SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported): December 10, 2008
A. O. Smith Corporation
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware | 1-475 | 39-0619790 | ||
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation) |
(Commission File Number) | (IRS Employer Identification No.) |
11270 West Park Place, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53224-9502
(Address of principal executive offices, including zip code)
(414) 359-4000
(Registrants telephone number)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions (see General Instruction A.2. below):
x | Written communication pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425) |
¨ | Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 204.14a-12) |
¨ | Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b)) |
¨ | Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13-e4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c)) |
Item 8.01. | Other Events |
On December 10, 2008, A. O. Smith Corporation (A. O. Smith) held a conference call in connection with the issuance of a news release announcing A. O. Smiths revised earnings forecast, during which, among other things, a proposed transaction between A. O. Smith and Smith Investment Company (SICO) was discussed. On December 11, 2008, A. O. Smith posted to its website (http://www.aosmith.com) an audio replay of such conference call and slides used in conjunction with such conference call. A transcript of the conference call and copies of such slides are filed as Exhibit 99.1 and 99.2, respectively, to this Current Report on Form 8-K and are incorporated by reference herein.
In connection with the proposed transaction between A. O. Smith and SICO, the parties intend to file a registration statement on Form S-4 with the SEC containing a joint proxy statement/prospectus. Such documents, however, are not currently available. The joint proxy statement/prospectus will be mailed to stockholders of A. O. Smith and SICO. INVESTORS ARE URGED TO READ THE JOINT PROXY STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS REGARDING THE PROPOSED TRANSACTION WHEN IT BECOMES AVAILABLE, BECAUSE IT WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Investors will be able to obtain a free copy of the joint proxy statement/prospectus filed by A. O. Smith, without charge, at the SECs website (http://www.sec.gov) once such documents are filed with the SEC. It will also be available on A. O. Smiths website (http://www.aosmith.com) by clicking on A. O. Smith Corporation, Investor Relations and then SEC filings. Copies of the joint proxy statement/prospectus can also be obtained, without charge, once they are filed with the SEC, by directing a request to A. O. Smith Corporation, Attention: Investor Relations, 11270 West Park Place, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53224.
A. O. Smith, SICO and their respective directors, executive officers and other employees may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies from the stockholders of A. O. Smith and SICO in connection with the proposed transaction. Information about the directors and executive officers of A. O. Smith and SICO and their respective interests in the proposed transaction will be available in the joint proxy statement/prospectus.
Item 9.01. | Financial Statements and Exhibits |
The following exhibits are being filed herewith:
(99.1) | Conference call transcript of A. O. Smith Corporation, dated December 10, 2008. | |
(99.2) | Slides of A. O. Smith Corporation to be used in conjunction with conference call, dated December 10, 2008. |
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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 hereunto duly authorized.
A. O. SMITH CORPORATION | ||||||
Date: December 11, 2008 | By: | /s/ James F. Stern | ||||
James F. Stern | ||||||
Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary |
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A. O. SMITH CORPORATION
Exhibit Index to Current Report on Form 8-K Dated December 10, 2008
Exhibit |
Description | |
99.1 | Conference Call Transcript of A. O. Smith Corporation, dated December 10, 2008 | |
99.2 | Slides of A. O. Smith Corporation to be used in conjunction with conference call, dated December 10, 2008 |
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Exhibit 99.1
Filed by A. O. Smith Corporation pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended Subject Company: A. O. Smith Corporation Subject Companys Commission File No. 1-475 |
In connection with the proposed transaction between A. O. Smith Corporation (A. O. Smith) and Smith Investment Company (SICO), the parties intend to file a registration statement on Form S-4 with the SEC containing a joint proxy statement/prospectus. Such documents, however, are not currently available. The joint proxy statement/prospectus will be mailed to stockholders of A. O. Smith and SICO. INVESTORS ARE URGED TO READ THE JOINT PROXY STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS REGARDING THE PROPOSED TRANSACTION WHEN IT BECOMES AVAILABLE, BECAUSE IT WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Investors will be able to obtain a free copy of the joint proxy statement/prospectus filed by A. O. Smith, without charge, at the SECs website (http://www.sec.gov) once such documents are filed with the SEC. It will also be available on A. O. Smiths website (http://www.aosmith.com) by clicking on A. O. Smith Corporation, Investor Relations and then SEC filings. Copies of the joint proxy statement/prospectus can also be obtained, without charge, once they are filed with the SEC, by directing a request to A. O. Smith Corporation, Attention: Investor Relations, 11270 West Park Place, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53224.
A. O. Smith, SICO and their respective directors, executive officers and other employees may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies from the stockholders of A. O. Smith and SICO in connection with the proposed transaction. Information about the directors and executive officers of A. O. Smith and SICO and their respective interests in the proposed transaction will be available in the joint proxy statement/prospectus.
MANAGEMENT DISCUSSION SECTION
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the A. O. Smith Conference Call. At this time, all lines are in a listen-only mode; later we will conduct a question-and-answer session. Instructions will be given at that time. [Operator Instructions].
I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, the Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer, Patricia Ackerman. Ms. Ackerman, please go ahead.
Patricia Ackerman, Vice President, Investor Relations
Thank you Reggie. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for joining us on this conference call. With me this morning, participating in the call are Paul Jones, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Terry Murphy, Chief Financial Officer; Ajita Rajendra, President of our Water Products Company; Chris Mapes, President of our Electrical Products Company; Jim Stern, General Counsel; John Kita, Senior Vice President of Finance; and Craig Watson, Vice President, Business Development.
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Before we begin with Pauls remarks, I would like to remind you that some of the comments that will be made during this conference call, including answers to your questions, will constitute forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks that could cause actual results to be materially different. Those risks include, among others, matters that we have described in this mornings press release and last evenings press release. Paul?
Paul W. Jones, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Okay, thank you, Pat. And good morning ladies and gentlemen, as you probably heard, were advantage of having all hands here today on having a planning session, so weve got everybody sitting in on this call from not everybody, but most of our leadership team.
Weve issued two press releases in the last 24-hours, and this morning well elaborate on both of them. Today, we issued a press release announcing a reduction in our fourth quarter estimate to be between $0.15 and $0.25 per share compared with $0.32 and $0.42 per share, implied by our previous guidance. Full-year earnings are now estimated to be between $2.63 and $2.73 per share. As a result, were now expecting cash flow from operations to be approximately $140 million.
Our fourth quarter of this year started off okay, with our October order volumes coming in as expected. However, in November we saw our orders drop substantially. The volume drop is caused not only by consumers retrenching in reaction to the credit crisis, but also prudent management of inventory levels across our entire distribution channel. Our current order levels in water heaters are below historic replacement levels, indicating inventory contraction by our customers.
Our Chinese businesses are now being impacted by the global recession and their growth rates are slowing. The good news here is that we should benefit from the $560 billion government stimulus package, as the majority of our products made in China are used domestically.
One phenomenon that those of you who have followed our story for a few years are familiar with is the December pre-buy. This year, with no announced price increase for January of 2009, we do not expect to have a pre-buy in December of this year. Also, you might be interested to know that most of our HAC OEM customers have shut down their production until January just to manage their own inventories.
Were responding to this challenging market first and foremost by conserving cash and reducing working capital. We have efforts in place to watch receivables with an eagle eye for credit issues and to aggressively police slow paying customers. Were watching key suppliers for signs of credit problems. Our plants are on high alert to stay in sync with customer production schedules and demand which, as weve already mentioned, have been abruptly changing within this market.
As a reminder, we are a short cycle business with minimal backlog. Most orders are shipped within five days. We decided to curtail production in lieu of building inventory in the fourth quarter. And we have expanded holiday shut downs and will continue to make adjustments if necessary.
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As has been the case for some time, were closely managing discretionary spending until we have more clarity on future order volumes. At the same time, the benefits of restructuring activities at Electrical Products Company are on track, and both operating units are aggressively continuing productivity programs that are delivering results. We are prudently navigating our acquisition pipeline and proceeding with expansion plans in China and India. Finally, we recognize that our strong balance sheet provides us with a competitive advantage in this tumultuous marketplace.
2009 will be challenging, no doubt about it. But we are excited about the opportunities that lie ahead. Negotiations on the annual contracts with our largest retail customers are right around the corner. The closure of two motor plants in the U.S. and one in Europe during 2008 is expected to benefit our results incrementally by $15 million in 2009. And our China businesses should benefit from the $560 billion government stimulus package already announced.
Finally, we continue to leverage our financial strength and have not cut-off key product development initiatives worldwide. Current forecasts now indicate that housing completions will not bottom until the fourth quarter of 2009, and no one has clear visibility to call the end of the global recession.
Our commercial volumes in China demand are now starting to show signs of weakness. 2009 looks like it will be a difficult year to forecast. But consistent with prior years, we will indicate our forecasted earnings range during our investor conference call in late January.
And now, lets talk about the SICO announcement. We are pleased that the transaction with Smith Investment Company was announced yesterday and proud of the milestone in our history that it represents. The benefits to our shareholders are numerous. Let me cover just a few. One, the number of shares of A.O. Smith exchanged for the underlying shares owned by Smith Investment Company will be the discount, resulting in a small shrinkage in the total shares outstanding.
Second, the transaction will result in several corporate governance enhancements, including one more Board seat elected by common stock shareholders, a sunset provision on Class A shares, based on the percentage of ownership, and a requirement the Class A shares automatically convert to common shares upon transfer to unaffiliated third-parties.
And third, the number of shares of A.O. Smith available to potentially trade in the public market will increase materially. And essentially, all costs associated with the merger will be paid by Smith Investment Company. This transaction has been a long process in the making and we are pleased with the outcome.
The process going forward includes an IRS ruling, an SEC review, and shareholder votes by both entities. But we are confident that it will go smoothly. We plan to put the merger in front of our shareholders for a vote at our annual meeting in April of next year and close shortly thereafter.
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Thats all we have for our prepared comments, just a reminder that we will report fourth quarter results on Thursday, January 22 and well host a conference call at 10 a.m. Eastern Time that morning.
That completes our prepared remarks and we are now ready for your questions. So Ill turn it back over to Reggie.
QUESTION AND ANSWER SECTION
Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions]. And well go now to the line of Paul Mammola with Sidoti & Company. Please go ahead.
<Q Paul Mammola>: Hi, good morning guys.
<A Paul Jones>: Good morning, Paul.
<Q Paul Mammola>: Can you give us a sense as to how water is tracking versus motors? I would assume motors is the leading decliner in terms of revenue; is water far behind there? Can you give us a sense of that?
<A Paul Jones>: Youre right. Weve seen a little bit smaller a larger decline on the motor side. You know, in total what we did in November as we looked at this it took about $50 million out of our revenue projection over the November, December time period. We havent lost the customer; this is strictly the customers weve got, just ordering less. Frankly, its not helping us right now obviously, but the good news is were not going to go into next year with an inventory bubble. So were going to be monitoring the order rates as we always do, but monitoring them very closely and at the end of December and going into January. But, yeah, the larger volume decline was in motors.
<Q Paul Mammola>: Okay, thats helpful. And then could you categorize how much cost inflation played in the 4Q forecast?
<A Paul Jones>: We already had that in, but, yeah, we do our Ill talk about steel as an example. Its done off of trailing CRU indices, and if you go back and look at the third quarter, those were sky-high. So we obviously have a pretty significant steel cost this quarter to overcome that will decline going forward, obviously, given whats happened to steel costs.
<Q Paul Mammola>: Okay. And then you mentioned renegotiations with retail customers. Do you think there is room for price improvement there, maybe in the first quarter?
<A Paul Jones>: Thats per contract that we have that window open and Im not going to comment on how that might come out.
<Q Paul Mammola>: Okay, fair enough. And then finally on the SICO, am I correct to assume that there are no assets or liabilities to be assumed by you guys, once or potentially, if this is completed?
<A Paul Jones>: Thats correct.
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<Q Paul Mammola>: Okay. Thanks for your time.
<A Paul Jones>: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions]. And well go now to the line of Scott Graham with Ladenburg. Please go ahead.
<Q Scott Graham>: Hey, good morning.
<A Paul Jones>: Good morning, Scott.
<Q Scott Graham>: I just want to ask a little bit more, Paul, about what you see going on in China. Are your customers there telling you that this is just maybe more of a shock to the system and that maybe, you know, volumes return because I know that you guys were kind of looking at sort of mid-high teens growth in that market right now and obviously weve got to temper that down a little bit, but whats the underlying trend line there, because clearly with government stimulus there possibly offsetting some of the GDP, the slower GDP, although I think we would all sign up for Chinas GDP any moment. What is really underneath those numbers do you think? And if you could maybe tell us what youre thinking on 09, incrementally?
<A Paul Jones>: Okay. Ill try to comment. Some of this is going to be personal opinion, but I think its what you asked for. The slow down China is still growing and I agree with you, Id love for the North America to have their GDP numbers next year, whatever theyre going to be. But they have a bit of a housing bubble. A lot of speculators got into the housing market and in my opinion there is just a lot of inventory there to be sold. Part of the government stimulus package is housing related. So where weve just seen a slowing, I personally dont think its going to last for a long period of time, maybe a few months at most. Again its slowing of the growth rate. So its not anything like were seeing in the U.S. where were seeing declines.
But thats, you know, were obviously still bullish on China, weve got weve not slowed down on any of our product development activities there. Were not slowing down on any of the initiatives we have relative to some potential acquisitions there. Were still moving forward; thats one area that we have not done any cutting back at all.
<Q Scott Graham>: Okay. Thats helpful. Would you also may be unbundle for us a little bit some of the things that youre doing in electrical products. I guess, my understanding was that maybe that there were some things, particularly some of the manufacturing, lets call it relocations or maybe in this case locations of SKUs that may be you were looking to jettison, what have you, that that was maybe slowing things down somewhat. Maybe if you wouldnt mind, Paul, going through not the plant closure stuff, the asset optimization, thats clearly on track. But the other two elements of the EP cost enhancement cost reduction?
<A Paul Jones>: Yes, the roadmap to profitability, those projects are still going on, the standardization as well as the customer and product optimization projects. The lean initiatives our lean initiative has a wide definition; primarily means reducing and taking costs out of the current designs. Those projects have been on schedule or ahead of schedule since we began them more than two years ago. I could not be more happy with how those teams are doing it.
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Our margins are going up in Electrical Products this year. Its our projection that that will continue for the next several years, based on these efforts. And again, we may have little a more color on that in January. Its unfortunate that the economys not helping us out there so that more of what theyve done has been visible will be more visible; but the results are there and theyre going to show up.
<Q Scott Graham>: I guess I was maybe a little bit more specifically Paul, there was some of the SKUs and business that maybe you wanted to walk away from. Maybe the ability to do that is happening a little bit more slowly than what you had hoped, based on the way production is dispersed for those same SKUs.
<A Paul Jones>: No, its not happening slower. Were still going to have a volume decline there even though I think the revenues will probably be up because of the price increases weve had to get this year because of raw materials.
But we are still eliminating business that is not good for our shareholders and were still not quoting on business thats not good for our shareholders; but at the same time we are securing some new business. Weve had a couple of pretty nice wins in the marketplace there and Scott, if I talk about it any more, Ill be giving our competitors a little bit more information than I want to, but we are going through a pretty significant transformation in Electrical Products, totally focused on increasing the margins and returns. And I couldnt be more happy with the results that that leadership team is delivering.
<Q Scott Graham>: Okay. Thats helpful. Thank you. Is there some point in the next, whatever quarter, two quarters that were going to get, maybe, kind of the same kind of granular basis point improvement tags on the water side as weve got on the EP side? You know what I mean?
<A Paul Jones>: You mean productivity numbers or something
<Q Scott Graham>: You know how you say youre expecting X basis points from this, that and the other, from the three main strategies. You have a couple of dissimilar strategies going on in water, but you dont have specific basis point expectations there. Is that something that you guys are going to maybe give us something more granular on or should we not expect that?
<A Paul Jones>: Yeah, we do some things internally. The Water Products business had gone through some pretty significant restructuring back with the acquisitions of State Industries, and we had another significant one with the acquisition of GSW. We were a little behind on that with the Electrical Products, and thats why a lot of what weve been doing there is catch-up. But we have we certainly have, internally, some roadmaps to profitability. Let me just say that well talk about it internally and if we can provide something there that would not be a competitive information that our competitors would love to see, well see if we can come up with something. But right off the top of my head, I cant think of any of the internal things we have going on that we want out in the public domain.
<Q Scott Graham>: Okay. Well, thank you for being so forthcoming.
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Operator: All right, thank you. And well go now to the line of Matt Summerville with Cubibanc [KeyBanc]. Please go ahead.
<A Paul Jones>: Cubibanc. Hello, Matt.
<Q>: Good morning.
<A>: You guys change your name, Matt?
<Q>: No, I hope not. Actually, this is Tony Curam on for Matt.
<A Paul Jones>: Okay, Tony, go ahead.
<Q>: Couple of questions. Just give, if you could, a little color on or guidance on whats going on with the forward contracts for copper and when they might expire?
<A Paul Jones>: Well, all of our competitors do the same things we do. I think its safe to say weve probably done a little bit less this year than in years past. But we dont talk publicly about our what our hedging is. Some of our competitors have come out with some pretty bold statements relative to some margin calls theyve incurred relative to copper with its significant price declines. And you can go look those things up, but were not going to comment on it.
<Q>: Okay. And then as far as the expansion plans go, given the environment, the expansion particularly in China and then longer term in India. Does it still makes sense to be moving forward at the same pace to adding those that kind of fixed costs to overhead? Are those plans changed at all?
<A Paul Jones>: No, and it still makes sense. Our Water Products facility in Nanjing is essentially completed. Were probably were putting in some equipment as we go and we do have some available floor space. Our new facility in Yueyang, to tell you a little bit of the internal color, I keep complaining about why its taking so long because we again thats a business that serves the global marketplace. And we are experiencing double-digit growth rates and we expect those to continue and we need that new facility not only for productivity, but for capacity reasons. I actually saw a picture yesterday of the building and its up and its got windows in it, and very soon well have equipment in there and be in production in January. But were still going forward with those projects and we are having very good receptivity in India with the water heater, the instantaneous water heater, a small wall hung unit designed for their market. Its going very, very well. We still dont have the land allocation, specific land allocation, but we expect to get that soon. As soon as we do, we intend to build a facility and start making that product there.
<Q>: Okay. And then one last question and more broadly, not so much with the retailers, the contract negotiations, but more broadly across water heaters and motors. The negotiations with the big customers that are upcoming, do you expect theyll be demand some sort of concession or price reductions as you move forward?
<A Paul Jones>: If youre talking water heaters, we only have contracts with the retailers; the wholesalers, its essentially done off a price sheet that we publish periodically. And our steel costs this quarter are the highest theyve been all year. So were still struggling to make sure that we cover those costs and keep delivering a reasonable return to shareholders. Were going to continue to do that. Weve been expanding those margins and its my expectation well continue to do so.
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<Q>: Okay. Thanks so much.
Operator: All right. Thank you. Well go now to the line of Mark [Mike] Schneider with Robert Baird. Please go ahead.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Yes, this is Mike Schneiders brother Mark.
<A Paul Jones>: Hi, Mark, good morning.
<A>: How are you doing Mike?
<Q Michael Schneider>: Im doing great. I guess first question just goes on production days. Weve seen this in the past, when Q4 comes around you have to make significant production reductions to level out the inventory. Do you have an estimate as to the shortfall this quarter thats attributable just to the production reductions, so we can get a sense of when you do reach level-loaded production what, indeed, the earnings run-rate is?
<A Paul Jones>: Thats a tough one, Mike. Youre talking about what our customers have cut back to?
<Q Michael Schneider>: No Im talking more A.O. Smith, because I presume thats whats been the added pressure on the earnings this quarter; you guys reduced your own production?
<A Paul Jones>: Weve reduced our production because our customers have reduced their production.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Agreed.
<A Paul Jones>: And its double-digit days, so were taking out of most of our facilities, which is a lot more than weve ever done in the past. And theres more than one reason for it. We want to make sure that we first of all, Im not frankly, if I were our customers, Id be as aggressive as they are right now making sure they dont go into next year with a bubble of inventory.
We have an additional incentive right now not to build anything because were paying more a lot more for material right now than we have all year. So theres no incentive on our part to be building anything we are not going to sell. So yeah, were being pretty aggressive right now and taking a lot of days out. We have had some reductions in force. If the order rate doesnt pick up, obviously, we have contingency plans to respond to that, but based on our analysis of the market and conversations that we have hourly and daily with our customer base, we will see a pick up in January, we believe. We just dont know how much, and weve got us some estimates but were intending to wait and see and were ready to respond whichever way that goes.
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<Q Michael Schneider>: And then, I guess, specifically then on the earnings revision this quarter, Terry, do you have an estimate of what that under or overhead under-absorption pressure was during the quarter?
<A Terry Murphy>: Well, without giving you specific numbers that is included in there, EPC will be reducing inventories as will WPC throughout the quarter. So there will be an absorption hit in that number, thats included in that number.
<A Paul Jones>: Yeah, Mike, if you add up all the hits that weve had its actually more than were reducing the earnings because were having some things that weve done on the other side to help offset that. So, by dropping our earnings estimate by $0.15 or $0.20 or so, were actually have got some pretty big numbers flowing through that and some of those are positive.
<Q Michael Schneider>: And in fact, next question on that is, I believe you have been anticipating about $0.05 of restructuring this quarter as part of the $0.25 you had announced for the year. Is that number actually greater now based on some additional actions that have been accelerated?
<A Paul Jones>: Its actually been a bigger number than $0.05, Mike. Weve been saying about $0.25 for the year. And I think were saying right now, whats fourth quarter, $0.10, $0.11?
<A>: [Inaudible]
<A Paul Jones>: Is that all the benefit?
<Q Michael Schneider>: No, no. What the actual restructuring expenses will be realized during Q4. I think if we take the year-to-date amount and back into the fourth quarter, you were looking for about $0.05 in Q4, and Im just curious if this earnings revision incorporates a bigger number than that?
<A Paul Jones>: No, its still the same thing that weve been doing all along, Mike.
<Q Michael Schneider>: So the $0.25 for the year has not grown?
<A>: No, its all
<A>: [Inaudible]
<A Paul Jones>: It actually might be a little lower.
<A>: Maybe a little lower than that, Mike.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Okay.
<A Paul Jones>: Mike, our restructuring expense this year was $0.09 in the first quarter, it was actually about flat in the second quarter, a nickel in the third quarter. And its going to be, we think, probably more than $0.10 in the fourth quarter. But its not grown based on anything that weve done so far.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Got it.
<A Paul Jones>: Anything weve done in this quarter.
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<Q Michael Schneider>: And then, looking into Q1, I realize you expect orders to at least sequentially improve as orders, at least, begin to match the sell through rate. Do you expect production days to be down year-over-year in Q1 and Q2 for A.O. Smith?
<A Paul Jones>: No.
<Q Michael Schneider>: So you think you can adjust your inventories adequately just this quarter?
<A Paul Jones>: Yeah, yeah. We as Ive said, there is absolutely no incentive for us to make anything were not going to sell this quarter.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Okay. And the I understand why distributors arent ordering during Q4 to adjust their inventories to demand levels, and obviously cash flow is a trouble for a number of these bigger guys. Do you sense, though, that theres additional orders being pushed out based on your conversations with them because they expect lower prices in Q1 and Q2? Just as youre not building in Q4, theyre not ordering in Q4?
<A Paul Jones>: The answer is no. No, theyre just trying to make sure theyre not going into the year with any inventory that they dont absolutely need.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Okay. And then China and the slowing growth rates there, youve mentioned the stimulus packages benefit to you in 2009. Based on what I understand where the money is going in China, though, Im not clear how that would benefit your motor business or your water heater business directly.
<A Paul Jones>: Some of that money is going to housing, specifically. Thats one of the five categories listed in yeah, theyve got a little bit of a housing bubble and thats impacting their employment, the trades, everything else, and they want to stimulate housing construction. And, I mean, that obviously helps us.
<Q Michael Schneider>: All right. Okay. And then Yueyang has been impacted as well, or maybe from your earlier comments, it actually has held up its growth rates?
<A Paul Jones>: Yeah, its doing great.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Okay. And Terry, just on goodwill or asset impairment as you go into 2009, do you sense that theres a potential for an asset write-off?
<A Terry Murphy>: I talked about that a little bit yesterday and our sense is now that there would not be any, we dont have any exposure for a write-off in 09. Now, as we go through some more specific calculation, and will do so at the end of the year, but based on what were looking at for our planning process next year and then to the following two years, in the 2009 to 2011 we dont see any asset impairment.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Okay. And then pension expense in 2009, Terry, with the discount rate presumably going down, but your plan assets down?
<A Terry Murphy>: Looks like pension rates will almost double next year or pension expense will almost double next year.
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<Q Michael Schneider>: Okay. From what to what?
<A Terry Murphy>: From 4 to 7.5, 7.8 million, something like that.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Okay. And then finally just on the SICO transaction, Paul, the this may be a non-issue, but if the spin-off occurs on the first of the year and the shareholder vote doesnt go through, does that what occurs then?
<A Paul Jones>: Its the spin-off is really a Smith Investment Company thing that theyre doing. The vote will take place in April for both sets of shareholders, and we are highly confident theres not going to be an issue with the shareholder vote.
<Q Michael Schneider>: And do the non-Smith Investment Company shares vote as an independent group?
<A Paul Jones>: No. They vote as shareholders, like all the other shareholders.
<Q Michael Schneider>: As one group?
<A Paul Jones>: [Inaudible], the majority of whom are Smith family members.
<Q Michael Schneider>: Got it. Okay, thank you.
Operator: All right, thank you. [Operator Instructions]. And well go to the line of Alan Mitrani at Sylvan Lake Asset Management. Please go ahead.
<Q>: Hi, thank you. You said youre paying some of the highest costs all year for steel, and I assume thats true for copper and the other raw materials this quarter?
<A Paul Jones>: No, I wouldnt say thats true for the other raw materials.
<Q>: Okay. How long until it cycles through, that you see the benefit of all the drops that have happened in the commodity market?
<A Paul Jones>: We work off a trailing three-month index. So its already started to drop down, based on what happened in October and November relative to declines in the steel index.
<Q>: Is this an index we can track here? Is there a ticker symbol for it?
<A Paul Jones>: Its called CRU.
<Q>: CRU?
<A Paul Jones>: Its a widely used steel index.
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<Q>: Okay. And what are you doing with so you have, I mean, you have high cost product then that youre not able to sell, I assume, because your distributors or customers dont want to buy product that was marked up in price if they see the price of steel and others coming down too, I assume. So what do you do with that product? How do you move it out or do you just take hits on to your gross margin?
<A Paul Jones>: I dont think your assumption is correct at all. We take orders and we ship them. We are still getting orders, were still shipping product. Our steel and a lot of the commodities and freight costs went up early in the year.
Ill just talk about our water heater business. We had two significant price increases as that was occurring in the second and third quarters. And those have held in the marketplace and theyre still out there, customers are ordering product and were shipping it. It may not be at the full rate of the replacement level of what their sell through is, but its close to that. And theyre still buying the product and reselling it. People will not take the cold shower more than once. And thats the big driver of that business.
<Q>: Okay. Also, you know in mid-October, I guess, you raised your estimates on the year, correct?
<A Paul Jones>: Well, because of the strong third quarter results, we actually lowered our fourth quarter estimate at that time.
<Q>: Right. Okay. I guess thats fair. And what are you seeing your competitors do, are you seeing similar on the specifically on the Electrical Products side, whether its the Baldors or RBCs of the world. Are they doing all the same things, you know, curtailing investments, Im sorry, curtailing operating days, cutting back I mean, or is it just you guys doing it ahead of them?
<A Paul Jones>: Youll have to discuss that with them, were not going to comment on or speak for them.
<Q>: You dont have to speak specifically to specific competitors, what Im wondering is it an isolated situation in terms of what youre doing, or are you doing similar to what the industry is doing? Im not asking what your earnings are relative to them, but more from terms of the actions that youre taking?
<A Paul Jones>: Once again, you can call them and let them say so, but Im pretty sure theyre probably doing same things were doing.
<Q>: Okay. Do you see opportunities for market share gains in this situation? Are you seeing any shifts in market share on the EPC side?
<A Paul Jones>: Weve picked up a little bit of business that were proud of. But again, we dont discuss that because it would be giving too much information to our competitors.
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<Q>: And just remind us where is EPC, how much of that business is domestic versus in Europe or in Asia?
<A Paul Jones>: Its essentially about 60%, I think, in North America. The rest is, although the part outside the U.S., North America is growing rather dramatically.
<Q>: And which is weaker, the North America part or the 40% overseas?
<A Paul Jones>: North America is weak. I talked about the Yueyang facility, we just acquired that, I believe, in November of 05, if I remember correct. And our volumes are well over double what they were when we acquired them. And they sell products all over the world and theyve got huge growth in Middle East, for example. And these make, they make high voltage air conditioning hermetic motors for air-conditioning systems. They go into commercial construction, primarily.
<Q>: Okay. And lastly, it seems like everybodys trying to focus on 09. I know you dont have visibility into your business in general with five days of orders and minimal backlog, but it seems like from a construction perspective, commercial construction is going to be down viciously next year, domestically, with the government offsetting some of that with some of their spend. But it seems like there are no projects or very, very few projects on the drawing board for the end of 09 and 2010. I dont know, if youre and youre obviously not thinking that far out, but have you seen the cliff thats coming in a year from now as it relates to commercial construction, given that no one could finance anything now?
<A Paul Jones>: Well, once again, I dont agree with your assumption. We sell the light commercial, like on the water heater side. Now we make 150 gallon water heaters for restaurants and things like that. We have seen some well, quite a few opportunities there. We are going we are seeing a decline right now, as I said in my prepared remarks. And we expect to continue that to decline into next year. But we dont have a sub-prime issue here or anything like that, or an overbuild of light commercial buildings anywhere near the extent that we did in residential. So while were seeing expecting a decline, were not using the words vicious and precipitous and anything like that. Maybe the high-rise constructions and the big condos, the Donald Trump type projects are not going to be being done late next year. But thats not really a market that we participate in to any great extent.
<Q>: Okay. I appreciate that. I would encourage you to take a look at some of the announcements from retailers, mall operators and restaurants in terms of their cap spending and store expansions for next year, which look to be store net store closings on a lot of fronts, just to get a sense of whats coming 8 to 12 months down as opposed to just looking at three to six months.
<A Paul Jones>: I can assure you that we are well aware of that. Are you aware of how many water heaters a Wal-Mart store has in it?
<Q>: Hopefully a heck of a lot, for your sake.
<A Paul Jones>: No, one small one. Thats it, for a bathroom. A lavatory.
<Q>: Okay. Thanks a lot.
Operator: All Right. Thank you. And we have a follow-up question from the line of Scott Graham with Ladenburg. Please go ahead.
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<Q Scott Graham>: Hey, I just want to ask Terry a quick question on the tax rate. Is there any reason for us to assume that something other than 25 is the truth here, or is that a number that could actually drift upward next year?
<A Terry Murphy>: Its going to drift upward. Remember, theres a couple of things that have happened. One is that, were losing our China holidays, thats one thing. Another thing thats happening is that a greater percentage of our profitability is from outside of the United States. That pushed it the other way, with the offset of increase in tax rates in both Mexico and in China, the tax rate will go up a little bit. I think were projecting somewhere 25 this year and 27-ish next year.
<Q Scott Graham>: 27-ish next year. Okay. Thank you.
Operator: [Operator Instructions]. And I have no further question at the queue. Please continue.
Paul W. Jones, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Okay. Thanks Reggie. And we want to thank everybody for your interest and hope everybody has a great holiday season. We look forward to talking to you in January.
Operator: And ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude our conference for today. We thank you for your participation and for using AT&T Executive Service. You may now disconnect.
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Fourth Quarter Interim December 10, 2008 Filed by A. O. Smith Corporation pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and deemed filed pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Subject Company: A. O. Smith Corporation Subject Companys Commission File No.: 1-475 Exhibit 99.2 |
2 Forward Looking Statements This presentation contains statements
that we believe are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements
generally can be identified by the use of words such as may,
will, expect, intend, estimate, anticipate, believe, continue, or words of similar meaning. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that
could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated as of the date
of this release. Factors that could cause such a variance include, among others, the following: significant volatility in raw material prices; competitive
pressures on the companys businesses; instability in the companys electric
motor and water products markets; further weakening in housing construction; further weakening in commercial construction; a further slowdown in the Chinese economy; expected
restructuring costs and savings realized; or further adverse changes in general
economic conditions; the failure of A. O. Smith or Smith Investment stockholders to
approve the proposed merger; the outcome of the proposed transaction, if completed; the ability to satisfy the conditions to the proposed transaction; the impact of the proposed
transaction or any other transaction on A. O. Smiths or Smith Investments
respective businesses, and the possibility of adverse publicity or litigation and the
outcome thereof and the costs and expenses associated therewith. Forward-looking
statements included in this conference call are made only as of the date of this presentation, and the company is under no obligation to update these statements to reflect subsequent events or
circumstances. All subsequent written and oral forward-looking statements
attributed to the company, or persons acting on its behalf, are qualified entirely by
these cautionary statements. This presentation contains certain non-GAAP financial
measures as that term is defined by the SEC. Non-GAAP financial measures are
generally identified by Adjusted (Adj.) or Before Restructuring. |
3 Revised Fourth Quarter Forecast GAAP earnings per share at $.15 to $.25 Implications for full year: $2.63 to $2.73 Full year cash flow expected to be about $140 million |
4 As We See it Today Fourth quarter order rates down dramatically in both businesses, including China Consumers react to credit crisis by cutting spending Channel inventory levels driven down as customers conserve cash Order volumes not expected to bounce back in December (no pre-buy ahead of price increases) |
5 Our Countermeasures Conserve Cash December production schedules reduced Discretionary SG&A spending eliminated Core restructuring and growth projects will remain on track |
6 Implications for 2009 Many moving parts Opportunities Pricing/materials balance EPC restructuring benefits of $15 million China demand buoyed by stimulus package New product introductions Risks Global recession continues Pricing/materials balance Commercial volumes Discretionary replacement volumes |
7 Merger with SICO SICO will merge into wholly-owned subsidiary of AOSmith SICO shareholders will hold AOSmith shares directly Benefits to AOSmith Potential increase public float Reduction in total shares outstanding Several corporate governance enhancements Essentially all costs paid by SICO Transaction expected to close in Q2 2009 |
8 Fourth Quarter Conference call: Thursday, January 22, 2009 10 am Eastern Time |
9 In connection with the proposed transaction between A. O. Smith and SICO, the parties intend to file a registration statement on Form S-4 with the SEC containing a joint proxy statement/prospectus. Such documents, however, are not currently available. The joint proxy statement/prospectus will be mailed to stockholders of A. O. Smith and SICO. INVESTORS ARE URGED TO READ THE JOINT PROXY STATEMENT/PROSPECTUS REGARDING THE PROPOSED TRANSACTION WHEN IT BECOMES AVAILABLE, BECAUSE IT WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Investors will be able to obtain a free copy of the joint proxy statement/prospectus filed by A. O. Smith, without charge, at the SECs website (http://www.sec.gov) once such documents are filed with the SEC. It will also be available on A. O. Smiths website (http://www.aosmith.com) by clicking on A. O. Smith Corporation, Investor Relations and then SEC filings. Copies of the joint proxy statement/prospectus can also be obtained, without charge, once they are filed with the SEC, by directing a request to A. O. Smith Corporation, Attention: Investor Relations, 11270 West Park Place, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53224. A. O. Smith, SICO and their respective directors, executive officers and other employees may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies from the stockholders of A. O. Smith and SICO in connection with the proposed transaction. Information about the directors and executive officers of A. O. Smith and SICO and their respective interests in the proposed transaction will be available in the joint proxy statement/prospectus. |