Good day, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Ashland Inc First Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are on a listen only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during that session, you will need to press star one one on your phone. You will hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Mr. Seth Mrozek, Director of Investor Relations. Sir, please go ahead.
Thank you, Chris. Welcome to Ashland's First Quarter Fiscal Year 2023 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. My name is Seth Mrozek, Director, Ashland Investor Relations. Joining me on the call today are Guillermo Novo, Ashland Chair and Chief Executive Officer, and Kevin Willis, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. We released preliminary results for the quarter ended December 31st, 2022, at approximately 5:00 P.M. Eastern time yesterday, January 31st. The news release issued last night was furnished to the SEC in a Form 8-K. During today's call, we will reference slides that are currently being webcast on our website, ashland.com, under the Investor Relations section. We encourage you to follow along with the webcast during the call. Please turn to slide two.
As a reminder, during today's call, we will be making forward-looking statements on several matters, including our outlook for fiscal year 2023. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause future results or events to differ materially from today's projections. We believe any such statements are based on reasonable assumptions, but cannot assure that such expectations will be achieved. Please refer to slide two of the presentation for an explanation of those risks and uncertainties and the limits applicable to forward-looking statements. You can also review our most recent Form 10-K under Item 1A for a comprehensive discussion of the risk factors impacting our business. Please also note that we will be referring to certain actual and projected financial metrics of Ashland on an adjusted basis, which are non-GAAP financial measures.
We will refer to those measures as adjusted and present them to supplement your understanding and assessment of the financial performance of our ongoing business. Non-GAAP measures should not be considered a substitute for or superior to financial measures calculated in accordance with GAAP. The most directly comparable GAAP measures, as well as reconciliations of the non-GAAP measures to those GAAP measures, are available on our website and in the appendix of today's slide presentation. Please turn to slide three. Guillermo will begin the call this morning with an overview of Ashland's performance and results in the fiscal first quarter. Kevin will provide a more detailed review of financial results for the quarter. Guillermo will provide additional commentary related to Ashland's financial outlook for fiscal year 2023. We will open the line for your questions.
Now please turn to slide five, and I'd like to turn the call over to Guillermo for his opening comments. Guillermo.
Thank you, Seth. Hello, everyone. Thank you for your interest in Ashland and for your participation today. As stated in our earnings release last night, Ashland's results in the fiscal first quarter were consistent with the earnings update we issued last week. During these times of continued global uncertainty, we will strive to provide transparency and timely communication on company results and performance. As we plan for the December quarter, we recognize that several external dynamics could impact demand and performance, the impact of central bank actions to combat inflation, the war in Ukraine and the COVID reopening in China. Our forecast was based on a more recessionary environment developing and did not include factors that we could not control or forecast.
The drivers of our results for the fiscal first quarter are a great example of how uncertain events significantly impact market dynamics in a very short period of time. I'd like to spend a few minutes providing my perspective on the overall results. First, disciplined pricing led to price versus inflation cost tailwinds in the quarter, as we had expected. Our commercial teams moved quickly last year to recover the increased costs we experienced in energy, freight, logistics, raw materials, and other input costs. They continued with this discipline in this quarter. On a constant current basis, that pricing carry over and additional new pricing resulted in double-digit % price improvements for all segments compared to Q1 of last year. In addition, our three consumer-focused segments, Life Sciences, Personal Care, and Specialty Additives, realized strong mix improvements which supported the company's overall margins.
Second, the results in Life Sciences segment was particularly strong. The team saw strong global demand in our leading pharmaceutical ingredients and was able to capture additional market share at leading pharma customers. As you saw in the video at the beginning of today's call, Ashland continues to expand its leadership position in some of the world's most important pharmaceutical applications. Third, Ashland serves resilient end markets and geographies across the globe. The U.S. consumer and our U.S. customers continued to demonstrate resilience in demand in the face of global economic uncertainty. Many emerging markets also demonstrated growth. The historic long-term resilience of the end markets we serve gives us confidence in our financial outlook for this year and beyond. In contrast, we also experienced several headwinds during the quarter that yielded overall results that were below our original expectations.
First, global macros factors certainly impacted demand in China and Europe during the quarter. The changes in government COVID policies and the resulting acceleration of infection rates clearly impacted demand as well as business and living activities for everyone in China. The speed and impact of these developments was much greater than anyone expected. As a result, sales in China were significantly below our expectations. Although we expected some level of economic downturn in Europe, driven by both recessionary trends and general uncertainty on the impact of the Russia-Ukraine war, demand in Europe was below our expectations. Second, inventory management and destocking, primarily by distributors in Europe and China, was real, and it happened quickly. While sales to distributors only represent about 20% of Ashland's overall sales, distributor inventory destocking actions were a significant driver and roughly 50% of our revenue gap versus prior year.
The vast majority of this was in China and Europe. We also saw certain customers take similar inventory management actions, though these were isolated and we believe very company-specific with no specific market patterns. The weaker demand in China and Europe, as well as the destocking, impacted mostly Specialty Additives and Personal Care in our Personal Care business. It is important to note that while Ashland's overall margins remain in line with prior year, margins in our Specialty Additives segment were impacted by plant turnarounds, both planned and unplanned, during the quarter. We are thankful that our team in China is healthy and are grateful for the resilience they demonstrated following the outbreak of COVID in December. While the U.S. freeze did impact operations at several plants during December and January, the financial impact will mostly come through in the second quarter.
Our teams are working on actions to offset the impact of the unplanned shutdowns and the freeze, including plans to rationalize some of our planned maintenance work company-wide in the third and fourth quarters. I will discuss this a bit more when we review our outlook for fiscal 2023 later in the call. All indications lead us to believe that the China reopening will have a positive impact on demand. The pace and breadth of the reopening should be an important factor in our financial outlook for the remainder of the year. Foreign exchange rates again had a negative impact on Ashland's overall results. The impact of the strong dollar continues to be realized on our business overseas, though current exchange rates are improving when compared to our original forecast from at the beginning of the year.
Please turn to slide six. Before I ask Kevin to discuss our quarterly results in more detail, I would like to sum up the key takeaways. Despite global uncertainty and macroeconomic volatility, Ashland delivered consistent results in the quarter. Sales growth, EBITDA growth, EPS growth were delivered along with nearly flat EBITDA margins compared to prior year. While there were many puts and takes, delivering consistent results is an important component of our long-term strategy. Please turn to slide seven. As you can see in the chart on the left, year-over-year sales growth in Life Sciences was very strong, while the top line for Personal Care and Specialty Additives was below prior year due to the factors referenced earlier. Overall margins for Ashland remain healthy and generally in line with our expectations.
While there are many global uncertainties in the horizon, the Ashland team is performing well and executing on the actions that are within our control. I look forward to discussing the outlook for fiscal year 2023 and reviewing broader progress by the company later in the call. In the meantime, I'll turn over the call to Kevin to review Q1 results in more detail. Kevin?
Thank you, Guillermo. Good morning, everyone. Please turn to slide nine. Total Ashland sales in the quarter were $525 million, up 3% versus prior year, driven by continued inflation recovery and mix improvements. Sales increased by 7% on a constant currency basis. Gross margin remained consistent at 31.4% as cost recovery and mix improvement actions by the commercial teams offset increased input costs and the turnaround expense at a number of our global facilities, which Guillermo previously discussed. When excluding key items, SG&A, R&D, and intangible amortization costs of $116 million were essentially flat compared to the prior year. In total, Ashland's adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $108 million, up 2% from the prior year adjusted EBITDA of $106 million.
It's important to note that unfavorable foreign currency negatively impacted adjusted EBITDA by $14 million, while the planned facility turnarounds resulted in $12 million of incremental cost during the quarter. Ashland's adjusted EBITDA margin for the quarter was 20.6% and consistent with the prior year. Adjusted EPS, excluding acquisition amortization for the quarter, was $0.97 per share, up 10% from the prior year quarter. Ongoing free cash flow was a - $21 million for the quarter, a reduction from the prior year, primarily reflecting an increase in working capital, driven by increased inventory balances globally. Let's review the results of each of our four operating segments. Please turn to slide 10. As Guillermo referenced at the beginning of today's call, Life Sciences delivered very strong results in the quarter, driven by our global pharmaceutical ingredients business.
Pharma demand remained strong, product mix was favorable, the team executed on disciplined cost recovery, all contributing to margin expansion. Unfavorable currency impact was a partial offset to the strong performance in Life Sciences. In total, Life Sciences sales increased by 22% to $207 million, while adjusted EBITDA increased by 44% to $52 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin increased meaningfully to more than 25%. Please turn to slide 11. Personal Care sales were down by double-digit percentage in China due to COVID policies. Inventory destocking by distributors, particularly in Europe, also negatively impacted sales. As with Life Sciences, the team continued to realize disciplined cost recovery through pricing and favorable product mix. For the quarter, Personal Care sales declined by 6% to $138 million, while adjusted EBITDA declined 11% to $32 million.
Adjusted EBITDA margin also declined to roughly 23%. Unfavorable currency impact was also a headwind to Personal Care results in the quarter. Please turn to slide 12. Specialty Additives also felt the impact of reduced demand, primarily related to inventory destocking among distributors and certain customers in China and Europe. Sales outside of these two important regions were up by mid-single digits versus the prior year quarter. The reduced demand more than offset improved cost recovery and mix for the segment, particularly within the architectural coatings end market. For the quarter, Specialty Additives sales declined by 8% to $143 million, while adjusted EBITDA declined by 39% to $23 million. The cost impact from both planned and unplanned facility shutdowns was about $7 million and represented nearly half of the year-over-year decline in EBITDA.
Adjusted EBITDA margin also declined to 16% for the quarter. Please turn to slide 13. Intermediates reported sales were $54 million, up 2% compared to the prior year, driven by higher merchant market pricing and improved product mix management of higher value derivatives. Intermediates reported adjusted EBITDA of $23 million, an increase of 21% compared to prior year, and adjusted EBITDA margin improved to 42.6%. Please turn to slide 14. As we discussed at our last Investor Day, capital allocation discipline continues to be an important component of Ashland's value creation strategy. The actions we have taken over the past year have improved Ashland's financial position and provide for increased flexibility. Last night, we announced plans to execute a new $100 million share repurchase program under Rule 10b5-1.
This program will be executed under the existing $500 million evergreen share repurchase authorization that was approved by Ashland's Board of Directors last year. We expect to begin executing trades under the new program in early February. With the strength of our balance sheet, our growth outlook for the year, and the fact that we continue to believe that Ashland shares remain significantly undervalued, now is the right time to begin a new open market purchase program. As of the quarter close on December thirty-first, we had cash on hand of more than $530 million, with total available liquidity of roughly $1.2 billion. Our net debt stands at $784 million, which is about 1.3 turns of leverage.
We have no floating rate debt outstanding, no long-term debt maturities for the next four years, and all of our outstanding debt is subject to investment-grade style credit terms. We are investing in our existing business to grow organically and continue to pursue our strategy of enhanced, profitable growth through targeted bolt-on M&A opportunities focused on pharma, personal care, and coatings. Against a backdrop of global uncertainty, Ashland has a strong balance sheet with the flexibility to pursue our targeted growth strategy. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Guillermo to discuss our outlook for fiscal year 2023. Guillermo?
Thank you, Kevin. Please turn to slide 16. I'd like to take a few minutes to provide some perspective on the current fiscal second quarter and the second half of our fiscal year outlook. For the second quarter, first, regarding demand, our global pharma business continues to demonstrate strong resilience in our order book for Personal Care ingredients and our architectural coatings additives is rebounding so far this quarter. Although most of the regions are experiencing demand strengthening, demand in China remained weak in January. We expect to see the demand pick up following the Chinese New Year. Additionally, during January, we began to see the regional destocking dynamic stabilizing, notably in Europe. While volume demand levels have not returned to prior year levels, the sequential improvement has been meaningful. As we exit January, our sales and open orders were slightly above prior year, with price up and volume down.
Relative to prior month, both volume and revenue were significantly up, even with a weak demand in China. Second, as previously communicated, the winter storm that impacted much of the U.S. in December and had significant impact in our facility in Calvert City, Kentucky, as well as several other facilities in the U.S. Fortunately, Calvert City and other locations have been back online and fully operational for most of January. While the storm did not have meaningful impact on results in Q1, we expect to recognize approximately $15 million of incremental cost in the March quarter. These costs will most directly impact results in Life Sciences and Personal Care segments of the business. However, we expect the timing of the off-said actions will be mostly impacting our third and fourth quarter. Finally, for the next few months, there continues to be an elevated level of uncertain globally.
What happens over the next two months, from China's reopening to geopolitical and economic developments in Europe, to central bank actions across the globe, will have important implications for the global economy and Ashland results. All these factors could further influence our modeling and outlook for the remainder of fiscal year 2023. As we move into March, we expect to have increased visibility into many of these factors and the actions that our customers are taking heading into the second half of the year. For the second half of 2023, as we look at the back half of our fiscal year, some of the key issues that we look at are the expected magnitude and impact of the recessionary momentum. Will there be more recent impacts as we move from a high demand and tight supply to a more recessionary environment?
The uncertainty around the impact of China's COVID reopening and potential changes in the Russia-Ukraine war dynamics. With regards to the recessionary environment, in the absence of new data, we believe that the markets our business serve will continue to perform in line with their historic resilience. Our question is more about the reset developments as we move from the 2022 tight supply-demand dynamics into a more recessionary 2023 environment. This reset, driven by China's COVID reopening and destocking, clearly impacted demand in the first quarter, but should be transitory. Note that for several of our key technologies capacity for the industry and Ashland remain tight, with operating rates above 90%. While I'm not ready to say that destocking is over, trends in January show significant improvement.
Unless there are new developments, we expect them to fade off by the end of the second quarter. The impact of China's reopening or changes in the Russia-Ukraine war dynamic is more difficult to forecast, given the lack of clarity on how they will develop. For China's COVID reopening, we do expect improved demand developments in China. What broader impacts could develop will depend on the pace and the magnitude of the reopening. This is uncertain environment. In this uncertain environment, we will continue to focus on what we can control while planning and building resilience to react quickly to developments, similar to what we did in 2022. Notwithstanding our current outlook, we, as we did during the uncertain times of COVID, we will continue to look at a more conservative outlook for our internal assumptions that will drive our actions and plans.
Our priorities will be on: While we do not ultimately control demand, we will remain nimble to react to positive or negative developments, and we'll continue to focus on innovation and share gain activities to support growth. We will maintain focus on disciplined pricing, mix, and cost management to sustain margins. We demonstrated this ability in a very challenging inflationary environment in fiscal 2022, and we will maintain this discipline in fiscal 2023 and beyond. We will drive actions to offset incremental costs from unplanned shutdowns and the freeze. We will monitor market developments and take appropriate actions to maintain inventories in line with developing supply-demand dynamics. Please turn to slide 17. Consistent with our earnings update from last week, we are maintaining our financial guidance range for sales and adjusted EBITDA margin for the fiscal year 2023.
As indicated, our current models put our EBITDA outlook below the midpoint of our range. We expect to have better visibility on the impact of China's reopening, post-winter Europe, and central bank actions to combat inflation at the end of the second quarter. Critical deliverables in our models are clear: to sustain price margin management discipline, to offset the unplanned shutdowns and freeze impact in Q3 and Q4, and to continue to invest in our innovation pipeline and capacity to drive growth. Critical assumptions in our model are, we assume that the reset items like destocking are transitory. We assume that demand in our core markets perform in line with historic recessionary resilience. We assume that demand in China picks up and normalizes with the ongoing reopening. As we did in 2022, we continue to build resilience to react quickly to uncertain and unplanned external developments.
Our outlook for the year takes into account the known macro operating environment and Ashland's unique position within that landscape. Speculation on the potential impact of highly uncertain macro factors that are out of our control or ability to forecast are not factored into our models. Please turn to slide 19. Overall, the last decade, Ashland's journey of transformation has sharpened our focus as an additives and specialty ingredients company. As we systematically identify and tackle the thorniest problems, we concentrate on areas rich in opportunities to innovate and drive value for our customers, where innovation and expertise in one business unit can be leveraged in others. In closing, I want to thank the Ashland team again for their leadership and proactive ownership of their business in an uncertain environment.
We have solidified our portfolio as a global additives and specialty ingredients company with exceptional businesses that have leadership positions in resilient, high-quality consumer-driven segments. I am pleased by the resilience and execution demonstrated by our people and our business and look forward to the opportunities that lie ahead. Thank you, and operator, let's open it to Q&A.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your phone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Stand by as we compile the Q&A roster. One moment please for our first question. Our first question will come from Christopher Parkinson from Mizuho Securities. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you so much. Guillermo, could you just give us a little bit more color on your remarks in January and how you see the quarter shaping up on the destock and kind of the focusing on Europe and China? Perhaps just as important, the U.S. seems to be holding in on a relative basis. Can you just also hit on your expectations there and where you'd assess inventory levels with your distribution and as well as direct customers? Thank you.
Yeah. Well, let me start with the general markets, and I'll comment on China and Europe and some of the headwinds we saw and how they're changing. Overall, if you look at it, you know, we did a lot of analysis in the first quarter and looking into January. For most of the world, the U.S., and a lot of the developed demand actually remained pretty solid, especially if you looked at our core customers. You know, it was softer than we had expected overall, so demand, but relative to prior year, they were able to hold up. If you look at by market segments, it was pretty general. A lot of the destocking actions at our customers were very specific to customers.
You know, in a specific market, one customer, you know, brought down inventories, but others did not. I would say, even if you look at, you know, coatings and some of the Specialty Additives business, we get a lot of questions. In the U.S., you know, we saw softness in the DIY market, but in other areas, we saw strength in some of our major customers. Again, we sell additives, we're not the major high volume ingredients, so some of the dynamics that happen to us are a little bit different than other players. For China, obviously the reopening has had a big impact. I don't think we're any different than anybody else. You know, we saw it with our plants.
You know, at one point in time, 95% of our team in the Nanjing plant reported infected. We shut down for an extended period of time. I think that happened to our customers, to a lot of our suppliers and even distributors. I think what's happening in China is more about the COVID. There was some destocking, but I assume that even, you know, across the chain, everybody had the same problem we did in terms of shutting down operations. We continue to see that in January. You know, we saw significant improvement in demands in our orders in sales in January, but China was down significantly. We're hopeful that, you know, as we get now beyond the Chinese New Year, we'll see that pick-up.
Then the same thing in Europe. We're seeing it stabilize, especially the distributor destocking. I think most of that should be behind us. Again, the demand at a customer level was customer by customer. You know, I think if you look at the core market resilience, you know, this is why we're talking about what's the resilience of the market versus these reset items. You know, obviously, the reset items were the bigger driver, and it cloud a lot of, you know, the underlying dynamics in many of the markets. Our, our take is that the, you know, things have slowed down, but the dynamics, you know, are solid in many of the markets.
It's just an issue of where each player was in terms of, you know, how they were managing last year with a tight supply and demand and their inventory positions. That should be transitory, as you said.
Just and just a little bit more of a long-term question. You know, obviously there's been a little bit of noise in results due to storms and outages, maintenance, so on and so forth, but you've been pricing well. Seems like you're growing in the right areas in terms of, you know, being a beneficiary of mix. Then, you know, it seems like some of the inflationary headwinds that you're, you know, the entire platform was facing throughout the last fiscal year are beginning to ease and in some cases improve. So could you just give us a very quick update on your latest assessment of the margin potential across the entire portfolio and your confidence there within? Thank you.
Yeah. You know, I think the team has been very focused on that area. That is, as we highlighted, a critical deliverable for our models in terms of outlook. Remember, we don't have a lot of capacity, volume was never a big driver. Obviously, we're looking at it on the negative side, what could happen as if volumes come down a little bit. They were never a big driver on the upside, just because of where we are. Most of our capacity will be coming on in 2024. We need it. Even with the slowdown, you know, the production rates in many of the key technologies are still very high. We need that capacity to drive growth.
Pricing and margin management is a critical deliverable, and I think we're in a good place because we've captured everything that we needed to, both from the carryover from last year and actions that they took during the first quarter. The issue really now is how prices develop. I think this is where there could be some noise with the China reopening on, you know, how that impacts global demand, and that's probably where there's more uncertainty. I think we see just the reopening will drive better demand in China, but the pace and magnitude obviously could have other implications around the world, which we're gonna monitor. I think we're in a good place on that pricing margin side.
You know, the freezes did not impact our revenue, our sales. We had inventory. you know, it was more of the financial impact of the shutdown, maintenance, and those kind of things that did impact, you know, the margins. The underlying margins, even in Specialty Additives, you know, are expected to rebound. They were fine in the quarter. It was just that added cost that came through. In the things that we can control, we feel good. I think the issue now is, you know, as we said, we're not immune to the external dynamics. Our biggest issue right now is making sure that we perform in line with our peer group.
I mean, we're all selling to the same, you know, if you're gonna sell into product X, whatever cosmetic as an example, we sell different ingredients. We should perform in line with our peers that are also focused on these resilient market segments. I think, you know, we're confident that we are doing that. Our issue is gonna be like last year. If you look at our results last year, they were very good. You know, versus what we expected at the beginning of the year, a lot of different actions, we reacted very quickly to changing dynamics. I think as has been the case for the last three years, it's about being nimble and, you know, assumptions change very quickly in this uncertain environment.
I'm, you know, I'm confident the team has performed well and will continue to perform well as we move forward.
Thank you as always.
Thank you.
Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from Josh Spector of UBS. Your line is open.
Yeah, thanks for taking my question. Just on the mix improvement, you know, it's been a big part of your earnings growth over the last year. You talked about markets remaining tight. You know, they were tight last year. You have limited capacity. Just wondering, you know, given the double-digit volume declines I think you saw in some of your segments this quarter, if we see more of a prolonged destocking or a longer period of weaker demand, does that change that mix dynamic? Do you give some of that back, or how do you react to that?
No, I think in some of the areas it gives us some flexibility. We have to go back into some markets if volumes come down. That's flexibility that we have. For the majority of the key ingredients, if you look at, you know, the acetylenics line, things are still really tight for the, you know, foreseeable outlook. You know, producers in Europe are still very challenged. We're in a very strong position there. HEC remains tight in the market, even with this lower demand. It's going to vary by segment and product line. Our critical ones, I think remain. We see a lot of that strength.
Our issue I think is going to be looking at if volumes come down and we need to take actions to maintain inventories, we're not going to be building unnecessary inventory just for absorption. If we need to take actions to bring that down, you know, I think what we're holding is as, you know, raw materials come down a little bit, that we can offset that with raw materials. In general, Although our outlook is based on that resilient, you know, market profile that these markets have historically had, our planning and the actions that we're taking internally around costs, around how we manage our plants is taking a much more conservative outlook and saying, "Look, we need to be ahead of the curve as we did in 2022 and 2021 and in 2020.
Plan ahead, be conservative, but don't start changing our outlooks, you know, on speculative information. You know, react, plan and react, as needed, based on developments.
Thanks, Guillermo. If I could just ask specifically on Personal Care. I mean, it's interesting double-digit pricing, so that stepped up from where you were.
Mm-hmm.
I think a lot of other specialty markets we've seen pricing more level off.
Yeah.
I guess, is there any risk that you're losing share going after that additional pricing?
No. You know, I think if you look at the numbers, we're seeing it already in January, again, you know, we can't, you know, our initial, like everybody else, initial view was, "Look, quarter was down, it must be the market," you know. We try to align the first explanation to the narrative of the market, that markets are down, therefore it must be that the markets are down. You know, as we did our analysis, what we saw is, well, no, it's China and Europe. Distributors were the majority. So 50%, probably the gap was China, and 50% was distributors. I mean, there's an overlap on the two. It's these reset items obviously were the big impact, I would say, versus prior year.
Versus expectations, we have seen some softening in demand. If you see January, you know, the orders have bounced back for Personal Care. You know, we look at demand and we put control, you know, upper and lower control limits. We're just not looking at one number. Demand has bounced back to the midpoint of our control limits in term of demand for Personal Care in, in January. You know, you contrast that in, Specialty Additives, we have seen an improvement. You know, demand has bounced back into the control limits, but they're more at the bottom end of the control limits. Our view is pharma remains strong.
Personal Care normalizes as we move forward, these reset items get more behind us and performs more in line with historic parameters. Our Specialty Additives is gonna be a little bit of a mix. You know, depending on the segments that we're on. It's gonna continue to improve, but probably will be a little bit softer than we expected at the beginning of the year.
Okay. Thank you.
Okay.
Thank you. Again, one moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from David Begleiter of Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning. Guillermo, just on price cost tailwinds, what were they in Q1? What do you expect for Q2? What's embedded in the guidance for the full year?
Okay. You know, our assumption is that, you know, we will continue to recover any inflationary pressures that we get. We did it last year, I think, you know, in the first quarter. It wasn't broad-based like last year. More specific to product lines. Like we said, caustic, for example, was a significant cost increase for us in the first quarter, and we took action on those items. I think as we move forward, it's gonna be much more surgical. If needed, we probably will see things slow down from an inflationary pressure. You know, again, we'll have to react as that moves forward.
Most of the inflation has been around energy, especially in Europe, and specific raw materials, where these supply-demand imbalances had a big impact. A lot of that has mostly been driven in Europe. I think we're starting in a good point. We don't have to recover. We're not behind the curve. We're on the curve. As we said, last year, you know, we took actions to protect our margins. We didn't improve through inflationary pricing. We just did what we need to do to stay whole. The improvement was driven more by that mix improvement. We will continue to. You know, the mix improvement is not just because of the supply-demand dynamics.
That's part of our strategy of which areas we wanna focus on long term, where are we gonna be investing. you know, that mix improvement is driving our portfolio to the areas where we're making all the capital investments in the coming year.
Thank you for that. Just, on your outlook slide, you talked about the potential need for more inventory control and absorption-
Right.
... absorption actions. Could you give a little more color what you mean by that?
You know, I think although, you know, we're forecasting that we're still in demand this quarter, for example, as we said, I think we said in the last call, we were not gonna take significant destocking actions because there was a lot of uncertainty, and we didn't wanna get caught into a situation like 2021 where something happens and suddenly things get very tight. That's, that was sort of our position there. The issue is gonna be more if demand comes down, you know, the one thing that's not in our model is if we had to reduce production to meet us up, that would be a headwind for us that is not in our model.
We did wanna highlight it for everybody that that's just one of the risks. You know, everything we're trying to do now is, given the uncertainty, is make sure that we're transparent. We don't know where it's going, but let our investors decide if they wanna, you know, what perspectives they have on some of these areas. I would say absorption, you know, would be a potential headwind if things continue to be or get softer as we move forward. I don't think that's not our current model right now, but it's something that we continue to monitor. We are not going to rebuild. We're not gonna drive absorption by building inventory. Working capital discipline is something that's very important to us that we're gonna maintain.
Thank you.
Thank you. One moment please for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of John McNulty of BMO. Your line is open.
Yeah, thanks for taking my question. Guillermo, I know last year a lot of the big issues you had were around freight and logistics, and it looks like those channels or those issues have largely been resolved. Can you speak to what kind of cost relief you're seeing there? I know we've seen the availability of things like freight to improve. On the cost side, I guess I'd be curious how much of a tailwind that actually might be for you at this point.
Definitely we've seen improvement. You know, into the last quarter of last year, we were starting to see improvement throughout this quarter. This, our first quarter, we continued to see that. You know, I think that's stabilizing our inventory, and that's allowed us to rebuild a lot of our inventory levels. I mean, it is not back to normal. It's still, you know, the on time shipments are still catching up, and it really depends on which lines you're talking about, but clearly a big improvement. On the cost side, we're also seeing some improvement. Just a reminder is, you know, our shipments are from Europe and the U.S. out.
You know, some of the ultra-high costs from exporting from China out were not the big driver for us. Our biggest, bigger problem was the on time, you know, the reliability of the supply chain was a bigger challenge. It is, it is an improvement area, but it's not, you know, relative to maybe other companies, it's not the same size given where our channels are of flow are going to.
Got it. Okay. Fair enough.
John, those costs continued to ramp through a lot of 2022 just based on energy prices, et cetera. For our Q1, freight logistics was still higher than prior year, probably, you know, call it around $10 million, give or take. That was, you know, that continued to be a negative from a cost perspective. Again, obviously, that's slowed down. As the year progresses, those comps should get better.
Got it. Okay. That makes sense. That's clear. I guess with regard to the buyback that you guys have in place, the $100 million 10b5, I guess, can you help us to think about the timing or how, like, the duration of that buyback and how much you're kind of committing to for your fiscal 2023? How should we be thinking about that? Just given higher rates at this point, given, you know, the markets, you know, unwinding a little bit over the last, whatever, nine to 12 months in terms of valuations, do you see more opportunities at this point to put capital into M&A?
I know it's a target for you, I guess, can you help us to think about whether it's a more target-rich environment at this point or maybe not?
Let me comment on the M&A side. Kevin, you can comment on the buyback process. You know, I think our focus right now is driven with bolt-ons. I think we're in a good position to do that, you know, in terms of our cash position and our overall, you know, capital availability. This does not change, you know, the interest or opportunities. I think the reality is, you know, it takes a little bit of time for the valuations to reset. You know, we're looking at specific opportunities that we continue to work on. We're gonna be patient. Our view is, you know, organic growth has to be the big driver.
Innovation, the capital has to be where the engine is. We want to do this, these bolt-ons to augment our portfolio, but we don't wanna be, you know, we don't wanna be in a mode of having to do it or going and paying, you know, prices that we will not create value in the long term. We're gonna be patient, we're gonna be disciplined as we move forward, and I do think the environment will improve, as we move into the back half of 2023. From an M&A perspective. I don't think we're, we're changing, our ability or interest to do that. Kevin, you wanna talk about the process?
Sure. In terms of the value, we are committed to the $100 million. I mean, strictly speaking, you know, these plans can be turned on and off, but our intention is to spend the $100 million. In terms of how long that'll take, it'll be a function of price and the volume of Ashland shares that are traded. The way these programs work is we will have an agreed grid, price and volume grid with the bank that's executing this buyback for us, and they'll be in the market each day. The amount of shares that they buy will be dependent on how many shares you're trading and at what price. I would expect us to be able to complete this by the end of the quarter.
That would be my expectation. Will remain to be seen. If not by the end of the quarter, certainly by early in the June quarter.
Got it. Okay. Thanks very much for the call. Yeah, that's actually a bit faster than we were thinking, so good to hear. Thanks very much.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you. Again, one moment for our next question. One moment, please. Our next question will come from Mike Harrison of Seaport Research Partners. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning. Was wondering if you can give a little bit more color on the strong demand that you're seeing in the pharma business? Is this increasing penetration or share of wallet with existing customers? Is this new customers, new products? I guess maybe what are you seeing in terms of underlying market growth? Really just trying to get a sense of whether this growth that you're seeing there or strength is sustainable through the rest of fiscal 2023.
Yeah. No, the underlying market has remained resilient. You know, it's not that the overall market is growing at the same pace. We clearly have gained share. You know, and this segment, as we said last year, we did not expect a lot of reset there. Significant concerns still about availability of product. Both, you know, supply chain was a headache prior year, but obviously the situation in Europe and specifically in Germany has had a lot of impact on availability of product, reliability of supply. In a broad base, that entire industry has been, you know, focused on reliability, given the products and the importance of their products to society and to the welfare of people.
That's been the big driver, and we saw that as we move forward. Now looking out, we expect demand to continue to remain strong. We probably will not see significant resetting of, you know, stocks or things of that nature. You know, I think we will continue to do well as we look out. You know, will things normalize in Europe and the supply? I'm sure towards the back end of the year, you know, there could be some improvement, and, you know, we'll normalize some of our growth rates, you know, towards the back end of the year. The question is gonna be what's gonna happen in Europe, and I don't think there's a lot of certainty.
We've made commitment to our customers and them to us, to make sure that we're guaranteeing, you know, as best we can, the supply reliability.
All right. Then a question on the Calvert City disruption that you had. Is part of the $15 million impact related to winterization or backup power or other measures to help make sure that that facility is more resilient in future cold weather? Then do you expect any insurance recoveries associated with that outage?
Most of it, and Kevin, you can comment a little bit more, but it's maintenance to repair, bring it up to speed and the absorption impact. You know, this plant is not a new plant. It's been in this weather. This weather was not worse. It was a very unique problem we had in one unit that had, you know, later on implications with others. And that's why, you know, the maintenance and the downtime was much more significant than expected. It was really, you know, very specific to a unit that in our compressed air that, you know, you think of in freezing weather about liquids and things like that.
Air is probably not the area that you're more concerned, and there was just a failure in a specific area that had a, you know, downstream effect in boilers and other areas. You know, that's really the big driver. You know, the plant historically has done very well in this kind of weather, so it's more of a unique situation. Kevin, if you wanna give a little bit more color on the numbers.
Yeah. The biggest chunk of it is lost absorption. Repair costs are gonna be, you know, a smaller piece of the equation. From an insurance perspective, we actually maintain a pretty high deductible to keep our rates as low as possible. We have historically been very comfortable with that simply because we just haven't had that many issues over the course of time. We've banked a lot of saved premium as a result of that. it's, you know, probably three to five of the total impact is gonna be repair cost, the rest is gonna be loss absorption.
This is where, you know, for the third and fourth quarter we had plant shutdowns. Obviously, since we had shutdowns, we try to do as much other maintenance as possible too. That's what the team is working is what work was completed, what can we avoid in terms of future shutdowns. That's why the timing of the offsets will be, you know, not in the same quarter. It's gonna be more around when we had some of those other activities planned.
Sorry, Kevin, just to clarify there.
For the Calvert plant and Mike, for the Calvert plant specifically, we typically do a kind of a June turnaround there that often typically lasts several weeks. So part of, you know, part of what we're working on right now that Guillermo just mentioned is, you know, what can we avoid later in the year as a result of what we've been doing at the Calvert City plant to make these repairs. Not only these repairs, but also some of the things we would've done in June as well. I'm sorry, go ahead. You had another question?
Yeah, sorry. I just wanted to clarify on the insurance recovery. Are you saying that the deductible is so high that you're not gonna get any recovery, or it'll just be very modest compared to the $15 million?
Yeah, there's no expectation of recovery. There are multiple categories of deductible involved in an event like this. You've got, you know, you've got the property piece, and you've got business interruption, and you've got to hit those limits on both. It's not an either/or kind of thing. We don't expect any insurance recovery from this event.
Okay, understood. All right. Thanks very much, gentlemen.
Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from John Roberts of Credit Suisse. Your line is open.
Thank you. While most of the business saw destocking, do you think pharma ingredients saw any restocking activity? I know you had some logistics issues last year. Do you think there was any timing issues that helped pharma? because sometimes, I know sometimes the shipment falls one quarter or the other, and these are large high-value shipments that occur.
You know, if we look at just January, I mean, we continue to see strong demand. I think it's more of that share gain was the bigger impact. I don't think there was overstocking. It was, you know, more ensuring our customers, ensuring that they had the stock in the right place. You know, I think, you know, between COVID and the European situation, there is a lot of, you know, uncertainty around supply in some of these areas. For this type of industry, you know, their risk management has been a top priority. I think in the last call I mentioned that.
You know, when I was in Europe in November, at one of the big events for the pharma industry, it was very clear that most customers were very focused on, for 2023, risk management in terms of supply, given all the uncertainty that existed there then, and I think still remains now with some of the developments. We're monitoring that closely, and we haven't seen any change in January.
And then on-
On most of it.
On slide five, under the resilient U.S. demand, you listed architectural paint additives. I believe most of the paint companies reporting so far have had weak architectural volume. How do we reconcile that?
You know, again, several things. We did see weakness in the DIY space. You know, I think the contractor space remained more resilient. You know, we don't necessarily follow 100% dynamics. We're additives. You know, when you see a lot of destocking, you know, we're not the main ingredients that drive inventory levels and things of that nature. There, there's just unique situations. Again, we're working with a lot of our customers. Supply remains tight around the world, even with the softening. We're working to make sure this is not just about a quarter, it's for the whole year of how we work to ensure that they have the right products.
You know, the issue with additives is if you don't have them, it doesn't matter what you have with the other raw materials, you can't produce. They are very focused to make sure that they don't have the same problems they had last year.
Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from Jeff Zekauskas of JPMorgan. Your line is open.
Thanks very much. In your press release, you said that currency negatively affected your EBITDA by $14 million. I think your currency effect on sales was about $24 million-$25 million. Why wouldn't the effect on EBITDA just be $4 million-$5 million consistent with your EBITDA margin? Why would it be so large relative to the sales impact? Second, could you comment on the trends in your, i n the margins of your Intermediates and solvents business. Is that business getting weaker or stronger or staying the same?
Okay. Well, let me comment on the Intermediates.
Sure.
Kevin, you can comment on the currency. Intermediates has held up. You know, a reminder, most of our Intermediates business is the downstream products NMP, BLO. BDO, we have the captive, and we have a use and maybe of our merchant business, maybe 20% of, you know, a little bit of, varies 20%-25% of our merchant business is BDO. I would say in BDO, clearly, you know, the markets are long, prices have been coming down. Internally for us, our pharma business has been strong, and even in Personal Care, our core business with customers versus distributors continues to hold up. Volumes, internal captive volumes were good.
Although transfer pricing, not so much in this quarter, but we are, you know, we are forecasting them to be coming down just because markets are longer. That'll be a negative for Intermediates, but a positive for our downstream businesses as we go through the year. We don't see that BDO dynamics are gonna change that much, you know, in the near term. I think it really will require markets to start picking up probably in the second half of the year, for things like fibers, you know, polyurethane. There's a lot of these other bigger markets that will drive that part of it. That's not the biggest part, but on the margin it, you know, we'll see some impact in the next quarter.
If you look at NMP and BLO, you know, they're different products driven by different markets. We are not pricing as, you know, maybe the markets were in the past, you know, just assume it's all a commodity and move it. These downstream products are very valuable. You know, NMP is going into semiconductors and to the EV market for battery production. Huge investments going in in the US and in Europe. We're focusing our portfolio more on the U.S. and Europe, less on Asia. Demand is going up. There is not enough product, so we are working with all our customers and people that are investing in both regions to make sure that, you know, we have the product they need as they ramp up, you know, the construction of their plants and increase production.
The pricing and supply demand dynamics are a bit different. Similarly, in the BLO market, these are going into active ingredient production for pharma, for Personal Care, you know, very specialized applications in the semi and the electronics industry too. We're the only Western merchant player. Again, the dynamics there are different. Markets have been tight, and we're pricing each product on their own, not just trying to move BDO. In the past, remember, we were a big BDO house, and it was just moved like most commodity companies. You wanna load the asset and just move it through across. We're not a big BDO house anymore. Most of our production is for captive use and to support our downstream.
We have a very different strategy, and so far, pricing has been holding up. You know, what we're trying to see is more of that demand. I think on the margin, we will see softness in BDO and the other ones. I think we'll have to see how markets develop, especially in Europe. You know, I think also with the China opening up a lot of excess product that may be just, you know, trying to find homes outside of China now that there's no demand. You know, all that will be pulled in back into China as China reopens. Kevin, if you wanna talk about FX.
Sure. Just the impact is a little counterintuitive on the surface. As you look at it, our manufacturing footprint is pretty U.S.-centric, especially for our higher margin products. Not only do you have a lower selling price on a translation basis outside the U.S. because of the strong dollar, you also have higher COGS because of we're U.S. dollar-based manufacturing for a lot of those products. You kinda get hit on both sides of the equation. You have an outsized impact on the gross profit and ultimately the EBITDA piece of the equation. That's why, you know, the numbers don't necessarily on the surface make as much sense.
I don't know if that answers your question or not, but it has to do with the fact that we're more U.S.-centric on the manufacturing side.
Lastly, you said your planned maintenance cost in the quarter was $12 million. Is that a lot or a little? What are your planned maintenance costs on an annual basis? Is this a year of larger planned maintenance costs or smaller planned maintenance costs?
From a plan perspective, it's pretty consistent year to year. What can differ, what can vary is the timing.
Yep.
This year versus last year, we're heavier. We're much heavier in Q1, especially in the Specialty Additives area than we were prior year. On an overall basis, it's pretty consistent. The impact typically is around $40 million a year in total, give or take.
Great. Thank you so much.
The big variable with that one, Jeff, would be the Lima, Ohio, BDO plant. We do that one about every three years, and that one's. You know, that one brings a number up whenever we have to do it. Otherwise, it's very consistent from one year to the next in total.
Yep. Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from Michael Sison of Wells Fargo. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning. Just one question. You talked about adding a lot of capacity this year. How much growth does that provide you over the next couple years in either sales growth or EBITDA? Depending on how quickly that fills up, when will you need to add more?
We're adding capacity in our core segments, so HEC, which is very tight globally, and not just for us, but for the industry. That'll come on, we're expanding in Hopewell, and that'll be, you know, significant capacity increase. Of course, we probably won't need new capacity there for several years. We're expanding capacity in our Benecel lines and that's more targeting our mix towards pharma and and nutrition, a lot of the plant-based protein type applications. Klucel, which is pharma-driven, and Aquaflow on the coating. You know, we'll need the material, the capacity, you know, the next tranche for, you know, will vary by each of the product lines. This will cover us for several years.
It's a significant number of important projects. There are other areas where we're not investing, where we believe we have plenty of capacity. As our mix changes and focus changes, we're gonna be focusing on strategic areas that are higher growth, higher value, higher differentiation areas.
If demand is there, you'd be able to grow your mid-single digits type of growth.
Oh, yeah.
for the next several years?
Yeah. You know, like we said last year and this year, you know, volume is not the growth drive. We don't have any more product to sell. I mean, any hiccup and we're short again. I mean, even with the softness, HEC as an example, the capacity utilizations for the industry will remain pretty high. You know, I don't think the reset... Again, we're... A lot of what we're looking at is what's going on under the core demand. Is that behaving per historic levels on resilience and things of that nature? We haven't seen any data that changes that. Even if we dig into our numbers, it's... You know, the core businesses have actually been resilient. We cannot make a statement based on what happened in Q1.
We cannot say, you know, these segments are falling, you know, abnormally versus history. So really, it's about this reset, and I think this is why the next two months are very important, and we really, you know, having a few months, a month or month and a half of the China reopening is very important. Also, the Europe post winter to see how the energy situation and supply-demand dynamics in Europe turn out. Those are big issues because they impact this reset notion that is different. If you look at historic recessions, you went from a normal demand supply into a recessionary environment. We're not coming from a normal position. We're coming from a very tight supply-demand, where people were behaving in a certain way.
This reset probably is not something we've seen, so it's not normal versus history, and that's where we're getting the noise. As we put that behind, we do believe it's transitory. We should see then the underlying performance of the markets. The capacity we're adding should put us in a good position starting 2024 to really drive volume growth, which is, has to be our number one priority.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for the next question. Our next question will come from Laurence Alexander of Jefferies. Your line is open.
Good morning. So just to expand on that notion of the reset, I guess, first of all, is it right that the volumes in most of the business lines were down more than 10% in the quarter outside Personal Care and oral care? What do you think? Given that the inventory Given what you've seen with the European nation inventory adjustment, what is your benchmark, you know, based on your historical analysis for what this portfolio should do if there actually is a U.S. recession? I guess just lastly, after 2024, when you have ample capacity, what do you see as a reasonable range of lumpiness quarter to quarter, given the kind of swings we're seeing in inventory positions?
You know, I think just to go through in the order that you mentioned. We still see demand holding up. If we look at underlying historic demand, we're not immune. When you start a recession, you could get some slowdown. In general, you know, we are in Personal Care. We're not in home care in our markets. Those tend to be resilient. You could see markets, you know, go down, you know, single digits to stay up in the middle digits. That's really where we see, you know, a lot of the history. You know what we're tracking right now, you know, absolute versus relative.
We wanna make sure that, you know, in the absolute that we're staying, you know, flat to our longer-term goal of 200-300 basis points over market, which would put you in the middle single digits. You know, that you're gonna vary in that level of range. Relative, we're looking at our peer group. You know, many of you have, you know, when coming in, you know the companies that we're trying to compare to, which is the additive ingredients company, and that tend to be very resilient. I think we're seeing our performance pretty much in line with what many others in this area. If we both sell a different ingredient into the same product, we should both feel the same relative performance relative to demand.
I would say pharma, Personal Care, obviously, the more resilient architectural coatings. There's a little bit more reset. It's higher volumes at the beginning of a transition. You know, our history has been that that recovers very quickly because it just it's much more of a consumer driven type portfolio. I think, you know, so far we're seeing that in the recovery in January. As I said in the numbers, pharma continues strong. We're seeing underlying demand in Personal Care normalize. In the Specialty Additives where coatings is our biggest market, it is not.
Pardon me. I'm afraid Mr. Novo has left the call for a second. Mr. Willis, will you be able to take over?
I'll do my best.
Kevin, do you want to?
Go ahead, Seth.
Go ahead, Kevin. Why don't you finish up? I think we lost Guillermo.
Just looking at the current situation, though, the bigger volume issues and revenue issues for that matter were China and Europe. I mean, you know, China is, I think, in its own way, compartmentalized. A lot of that, we believe is COVID related. Early in this quarter, you know, January certainly is, you know, less COVID, probably more Chinese New Year. As we finish out the quarter, I think Guillermo mentioned this earlier, we'll have better visibility about what, you know, what we.
I-
-what we believe is gonna, you know, gonna be the future trend in China and Europe. Guillermo, you back?
Yeah. Yeah, I'm back. I don't know what happened. Sorry about that.
Technology.
Yeah.
Guillermo, I was just mentioning China and Europe were really where the volume and revenue shortfalls were for us. Again, as you mentioned, the distributor impact was a huge chunk of that. I think as we get through the quarter, we'll have better visibility about what that's gonna look like going forward. Laurence, sorry about that.
Thank you. No, no, perfect.
Okay.
Thank you.
Thank you. This will conclude the Q&A session of the call. I would now like to turn the conference back to Mr. Guillermo Novo for closing remarks.
Okay. Well, thank you everyone for your participation and questions. I just hope you're seeing, I think the core things that the company is focused on and controlling around pricing, around innovation, about driving our core business. You know, the team is performing very strong. You know, I think as we look at this transition, this reset part is creating some challenges, and we're working through them. But I think still a lot of the fundamentals as we look forward, we feel confident that, you know, we have a strong portfolio.
Our portfolio itself, I think, is one of the big changes that we've had in the last few years of position as well, servicing very resilient, high quality markets, that should provide us, significant, growth opportunities and a degree of stability, not immunity, but stability relative to other areas. We will continue to communicate openly and transparently during this period of higher uncertainty, and we look forward to connecting with all of you in the coming weeks. Thank you for your time and, thank you to everybody. Bye.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you all for participating. You may now disconnect and have a pleasant day.