使用警語:中文譯文來源為 Google 翻譯,僅供參考,實際內容請以英文原文為主
Operator
Greetings, and welcome to the Sterling Construction Company's First Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call and Webcast. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. (Operator Instructions) There are accompanying slides on the investor relations section of this company's website.
Before turning the call over to Joe Cutillo, Sterling's Chief Executive Officer, I will read the safe harbor statement. Some discussions made today may include forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from the statements made today. Please refer to Sterling's most recent 10-K and 10-Q filings for a more complete description of risk factors that could affect these projections and assumptions. The company assumes no obligations to update forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
Please also note that management may reference EBITDA, adjusted EBITDA, adjusted net income or adjusted earnings per share on this call, which are all financial measures not recognized under U.S. GAAP. As required by SEC rules and regulations, these non-GAAP financial measures are reconciled to their most comparable GAAP financial measures in our earnings release issued yesterday afternoon.
And I'll turn the call over to Mr. Joe Cutillo. Thank you, sir. Please go ahead.
Joseph A. Cutillo - CEO, President & Director
Thanks, Maria. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Sterlingʻs First Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. I'm proud to report another record quarter during an unprecedented time of hyperinflation and supply chain challenges. Our teams are working harder than ever to overcome these challenges and ensure we continue to service our customers and our investors. I'd like to take a second to thank them for their efforts and let them know it does not go unnoticed. This morning, I will cover the highlights of our first quarter and the strategic progress we have made. Then I'll turn it over to Ron for his financial commentary. And I will finish with the market and full year outlook. Let's start with the most important highlight of the quarter, and that is we had zero lost time incidents in the quarter and our teams went home to their family safe every evening. We continue to be an industry leader in safety, driven by a culture that cares as much about their fellow colleagues as they do about themselves.
Our diverse workforce understands that financial results alone are not enough. We're constantly looking for better ways to protect our people, protect our environments and give back to our communities. This is what we call the Sterling way. Shifting to the strategic front, our strategic transformation focused on improving margins, reducing risks and diversification into value added services continues to pay off. In the quarter, our highest margin segment, E infrastructure, surpassed our transportation segment and revenue for the first time in our history. With the addition of the Petillo acquisition, which we completed at year end, our E infrastructure segment represented 41% of our total revenue and 62% of our segment operating income in the quarter. We continue to be very excited about the incremental opportunities and synergies we have with the addition of Petillo into the segment. Combined with plateau, we believe we now have the largest, most capable E infrastructure site development company in the country.
Our building solution segment, our second highest margin segment continued its organic expansion in both Houston and Phoenix in the quarter versus prior year operating income increased 27%. And our Phoenix market has now grown to over 10% of revenue in the segment in less than 9 months when combined our E infrastructure and building solution segments contributed 89% of our segment operating income in the quarter. In transportation solutions, our focus on bottom line improvements versus top line growth and migration away from low bid heavy highway projects continues to pay off. In the quarter, versus prior year, our operating income was up 38% while revenue was up 9%. These improvements in all 3 segments, combined, delivered another outstanding quarter for the quarter versus prior year. Our revenue was up 30%. Our net income was up 24% and our operating income was up 24% and our net income was up 82%.
Versus year end 2021, our combined backlog grew to over 1.6 billion and our cash balance ended at just over 80 million. These great results are a direct tribute to the power of linking of customer centric, entrepreneurial culture with our strategic focus on improving margins, reducing risk and building a platform for future growth.
With that, I'd like to turn it over to Ron, to give you more details on the financial. Ron.
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
Thanks, Joe, and good morning. I am pleased to discuss our strong financial start of 2022 and another record first quarter performance. Our updated investor relations slide presentation has been posted to our website and includes additional financial details to help further understand our first quarter 2022 financial results. The presentation also provides additional moderate modeling considerations, which underpin our 2022 revenue and earnings status. As you may recall, we closed on the Petillo acquisition on December 30, 2021, resulting with the full inclusion of Petillo's financial results in the first quarter.
Let me take you through our financial highlights, starting with our backlog metrics. As March 31, 2022, our backlog totaled $1,000,527,000, up $34 million from the beginning of the year gross margin in this backlog was 12.8%, a 60 basis pointing increase over the beginning of the year. A higher proportion of each infrastructure solutions backlog drove this margin improvement.
Unsigned low bid awards at the end of the first quarter of 2022 or 142 million an increase from approximately $20 million at the end of last year. We finished the current quarter with combined backlog of $1,000,669,000, 10% increase over the end of 2021. Our gross profit and combined backlog was a record 12.6% compared to 12.2% at the beginning of the quarter. Our current quarter book to burn ratios were 1.0x for backlog and 1.43x for combined backlog.
Revenue for the current quarter of 2022 were $410 million, up $95 million for 30% over the first quarter of 2021. Importantly of this 30% first quarter revenue growth, half of the revenue growth was driven by the late 2021 acquisition of Petillo and half from Organic Sterling and [its revenue]. Our segments strong first quarter Organic revenue growth of 26% from E infrastructure, 13% from building solutions and 9% organic growth from transportations solution. The current quarter E infrastructure organic growth of 25 million over the prior year quarter reflects a continuing strong demand for distribution centers, data centers, and warehouse within our East coast footprint.
Building solutions revenues grew 13% over 2021 compared to compared to 21 financial quarter. Reflecting continued residential growth in our core Dallas Fort Worth market and our expanding footprints in Phoenix and Houston. In the current quarter, Phoenix and Houston accounted for 18% of our residential revenues compared to 7% in the prior year quarter. Transportation solutions revenue was 160 million in the current, an increase of 9.1% over the prior period. The increased transportation revenues were primarily driven by higher heavy highway and water containment and treatment work, partially offset by lower aviation revenues. The heavy highway revenue growth was primarily due to increased construction activities on our large design build projects.
Consolidated gross profit with 56 million, an increase of 11.1 million over the prior year quarter. Consolidated gross margin declined from the comparable 21 quarter by 40 basis points to 13.9% in the current quarter. This decline line resulted from continuing supply chain and inflationary pressures, primarily impacting our E infrastructure and building solutions segments. These challenges make our year over year margin comparison difficult, as there was minimal impact of these supply change and inflationary challenges. In the first quarter of 2021. General and administrative expenses increased 6 million in the current quarter to 23.1 million, over half of this increase is attributable to the Petillo acquisition.
We continue to expect our full year DNA expense to be approximately 5% of revenues. Operating income for the first quarter was 28.3 million an increase from 22.8 million in the prior year quarter. Our current quarter operating margin was 6.9% compared to 7.2% in prior year quarter. The decline is primarily the results of Maya 4 mention supply chain, and inflationary challenges, which have put pressure on our margins since Q2 of 2021. In the current quarter, one of our 50% own entities received the final notice that its PPP loan had been forgiven. So the portion of this debt forgiveness was 2.4 million and this gain is included in income in the first quarter.
The current quarter effective income tax rate was 25.3% a decline from 29% in the prior year quarter. This effective tax rate declined principally reflects the benefit of the 2.4 million nontaxable gain from the forgiveness of our last outstanding PPP loan. We continue to expect our full year effective tax rate to be 28 to 29%. Our full year noncash portion of our effective tax rate will continue to be approximately 24% of pretax income.
The net effect of all these items results in a first quarter record net income of $19.3 million or $0.64 per share. The prior year, quarter net income and EPS were $10.6 million and $0.37 per share respectively. Our first quarter, first quarter EBITDA totaled $39.8 million, an increase of 33% over the prior year quarter of $29.9 million. The other percent of revenues keep it to improve to 9.7% of revenues for the quarter up from 9.5% for the prior year period. Cash flow generation from operating activity, the quarter was 19.2 million compared to 38.1 million in the comparable 2021 quarter. The fluctuation principally reflects our first quarter seasonality and mix of in our changes in the mix in our contracts included in backlog.
Additionally, the current quarter included approximately 4 million of outflows relating to the payment of the Petillo acquisition related costs, In 2022. We continue to expect our full year cashflow from operations to approximate our income from operations for the year. Our first quarter capital expenditures net of disposal proceeds total 14.6 million, compared to 11 million in 2021. This increase reflects our strong E infrastructure solutions activities, including the impact of the Petillo acquisition. Our full year 2022 anticipated net CapEx continues to be in the $50 million to $55 million range.
Now I'll turn it back to Joe.
Joseph A. Cutillo - CEO, President & Director
Thanks, Ron. Now I'd like to take a few minutes to talk about our markets and our full year outlook. Starting with the infrastructure, demand throughout the east coast remains extremely strong. We continue to be very selective on the projects we're taking to ensure we continue to service our core customers and their demand first. Our ability to increase capacity significantly still remains limited due to equipment and material availability. At this time, we do not see either of these getting better in 2022. As an example, that current lead time for new equipment is now averaging 9 to 12 months.
And our building solution segment are 3 markets, which are currently top 3 markets in the U.S., remain extremely strong. However, this strength is leading to even further supply chain issues and inflation. In the quarter, we began seeing companies put on allocation in several markets for concrete. These allocations are driven by a lack of cement powder availability and are projected to remain an issue through the second quarter. In addition, we continue to see price increases on all of our materials that have been successful in passing those on more quickly than in the past. We saw the benefit of this in the first quarter as our operating income increased over 100 basis points from last year's first quarter. Our transportation segment is our only segment seeing slight headwinds from the market. At this time only a small amount of funding from the new infrastructure build has made it through to the bid phase of new projects.
Historically it has taken 24 to 30 months for us to see any significant impact of new funding. This is not a surprise. It is how we planned and forecasted this piece of our business. What is more challenging is the disconnect between our customers estimate of project cost or what we call engineers estimates and actual bid cost. Because our customers estimates were developed several months or sometimes several quarters before the bid process, they have outdated the material and labor costs to them. As a result, we won, but were not awarded almost 300 million of revenue in the first quarter. That was 30% to 60% over the engineers estimates. These jobs will now go back to be reestimated using current material own labor prices, and then rebate.
Even with the significant challenges. Each of our businesses is facing our strong backlog position coupled with a great start to the new year, enables us to remain confident in our ability to maintain our full year revenue guidance of $1.825 billion to 1.875 billion and an EPS range of $2.69 to $2.88.
With that I'd like to turn it over for questions.
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Our first question comes from Sean Eastman with KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Sean D. Eastman - Senior Equity Research Analyst
Joe I just wanted to expand on the supply chain inflation update here. I think the original guidance framework sort of contemplated a, the status quo type of supply chain backdrop over the course of the year. I'm just wondering has that gotten worse and you've been able to overcome it in, in some way? How would you frame that here Joe?
Joseph A. Cutillo - CEO, President & Director
Yes. So if I look at the supply chain itself, it continues to get worse. It's not getting better between availability, and pricing. But the good news is when we looked at third quarter, fourth quarter trends and fourth quarter coming into first quarter -- we're not seeing further margin erosion. There's a little bit of confusion because the first quarter, last year we didn't see inflation. But what we've been watching is, we are seeing any further erosion -- as a matter of fact in our residential business we've actually clawed back a nice amount of some of the inflation. But part of that is, once this started hitting us we got caught in that cycle where we had projects that were already bid. We didn't have enough inflation built into them. We always put some sort of hedge for material to go up, but we never expected some of the increases we saw last year. So we've corrected that process.
In addition in our E infrastructure business, we've done things with fuel indexing in our contract. So we give a price at the beginning of the contract. If it goes up the customer pays us. If it goes down, we'll give money back to the customer to try to offset those. So supply chain's still very volatile, still going up, but our guys have done an outstanding job of fending it off and we feel good about the margins and if it continues at this pace, should see no or very little incremental erosion.
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
Yes. Let me help you with a couple oranges and apples. So from an operating return on our segments, Petillo --together with all of our billing solutions group -- we're flat from the fourth quarter. In other words we didn't see further decline in the margins. The challenge in the story is the acquisition, which performed a little bit better than we thought they would in the out of the gates. But you have to remember that the 2 things: Petillo is in the far Northeast. It snows and it's got nasty weather up there in first quarter. So from our revenue pacing side, approximately 20% of the revenue falls to the first quarter. 25% or so in the second quarter, and then 30% in the balance in the back half of the year. So that's pretty important. That, of course, that lower volume impacts margins.
And the other one, just to refresh your memory, is the Petillo margin characteristics are different than plateau because of the type of work they add on to some of their large dirt moving. So historically 4 percentage points, difference between full run rate by co full run rate Petillo, but that's already been out the public entity with audited financial statements and performance. We built it in all the plans. So I think that's one of the challenges that's in there. Once because we got basically minimal in the first quarter of last year and we're doing those comparisons, so it's not only the inflation, but also the addition of the Petillo business, which we're still very excited about.
Sean D. Eastman - Senior Equity Research Analyst
Yes. So this starts to come into my next question. It looks like 14 and a half percent gross margin guidance is maintained. And so you guys are still confident you can get that 70 basis points of expansion, even though you started the year down 60 basis points in one cube. And that's largely a comps thing. It sounds like.
Joseph A. Cutillo - CEO, President & Director
Yes, I think there's -- yes. The 2 main elements of that are you had a little bit of a comp differential in the first quarter. You got the seasonality of the business in the first quarter, but they come back strong and their margins really improve over the next 3. Between their backlog activity and their run activity, we don't have any concerns.
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
Even without, until -- Don't forget our seasonally slowest quarter is always the first quarter. Same store sales across the board. So we are flinching clenching on having confidence that will remain in that 14 and a half percent bandwidth.
Sean D. Eastman - Senior Equity Research Analyst
Yes. Okay. And then last one from me, is it fair to say that you guys are tracking ahead of budget on revenue here in the first quarter? This run rate seems to leave some room for upside on the full year range is my sense, unless I'm missing something there.
Joseph A. Cutillo - CEO, President & Director
Yes. Here's what I would say. We're kind of sticking with the guidance -- that kind of -- we are stick with the guidance today and we're still early in the year. Sean, there's still so many moving parts out there with the supply chain. The piece that worries me -- everybody wants to understand is their margin [rose], I feel pretty good about that -- is availability. And knock on wood, we fought our way through, but availability does not seem to be getting any better on these materials. And as you can imagine, if projects later in the year can't get raw materials, do they continue to start them or do they delay them a month or a quarter -- that's still the wildcard we got out there, frankly. So we feel good with the backlog we have. We feel good with the tailwinds of the markets. We just have that one variable of the headwind on the supply chain side, that we just -- we can't control and we don't know at this point in time. So we'd be getting over our skis if we went any further than the guidance today, I think.
Operator
Our next question comes from Brent Thielman with D.A Davidson.
Brent Edward Thielman - Senior VP & Senior Research Analyst
Ron congrats. Great quarter. I guess first question, just on building solutions. Joe, you talked about some of these allocation issues for concrete. Does that cause some near term deceleration on the top line in this segment?
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
No, no, the good news is -- we saw them. They started hitting in the quarter. We're fighting through them. If anything, I think our growth in the Phoenix market would be even bigger than, than it has been. We’ve been really happy with the team and their performance and now that's up 10% or so of our total volume. I think it would be even higher if we didn't see some of the allocations and shortages on the material side. So we've got it all baked in, it's got the reins on us a little bit here as we see.
Brent Edward Thielman - Senior VP & Senior Research Analyst
Okay. And it sounds like the Phoenix market's now bigger than the Houston market for you. Maybe that's just a function of the demand environment, but maybe, maybe you could talk a little bit about that and things you do to grow the business in Houston.
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
Yes. So the Houston market -- still obviously great market is sponsored between 1 and 2. It seems one quarter Houston's one, next quarter Dallas is one. The fundamental difference between the 2 markets is you do have 2 fairly sizable players in the Houston market. So we're doing business for 1 or 2 builders in a cup, 1 or 2 small builders. Very limited in -- very hard to get labor. Okay. So we're able to grow in Houston is --labor is more of our limiting factor in the Houston market.
Phoenix, a lot of small players, not a lot of large players in combination of the market, the pricing in the market. Laborers are still a significant issue down there as well, but that market seems to be an opportunity for us to get faster traction, not only our core customers, but the potential of some other customers as we go forward. So we -- from a strategic standpoint -- we're spending more and more time on what we might be able to do to even enhance the growth rates and the Phoenix target.
Joseph A. Cutillo - CEO, President & Director
And certainly the Houston revenue increased pretty steadily in 2022 here, but not at the pace that, obviously -- the going from nothing to something in Arizona and a lot, it's part of that math.
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
I would I say, probably the right way to look at it is Houston's on par with what we anticipated. Phoenix is greatly exceeding our expectations on how fast and how rapid that's growing.
Brent Edward Thielman - Senior VP & Senior Research Analyst
Okay. And then on the cash flow side -- in the first quarter, last year was really, really good. Obviously not as strong in the its first quarter this year, maybe Ron -- just the moving pieces, the cash flow side here, in the first quarter, is that function some of these supply chain issues -- or maybe just talk through that?
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
No, I think it's consistent what we thought it would be. So the difference year over year is several of our large design build projects were getting off the ground and ramping up into in first quarter of last year. Generally, that's good for cash flow because we're getting money to mobilize and early payment payments -- they're not too huge, but at the same time, we're not spending a lot of money getting there. So that levels off and we're seeing it level off. So we've always thought that even through the bidding of last year, that our best metric around cash mobs -- cause it's a challenging one with all various variables in there -- would approximate our income from operation for the year, which is give or take $150 million. So we're continuing to kind of stay in that for the expectation side.
Brent Edward Thielman - Senior VP & Senior Research Analyst
Okay. And then just coming back to Sean's questions on the E infrastructure side, I guess I just wanted to kind of recap what I think you said. It sounds like the first quarter is sort of a low point for margins. You should get some benefits of leverage as you get into seasonally, stronger quarters here, Q2, Q3, such that we should see some decent improvement in margins in that segment over the next couple quarters. Is that, is that fair?
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
Yes, the margins in the first quarter are not eroded because there's a margin issue or a pricing issue or anything like that. It's seasonality driven.
Brent Edward Thielman - Senior VP & Senior Research Analyst
Got you. So they will…
Ronald A. Ballschmiede - Executive VP, CFO, CAO & Treasurer
And hopefully we'll continue with a flat impact of -- that can go away -- but our challenges of pricing, of inflation and supply chain. So we haven't built in not to recover too quickly because we just don't see any recovery in 2022 in our short range, crystal ball.
Joseph A. Cutillo - CEO, President & Director
Yes. I think one of the challenges that Sean -- both you, Brent, and Sean both have is that -- everybody's going to have -- is we haven't gone through a full year with pillow in the mix yet. So we it's challenging. We know kind of the ramp up rates and the quarterly rates and everything. And I think that'll become very apparent as we get through the year for everybody. And it'll be very consistent as we go into next year as well.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of our question and answer session, and I would now like to turn the call back over Mr. Cutillo for closing remarks.
Joseph A. Cutillo - CEO, President & Director
Thanks, Maria, and thank you, everyone. I'd like to take a minute to reflect back on the quarter and with an outstanding job, all the teams have done in some very, very challenging times. If you have any follow up questions or to schedule a call, please refer to the information provided in the press release associated with our investor relations group at Sterling, or our partners at the equity group. I hope everyone's had a great day, has a great day. And I thank you again for your time this morning. Thanks everybody.
Operator
This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.