segment designs, produces and distributes a wide range of precision fluidics, rotary lobe pumps, centrifugal and positive displacement pumps, roll compaction and drying systems used in beverage, food processing, pharmaceutical and cosmetics, pneumatic components and sealing solutions, very high precision, low-flow rate pumping solutions required in analytical instrumentation, clinical diagnostics and drug discovery, high performance molded and extruded, biocompatible medical devices and implantables, air compressors used in medical, dental and industrial applications,
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
optical components and coatings for applications in the fields of scientific research, defense, biotechnology, aerospace, semi-conductor, telecommunications and electronics manufacturing, laboratory and commercial equipment used in the production of micro and nano scale materials, precision photonic solutions used in life sciences, research and defense markets, and precision gear technologies that meet exacting original equipment manufacturer specifications. The Fire & Safety/Diversified Products segment produces firefighting pumps and controls, valves, monitors, nozzles, rescue tools, lifting bags and other components and systems for the fire and rescue industry, engineered stainless steel banding and clamping devices used in a variety of industrial and commercial applications, and precision equipment for dispensing, metering and mixing colorants and paints used in a variety of retail and commercial businesses around the world.
Information on the Company’s business segments is presented below, based on the nature of products and services offered. The Company evaluates performance based on several factors, of which operating income is the primary financial measure. Intersegment sales are accounted for as if the sales were to third parties.
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Net sales
Fluid & Metering Technologies
External customers
$
208,164
$
211,971
$
641,508
$
644,886
Intersegment sales
171
130
480
756
Total group sales
208,335
212,101
641,988
645,642
Health & Science Technologies
External customers
183,453
184,816
556,157
550,612
Intersegment sales
111
77
318
1,806
Total group sales
183,564
184,893
556,475
552,418
Fire & Safety/Diversified Products
External customers
138,739
107,004
384,959
325,372
Intersegment sales
28
5
37
200
Total group sales
138,767
107,009
384,996
325,572
Intersegment elimination
(310
)
(212
)
(835
)
(2,762
)
Total net sales
$
530,356
$
503,791
$
1,582,624
$
1,520,870
Operating income
Fluid & Metering Technologies
$
55,600
$
46,910
$
160,866
$
154,665
Health & Science Technologies
37,204
38,371
119,028
117,888
Fire & Safety/Diversified Products
32,189
32,536
91,709
91,180
Corporate office income (expense) and other
(1)
(16,136
)
3,996
(47,213
)
(30,254
)
Total operating income
108,857
121,813
324,390
333,479
Interest expense
11,913
10,229
33,607
31,410
Other (income) expense - net
(2,364
)
(693
)
(4,982
)
(1,589
)
Income before income taxes
$
99,308
$
112,277
$
295,765
$
303,658
(1)
2016 includes a $2.1 million loss on sale of businesses and 2015 includes an $18.1 million gain on the sale of business.
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
September 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Assets
Fluid & Metering Technologies
$
1,084,118
$
1,125,266
Health & Science Technologies
1,323,130
1,108,302
Fire & Safety/Diversified Products
741,427
448,867
Corporate office
113,789
123,008
Total assets
$
3,262,464
$
2,805,443
4. Earnings Per Common Share
Earnings per common share (“EPS”) are computed by dividing net income by the weighted average number of shares of common stock (basic) plus common stock equivalents outstanding (diluted) during the period. Common stock equivalents consist of stock options, which have been included in the calculation of weighted average shares outstanding using the treasury stock method, restricted stock, performance share units, and shares issuable in connection with certain deferred compensation agreements (“DCUs”).
ASC 260,
Earnings Per Share,
provides that all outstanding unvested share-based payment awards that contain rights to nonforfeitable dividends participate in undistributed earnings with common shareholders. If awards are considered participating securities, the Company is required to apply the two-class method of computing basic and diluted earnings per share. The Company has determined that its outstanding shares of restricted stock are participating securities. Accordingly, earnings per common share are computed using the more dilutive of the treasury stock method and the two-class method prescribed by ASC 260.
Basic weighted average shares reconciles to diluted weighted average shares as follows:
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Basic weighted average common shares outstanding
75,819
76,831
75,753
77,431
Dilutive effect of stock options, restricted stock, performance share units and DCUs
1,061
815
989
835
Diluted weighted average common shares outstanding
76,880
77,646
76,742
78,266
Options to purchase approximately
0.1 million
and
0.9 million
shares of common stock for the three and
nine months ended September 30, 2016
, respectively, and
0.9 million
and
0.5 million
shares of common stock for the three and
nine
months ended
September 30, 2015
were not included in the computation of diluted EPS because the effect of their inclusion would be antidilutive.
5. Inventories
The components of inventories as of
September 30, 2016
and
December 31, 2015
were:
September 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Raw materials and component parts
$
166,205
$
141,671
Work in process
37,001
32,387
Finished goods
72,807
65,066
Total
$
276,013
$
239,124
Inventories are stated at the lower of cost or market. Cost, which includes material, labor and factory overhead, is determined on a FIFO basis.
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NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
6. Goodwill and Intangible Assets
The changes in the carrying amount of goodwill for the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
, by reportable business segment, were as follows:
Fluid &
Metering
Technologies
Health &
Science
Technologies
Fire & Safety/
Diversified
Products
Total
Balance at December 31, 2015
$
584,770
$
590,605
$
221,154
$
1,396,529
Foreign currency translation
3,151
(4,820
)
1,638
(31
)
Acquisitions
—
132,381
147,823
280,204
Disposition of businesses
(3,594
)
(9,140
)
—
(12,734
)
Acquisition adjustments
(1,623
)
547
—
(1,076
)
Balance at September 30, 2016
$
582,704
$
709,573
$
370,615
$
1,662,892
ASC 350,
Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets,
requires that goodwill be tested for impairment at the reporting unit level on an annual basis and between annual tests if an event occurs, or circumstances change, that would more likely than not reduce the fair value of the reporting unit below its carrying value. Annually, on October 31, goodwill and other acquired intangible assets with indefinite lives are tested for impairment. Based on the results of our annual impairment test at October 31,
2015
, all reporting units had a fair value that was more than
70%
greater than the carrying value, except for our IDEX Optics and Photonics (“IOP”) and Valves reporting units. Our IOP reporting unit had a fair value that was approximately
20%
in excess of the carrying value and our Valves reporting unit had a fair value near its carrying value as a result of the formation of this reporting unit in conjunction with our Alfa acquisition in June 2015. Due to the divestitures in the third quarter of 2016, the Company performed interim impairment tests at the Water and IOP reporting units. As a result of these interim impairment tests, the Company concluded that both reporting units had fair values in excess of their carrying values. The Water reporting unit had a fair value that was significantly in excess of its carrying value and the IOP reporting unit had a fair value that was approximately
20%
in excess of its carrying value, both of which are consistent with our annual impairment test at October 31, 2015.
The following table provides the gross carrying value and accumulated amortization for each major class of intangible assets at
September 30, 2016
and
December 31, 2015
:
At September 30, 2016
At December 31, 2015
Gross
Carrying
Amount
Accumulated
Amortization
Net
Weighted
Average
Life
Gross
Carrying
Amount
Accumulated
Amortization
Net
Amortized intangible assets:
Patents
$
10,180
$
(6,772
)
$
3,408
11
$
10,202
$
(6,175
)
$
4,027
Trade names
118,983
(42,190
)
76,793
16
110,658
(38,696
)
71,962
Customer relationships
384,141
(162,524
)
221,617
12
257,071
(144,134
)
112,937
Non-compete agreements
—
—
—
3
794
(775
)
19
Unpatented technology
117,455
(48,281
)
69,174
11
78,562
(42,745
)
35,817
Other
6,599
(6,061
)
538
10
6,554
(5,579
)
975
Total amortized intangible assets
637,358
(265,828
)
371,530
463,841
(238,104
)
225,737
Indefinite lived intangible assets:
Banjo trade name
62,100
—
62,100
62,100
—
62,100
Akron Brass trade name
28,800
—
28,800
—
—
—
Total intangible assets
$
728,258
$
(265,828
)
$
462,430
$
525,941
$
(238,104
)
$
287,837
The Banjo trade name is an indefinite lived intangible asset which is tested for impairment on an annual basis in accordance with ASC 350 or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that the asset might be impaired. In the first
nine
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
months of
2016
, there were no triggering events or changes that would have required a review. Based on the results of our annual impairment test at October 31,
2015
, the fair value of the Banjo trade name was greater than
20%
in excess of the carrying value.
The Akron Brass trade name is an indefinite lived intangible asset that was generated as a result of the Akron Brass acquisition in March 2016 and it will be tested for impairment on an annual basis in accordance with ASC 350 or more frequently if events or changes in circumstances indicate that the asset might be impaired.
Amortization of intangible assets was
$12.8 million
and
$11.2 million
for the
three months ended September 30, 2016
and
2015
, respectively. Amortization of intangible assets was
$28.4 million
and
$26.6 million
for the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
and
2015
, respectively. Based on the intangible asset balances as of
September 30, 2016
, amortization expense is expected to approximate
$14.0 million
for the remaining
three
months of
2016
,
$40.3 million
in
2017
,
$34.5 million
in
2018
,
$33.0 million
in
2019
and
$32.2 million
in
2020
.
7. Accrued Expenses
The components of accrued expenses as of
September 30, 2016
and
December 31, 2015
were:
September 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Payroll and related items
$
62,703
$
67,209
Management incentive compensation
13,755
12,599
Income taxes payable
11,409
3,836
Insurance
8,979
9,505
Warranty
6,036
7,936
Deferred revenue
11,200
9,885
Restructuring
2,258
6,636
Liability for uncertain tax positions
2,711
3,498
Accrued interest
11,518
1,230
Contingent consideration for acquisition
—
4,705
Other
30,247
26,633
Total accrued expenses
$
160,816
$
153,672
8. Other Noncurrent Liabilities
The components of other noncurrent liabilities as of
September 30, 2016
and
December 31, 2015
were:
September 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Pension and retiree medical obligations
$
98,422
$
76,190
Liability for uncertain tax positions
3,030
4,252
Deferred revenue
1,828
3,763
Other
16,795
18,160
Total other noncurrent liabilities
$
120,075
$
102,365
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NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
9. Borrowings
Borrowings at
September 30, 2016
and
December 31, 2015
consisted of the following:
September 30,
2016
December 31,
2015
Revolving Facility
$
255,130
$
195,000
4.5% Senior Notes, due December 2020
300,000
300,000
4.2% Senior Notes, due December 2021
350,000
350,000
3.2% Senior Notes, due June 2023
100,000
—
3.37% Senior Notes, due June 2025
100,000
—
Other borrowings
1,562
2,436
Total borrowings
1,106,692
847,436
Less current portion
1,171
1,087
Less deferred debt issuance costs
4,664
5,203
Less unaccreted debt discount
1,256
1,439
Total long-term borrowings
$
1,099,601
$
839,707
On June 13, 2016, the Company completed a private placement of
$100 million
aggregate principal amount of
3.20%
Senior Notes due June 13, 2023 and
$100 million
aggregate principal amount of
3.37%
Senior Notes due June 13, 2025 (collectively, the “Notes”) pursuant to a Note Purchase Agreement, dated June 13, 2016 (the “Purchase Agreement”). Each series of Notes bears interest at the stated amount per annum, which is payable semi-annually in arrears on each June 13
th
and December 13
th
. The Notes are unsecured obligations of the Company and rank pari passu in right of payment with all of the Company’s other unsecured, unsubordinated debt. The Company may at any time prepay all, or any portion of the Notes; provided that such portion is greater than
5%
of the aggregate principal amount of Notes then outstanding. In the event of a prepayment, the Company will pay an amount equal to par plus accrued interest plus a make-whole amount. In addition, the Company may repurchase Notes by making an offer to all holders of the Notes, subject to certain conditions.
The Purchase Agreement contains certain covenants that restrict the Company’s ability to, among other things, transfer or sell assets, incur indebtedness, create liens, transact with affiliates and engage in certain mergers or consolidations or other change of control transactions. In addition, the Company must comply with a leverage ratio and interest coverage ratio, as further described below, and the Purchase Agreement also limits the outstanding principal amount of priority debt that may be incurred by the Company to
15%
of consolidated assets. The Purchase Agreement provides for customary events of default. In the case of an event of default arising from specified events of bankruptcy or insolvency, all of the outstanding Notes will become due and payable immediately without further action or notice. In the case of payment event of default, any holder of the Notes affected thereby may declare all the Notes held by it due and payable immediately. In the case of any other event of default, a majority of the holders of Notes may declare all of the Notes to be due and payable immediately.
On June 23, 2015, the Company entered into a credit agreement (the “Credit Agreement”) along with certain of its subsidiaries, as borrowers (the “Borrowers”), Bank of America, N.A., as administrative agent, swing line lender and an issuer of letters of credit, with other agents party thereto. The Credit Agreement replaces the Company’s existing
five
-year,
$700 million
credit agreement, dated as of June 27, 2011, which was due to expire on June 27, 2016.
The Credit Agreement consists of a revolving credit facility (the “Revolving Facility”) in an aggregate principal amount of
$700 million
, with a final maturity date of
June 23, 2020
. The maturity date may be extended under certain conditions for an additional
one
-year term. Up to
$75 million
of the Revolving Facility is available for the issuance of letters of credit. Additionally, up to
$50 million
of the Revolving Facility is available to the Company for swing line loans, available on a same-day basis.
Proceeds of the Revolving Facility are available for use by the Borrowers for acquisitions, working capital and other general corporate purposes, including refinancing existing debt of the Company and its subsidiaries. The Company may request increases in the lending commitments under the Credit Agreement, but the aggregate lending commitments pursuant to such increases may not exceed
$350 million
. The Company has the right, subject to certain conditions set forth in the Credit Agreement, to designate certain foreign subsidiaries of the Company as borrowers under the Credit Agreement. In connection with any such designation,
the Company is required to guarantee the obligations of any such subsidiaries.
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NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
Borrowings under the Credit Agreement bear interest, at either an alternate base rate or an adjusted LIBOR rate plus, in each case, an applicable margin. Such applicable margin is based on the Company’s senior, unsecured, long-term debt rating and can range from
.005%
to
1.50%
. Based on the Company’s credit rating at
September 30, 2016
, the applicable margin was
1.10%
, resulting in a weighted average interest rate of
1.34%
at
September 30, 2016
. Interest is payable (a) in the case of base rate loans, quarterly, and (b) in the case of LIBOR rate loans, on the maturity date of the borrowing, or quarterly from the effective date for borrowings exceeding three months.
The Credit Agreement requires payment to the lenders of a facility fee based upon (a) the amount of the lenders’ commitments under the credit facility from time to time and (b) the applicable corporate credit ratings of the Company. Voluntary prepayments of any loans and voluntary reductions of the unutilized portion of the commitments under the credit facility are permissible without penalty, subject to break funding payments and minimum notice and minimum reduction amount requirements.
The negative covenants include, among other things, limitations (each of which is subject to customary exceptions for
financings of this type) on our ability to grant liens; enter into transactions resulting in fundamental changes (such as mergers or sales of all or substantially all of the assets of the Company); restrict subsidiary dividends or other subsidiary distributions; enter into transactions with the Company’s affiliates; and incur certain additional subsidiary debt.
The Credit Agreement also contains customary events of default (subject to grace periods, as appropriate) including among others: nonpayment of principal, interest or fees; breach of the representations or warranties in any material respect; breach of the financial, affirmative or negative covenants; payment default on, or acceleration of, other material indebtedness; bankruptcy or insolvency; material judgments entered against the Company or any of its subsidiaries; certain specified events under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended; certain changes in control of the Company; and the invalidity or unenforceability of the Credit Agreement or other documents associated with the Credit Agreement.
At
September 30, 2016
,
$255.1 million
was outstanding under the Revolving Facility, with
$8.2 million
of outstanding letters of credit, resulting in net available borrowing capacity under the Revolving Facility at
September 30, 2016
of approximately
$436.7 million
.
Other borrowings of
$1.6 million
at
September 30, 2016
consisted primarily of debt at international locations maintained for working capital purposes. Interest is payable on the outstanding debt balances at rates ranging from
0.9%
to
2.8%
per annum.
There are
two
key financial covenants that the Company is required to maintain in connection with the Revolving Facility and the Notes, a minimum interest coverage ratio of
3.0
to
1
and a maximum leverage ratio of
3.50
to
1
. At
September 30, 2016
, the Company was in compliance with both of these financial covenants. There are no financial covenants relating to the
4.5%
Senior Notes or
4.2%
Senior Notes; however, both are subject to cross-default provisions.
10. Derivative Instruments
The Company enters into cash flow hedges from time to time to reduce the exposure to variability in certain expected future cash flows. The type of cash flow hedges the Company enters into includes foreign currency contracts and interest rate exchange agreements that effectively convert a portion of floating-rate debt to fixed-rate debt and are designed to reduce the impact of interest rate changes on future interest expense.
The effective portion of gains or losses on interest rate exchange agreements is reported in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) in shareholders’ equity and reclassified into net income in the same period or periods in which the hedged transaction affects net income. See Note 13 for the amount of loss reclassified into income for interest rate contracts for the
nine months ended
September 30, 2016
and
2015
. The remaining gain or loss in excess of the cumulative change in the present value of future cash flows or the hedged item, if any, is recognized into net income during the period of change.
Fair values relating to derivative financial instruments reflect the estimated amounts that the Company would receive or pay to sell or buy the contracts based on quoted market prices of comparable contracts at each balance sheet date. As of
September 30, 2016
, the Company did not have any interest rate contracts outstanding.
In 2010 and 2011, the Company entered into
two
separate forward starting interest rate contracts in anticipation of the issuance of the
4.2%
Senior Notes and the
4.5%
Senior Notes. The Company cash settled these two interest rate contracts in 2010 and 2011 for a total of
$68.9 million
, which is being amortized into interest expense over the
10
year term of the debt instruments. Approximately
$6.7 million
of the pre-tax amount included in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) in shareholders’
15
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
equity at
September 30, 2016
will be recognized to net income over the next 12 months as the underlying hedged transactions are realized.
11. Fair Value Measurements
ASC 820,
Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures,
defines fair value, provides guidance for measuring fair value and requires certain disclosures. This standard discusses valuation techniques, such as the market approach (comparable market prices), the income approach (present value of future income or cash flow), and the cost approach (cost to replace the service capacity of an asset or replacement cost). The standard utilizes a fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs to valuation techniques used to measure fair value into three broad levels. The following is a brief description of those three levels:
•
Level 1: Observable inputs such as quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.
•
Level 2: Inputs, other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. These include quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets and quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in markets that are not active.
•
Level 3: Unobservable inputs that reflect the reporting entity’s own assumptions.
The following table summarizes the basis used to measure the Company’s financial assets at fair value on a recurring basis in the balance sheets at
September 30, 2016
and
December 31, 2015
:
Basis of Fair Value Measurements
Balance at
September 30, 2016
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Money market investment
$
18,210
$
18,210
$
—
$
—
Available for sale securities
5,705
5,705
—
—
Basis of Fair Value Measurements
Balance at
December 31, 2015
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Money market investment
$
21,931
$
21,931
$
—
$
—
Available for sale securities
4,794
4,794
—
—
Contingent consideration
(4,705
)
—
—
(4,705
)
There were no transfers of assets or liabilities between Level 1 and Level 2 during the
three and nine months ended
September 30, 2016
or the year ended
December 31, 2015
.
In determining the fair value of the contingent consideration potentially due on the acquisition of CPS, the Company used probability weighted estimates of EBITDA during the earn-out period. The
$4.7 million
represented management’s best estimate of the liability as of the opening balance sheet date and December 31, 2015, based on a range of outcomes of CPS’s 12 month operating results, from July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016. During the six months ended June 30, 2016, the Company re-evaluated the contingent consideration arrangement and fully reversed the
$4.7 million
liability based on CPS’s actual operating results from July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016. The
$4.7 million
reversal was recognized as a benefit within Selling, general and administrative expenses, of which
$3.7 million
was recognized in March 2016 and the remaining
$1.0 million
was recognized in June 2016.
The carrying value of our cash and cash equivalents, accounts receivable, accounts payable and accrued expenses approximates their fair values because of the short term nature of these instruments. At
September 30, 2016
, the fair value of the outstanding indebtedness under our Revolving Facility,
3.2%
Senior Notes,
3.37%
Senior Notes,
4.5%
Senior Notes and
4.2%
Senior Notes, based on quoted market prices and current market rates for debt with similar credit risk and maturity, was approximately
$1,143.2 million
compared to the carrying value of
$1,103.9 million
. This fair value measurement is classified as Level 2 within the fair value hierarchy since it is determined based upon significant inputs observable in the market, including interest rates on recent financing transactions to entities with a credit rating similar to ours.
16
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
12. Restructuring
During the fourth quarter of 2015, the Company recorded restructuring costs as part of the 2015 restructuring initiatives that support the implementation of key strategic efforts designed to facilitate long-term, sustainable growth through cost reduction actions, primarily consisting of employee reductions. The costs incurred related to these initiatives were included in Restructuring expenses in the Consolidated Statements of Operations while the related accruals were included in Accrued expenses in the Consolidated Balance Sheets. Severance costs primarily consisted of severance benefits through payroll continuation, COBRA subsidies, outplacement services, conditional separation costs and employer tax liabilities.
Restructuring accruals of
$2.3 million
and
$6.6 million
at
September 30, 2016
and
December 31, 2015
, respectively, are recorded in Accrued expenses in the Consolidated Balance Sheets. Severance benefits are expected to be paid in the next six months using cash from operations. The changes in the restructuring accrual for the
nine
months ended
September 30, 2016
are as follows:
Restructuring
Balance at January 1, 2016
$
6,636
Payments, utilization and other
(4,378
)
Balance at September 30, 2016
$
2,258
13. Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)
The components of other comprehensive income (loss) are as follows:
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2016
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2015
Pre-tax
Tax
Net of tax
Pre-tax
Tax
Net of tax
Cumulative translation adjustment
$
4,611
$
—
$
4,611
$
(21,661
)
$
—
$
(21,661
)
Pension and other postretirement adjustments
915
(321
)
594
1,215
(397
)
818
Reclassification adjustments for derivatives
1,701
(619
)
1,082
1,748
(634
)
1,114
Total other comprehensive income (loss)
$
7,227
$
(940
)
$
6,287
$
(18,698
)
$
(1,031
)
$
(19,729
)
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2016
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2015
Pre-tax
Tax
Net of tax
Pre-tax
Tax
Net of tax
Cumulative translation adjustment
$
(6,215
)
$
—
$
(6,215
)
$
(54,555
)
$
—
$
(54,555
)
Pension and other postretirement adjustments
2,820
(964
)
1,856
3,605
(1,187
)
2,418
Reclassification adjustments for derivatives
5,144
(1,872
)
3,272
5,287
(1,917
)
3,370
Total other comprehensive income (loss)
$
1,749
$
(2,836
)
$
(1,087
)
$
(45,663
)
$
(3,104
)
$
(48,767
)
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
The following table summarizes the amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income to net income during the three and
nine months ended September 30, 2016
and
2015
:
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Pension and other postretirement plans
Amortization of service cost
$
915
$
1,215
$
2,820
$
3,605
Total before tax
915
1,215
2,820
3,605
Provision for income taxes
(321
)
(397
)
(964
)
(1,187
)
Total net of tax
$
594
$
818
$
1,856
$
2,418
Derivatives
Reclassification adjustments
$
1,701
$
1,748
$
5,144
$
5,287
Total before tax
1,701
1,748
5,144
5,287
Provision for income taxes
(619
)
(634
)
(1,872
)
(1,917
)
Total net of tax
$
1,082
$
1,114
$
3,272
$
3,370
The Company recognizes net periodic benefit cost in both Selling, general and administrative expenses and Cost of sales, depending on the functional area of the underlying employees included in the plans.
14. Common and Preferred Stock
On
December 1, 2015
, the Company’s Board of Directors approved a
$300.0 million
increase in the authorized level for repurchases of common stock. Repurchases will be funded with future cash flow generation or borrowings available under the Revolving Facility. During the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
, the Company purchased a total of
739 thousand
shares at a cost of
$55.0 million
. During the
nine months ended September 30, 2015
, the Company purchased
2.4 million
shares at a cost of
$179.4 million
, of which
$4.3 million
was settled in
October
2015
. As of
September 30, 2016
, the amount of share repurchase authorization remaining is
$580.0 million
.
At
September 30, 2016
and
December 31, 2015
, the Company had
150 million
shares of authorized common stock, with a par value of
$.01
per share, and
5 million
shares of authorized preferred stock, with a par value of
$.01
per share.
No
preferred stock was outstanding at
September 30, 2016
or
December 31, 2015
.
15. Share-Based Compensation
Stock Options
Weighted average option fair values and assumptions for the periods specified are disclosed below. The fair value of each option grant was estimated on the date of the grant using the Binomial lattice option pricing model.
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Weighted average fair value of option grants
$21.88
$19.98
$18.47
$20.34
Dividend yield
1.53%
1.65%
1.69%
1.44%
Volatility
29.60%
29.64%
29.71%
29.91%
Risk-free forward interest rate
0.51% - 2.01%
0.29% - 3.37%
0.53% - 2.50%
0.24% - 2.82%
Expected life (in years)
5.91
6.16
5.91
5.93
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
Total compensation cost for stock options is as follows:
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Cost of goods sold
$
92
$
91
$
354
$
441
Selling, general and administrative expenses
1,278
1,297
5,084
4,987
Total expense before income taxes
1,370
1,388
5,438
5,428
Income tax benefit
(441
)
(440
)
(1,727
)
(1,709
)
Total expense after income taxes
$
929
$
948
$
3,711
$
3,719
A summary of the Company’s stock option activity as of
September 30, 2016
, and changes during the
nine months ended
September 30, 2016
, are presented in the following table:
Stock Options
Shares
Weighted
Average
Price
Weighted-Average
Remaining
Contractual Term
Aggregate
Intrinsic
Value
Outstanding at January 1, 2016
2,266,433
$
54.05
6.58
$
51,918,028
Granted
558,420
75.01
Exercised
(526,918
)
43.52
Forfeited
(162,969
)
72.69
Outstanding at September 30, 2016
2,134,966
$
60.71
6.95
$
70,154,123
Vested and expected to vest as of September 30, 2016
2,013,213
$
59.83
6.84
$
67,927,238
Exercisable at September 30, 2016
1,092,881
$
48.34
5.40
$
49,426,856
Restricted Stock
Restricted stock awards generally cliff vest after
three
years for employees and non-employee directors. Unvested restricted stock carries dividend and voting rights and the sale of the shares is restricted prior to the date of vesting. A summary of the Company’s restricted stock activity as of
September 30, 2016
, and changes during the
nine months ended
September 30, 2016
, are presented as follows:
Restricted Stock
Shares
Weighted-Average
Grant Date Fair
Value
Unvested at January 1, 2016
272,755
$
65.90
Granted
75,640
78.66
Vested
(104,427
)
51.73
Forfeited
(25,440
)
74.54
Unvested at September 30, 2016
218,528
$
76.08
Dividends are paid on restricted stock awards whose fair value is equal to the market price of the Company’s stock at the date of the grant.
19
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
Total compensation cost for restricted shares is as follows:
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Cost of goods sold
$
64
$
9
$
325
$
245
Selling, general and administrative expenses
751
449
3,249
3,962
Total expense before income taxes
815
458
3,574
4,207
Income tax benefit
(216
)
(184
)
(1,053
)
(1,239
)
Total expense after income taxes
$
599
$
274
$
2,521
$
2,968
Cash-Settled Restricted Stock
The Company also maintains a cash-settled share based compensation plan for certain employees. Cash-settled restricted stock awards generally cliff vest after
three
years. A summary of the Company’s unvested cash-settled restricted stock activity as of
September 30, 2016
, and changes during the
nine months ended
September 30, 2016
, are presented in the following table:
Cash-Settled Restricted Stock
Shares
Weighted-Average
Fair Value
Unvested at January 1, 2016
110,860
$
76.61
Granted
39,450
93.57
Vested
(35,960
)
72.54
Forfeited
(9,465
)
93.57
Unvested at September 30, 2016
104,885
$
93.57
Dividend equivalents are paid on certain cash-settled restricted stock awards. Total compensation cost for cash-settled restricted stock is as follows:
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Cost of goods sold
$
307
$
29
$
627
$
533
Selling, general and administrative expenses
881
164
1,842
1,089
Total expense before income taxes
1,188
193
2,469
1,622
Income tax benefit
(170
)
(28
)
(354
)
(251
)
Total expense after income taxes
$
1,018
$
165
$
2,115
$
1,371
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
Performance Share Units
Weighted average performance share unit fair values and assumptions for the period specified are disclosed below. The performance share units are market condition awards and have been assessed at fair value on the date of grant using a Monte Carlo simulation model.
Three and Nine Months Ended September 30,
2016
2015
Weighted average fair value of performance share units
$111.42
$95.07
Dividend yield
—%
—%
Volatility
17.99%
19.14%
Risk-free forward interest rate
0.89%
1.01%
Expected life (in years)
2.86
2.86
A summary of the Company’s performance share unit activity as of
September 30, 2016
, and changes during the
nine months ended
September 30, 2016
, are presented in the following table:
Performance Share Units
Shares
Weighted-Average
Grant Date Fair
Value
Unvested at January 1, 2016
146,275
$
94.80
Granted
85,130
111.42
Vested
—
—
Forfeited
(31,025
)
99.52
Unvested at September 30, 2016
200,380
$
101.13
The Company granted
43,800
performance share units in February 2013, which vested on December 31, 2015. Based on the Company’s relative total shareholder return rank during the
three
year period ended December 31, 2015, the Company achieved a
200%
payout that resulted in
87,600
shares issued in February 2016.
Total compensation cost for performance share units is as follows:
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Cost of goods sold
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Selling, general and administrative expenses
348
953
3,844
3,478
Total expense before income taxes
348
953
3,844
3,478
Income tax benefit
(98
)
(323
)
(1,266
)
(1,161
)
Total expense after income taxes
$
250
$
630
$
2,578
$
2,317
The Company’s policy is to recognize compensation cost on a straight-line basis, assuming forfeitures, over the requisite service period for the entire award. Classification of stock compensation cost within the Consolidated Statements of Operations is consistent with classification of cash compensation for the same employees.
As of
September 30, 2016
, there was
$11.9 million
of total unrecognized compensation cost related to stock options that is expected to be recognized over a weighted-average period of
1.5
years,
$10 million
of total unrecognized compensation cost related to restricted stock that is expected to be recognized over a weighted-average period of
1.1
years, and
$7.6 million
of total unrecognized compensation cost related to performance share units that is expected to be recognized over a weighted-average period of
1.1
years.
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
16. Retirement Benefits
The Company sponsors several qualified and nonqualified defined benefit and defined contribution pension plans and other postretirement plans for its employees. The following tables provide the components of net periodic benefit cost for its major defined benefit plans and its other postretirement plans.
Pension Benefits
Three Months Ended September 30,
2016
2015
U.S.
Non-U.S.
U.S.
Non-U.S.
Service cost
$
181
$
331
$
214
$
377
Interest cost
788
344
956
437
Expected return on plan assets
(1,233
)
(203
)
(1,186
)
(282
)
Net amortization
766
241
906
405
Net periodic benefit cost
$
502
$
713
$
890
$
937
Pension Benefits
Nine Months Ended September 30,
2016
2015
U.S.
Non-U.S.
U.S.
Non-U.S.
Service cost
$
769
$
934
$
965
$
1,134
Interest cost
2,282
1,049
2,831
1,305
Expected return on plan assets
(3,583
)
(642
)
(3,682
)
(838
)
Net amortization
2,420
722
2,585
1,334
Net periodic benefit cost
$
1,888
$
2,063
$
2,699
$
2,935
Other Postretirement Benefits
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Service cost
$
181
$
168
$
494
$
506
Interest cost
224
208
622
626
Net amortization
(154
)
(95
)
(462
)
(314
)
Net periodic benefit cost
$
251
$
281
$
654
$
818
The Company previously disclosed in its financial statements for the year ended
December 31, 2015
, that it expected to contribute approximately
$6.1 million
to its defined benefit plans and
$0.9 million
to its other postretirement benefit plans in
2016
. As of
September 30, 2016
, the Company now expects to contribute
$4.5 million
to its defined benefit plans and
$0.9 million
to its other postretirement benefit plans in
2016
. The Company contributed a total of
$4.5 million
during the first
nine
months of
2016
to fund these plans.
During the third quarter of 2016, the Company implemented a program offering certain former U.S. employees with a vested pension benefit an option to take a one-time lump sum distribution rather than future monthly pension payments. The Company expects to make approximately
$8.0 million
to
$10.0 million
in payments from the plans in connection with this action and to incur an estimated pre-tax settlement loss of
$3.0 million
to
$6.0 million
in the fourth quarter of 2016. However, since the final result of the offering is presently unknown, these amounts are subject to change.
17. Legal Proceedings
The Company is party to various legal proceedings arising in the ordinary course of business, none of which are expected to have a material impact on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows.
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IDEX CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
NOTES TO CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Amounts in thousands except share data and where otherwise indicated)
(unaudited)
18. Income Taxes
The Company’s provision for income taxes is based upon estimated annual tax rates for the year applied to federal, state and foreign income. The provision for income taxes
decreased
to
$29.4 million
in the
third quarter
of
2016
from
$32.8 million
in the same period of
2015
. The effective tax rate
increased
to
29.6%
for the
third quarter
of
2016
compared to
29.2%
in the same period of
2015
due to the incurrence of an additional
$5.2 million
of foreign withholding taxes, tax expense as a result of the divestiture of the Hydra-Stop product line and the prior year divestiture of the Ismatec product line. These unfavorable items were offset by tax benefits as a result of the divestiture of Melles Griot KK, certain return-to-provision adjustments, the early adoption of ASU 2016-09 and the related tax effects of share based payments now recognized in income, the enactment of the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 on December 18, 2015 which, beginning in 2015, permanently extended the U.S. R&D credit, as well as the mix of global pre-tax income among jurisdictions.
The provision for income taxes
decreased
to
$82.0 million
in the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
from
$88.6 million
in the same period of
2015
. The effective tax rate
decreased
to
27.7%
for the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
compared to
29.2%
in the same period of
2015
due tax benefits as a result of the divestiture of Melles Griot KK, certain return-to-provision adjustments, the early adoption of ASU 2016-09 and the related tax effects of share based payments now recognized in income, the enactment of the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 on December 18, 2015 which, beginning in 2015, permanently extended the U.S. R&D credit, as well as the mix of global pre-tax income among jurisdictions. These favorable items were offset by the incurrence of additional
$5.2 million
of foreign withholding taxes and tax expense as a result of the divestiture of the Hydra-Stop product line and the prior year divestiture of the Ismatec product line.
The Company and its subsidiaries file income tax returns in the U.S. federal jurisdiction, and various state and foreign jurisdictions. Due to the potential for resolution of federal, state and foreign examinations, and the expiration of various statutes of limitation, it is reasonably possible that the Company’s gross unrecognized tax benefits balance may change within the next twelve months by a range of
zero
to
$2.7 million
.
19. Subsequent Events
On October 10, 2016, the Company entered into a definitive agreement and completed the sale of its IETG and 40Seven subsidiaries, based in Leeds, United Kingdom for cash consideration of
$2.8 million
, subject to customary post-closing adjustments. The results of the subsidiaries were reported within the Fluid & Metering Technologies segment and generated revenues of
$12 million
in 2015.
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Item 2.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.
Cautionary Statement Under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act
This quarterly report on Form 10-Q, including the “Overview and Outlook” and the “Liquidity and Capital Resources” sections of this Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, contains “forward-looking” statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, as amended. These statements may relate to, among other things, capital expenditures, acquisitions, cost reductions, cash flow, revenues, earnings, market conditions, global economies and operating improvements, and are indicated by words or phrases such as “anticipate,” “estimate,” “plans,” “expects,” “projects,” “forecasts,” “should,” “could,” “will,” “management believes,” “the Company believes,” “the Company intends,” and similar words or phrases. These statements are subject to inherent uncertainties and risks that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated at the date of this report. The risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the following: economic and political consequences resulting from terrorist attacks and wars; levels of industrial activity and economic conditions in the U.S. and other countries around the world; pricing pressures and other competitive factors, and levels of capital spending in certain industries - all of which could have a material impact on order rates and IDEX’s results, particularly in light of the low levels of order backlogs it typically maintains; its ability to make acquisitions and to integrate and operate acquired businesses on a profitable basis; the relationship of the U.S. dollar to other currencies and its impact on pricing and cost competitiveness; political and economic conditions in foreign countries in which the company operates; interest rates; capacity utilization and the effect this has on costs; labor markets; market conditions and material costs; and developments with respect to contingencies, such as litigation and environmental matters. The forward-looking statements included here are only made as of the date of this report, and management undertakes no obligation to publicly update them to reflect subsequent events or circumstances, except as may be required by law. Investors are cautioned not to rely unduly on forward-looking statements when evaluating the information presented here.
Overview and Outlook
IDEX is an applied solutions company specializing in fluid and metering technologies, health and science technologies, and fire, safety and other diversified products built to customers’ specifications. IDEX’s products are sold in niche markets to a wide range of industries throughout the world. Accordingly, IDEX’s businesses are affected by levels of industrial activity and economic conditions in the U.S. and in other countries where it does business and by the relationship of the U.S. Dollar to other currencies. Levels of capacity utilization and capital spending in certain industries and overall industrial activity are among the factors that influence the demand for IDEX’s products.
The Company has three reportable business segments: Fluid & Metering Technologies (“FMT”), Health & Science Technologies (“HST”) and Fire & Safety/Diversified Products (“FSDP”). Within our three reportable segments, the Company maintains fifteen platforms where we focus on organic growth and strategic acquisitions. Each of our fifteen platforms is also a reporting unit, where we annually test goodwill for impairment.
The Fluid & Metering Technologies segment contains the Energy (comprised of Corken, Faure Herman, Liquid Controls, SAMPI, and Toptech), Valves (comprised of Alfa Valvole), Water (comprised of Pulsafeeder, Knight, ADS, and iPEK), Industrial (comprised of Richter, Viking, Aegis, Warren Rupp, and Trebor), and Agricultural (comprised of Banjo) platforms. The Health & Science Technologies segment contains the IDEX Optics & Photonics (comprised of CVI Melles Griot, Semrock, and AT Films), Scientific Fluidics (comprised of Eastern Plastics, Rheodyne, Sapphire Engineering, Upchurch, ERC, and CiDRA Precision Services), Material Processing Technologies (comprised of Quadro, Fitzpatrick, Microfluidics, and Matcon), Sealing Solutions (comprised of PPE, FTL, Novotema and SFC Koenig), Micropump, and Gast platforms. The Fire & Safety/Diversified Products segment is comprised of the Dispensing, Rescue (comprised of Lukas, Vetter, Hurst Jaws of Life, and Dinglee), Band-It, and Fire Suppression (comprised of Class 1, Hale, Akron Brass, AWG Fittings and Godiva) platforms.
The Fluid & Metering Technologies segment designs, produces and distributes positive displacement pumps, flow meters, injectors, and other fluid-handling pump modules and systems and provides flow monitoring and other services for the food, chemical, general industrial, water and wastewater, agricultural and energy industries.
The Health & Science Technologies segment designs, produces and distributes a wide range of precision fluidics, rotary lobe pumps, centrifugal and positive displacement pumps, roll compaction and drying systems used in beverage, food processing, pharmaceutical and cosmetics, pneumatic components and sealing solutions, very high precision, low-flow rate pumping solutions required in analytical instrumentation, clinical diagnostics and drug discovery, high performance molded and extruded, biocompatible medical devices and implantables, air compressors used in medical, dental and industrial applications, optical components and coatings for applications in the fields of scientific research, defense, biotechnology, aerospace, telecommunications and electronics manufacturing, laboratory and commercial equipment used in the production of micro and nano scale materials, precision photonic solutions used in life sciences, research and defense markets, and precision gear technologies that meet exacting original equipment manufacturer specifications.
24
Table of Contents
The Fire & Safety/Diversified Products segment produces firefighting pumps and controls, valves, monitors, nozzles, rescue tools, lifting bags and other components and systems for the fire and rescue industry, engineered stainless steel banding and clamping devices used in a variety of industrial and commercial applications, and precision equipment for dispensing, metering and mixing colorants and paints used in a variety of retail and commercial businesses around the world.
Management’s primary measurements of segment performance are sales, operating income, and operating margin. In addition, due to the highly acquisitive nature of the Company, the determination of operating income includes amortization of acquired intangible assets and, as a result, management reviews depreciation and amortization as a percentage of sales. These measures are monitored by management and significant changes in operating results versus current trends in end markets and variances from forecasts are analyzed with segment management.
This report references organic sales, a non-GAAP measure, that refers to sales calculated according to U.S. GAAP but excluding amounts from acquired or divested businesses during the first twelve months after acquisition or divestiture and the impact of foreign currency translation. The portion of sales attributable to foreign currency translation is calculated as the difference between (a) the period-to-period change in organic sales and (b) the period-to-period change in organic sales after applying prior period foreign exchange rates to the current year period. Management believes that reporting organic sales provides useful information to investors by helping identify underlying growth trends in our business and facilitating easier comparisons of our revenue performance with prior and future periods and to our peers. The Company excludes the effect of foreign currency translation from organic sales because foreign currency translation is not under management’s control, is subject to volatility and can obscure underlying business trends. The Company excludes the effect of acquisitions and divestitures because the nature, size, and number can vary dramatically from period to period and between the Company and its peers and can also obscure underlying business trends and make comparisons of long-term performance difficult.
EBITDA means earnings before interest, income taxes, depreciation and amortization. Given the acquisitive nature of the Company, which results in a higher level of amortization expense at recently acquired businesses, management uses EBITDA as an internal operating metric to provide another representation of the businesses performance across our three segments and for enterprise valuation purposes. Management believes that EBITDA is useful to investors as an indicator of the strength and performance of the Company and a way to evaluate and compare operating performance and value companies within our industry. Management believes EBITDA margin is useful for the same reason as EBITDA. EBITDA is also used to calculate certain financial covenants, as discussed in Note 9 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements in Part I, Item 1, “Financial Statements.”
Organic sales have been reconciled to net sales and EBITDA has been reconciled to net income in Item 2 under the heading “Non-GAAP Disclosures.” The reconciliation of segment EBITDA to net income was performed on a consolidated basis due to the fact that we do not allocate consolidated interest expense or the consolidated provision for income taxes to our segments.
The non-GAAP financial measures disclosed by the Company should not be considered a substitute for, or superior to, financial measures prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP, and the financial results prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP and the reconciliations from these results should be carefully evaluated.
Some of our key financial results for the three months ended
September 30, 2016
when compared to the same period from the prior year are as follows:
•
Sales of
$530 million
increased
5%
; organic sales (which excludes acquisitions, divestitures and foreign currency translation) were down 2%.
•
Operating income of
$109 million
decreased
11%
. Adjusted operating income of
$111 million
increased
2%
.
•
Net income
decreased
12%
to
$70 million
or
13%
of sales.
•
EBITDA of
$133 million
was
25%
of sales and covered interest expense by more than
11
times.
•
Diluted EPS of
$0.91
decreased
11
cents, or
11%
. Adjusted EPS of
$0.92
increased
3
cents, or
3%
.
Some of our key financial results for the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
when compared to the same period from the prior year are as follows:
•
Sales of $
1.6 billion
increased
4%
; organic sales (which excludes acquisitions, divestitures and foreign currency translation) were down 2%.
•
Operating income of $
324 million
decreased
3%
. Adjusted operating income of
$326 million
increased
2%
.
•
Net income
decreased
1%
to $
214 million
or
14%
of sales.
•
EBITDA of
$394 million
was
25%
of sales and covered interest expense by nearly
12
times.
•
Diluted EPS of $
2.78
increased
3 cent
s, or
1%
. Adjusted EPS of
$2.79
increased
17
cents, or
6%
.
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Given the Company’s current outlook, we are projecting fourth quarter
2016
adjusted EPS in the range of $0.92 to $0.94 with full year
2016
adjusted EPS of $3.72 to $3.74. We are also projecting full year revenue growth at 5% with full year organic revenue of negative 1%.
Results of Operations
The following is a discussion and analysis of our results of operations for the three and
nine
month periods ended
September 30, 2016
and
2015
. Segment operating income and EBITDA excludes unallocated corporate operating expenses of $16.1 million and operating income of $4.0 million for the
three months ended
September 30,
2016
and
2015
, respectively, and unallocated corporate operating expenses of $47.2 million and $30.3 million for the
nine months ended
September 30, 2016
and
2015
, respectively. Corporate operating expenses include a net loss on sale of businesses of $2.1 million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2016 and an $18.1 million gain on sale of businesses for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2015.
Consolidated Results for the
Three Months Ended September 30, 2016
Compared with the Same Period of
2015
(In thousands)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
Net sales
$
530,356
$
503,791
Operating income
108,857
121,813
Operating margin
20.5
%
24.2
%
For the
third quarter
of
2016
, Fluid & Metering Technologies contributed
39%
of sales,
44%
of operating income and
43%
of EBITDA; Health & Science Technologies accounted for
35%
of sales,
30%
of operating income and
33%
of EBITDA; and Fire & Safety/Diversified Products represented
26%
of sales, 26% of operating income and 24% of EBITDA. These percentages are calculated on the basis of total segment (not total Company) sales, operating income and EBITDA.
Sales in the
three months ended September 30, 2016
were
$530.4 million
, a
5%
increase
from the comparable period last year. This
increase
reflects an 8% net increase from acquisitions (Novotema - June 2015, Alfa - June 2015, CPS - July 2015, Akron Brass - March 2016, AWG Fittings - July 2016 and SFC Koenig - September 2016) and divestitures (Ismatec - July 2015, Hydra- Stop - July 2016 and Melles Griot KK - September 2016), 1% unfavorable foreign currency translation and a 2% decrease in organic sales. Sales to customers outside the U.S. represented approximately 48% of total sales in the
third
quarter of
2016
compared to 52% during the same period in
2015
.
Gross profit of
$230.9 million
in the
third quarter
of
2016
increased
$7.6 million
, or
3%
, from the same period in
2015
. Gross margin of
43.5%
in the
third quarter
of
2016
decreased
80
basis points from
44.3%
during the same period in
2015
. The
decrease
in gross margin is primarily due to $4.6 million in fair value inventory step-up charges related to the AWG Fittings and SFC Koenig acquisitions. The increase in gross profit is primarily due to the Akron Brass acquisition.
Selling, general and administrative expenses
increased
to
$120.0 million
in the
third quarter
of
2016
from
$114.8 million
during the same period of
2015
. The increase is primarily related to $10.5 million of incremental costs from acquisitions, partially offset by the benefits from prior year restructuring actions and cost controls. As a percentage of sales, selling, general and administrative expenses were
22.6%
for the
third quarter
of
2016
, down
20
basis points from the
22.8%
for the same period of
2015
.
Operating income of
$108.9 million
, in the
third quarter
of
2016
, was
down
from the
$121.8 million
recorded during the same period in
2015
, while operating margin of
20.5%
for the
third quarter
of
2016
, was down compared to
24.2%
recorded during the same period in
2015
. The decrease in operating income and operating margin was primarily due to an $18.1 million gain on sale of a business in 2015 compared to a $2.1 million loss on sale of businesses in 2016 and higher fair value inventory step-up charges related to 2016 acquisitions, partially offset by the incremental impact of acquisitions and prior year restructuring actions.
Other (income) expense - net was
$(2.4) million
in the
third
quarter of
2016
compared with
$(0.7) million
of other (income) expense - net recorded in the same period in
2015
, primarily due to higher foreign currency translation gains in 2016.
Interest expense of
$11.9 million
in the
third quarter
of
2016
was
up
from
$10.2 million
in
2015
primarily as a result of higher borrowings outstanding on the Revolving Facility and the Notes.
The provision for income taxes is based upon estimated annual tax rates for the year applied to federal, state and foreign income. The provision for income taxes of
$29.4 million
for the
third quarter
of
2016
decreased
compared to
$32.8 million
recorded in the same period of
2015
. The effective tax rate
increased
to
29.6%
for the
third quarter
of
2016
compared to
29.2%
in the same period of
2015
due to the incurrence of an additional $5.2 million of foreign withholding taxes, tax expense as a result of the
26
Table of Contents
divestiture of the Hydra-Stop product line and the prior year divestiture of the Ismatec product line. These unfavorable items were offset by tax benefits as a result of the divestiture of Melles Griot KK, certain return-to-provision adjustments, the early adoption of ASU 2016-09 and the related tax effects of share based payments now recognized in income, the enactment of the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 on December 18, 2015 which, beginning in 2015, permanently extended the U.S. R&D credit, as well as the mix of global pre-tax income among jurisdictions.
Net income in the
third quarter
of
2016
of
$69.9 million
decreased
from
$79.5 million
during the same period of
2015
. Diluted earnings per share in the
third quarter
of
2016
of
$0.91
decreased
$0.11
, or
11%
, compared with the same period in
2015
.
Fluid & Metering Technologies Segment
(In thousands)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
Net sales
$
208,335
$
212,101
Operating income
55,600
46,910
Operating margin
26.7
%
22.1
%
Sales of
$208.3 million
decreased
$3.8 million
, or
2%
, in the
third quarter
of
2016
compared with the same period of
2015
. This reflects a 1% decrease from divestitures (Hydra-Stop - July 2016) and a 1% unfavorable foreign currency translation. In the
third quarter
of
2016
, sales increased 4% domestically and decreased 9% internationally compared to the same period in
2015
. Sales to customers outside the U.S. were approximately 43% of total segment sales during the
third quarter
of
2016
compared with 46% during the same period in
2015
.
Sales decreased in our Energy platform in the third quarter of 2016 compared to the same period of 2015 due to challenges in the mobile and LPG markets partially offset by strength in the downstream OEM and aviation markets. Sales within our Industrial platform decreased compared to the third quarter of 2015 due to continued softness in the North American industrial distribution market driven by oil & gas end markets and lower project volume. Sales decreased in the Water platform compared to the third quarter of 2015, due to the divestiture of the Hydra-Stop product line as well as weakness in the United Kingdom and the chemical end market, partially offset by an increase in U.S. municipal service revenue. Sales within the Agricultural platform increased compared to the third quarter of 2015 as a result of increased sales volume to U.S. OEMs. Sales in the Valves platform decreased compared to 2015 as a result of softness in the oil and natural gas markets.
Operating income and operating margin of
$55.6 million
and
26.7%
, respectively, were
higher
than the
$46.9 million
and
22.1%
recorded in the
third quarter
of
2015
, primarily due to prior year restructuring actions and a fair value inventory step-up charge associated with the Alfa acquisition.
Health & Science Technologies Segment
(In thousands)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
Net sales
$
183,564
$
184,893
Operating income
37,204
38,371
Operating margin
20.3
%
20.8
%
Sales of
$183.6 million
decreased
$1.3 million
, or
1%
, in the
third quarter
of
2016
compared with the same period in
2015
. This reflects a 1% decrease in organic revenue, a 2% net increase from an acquisition (SFC Koenig - September 2016) and divestitures (Ismatec - July 2015 and Melles Griot KK - September 2016) and 2% unfavorable foreign currency translation. In the
third quarter
of
2016
, sales increased 10% domestically and decreased 8% internationally. Sales to customers outside the U.S. were approximately 53% of total segment sales in the
third quarter
of
2016
compared with 58% during the same period in
2015
.
Sales within our Material Processing Technologies platform decreased compared to the third quarter of 2015 primarily due to the delivery of large capital projects in 2015, partially offset by strength in the pharmaceutical business. Sales increased compared to the third quarter of 2015 within our Scientific Fluidics platform due to continued strong demand in the analytical instrumentation, in-vitro diagnostic and bio end markets, partially offset by the July 2015 disposition of our Ismatec product line. Sales within our Sealing Solutions platform increased compared to the third quarter of 2015 due to the acquisition of SFC Koenig and continued strength in semi-conductor markets, partially offset by continued softness in the oil & gas and heavy equipment markets. Sales within our Optics and Photonics platform decreased compared to the third quarter of 2015 due to the divestiture of Melles Griot KK and a slow down in the Korean business unit, partially offset by strength in the optical systems & shutters and optical filters
27
Table of Contents
end markets. Sales within our Gast platforms decreased compared to the third quarter of 2015 due to continued softness in the North American industrial markets. Sales within the Micropump platform increased compared to the third quarter of 2015 due to project wins within the printing end market.
Operating income and operating margin of
$37.2 million
and
20.3%
, respectively, in the
third quarter
of
2016
were
down
from the
$38.4 million
and
20.8%
recorded in the same period of
2015
, primarily due to a fair value inventory charge associated with the SFC Koenig acquisition, partially offset by prior year restructuring charges.
Fire & Safety/Diversified Products Segment
(In thousands)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
Net sales
$
138,767
$
107,009
Operating income
32,189
32,536
Operating margin
23.2
%
30.4
%
Sales of
$138.8 million
increased
$31.8 million
, or
30%
, in the
third quarter
of
2016
compared with the same period in
2015
. This reflects a 6% decrease in organic revenue, 38% increase from acquisitions (Akron Brass - March 2016 and AWG Fittings - July 2016) and 2% unfavorable foreign currency translation. In the
third quarter
of
2016
, sales increased 38% domestically and 22% internationally. Sales to customers outside the U.S. were approximately 48% of total segment sales in the
third quarter
of
2016
compared to 51% in the same period of
2015
.
Sales within our Dispensing platform were flat compared to the third quarter of 2015. Sales within our Band-It platform decreased compared to the third quarter of 2015 due to declines in upstream oil & gas sales and North American industrial, partially offset by strength in automotive end markets. Sales within our Fire Suppression platform increased due to the acquisitions of Akron Brass and AWG Fittings. Sales within our Rescue platform were down compared to 2015 primarily due to large projects in eastern Europe in the prior year.
Operating income of
$32.2 million
in the
third quarter
of
2016
was lower than
$32.5 million
in the
third quarter
of
2015
due to the Akron Brass and AWG Fittings acquisitions, partially offset by the fair value inventory step-up charge associated with the AWG Fittings acquisition. Operating margin of
23.2%
in the
third quarter
of
2016
was lower than the
30.4%
recorded in the
third quarter
of
2015
primarily due to the fair value inventory step-up charge related to the AWG Fittings acquisition and the dilutive impact of current year acquisitions resulting from a higher level of amortization as compared to the existing businesses.
Consolidated Results for the
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2016
Compared with the Same Period of
2015
(In thousands)
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
Net sales
$
1,582,624
$
1,520,870
Operating income
324,390
333,479
Operating margin
20.5
%
21.9
%
For the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
, Fluid & Metering Technologies contributed
41%
of sales,
43%
of operating income and
42%
of EBITDA; Health & Science Technologies contributed
35%
of sales,
32%
of operating income and
35%
of EBITDA; and Fire & Safety/Diversified Products contributed
24%
of sales,
25%
of operating income and
23%
of EBITDA. These percentages are calculated on the basis of total segment (not total Company) sales, operating income and EBITDA.
Sales in the
nine months ended September 30, 2016
were
$1,582.6 million
, which was a
4%
increase
compared to the same period last year. This reflects a 2% decrease in organic sales, a 7% net favorable impact from acquisitions (Alfa - June 2015; Novotema - June 2015; CPS - July 2015; Akron Brass - March 2016, AWG Fittings - July 2016 and SFC Koenig - September 2016) and divestitures (Ismatec - July 2015, Hydra-Stop - July 2016 and Melles Griot KK - September 2016) and 1% unfavorable foreign currency translation. Sales to customers outside the U.S. represented approximately 50% of total sales in the first
nine
months of
2016
compared with 49% during the same period in
2015
.
Gross profit of
$698.3 million
in the first
nine
months of
2016
increased
$17.4 million
, or
3%
, from the same period in
2015
. Gross margin of
44.1%
in the first
nine
months of
2016
decreased
70
basis points from
44.8%
during the same period in
2015
,
28
Table of Contents
primarily due to higher fair value inventory step-up charges related to the 2016 acquisition. Gross profit increased compared to 2015 as a result of a full year of prior year acquisitions and the 2016 Akron Brass acquisition.
Selling, general and administrative expenses
increased
to
$371.8 million
in the first
nine
months of
2016
from
$360.8 million
during the same period of
2015
. The change is due to $25.1 million of incremental costs from acquisitions, offset by benefits from prior period restructuring, cost controls and a $4.7 million reversal of a contingent consideration from a 2015 acquisition. As a percentage of sales, selling, general and administrative expenses were
23.5%
for the first
nine
months of
2016
, down
30
basis points compared to
23.8%
during the same period of
2015
.
Other (income) expense - net was
$(5.0) million
in the first
nine
months of
2016
compared with
$(1.6) million
of other (income) expense - net recorded in the same period in
2015
, primarily due to higher foreign currency translation gains in the current year to date period.
Interest expense of
$33.6 million
in the first
nine
months of
2016
was
up
from
$31.4 million
in
2015
primarily as a result of higher borrowings outstanding on the Revolving Facility and the Notes.
Operating income of
$324.4 million
in the first
nine
months of
2016
was
down
from the
$333.5 million
recorded during the same period in
2015
, while operating margin of
20.5%
was down from
21.9%
recorded in the same period of
2015
. The decrease in operating income and margin is primarily due to higher fair value inventory step-up charges related to current year acquisitions and higher gain on sale of businesses in 2015, partially offset by the $4.7 million benefit from the reversal of the contingent consideration related to a prior year acquisition and prior year restructuring.
The provision for income taxes is based upon estimated annual tax rates for the year applied to federal, state and foreign income. The provision for income taxes of $
82.0 million
for the first
nine
months of
2016
decreased
compared to $
88.6 million
recorded in the same period of
2015
. The effective tax rate
decreased
to
27.7%
for the first
nine
months of
2016
compared to
29.2%
in the same period of
2015
due to tax benefits as a result of the divestiture of Melles Griot KK, certain return-to-provision adjustments, the early adoption of ASU 2016-09 and the related tax effects of share based payments now recognized in income, the enactment of the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act of 2015 on December 18, 2015 which, beginning in 2015, permanently extended the U.S. R&D credit, as well as the mix of global pre-tax income among jurisdictions. These adjustments were offset by the incurrence of an additional $5.2 million of foreign withholding taxes, and tax expense as a result of the divestiture of the Hydra-Stop product line and the prior year divestiture of the Ismatec product line.
Net income in the first
nine
months of
2016
of $
213.8 million
decreased
from $
215.0 million
during the same period of
2015
. Diluted earnings per share in the first
nine
months of
2016
of $
2.78
increased
$
0.03
, or
1%
, compared with the same period in
2015
.
Fluid & Metering Technologies Segment
(In thousands)
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
Net sales
$
641,988
$
645,642
Operating income
160,866
154,665
Operating margin
25.1
%
24.0
%
Sales of $
642.0 million
decreased by
1%
in the first
nine
months of
2016
compared with the same period of
2015
. This reflects a 1% decrease in organic sales, a 1% favorable net impact from acquisitions (Alfa - June 2015) and divestitures (Hydra-Stop - July 2016), and a 1% unfavorable impact from foreign currency translation. In the first
nine
months of
2016
, sales decreased 2% domestically and increased 1% internationally compared to the same period in
2015
. Sales to customers outside the U.S. were approximately 44% of total segment sales during the first
nine
months of
2016
and
2015
.
Sales within our Energy platform were down slightly in the first nine months of 2016 compared to the same period of 2015 primarily due to challenges in the mobile and LPG end markets, partially offset by large international project shipments and strength within the aviation market. Sales within our Industrial platform decreased compared to the first nine months of 2015 due to softness in the North American industrial distribution market primarily as a result of the continued depression in the oil & gas market, softening of mining end markets and lower project volume. Sales within the Water platform were flat compared to the first nine months of 2015 due to an increase in municipal spending coupled with the mild winter offset by slowing demand in the United Kingdom and chemical end market and the divestiture of the Hydra-Stop product line. Sales within our Agricultural platform decreased in the first nine months of 2016 compared to the same period of 2015 due to continued overall softness within OEM markets. Sales in the Valves platform increased as a result of the Alfa acquisition in June 2015 and thus only had sales during a portion of the prior year.
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Table of Contents
Operating income and operating margins of $
160.9 million
and
25.1%
, respectively, in the first
nine
months of
2016
were higher than the $
154.7 million
and
24.0%
, respectively, recorded in the first
nine
months of
2015
, primarily due to a full year of the Alfa acquisition included in the 2016 results and restructuring expenses incurred in the prior period.
Health & Science Technologies Segment
(In thousands)
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
Net sales
$
556,475
$
552,418
Operating income
119,028
117,888
Operating margin
21.4
%
21.3
%
Sales of $
556.5 million
increased
$
4.1 million
, or
1%
, in the first
nine
months of
2016
compared with the same period in
2015
. This reflects a 2% net favorable impact from acquisitions (Novotema - June 2015, CPS - July 2015 and SFC Koenig - September 2016) and divestitures (Ismatec - July 2015 and Melles Griot KK - September 2016) and a 1% unfavorable impact from foreign currency translation. In the first
nine
months of
2016
, sales decreased 1% domestically and increased 2% internationally. Sales to customers outside the U.S. were approximately 55% of total segment sales in the first
nine
months of
2016
compared with 54% during the same period in
2015
.
Sales within our Material Processing Technologies platform were flat compared to the first nine months of 2015. Sales within our Scientific Fluidics platform were up compared to the first nine months of 2015 due to strong demand in all primary end markets and the full-year impact of the CPS acquisition, partially offset by the July 2015 divestiture of our Ismatec product line. Sales within our Sealing Solutions platform increased compared to the first nine months of 2015 due to the inclusion of a full year of the Novotema acquisition, the SFC Koenig acquisition and strength in the semi-conductor markets, partially offset by the weakened heavy equipment market and continued softness in the oil & gas markets. Sales within our Optics and Photonics platform decreased compared to the first nine months of 2015 due to weakness in the optical systems & shutters and laser optics end markets and the divestiture of Melles Griot KK, partially offset by stability within semi-conductor end markets. Sales within our Gast and Micropump platforms decreased compared to the first nine months of 2015 due to declines in the North American industrial distribution markets.
Operating income and operating margin of $
119.0 million
and
21.4%
, respectively, in the first
nine
months of
2016
were
up
from the $
117.9 million
and
21.3%
, respectively, recorded in the same period of
2015
, primarily due to higher volume and productivity improvements within the segment, partially offset by the inventory step-up charges associated with the SFC Koenig acquisition.
Fire & Safety/Diversified Products Segment
(In thousands)
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
Net sales
$
384,996
$
325,572
Operating income
91,709
91,180
Operating margin
23.8
%
28.0
%
Sales of $
385.0 million
increased
$
59.4 million
, or
18%
, in the first
nine
months of
2016
compared with the same period in
2015
. This reflects a 5% decline in organic revenue, a 24% favorable acquisition impact (Akron Brass - March 2016 and AWG Fittings - July 2016) and a 1% unfavorable impact from foreign currency translation. In the first
nine
months of
2016
, sales increased 23% domestically and increased 14% internationally, compared with the same period in
2015
. Sales to customers outside the U.S. were approximately 51% of total segment sales in the first
nine
months of
2016
compared to 52% during the same period of
2015
.
Sales within our Dispensing platform increased compared to the first nine months of 2015, primarily driven by strong X-Smart sales in Asia and continued strength in deliveries to North American retailers. Sales within our Band-It platform decreased compared to the first nine months of 2015, primarily due to the decline in upstream oil & gas markets, partially offset by strength within the transportation end markets. Sales within our Fire Suppression platform increased compared to the first nine months of 2015 due to the Akron Brass and AWG Fittings acquisitions. Sales within our Rescue platform were down compared to 2015, primarily due to project delays in Asian markets and large projects in eastern Europe in the prior year.
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Table of Contents
Operating income of $
91.7 million
in the first
nine
months of
2016
was
higher
than the $
91.2 million
recorded in the same period of 2015 while operating margin of
23.8%
recorded in the first
nine
months of
2016
was lower than the
28.0%
recorded for the same period of 2015. The lower operating margin was due to the fair value inventory step-up charge related to the Akron Brass and AWG Fittings acquisitions and the dilutive impact of current year acquisitions resulting from a higher level of amortization as compared to the existing businesses. The higher operating income was due to the incremental impact of the current year acquisitions.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
Operating Activities
At
September 30, 2016
, the Company’s cash and cash equivalents totaled
$239.4 million
, of which
$216.0 million
was held outside of the United States. At
September 30, 2016
, working capital was
$552.0 million
and the current ratio was
2.8
to 1. Cash flows from operating activities for the first
nine
months of
2016
increased
$22.5 million
, or
9%
, to
$284.3 million
compared to the first
nine
months of
2015
, due to improved working capital performance, lower bonus payments and the early adoption of ASU 2016-09 which no longer requires the excess tax benefit from share-based compensation to be shown as a reduction within cash flows from operating activities, partially offset by higher U.S. federal income tax payments.
Investing Activities
Cash flows
used in
investing activities for the first
nine
months of
2016
increased
$308.7 million
to
$506.2 million
compared to the same period in
2015
, primarily due to $510.0 million spent on the acquisitions of Akron Brass, AWG Fittings, and SFC Koenig in 2016 compared to $193.2 spent on the acquisitions of Alfa, Novotema, and CPS in 2015, partially offset by $4.0 million in lower capital expenditures and $4.9 million in lower proceeds from sale of businesses.
Cash flows
provided by
operating activities were more than adequate to fund capital expenditures of
$28.6 million
and
$32.6 million
in the first
nine
months of
2016
and
2015
, respectively. Capital expenditures were generally for machinery and equipment that improved productivity, tooling, business system technology, replacement of equipment and investments in new facilities. Management believes the Company has sufficient capacity in its plants and equipment to meet expected needs for future growth.
Financing Activities
Cash flows
provided by
financing activities for the first
nine
months was
$141.7 million
compared to cash flows used in financing activities of
$235.6 million
in the same period of
2015
, primarily as a result of increased borrowings to fund the Akron Brass acquisition combined with lower stock repurchases in 2016 compared to the comparable period in 2015.
On June 13, 2016, the Company completed a private placement of
$100 million
aggregate principal amount of
3.20%
Senior Notes due June 13, 2023 and
$100 million
aggregate principal amount of
3.37%
Senior Notes due June 13, 2025 (collectively, the “Notes”) pursuant to a Note Purchase Agreement, dated June 13, 2016 (the “Purchase Agreement”). Each series of Notes bears interest at the stated amount per annum, which is payable semi-annually in arrears on each June 13
th
and December 13
th
. The Notes are unsecured obligations of the Company and rank pari passu in right of payment with all of the Company’s other unsecured, unsubordinated debt. The Company may at any time prepay all, or any portion of the Notes; provided that such portion is greater than
5%
of the aggregate principal amount of Notes then outstanding. In the event of a prepayment, the Company will pay an amount equal to par plus accrued interest plus a make-whole amount. In addition, the Company may repurchase Notes by making an offer to all holders of the Notes, subject to certain conditions.
The Credit Agreement consists of the Revolving Facility, which is a $700.0 million unsecured, multi-currency bank credit facility expiring on June 23, 2020. At
September 30, 2016
, there were
$255.1 million
of outstanding borrowings under the Revolving Facility and outstanding letters of credit totaled approximately
$8.2 million
. The net available borrowing capacity under the Revolving Facility at
September 30, 2016
, was approximately
$436.7 million
. Borrowings under the Revolving Facility bear interest, at either an alternate base rate or an adjusted LIBOR rate plus, in each case, an applicable margin. Such applicable margin is based on the Company’s senior, unsecured, long-term debt rating and can range from
.005%
to
1.50%
. Based on the Company’s credit rating at
September 30, 2016
, the applicable margin was
1.10%
, resulting in a weighted average interest rate of
1.34%
at
September 30, 2016
. Interest is payable (a) in the case of base rate loans, quarterly, and (b) in the case of LIBOR rate loans, on the maturity date of the borrowing, or quarterly from the effective date for borrowings exceeding three months. An annual Revolving Facility fee, also based on the Company’s credit rating, is currently 15 basis points and is payable quarterly.
There are two key financial covenants that the Company is required to maintain in connection with the Revolving Facility and the Notes, which require a minimum interest coverage ratio of 3.0 to 1 and a maximum leverage ratio of
3.50
to
1
. At
September 30, 2016
, the Company was in compliance with both of these financial covenants, as the Company’s interest coverage ratio was 12.25 to 1 and the leverage ratio was 1.98 to 1. There are no financial covenants relating to the 4.5% Senior Notes or 4.2% Senior Notes; however, both are subject to cross-default provisions.
31
Table of Contents
On
December 1, 2015
, the Company’s Board of Directors approved a
$300.0 million
increase in the authorized level for repurchases of common stock. Repurchases under the program will be funded with future cash flow generation or borrowings available under the Revolving Facility. During the first
nine
months of
2016
, the Company purchased a total of
739 thousand
shares at a cost of
$55.0 million
. During the
nine months ended September 30, 2015
, the Company purchased
2.4 million
shares at a cost of
$179.4 million
, of which
$4.3 million
was settled in
October
2015
. As of
September 30, 2016
, the amount of share repurchase authorization remaining is
$580.0 million
.
The Company believes current cash, cash from operations and cash available under the Revolving Facility will be sufficient to meet its operating cash requirements, planned capital expenditures, interest on all borrowings, pension and postretirement funding requirements, expected share repurchases and annual dividend payments to holders of the Company’s stock for the remainder of
2016
. Additionally, in the event that suitable businesses are available for acquisition upon acceptable terms, the Company may obtain all or a portion of the financing for these acquisitions through the incurrence of additional borrowings.
Non-GAAP Disclosures
Set forth below are reconciliations of EBITDA to the comparable measures of net income, as determined in accordance with U.S. GAAP. We have reconciled consolidated EBITDA and segment EBITDA to net income. The reconciliation of segment EBITDA to net income was performed on a consolidated basis due to the fact that we do not allocate consolidated interest expense or the consolidated provision for income taxes to our segments.
EBITDA means earnings before interest, income taxes, depreciation and amortization. Given the acquisitive nature of the Company, which results in a higher level of amortization expense at recently acquired businesses, management uses EBITDA as an internal operating metric to provide another representation of the businesses performance across our three segments and for enterprise valuation purposes. Management believes that EBITDA is useful to investors as an indicator of the strength and performance of the Company and a way to evaluate and compare operating performance and value companies within our industry. Management believes EBITDA margin is useful for the same reason as EBITDA. EBITDA is also used to calculate certain financial covenants, as discussed in Note 9 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements in Part I, Item 1, “Financial Statements.”
This report references organic sales, a non-GAAP measure, that refers to sales calculated according to U.S. GAAP but excluding amounts from acquired or divested businesses during the first twelve months after acquisition or divestiture and the impact of foreign currency translation. The portion of sales attributable to foreign currency translation is calculated as the difference between (a) the period-to-period change in organic sales and (b) the period-to-period change in organic sales after applying prior period foreign exchange rates to the current year period. Management believes that reporting organic sales provides useful information to investors by helping identify underlying growth trends in our business and facilitating easier comparisons of our revenue performance with prior and future periods and to our peers. The Company excludes the effect of foreign currency translation from organic sales because foreign currency translation is not under management’s control, is subject to volatility and can obscure underlying business trends. The Company excludes the effect of acquisitions and divestitures because they can obscure underlying business trends and make comparisons of long term performance difficult due to the varying nature, size and number of transactions from period to period and between the Company and its peers.
The non-GAAP financial measures disclosed by the Company should not be considered a substitute for, or superior to, financial measures prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP. The financial results prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP and the reconciliations from these results should be carefully evaluated.
Reconciliations of Reported-to-Adjusted Operating Income
(in thousands)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Reported operating income
$
108,857
$
121,813
$
324,390
$
333,479
+ Restructuring expenses
—
4,723
—
4,723
+ Loss (gain) on sale of businesses - net
2,067
(18,070
)
2,067
(18,070
)
Adjusted operating income
$
110,924
$
108,466
$
326,457
$
320,132
Net sales
530,356
503,791
1,582,624
1,520,870
Operating margin
20.5
%
24.2
%
20.5
%
21.9
%
Adjusted operating margin
20.9
%
21.5
%
20.6
%
21.0
%
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Table of Contents
Reconciliations of Reported-to-Adjusted Net Income
(in thousands)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Reported net income
$
69,873
$
79,505
$
213,762
$
215,044
+ Restructuring expenses
—
4,723
—
4,723
+ Tax impact on restructuring expenses
—
(1,638
)
—
(1,638
)
+ Loss (gain) on sale of businesses - net
2,067
(18,070
)
2,067
(18,070
)
+ Tax impact on loss (gain) on sales of businesses - net
(1,467
)
4,839
(1,467
)
4,839
Adjusted net income
$
70,473
$
69,359
$
214,362
$
204,898
Reconciliations of Reported-to-Adjusted EPS
(shares in thousands)
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
2016
2015
2016
2015
Reported EPS
$
0.91
$
1.02
$
2.78
$
2.75
+ Restructuring expenses
—
0.06
—
0.06
+ Tax impact on restructuring expenses
—
(0.02
)
—
(0.02
)
+ Loss (gain) on sale of businesses - net
0.03
(0.23
)
0.03
(0.23
)
+ Tax impact on loss (gain) on sale of businesses - net
(0.02
)
0.06
(0.02
)
0.06
Adjusted EPS
$
0.92
$
0.89
$
2.79
$
2.62
Diluted weighted average shares
76,880
77,646
76,742
78,266
Reconciliation of EBITDA to Net Income
(in thousands)
Three Months Ended September 30, 2016
FMT
HST
FSDP
Corporate Office
Total IDEX
Operating income (loss)
$
55,600
$
37,204
$
32,189
$
(16,136
)
$
108,857
- Other (income) expense - net
(136
)
(375
)
(498
)
(1,355
)
(2,364
)
+ Depreciation & amortization
7,168
11,163
3,584
277
22,192
EBITDA
62,904
48,742
36,271
(14,504
)
133,413
- Interest expense
11,913
- Provision for income taxes
29,435
- Depreciation and amortization
22,192
Net income
$
69,873
Net sales (intersegment eliminations)
$
208,335
$
183,564
$
138,767
$
(310
)
$
530,356
Operating margin
26.7
%
20.3
%
23.2
%
n/m
20.5
%
EBITDA margin
30.2
%
26.6
%
26.1
%
n/m
25.2
%
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Table of Contents
Reconciliation of EBITDA to Net Income
(in thousands)
Three Months Ended September 30, 2015
FMT
HST
FSDP
Corporate Office
Total IDEX
Operating income (loss)
$
46,910
$
38,371
$
32,536
$
3,996
$
121,813
- Other (income) expense - net
(82
)
(877
)
(247
)
513
(693
)
+ Depreciation & amortization
7,311
11,179
1,513
374
20,377
EBITDA
54,303
50,427
34,296
3,857
142,883
- Interest expense
10,229
- Provision for income taxes
32,772
- Depreciation and amortization
20,377
Net income
$
79,505
Net sales (intersegment eliminations)
$
212,101
$
184,893
$
107,009
$
(212
)
$
503,791
Operating margin
22.1
%
20.8
%
30.4
%
n/m
24.2
%
EBITDA margin
25.6
%
27.3
%
32.0
%
n/m
28.4
%
Reconciliation of EBITDA to Net Income
(in thousands)
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2016
FMT
HST
FSDP
Corporate Office
Total IDEX
Operating income (loss)
$
160,866
$
119,028
$
91,709
$
(47,213
)
$
324,390
- Other (income) expense - net
(350
)
(1,505
)
(1,342
)
(1,785
)
(4,982
)
+ Depreciation and amortization
22,011
33,044
8,316
953
64,324
EBITDA
183,227
153,577
101,367
(44,475
)
393,696
- Interest expense
33,607
- Provision for income taxes
82,003
- Depreciation and amortization
64,324
Net income
$
213,762
Net sales (intersegment eliminations)
$
641,988
$
556,475
$
384,996
$
(835
)
$
1,582,624
Operating margin
25.1
%
21.4
%
23.8
%
n/m
20.5
%
EBITDA margin
28.5
%
27.6
%
26.3
%
n/m
24.9
%
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Table of Contents
Reconciliation of EBITDA to Net Income
(in thousands)
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2015
FMT
HST
FSDP
Corporate Office
Total IDEX
Operating income (loss)
$
154,665
$
117,888
$
91,180
$
(30,254
)
$
333,479
- Other (income) expense - net
(894
)
(347
)
(1,091
)
743
(1,589
)
+ Depreciation and amortization
20,321
31,874
4,574
1,205
57,974
EBITDA
175,880
150,109
96,845
(29,792
)
393,042
- Interest expense
31,410
- Provision for income taxes
88,614
- Depreciation and amortization
57,974
Net income
$
215,044
Net sales (intersegment eliminations)
$
645,642
$
552,418
$
325,572
$
(2,762
)
$
1,520,870
Operating margin
24.0
%
21.3
%
28.0
%
n/m
21.9
%
EBITDA margin
27.2
%
27.2
%
29.7
%
n/m
25.8
%
Reconciliation of Net Sales to Net Organic Sales
Three Months Ended September 30, 2016
FMT
HST
FSDP
Total IDEX
Change in net sales
(2
)%
(1
)%
30
%
5
%
- Net impact from acquisitions/divestitures
(1
)%
2
%
38
%
8
%
- Impact from foreign currency
(1
)%
(2
)%
(2
)%
(1
)%
Net organic sales
—
%
(1
)%
(6
)%
(2
)%
Reconciliation of Net Sales to Net Organic Sales
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2016
FMT
HST
FSDP
Total IDEX
Change in net sales
(1
)%
1
%
18
%
4
%
- Net impact from acquisitions/divestitures
1
%
2
%
24
%
7
%
- Impact from foreign currency
(1
)%
(1
)%
(1
)%
(1
)%
Net organic sales
(1
)%
—
%
(5
)%
(2
)%
35
Table of Contents
Item 3.
Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk.
The Company is subject to market risk associated with changes in foreign currency exchange rates and interest rates. The Company may, from time to time, enter into foreign currency forward contracts and interest rate swaps on its debt when it believes there is a financial advantage in doing so. A treasury risk management policy, adopted by the Board of Directors, provides for procedures and controls over derivative financial and commodity instruments, including foreign currency forward contracts and interest rate swaps. Under the policy, the Company does not use derivative financial or commodity instruments for trading purposes, and the use of these instruments is subject to strict approvals by senior officers. Typically, the use of derivative instruments is limited to foreign currency forward contracts and interest rate swaps on the Company’s outstanding long-term debt.
Foreign Currency Exchange Rates
The Company’s foreign currency exchange rate risk is limited principally to the Euro, British Pound, Canadian Dollar, Swiss Franc, Indian Rupee and Chinese Renminbi. The Company manages its foreign exchange risk principally through invoicing customers in the same currency as the cost incurred to produce our products. The effect of transaction gains and losses is reported within other (income) expense-net on the Consolidated Statements of Operations.
Interest Rate Fluctuation
The Company’s interest rate exposure is primarily related to the
$1.1 billion
of total debt outstanding at
September 30, 2016
. Approximately
23%
of the debt, representing the amount drawn on the Revolving Facility at
September 30, 2016
, is priced at interest rates that float with the market. A 50 basis point movement in the interest rate on the floating rate debt would result in an approximate
$1.3 million
annualized increase or decrease in interest expense and cash flows. The remaining debt is fixed rate debt.
Item 4.
Controls and Procedures.
The Company maintains disclosure controls and procedures that are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed in the Company’s Exchange Act reports is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the SEC’s rules and forms, and that such information is accumulated and communicated to the Company’s management, including its Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.
As required by Rule 13a-15(b) promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act, the Company carried out an evaluation, under the supervision and with the participation of the Company’s management, including the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and the Company’s Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this report. Based on the foregoing, the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded as of
September 30, 2016
, that the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures were effective.
There has been no change in the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting during the Company’s most recent fiscal quarter that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal controls over financial reporting.
36
Table of Contents
PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
Item 1.
Legal Proceedings.
The Company and six of its subsidiaries are presently named as defendants in a number of lawsuits claiming various asbestos-related personal injuries, allegedly as a result of exposure to products manufactured with components that contained asbestos. These components were acquired from third party suppliers, and were not manufactured by the Company or any of the defendant subsidiaries. To date, the majority of the Company’s settlements and legal costs, except for costs of coordination, administration, insurance investigation and a portion of defense costs, have been covered in full by insurance, subject to applicable deductibles. However, the Company cannot predict whether and to what extent insurance will be available to continue to cover these settlements and legal costs, or how insurers may respond to claims that are tendered to them. Claims have been filed in jurisdictions throughout the United States. Most of the claims resolved to date have been dismissed without payment. The balance have been settled for various insignificant amounts. Only one case has been tried, resulting in a verdict for the Company’s business unit. No provision has been made in the financial statements of the Company, other than for insurance deductibles in the ordinary course, and the Company does not currently believe the asbestos-related claims will have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business, financial position, results of operations or cash flows.
The Company is also party to various other legal proceedings arising in the ordinary course of business, none of which are expected to have a material impact on its financial condition, results of operations or cash flows.
Item 2.
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds.
The following table provides information about the Company’s purchases of its common stock during the quarter ended
September 30, 2016
:
Period
Total Number of
Shares Purchased
Average Price
Paid per Share
Total Number of
Shares Purchased as
Part of Publicly
Announced Plans
or Programs
(1)
Maximum Dollar
Value that May Yet
be Purchased
Under the Plans
or Programs
(1)
July 1, 2016 to July 31, 2016
12,600
$
84.17
12,600
$
580,010,084
August 1, 2016 to August 31, 2016
—
—
—
580,010,084
September 1, 2016 to September 30, 2016
—
—
—
580,010,084
Total
12,600
$
84.17
12,600
$
580,010,084
(1)
On
December 1, 2015
, the Company announced that its Board of Directors had increased the authorized level for repurchases of its common stock by
$300.0 million
. This followed the prior Board of Directors repurchase authorization of $400.0 million, announced by the Company on November 6, 2014. These authorizations have no expiration date.
Item 6.
Exhibits.
The exhibits listed in the accompanying “Exhibit Index” are filed or furnished as part of this report.
37
Table of Contents
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
IDEX Corporation
By:
/s/ MICHAEL J. YATES
Michael J. Yates
Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Accounting Officer (Principal Accounting and Financial Officer)
Date:
October 25, 2016
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Table of Contents
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibit
Number
Description
3.1
Restated Certificate of Incorporation of IDEX Corporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit No. 3.1 to the Registration Statement on Form S-1 of IDEX, et al., Registration No. 33-21205, as filed on April 21, 1988)
3.1(a)
Amendment to Restated Certificate of Incorporation of IDEX Corporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit No. 3.1(a) to the Quarterly Report of IDEX on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1996, Commission File No. 1-10235)
3.1(b)
Amendment to Restated Certificate of Incorporation of IDEX Corporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit No. 3.1(b) to the Current Report of IDEX on Form 8-K dated March 24, 2005, Commission File No. 1-10235)
3.2
Amended and Restated By-Laws of IDEX Corporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit No. 3.1 to the Current Report of IDEX Corporation on Form 8-K filed November 14, 2011, Commission File No. 1-10235)
3.2(a)
Amended and Restated Article III, Section 13 of the Amended and Restated By-Laws of IDEX Corporation (incorporated by reference to Exhibit No. 3.2(a) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 to the Registration Statement on Form S-1 of IDEX, et al., Registration No. 33-21205, as filed on February 12, 1990)
*31.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002
*31.2
Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to Section 302 of Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002
*32.1
Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350
*32.2
Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350
*101
The following financial information from IDEX Corporation's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2016 formatted in XBRL includes: (i) the Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets, (ii) the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Earnings, (iii) the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income, (iv) the Condensed Consolidated Statement of Shareholders’ Equity, (v) the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows, and (vi) Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
* Filed herewith
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