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3M's (NYSE: MMM) CEO Bill Brown recently gave a presentation at the JPMorgan Industrial Conference, and his remarks contained some mixed news for investors. However, on balance, they were positive for long-term investors. Here's what happened and what it means to investors.
A mixed first quarter for 3M
Going back to the company's fourth-quarter earnings presentation in late January, management had told investors to expect the following in the first quarter:
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Organic revenue growth in line with Q4 (2.1%)
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Earnings similar to those of Q1 2024 ($1.71)
However, at the recent JPMorgan conference, Brown told investors that organic revenue growth would be in the range of 1% to 1.5%, but there would be better-than-anticipated margin performance.
"Our earnings per share should be slightly better than what you previously expected," he said. When pressed on how earnings would beat prior guidance when sales are lighter, Brown credited it to "tight control of spending."
A double-edged sword
It's not great news for the near term. While the bottom line (earnings) will beat expectations, there's only so much reining in of spending that can be done to squeeze margin performance out of a business with weak sales. On the other hand, 3M's ability to react to events is a sign of the new operational discipline that Brown is looking to establish at 3M.
The question is whether the deteriorating sales outlook is part of a developing trend or a temporary weakness.
Why the sales outlook deteriorated
It's a somewhat complicated situation, because management said that orders would increase by more than 2% in the quarter. However, CFO Anurag Maheshwari noted that "revenue is getting elongated from the orders," meaning that sales would be light in Q1 and will move into the second quarter. Going into the details of where the weakness was, Brown highlighted manufacturing abrasives, auto aftermarket, and auto original equipment manufacturer (where 3M is overexposed to the U.S. and Europe), and notable weakness in the consumer segment, notably the "office channel" (Post-It notes, Scotch tape, etc.)
Since market interest rates peaked in mid-January, it's hard to argue that this was some kneejerk reaction in early March. In fact, interest rates and, in turn, mortgage rates have come down since then, although they remain uncomfortably high.
As such, it is likely a reaction to the tariff actions planned and implemented by the current administration. They are creating uncertainty, feeding into consumers' and distributors' cautionary behavior. Notably, the particular weakness is in areas (3M's consumer and auto-related areas) that have disappointed for some time and, therefore, are where confidence is probably relatively low.