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Q4 2024 Ibc Advanced Alloys Corp Earnings Call

In This Article:

Participants

Jim Sims; Chief Communications Officer; Ibc Advanced Alloys Corp

Mark Smith; Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer; Ibc Advanced Alloys Corp

Presentation

Jim Sims

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to this IBC Advanced Alloys Investor Update webcast. We're going to discuss today IBC's financial performance for the quarter and year ended June 30, 2024. I'm Jim Sims, Director of Investor and Public Relations with IBC.
Before we begin our webcast, just a few reminders. The slides from today's presentation and the audio of this call are being broadcast live over the web. A recording of this broadcast is being made, and a replay will be available on the IBC website later today, and we are at www.ibcadvancedalloys.com. After our formal presentation, we'll be happy to take questions from webcast participants.
During today's presentation, we'll be making forward-looking statements, and viewers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on such forward-looking information and statements. Additional information identifying risks and uncertainties is contained in IBC's public filings available on sedar.com and on our company website at ibcadvancedalloys.com.
Joining us for the webcast today is Mark Smith, CEO and Executive Chairman of the Board of IBC; and Toni Wendel, Chief Financial Officer and Board Secretary for IBC. Mark and Toni, thank you both for joining us.
Mark, why don't you go ahead?

Mark Smith

Thanks, Jim, and welcome, everyone. Let's go ahead with the first slide. Thank you, Jim. So for those of you on the call who are new to IBC, let me take -- let me start by providing a quick overview of our company and our operations.
We are an Indiana-based manufacturer specializing in copper alloy products for the defense and global commercial markets. We are the only company in the US that both casts and forges copper and copper alloy products at its primary business -- or as our primary business. We are known for the depth of our technical expertise and our ability to maintain the highest product quality by operating in a vertically integrated facility. There is still room for significant expansion of plant operations on the current site.
IBC makes a variety of specialty copper and copper alloy products for hundreds of customers across multiple industry sectors, including those shown here. Here is a representative sampling of some of our customers, both past and current, very impressive. I'm very pleased to report a very good quarter and fiscal year 2024 for IBC. First, we achieved profitability, both in the quarter and for the year. We set several financial performance records in 2024, including the highest consolidated sales in IBC's history.
Gross margins are continuing to improve. We strengthened our working capital position by $5.6 million in 2024 fiscal year. We have now successfully discontinued operations at our Wilmington, Massachusetts facility. We expect to incur a charge to operations in respect to the discontinuation of that facility, and we're continuing to negotiate with the building landlord to minimize such costs. As we focus now on our continuing operations at our Copper Alloys division, I'd have to say I'm very, very excited about the future of IBC, which we'll discuss in more detail later today.
So let's get into more of the details. First, as many of you probably saw in our news release earlier today, we are reporting the performance of discontinued operations from our now closed Massachusetts facility, continuing operations at our Copper Alloy division and a combination of continued and discontinued operations.
So combined sales of both discontinued and continuing operations rose by 50.9% and 33.4% year-over-year for the quarter and the year, respectively, on much higher product demand. Continuing operations at -- continuing operations sales at Copper Alloys division were $7 million in the quarter, a 28.7% year-over-year increase and $25.7 million for the year, a 19.3% increase over the prior year. And I'm pleased to report that this 2024 sales performance was a new record for the Copper Alloys division. We generated combined operating income of $2.3 million and $5.6 million in the quarter and year, respectively, which showed substantial improvement over prior year period figures.
We booked combined adjusted EBITDA of $2.3 million for the quarter and $7.6 million for the year, both of which reversed prior year period losses. Combined gross margin came in at 33.9% in the quarter and 29% for the year. Both reflected stronger performance and a favorable inventory adjustment in the quarterly result.
We generated combined net income of $559,000 or $0.01 per share and $1.7 million or $0.02 per share for the quarter and year, respectively. IBC's working capital improved by $5.6 million in the fiscal year going from a working capital deficiency of $7.2 million, including cash of $83,000 as of June 30, 2023, to a working capital deficiency of $1.6 million, including cash of $1.4 million as of June 30, 2024, that improvement largely reflected debt refinancing of short-term debt with long-term debt and satisfaction of the obligation to produce beryllium-aluminum castings under a sales contract in our EMC division.
Here, you can see a very nice upward trend over the past four years in both revenue and adjusted EBITDA for IBC. The copper-colored bars show the performance of our continuing operations at Copper Alloys and the blue bars show performance from our now discontinued operations at our Wilmington Massachusetts plant. The combined total sales revenue generated in 2024 of just over $38 million was a new record for the company as was the adjusted EBITDA for the year of $7.4 million.
This next slide shows what I see as a nice and very welcome turnaround for the company in terms of net income. After some very challenging years, it's nice to be in the green. All right. There you go, Jim. Here's the green that we're very happy to be in. My goal and that of the entire air team is to continue to operate profitably going forward. And I see growth opportunities ahead that I believe will help us achieve this goal.
The next slide, you can see here, copper has a very strong upward trend in terms of gross profit and gross margin since we completed our $5.7 million expansion and modernization of the Copper Alloys manufacturing facility in Franklin, Indiana in 2022.
This vertically integrated facility has 32,000 square feet of new production space, which now totals 83,000 square feet on 12 acres of land. It provides vertical integration of alloy casting, forging, which includes hammer, press and ring rolling, heat treating and machining operations and has helped generate sales growth from about $13.7 million to more than $25 million a year, and it positions IBC to expand our business with additional capacity.
Here are a few of the longer-term macro growth trends that we see continuing to drive demand of our products. The global expansion of 5G networks and the Internet of Things is increasing demand for materials across our copper product lines. Growth in the electronics sector is also driving greater demand for our products. As markets for electric vehicles expand around the world, we expect to see much more intensive use of copper that's very bullish for IBC.
A number of our customers are in the power generation sector and that includes the rapidly intensifying work in Fusion Energy. The US sees a return -- or if the US sees a return to major investment in the oil and gas industry and production therein, there is also a potentially strong area of additional growth in that sector with lots of positive things moving forward for the Copper division.
Let me mention what additional area of potential growth, US naval defense. It's widely recognized by both political parties in the US that America has seriously fallen behind in terms of its competitive position vis-a-vis China in terms of surface and subsurface naval ships.
One statistic puts this situation in sharp focus for me. Just on Chinese shipyard near Shanghai, has more capacity than all of America's shipyards combined. The US Navy has announced an aggressive 30-year plan to rebuild both the number of naval defense vessels we sale and the domestic supplier networks that service this industry.
The Navy's goal is to grow the fleet to over 381 ships and 134 large, unmanned surface and underwater vehicles. That is from a forecast low of only 285 ships in 2026. A special emphasis will be on submarines, including the Columbia and Virginia class subs. IBC has supplied the Navy for a number of years with a variety of copper alloy products, including for Columbia and Virginia class submarines.
We're in discussions now with defense policy leaders in Washington, D.C. and with leaders in America's largest submarine boat builders about potentially expanding our ability to provide them with the specialized alloys they need. I hope to have more of this growth opportunity in the months ahead.
And with that, I'm happy to take any questions.