Listened to the Pool Corp (#POOL) Investor Day earlier. Been an owner of $POOL since 2014 and still tear up a bit on every call, such a beautiful business, the type you will tell your grandkids about. Here are some notes.
2/#POOL reiterated '22 guidance for 17%-19% revenue growth (9-10% price, 3-4% volume, 5% M&A) and 15-17% EPS growth. Demand still strong with customers remaining booked through '22 and often into '23 with large backlogs. Sees post '22 revenue growth back to the 6-9% LT model.
3/#POOL noted they are a natural population migration beneficiary. 1,000 people/day moving to FL and TX. Often from NE and NW states where pool ownership was not attractive. Down in FL and TX these folks are adding pools and upgrading existing pools which is helping drive demand
4/#POOL continues to benefit from a large, ageing, and growing (1-3%/yr) installed base of ~5.4mln pools. Each is a vessel of consumption requiring recurring maintenance and upgrade/rehab spend as equiptment (i.e pumps) needs replaced and interior/exterior features need upgraded
5/ $POOL superior economies of scale and value add to both sides of a fragmented market (suppliers ~2,200 buyers ~120,000) continue to allow POOL to outperform small, local players and take market share. POOL is now at ~40% US wholesale market share across all US markets.
6/#POOL saw 7-8% price inflation in '21 and sees 9-10% in '22 vs. LT avg of 1-2%/yr. $POOL can easily pass through price in excess of supplier hikes as material costs are often ~25% of project costs, dwarfed 3-5x by labor. Maintenance items are also mandatory to keep a pool open
7/#POOL discussed recent PE acquisitions, providing its first real competitive headwind as the industry has been absent any large peer. Noted PE is buying existing operators, not adding greenfield capacity. $POOL is competing against new owners of the same locations.
8/ $POOL's recent acquisition of Porpoise Pool grants access to the $3bln DIY market via a franchise model of 265 stores in key states (FL/TX) and a strategic chemical packaging DC which improves $POOL chemical sourcing. Creates supply chain synergies for both $POOL and Porpoise
9/ $POOL reiterated it's LT algorithm for 6-9% organic growth augmented by M&A ('15-'19 +1-2%) and 20-40bps of EBIT leverage. Foots to ~11%/yr. EBIT growth. $POOL usually buys 1-2% of shares back and pays a ~1% dividend yield bringing est. LT TSR to ~14-15%/yr at a flat multiple
10/ overall the $POOL investment thesis appears intact. $POOL shares are down -25% off Nov/'21 highs and now trade at ~19x '22 EBITDA (~31x in Nov/'21) and ~25x EPS (~44x in Nov/'21) with multiples back to pre-covid levels and those not seen since '18-'19.
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Stuffed in the footnotes of their 10-K’s, some may not know that $HD & $LOW actually report their flooring department sales annually…
While their fiscal yr ends do lag $FND by a month, we can still derive good insights from their results
A few highlights…
$FND has massively outperformed $HD & $LOW since 2013…
Using 2013 as a base, $FND sales are up a cumulative +861%, around ~14x $HD (+62%) and $LOW's (+58%) flooring department growth
The bulk of $FND’s outperformance is due to new store growth, as $FND's store base is up nearly 5x from '13 (39) to '22 (191)
Even still, looking at total same store sales growth since '13, $FND's +206% comp growth crushed $HD (+62%) & $LOW (+58%), with nearly ~4x faster growth
$DHR was the first company I came across that had a “business system” – a structured operating framework used to drive continuous growth & improvement
Many other companies have similar systems in place
Often these have proved to be exceptional businesses
Here’s 10 I've found
First up is Fortive $FTV
$DHR's framework unsurprisingly extended to its spun-off industrial business, which has a similar system – the “Fortive Business System”
Novanta $NOVT – a ~10x bagger since 2016 – leverages its Novanta Growth System
$NOVT is a mfg of a wide suite of high precision lasers, sensors, robotics, motion control & other subsystem components used in advanced industrial & medical product applications
$TREX is up +7% today on Q2 results which showed surprising resilience…in contrast to other outdoor living category players like $POOL...
$TREX's better than expected results have a positive read through for names like $FND $SITE $HD & $LOW
My key notes...
$TREX saw revenues decline just -5% (adj), well ahead of street & prior guidance for a -15-16% (adj) decline
Key driver was more resilient consumer demand for composite decking as $TREX saw +MSD growth in channel sell through, leading to higher channel sell in for $TREX
Q2 results are also a notable improvement vs. Q1 which saw a -MSD decline in sell through & a -27% decline in $TREX revenues
$MHK Q2 earnings had some important read through for $FND $HD $LOW & peers
While last qtr mgmt had encouraging comments around a potential bottom in flooring, this qtr mgmt noted they still have yet to see a trough form but remain "hopeful" volumes are near a bottom
Some notes
Investors in $FND should keep close tabs on $MHK as it is…
1) the largest flooring manufacturer (~21% share) 2) $MHK's NA Flooring y/y results have very high correlation (~90%) with $FND total sales and SSS comp sales
While $MHK total sales posted a similar decline to last qtr. (Q2 -6.4% vs. Q1 -6.9%), NA Flooring softened a bit further, going from down -11.1% in Q1 to a -12.1% this qtr.
Unlike last qtr., further deceleration was despite much easier comps (10.6% to 1.7%)…