NYSE:IP International Paper Q2 2024 Earnings Report $44.31 -0.61 (-1.36%) As of 05/9/2025 03:53 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast International Paper EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.55Consensus EPS $0.41Beat/MissBeat by +$0.14One Year Ago EPS$0.59International Paper Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$4.73 billionExpected Revenue$4.78 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$42.94 millionYoY Revenue Growth+1.10%International Paper Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/24/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateWednesday, July 24, 2024Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsInternational Paper's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, July 23, 2025Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by International Paper Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 24, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning and thank you for standing by. Welcome to today's International Paper's Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent background noise. Operator00:00:11After the speakers' remarks, you will have an opportunity to ask questions. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Mark Nellison, Vice President, Investor Relations. Sir, the floor is yours. Speaker 100:00:44Thank you, Alan. Good morning and thank you for joining International Paper's 2nd quarter earnings call. Our speakers this morning are Andy Silvernail, Chief Executive Officer and Tim Nicholl, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. There is important information at the beginning of our presentation, including certain legal disclaimers. For example, during this call, we will make forward looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Speaker 100:01:09These and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward looking statements can be found in our press releases and reports filed with the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission. We will also present certain non U. S. Speaker 100:01:23GAAP financial information. A reconciliation of those figures to U. S. GAAP financial measures is available on our website. Our website also contains copies of the 2nd quarter earnings press release and today's presentation slides. Speaker 100:01:36With that, I'll turn it over to Andy Silvernill. Speaker 200:01:38Thanks, Mark. Hey, good morning to everybody the Americas and good afternoon to all of our friends in Europe. I'm excited to have joined the IP team with our rich history, important mission and dedicated talented people. Prior to joining IP, I spent a decade as CEO of IDEX Corporation where we delivered strong consistent results through great teams, customer obsession and embracing an eightytwenty operating system. I also spent several years working with private equity where speed and impact are at a premium. Speaker 200:02:08I've been asked many times since my announcement why IP? The bottom line is that through my due diligence very similar to how I approach acquisitions, I found a company that matters in terms of its mission, a company with solid underpinnings and a company with a lot of opportunity for improvement and significant upside potential. It is absolutely a diamond in the rough. I spent my first 90 days on a learning journey with the goal of getting fact based insights, aligning the team, dimensionalizing the opportunity and launching the improvement plan. It's been a powerful experience, an opportunity to speak with employees, customers, suppliers and investors. Speaker 200:02:48All of this has reinforced my initial beliefs and open new insights. Let's turn to Slide 5. So before we go through the quarter, I'm going to talk about the case for change in International Paper. And later in the presentation, I'm also going to talk about what we're playing to do differently to drive significant change at IP and significantly improve performance. So I'm going to spend a few minutes walking you through some of the data that highlights the challenges we faced as a company in a very candid fact based way. Speaker 200:03:19The data and feedback have told me that most of our performance issues are self induced. And as a result, these can be fixed with intense focus on the right strategy and courage to do what must be done. I'm going to start on Slide 6. You can see 10 years of data here. These are the facts that I know as owners of IP you appreciate. Speaker 200:03:42We have underperformed on every meaningful metric. You can see the realities of sales, margin and profitability decline. And although it's not on this chart, our return on invested capital has followed the same trend and is underwater today. I want you as our share owners to know I understand this is totally unacceptable and we are going to fix it. But to fix it, we need to understand the root cause, we must face the brutal facts and do something very different. Speaker 200:04:11Let's go to Slide 7. IP's performance deterioration has been exacerbated by some very important choices in capital allocation and resource allocation. You can see over the past decade, we spent more than $35,000,000,000 including returning cash to share owners, making investments and improving the balance sheet. Let me start with the efforts around the balance sheet. We made excellent choices here, deleveraging and funding our pension. Speaker 200:04:39A strong balance sheet is foundational and gives us great degrees of freedom for value creation. But we've also spent more than $12,000,000,000 on dividends and share repurchases. Both of these tools can create substantial value if used well but are value destructive if used poorly. IP will pay an attractive dividend. We can support our dividend at the current level and we will grow into it as performance improves. Speaker 200:05:02But as I think about share repurchases, when and how you do it really matters. As with most companies, IP purchase shares when cash is generated, but not in the mind of maximizing the opportunity based on market factors and intrinsic value. The remaining spend $2,000,000,000 on acquisitions and $12,000,000,000 on CapEx have not generated the returns we expect. Now turning to Slide 8. Importantly, our spending since 2018 on investments that drive performance for customers and productivity have lagged. Speaker 200:05:38I'm not saying that we can't be more efficient with capital than our competition, but we push the envelope too far. While our mills are well capitalized and advantaged, we spent too much on unproductive capacity and haven't stayed ahead of the curve. We have under invested in our box system. On the right hand side is where you can see this show up. We've underspent on maintenance and repair and this is the heartbeat of operations and what drives reliability for our customers and productivity. Speaker 200:06:05These numbers are supported by the conversations I'm having with our folks across our system, particularly in maintenance. We've got an incredibly long list of great opportunities that need capital to drive performance for our customers and expand profitability. When we're driving excellent reliability internally, we get excellent reliability externally and we will sell for our customers and get paid for value. That means we've got to spend some money and I believe we can do that with capital plan in the range of $1,000,000,000 to $1,100,000,000 per year. If opportunities exist to drive results by expanding those investments, we will do so. Speaker 200:06:42I'm turning to Slide 9. This is probably the most important slide that we're going to go through here today, that and capital allocation. The lack of investment back into the businesses has directly contributed to a cost problem. Operating costs have ballooned on modest sales growth. The good part here is that it's in our control. Speaker 200:07:03We can attack this and control our own destiny. What doesn't show up on this page is the impact of the slippage of reliability our customers. Reliability defined as quality, delivery and service is the most important factor for the vast majority of our customers. We made our own bed here under investing in cost that has lost us market share over the past decade. The share loss will continue over the near term, but again, we know how to reverse this and can control our own destiny. Speaker 200:07:34We've done a lot of work commercially to position ourselves correctly in the market. We've made sensible value over volume trade offs recently and we're ramping up our commercial talent, capability and incentives. We have lost other share where we let customers down. We will change this by being the leader in reliability. We've made some solid progress in on time delivery and our corrugator and converted capacity is up. Speaker 200:07:59But we have more to do to address the share slide. I'm now turning to Slide 10. I'll talk about this of where to build from and things to improve. IP has a strong culture of ethics. We work with integrity. Speaker 200:08:16This is a really hard thing to change within our organization and we have a great foundation here. We have talented, experienced people up and down the organization. I'm finding them willing to face the reality and embrace significant change. My team wants to win. They are tired of getting their butts kicked. Speaker 200:08:33My job is to focus and align them on the critical few and away from the trivial many. The strongest thing we have to build from is our North American packaging franchise. Our packaging franchise is incredibly valuable and has tremendous upside potential with the right strategy. And as I mentioned earlier, we have a strong financial foundation. Turning to the opportunities for improvement, we are embracing the N eightytwenty operating system to do 4 things. Speaker 200:08:591st, an outside in customer driven strategy that differentiates through reliability and leverages our reach. 2nd, optimize our cost structure. 3rd, align our team and resources toward differentiation and profitable growth. Finally, we will instill a high performance culture that achieves superior results. In a little bit, I'm going to talk about how we are embracing eightytwenty to drive results. Speaker 200:09:26So now let me turn to the Q2 of our performance and the outlook. I'll share some highlights and then turn it over to Tim to walk through the details. I'm now on Slide 12. Our 2nd quarter earnings were higher than the Q1, but relatively unchanged year over year. We saw sequential improvement driven by higher sales across higher selling prices across the portfolio and we got benefit from seasonally higher box volumes. Speaker 200:09:52Regarding the market environment, there is stable to moderately better demand. However, IP's packaging volumes came in below our expectations and continue to lag the overall market and that will continue for some time. We're seeing expected volumes decline from repositioning our optimization and optimizing value and volume. We do have residual effect from a history of under investing in certain regions and markets where we have ongoing reliability and capacity issues that we are addressing and have seen improvement in already. We need to make sure that we are close to the market, pricing appropriately and investing to be the leader in reliability. Speaker 200:10:31As I mentioned earlier, we're focused on investing in differentiation and we are seeing specific results that are leading indicators to positive change. It will however be messy over the next 3 to 4 quarters. We expect near term performance to be challenged by seasonally lower volumes and higher mill outage expense. With that, I'll turn it over to Tim to provide more details about our Q2 performance and our outlook. Speaker 300:10:57Thank you, Andy. Good morning, everyone. I'm on Slide 13 now, where I'll provide the details around the Q2 as we walk through the sequential earnings bridge. 2nd quarter adjusted operating earnings per share was $0.55 as compared to $0.17 in the Q1. Recall that the Q1 included a $0.10 per share drag related to the January freeze and the Ixak box plant fire. Speaker 300:11:21Price and mix was higher by $0.23 per share driven by the flow through of prior price index movements as well as margin and mix benefits from successfully executing our Fox go to market strategy and our GCF optimization strategy. Volume was favorable by $0.06 per share. Although we continue to see favorable demand trends, deploying our commercial strategies across the portfolio continues to impact volumes in the near term as expected as we transition based on our strategy. Operations and cost was unfavorable by $0.01 per share sequentially. This is largely from the impact of inflation, higher S and A and spending to improve reliability in our Packaging business, partially offset by mill efficiencies following the pulp machine closure at our Regalwood mill. Speaker 300:12:14Maintenance outages were lower by $16,000,000 or $0.03 per share in the 2nd quarter and input costs were overall flat sequentially with decreased costs for energy and freight offsetting increased costs for OCC and chemicals. And finally, corporate items favorably Turning to the segments and starting with Industrial Packaging 2nd quarter results on Slide 14. Price and mix was higher due to the realization of strategy contributed approximately $25,000,000 of earnings benefit from improved margins and mix, and higher export and mix contributed approximately $21,000,000 Volume was higher by $27,000,000 sequentially, is about making choices that impacts our volume in the near term. Although we expect to trail the industry for the next few quarters, we believe our box go to market strategy will allow us to improve our margins and mix over the long term. Operations and costs was $43,000,000 unfavorable sequentially due to the impacts of inflation, higher S and A and spending to improve for liability. Speaker 300:13:45Planned maintenance outages were higher by $3,000,000 sequentially and input costs were $3,000,000 favorable primarily due to lower energy more than offsetting higher OCC costs. Moving to Slide 15, I'll cover the Global Cellulose Fibers 2nd quarter. Price and mix was sequentially higher by $22,000,000 due to the price index movement and GCF optimization strategy driving benefits from higher absorbent pulp mix and the reduction in commodity grades. Volume sequentially was relatively flat overall as improved demand for absorbent pulp was offset by lower sales of commodity grades as we segments. Operations and cost was favorably was favorable sequentially by $36,000,000 A large portion of this benefit is related to the pulp machine closure at our mill in Regalwood, North Carolina. Speaker 300:14:49Planned maintenance outages were lower in the second quarter by $19,000,000 as planned. And finally, input costs were higher by $1,000,000 with lower energy costs not quite offsetting higher chemical and wood costs. Turning to Slide 16. I'm going to provide our outlook for the Q3. As Andy said earlier, we expect lower sequential earnings due to volume decline and higher costs, offsetting benefits from the prior price index increases. Speaker 300:15:19For our Industrial Packaging segment, earnings are expected to be down sequentially in the 3rd quarter by approximately $160,000,000 and earnings will be relatively flat for Global Cellulose Fibers. Now let me give you the breakdown. I'll start with Industrial Packaging. We expect price and mix to improve earnings by approximately $60,000,000 sequentially. This is the result of prior index movement in North America as well as higher export prices to date. Speaker 300:15:53I would also note that approximately $13,000,000 of the expected improvement is related to our box go to market strategy. Volume is expected to decrease earnings by approximately We expect operations and costs to decrease earnings by approximately $80,000,000 This includes higher reliability spending, labor and benefits costs during the summer months and higher unabsorbed fixed costs. Higher maintenance outage expense is expected to decrease by approximately $44,000,000 And lastly, higher input costs are expected to decrease earnings by approximately $30,000,000 primarily due to higher energy costs. Switching to Global Cellulose Fibers, we expect price and mix increase earnings by approximately $10,000,000 as a result of prior index movement. Volume is expected to decrease earnings in the Q3 by approximately $5,000,000 due to seasonally lower demand. Speaker 300:17:00We expect operations and cost to decrease earnings by approximately $25,000,000 largely due to higher distribution costs and timing of spend as well as higher unabsorbed fixed costs. Lower maintenance outage expense is expected to increase earnings in the Q3 by approximately $25,000,000 And lastly, input costs are expected to be stable. With that, I'll turn it back over to Andy. Speaker 200:17:27Thanks, Tim. I'll pick back up on Slide 17. For over a decade, I've embraced an eightytwenty operating system that has consistently produced superior results for customers and shareholders. At IDEXX, eightytwenty became part of our DNA and we delivered over 500% CSR over my tenure. One of the reasons I joined IP is that through my diligence, I found a very compelling case where eightytwenty can produce significant results. Speaker 200:17:56Eightytwenty is a data driven methodology that creates laser like focus on customers, products and resources that drive dramatic profitable growth. It's about simplifying so we can say yes to the critical few and no to the trivial many that create value destroying complexity. Using this approach, we are reviewing the entire portfolio and sub segments as well as our enterprise functions. I'm now turning to Slide 18 to talk about our Eightytwenty methodology. There are 4 steps to Eightytwenty that we're taking our entire business through and then sub segments of our business and the enterprise. Speaker 200:18:33Step 1 is about simplifying customers and products quickly to focus on attractive markets. We should never become good at something we shouldn't have done in the 1st place. Step 2, we want to segment unlike businesses so we can focus on winning for the customer and driving results. Step 3, we're going to align minimum resources. Different businesses have different resource intensity. Speaker 200:18:56We need to give them uniquely what they need to win. Step 4 is accelerating profitable growth through customer obsession that shows itself in great quality, delivery, service, value based pricing and innovation. Now let's turn to Slide 19. The most important insight of eightytwenty is the misalignment of what drives the business and how resources are typically applied. I've deployed eightytwenty dozens of times and found it to be universally true. Speaker 200:19:27We have 40 businesses at IDEXX and I brought the approach to private equity also. The bottom line is that unaffected complexity grows out of control in each resources. IP is a very complex business, but we're complex by choice, not by necessity. We will simplify and focus IP. We will improve profitability, while at the same time liberating resources to invest in differentiated capabilities for the most attractive customers, products, productivity and capital allocation. Speaker 200:19:59My experience is that eightytwenty is a highly differentiated approach that demands facing the brutal facts and by making courageous choices that dramatically improve results. Now let's turn to Slide 20. So what will you, our customers and our team experience? 1st, we will simplify to focus on the businesses, customers and products where we will invest long term and differentiate. 2nd, we'll segment the businesses to stand on their own. Speaker 200:20:293rd, we will 0 up each business. You're going to hear that term 0 up often, but we're going to 0 up each business. This means we will rigorously understand what resources are needed to win for customers and deliver attractive profitability. 4th, Speaker 400:20:43we Speaker 200:20:44will commit and align our people and our investment. Finally, we'll place authority and accountability close to the customer and decision making to drive outstanding results. We'll take the same approach to Corporate Center. Through the 0 up, we are determining the minimum resources required to be a public company and then be very strategic about a small handful of things we will invest in to differentiate across the company. Turning to Slide 21. Speaker 200:21:13We will be relentless in applying eightytwenty across IP. We launched eightytwenty shortly after I joined. We actually started the data process before I joined. We've completed much of the analytics that point us towards opportunity. IP has attractive and substantial upside. Speaker 200:21:30I believe that the current portfolio of IP has the potential to deliver $4,000,000,000 of EBITDA in a mid cycle environment. The key drivers will be optimizing our cost structure to improve profitability and very importantly liberate resources, investing in box plants for reliability and productivity, investing in our mills for long term performance and cost advantage and investing in our commercial capabilities for innovation and sales talent. Ultimately, these will allow us to win for our customers and be rewarded for the value that we create for our customers. I'm turning to my final slide on 22. We're going to be laser focused working with the teams to accelerate Eightytwenty and begin implementation. Speaker 200:22:17I commit to continue to engage with you and share updates. We're planning a road show in September, and we're also attending conferences. We'll update you on our progress at our next earnings call in October. We expect that required disclosure documents related to DS Smith acquisition will be published in late summer and related meetings held in the early fall. And we will offer an 80 20 101 webinar on August 14 to give you an opportunity to learn more about 80 20 and how it drives change and results, so you'll get an invitation to attend that. Speaker 200:22:52Finally, we're going to have an Investor Day in March. This will give us an opportunity to share our progress at that time. The last thing that I want to say is I want to say thank you to the IP team. I have pushed them very hard in a very short period of time. I found people to be willing and able to tackle this important mission. Speaker 200:23:10People are bought into what we're trying to do. They understand the stakes at hand and we're going after it. With that, let me turn it over to the operator for questions. Operator00:23:20Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Mike Roxanne with Truist Securities. Speaker 400:23:47Thanks very much, Andy, Tim and Mark for taking my questions and congrats on a good quarter. Speaker 200:23:54Good morning, Mike. Speaker 400:23:55Good morning. I want to get a little more color for you, Andy, on the eightytwenty and also the box strategy. Obviously, you're pruning the portfolio for unprofitable business. How much of the business you intend to walk away from or that you have walked away from is truly unprofitable where IP is actually losing money rather than maybe it's just lower EBITDA or lower EBITDA margin business relative to other businesses? Speaker 200:24:22Yes, Mike, that's a great question. So, look, a lot of people have the first experience that effectively what you're saying is you're going to exit a bunch of business. And what I have found to be true is, and again, having done this many, many times, that is actually not practically what happens over a very short period of time, an intermediate period of time, call it a year or 2. What ends up happening is what you're doing is you're segmenting your business, you're understanding the drivers for those customers and those products and you are really aggressively aligning resources, minimum resources for what's required to win. And so when we think of profitability, if you peanut butter spread overheads, which is what most companies do, right? Speaker 200:25:10You peanut butter spread most overhead. What you do is you're effectively overburdened with overhead. So it actually, it shows them in a typical accounting system, right, the peanut butter spreads overhead. It spreads them usually by revenue. And so what you end up having, right, is an understatement of profitability for your most attractive segments and an overstatement of profitability for your less attractive. Speaker 200:25:44That being said, when you structure this correctly, when you go through segmentation, you simplify and go through segmentation, you're aligning the appropriate resources. And what I found when you're doing that, we use a gardening example, right. We use a farming example. That's why I showed those farming pictures. So think of it as you're farming and you make a decision that the thing you're going to farm for are tomatoes and pumpkins, right. Speaker 200:26:08That's what you decide you're going to farm for. So you simplify, that's what we're going to do. When you segment, you realize that tomatoes and pumpkins actually need different resources. So a pumpkin will take as much water as you can possibly give it. And a tomato, if you give it too much, you're going to kill it. Speaker 200:26:27And so if you actually put them together, you give them just enough water so both of them die, right? And it's a tough analogy, but it's a true analogy. And what I would say is we are going to aggressively segment and we're going to give them just the water that they need to flourish. And what I found historically is you can actually recover any volume loss that you decide. You can actually recover from it pretty shortly because you're satisfying customer needs, you're meeting customers where they are with the right amount of resources and you're getting real profitability, which then drives returns long term. Speaker 400:27:03Got you. Very, very clear. My follow-up then is, how do you tend to deploy Eightytwenty with DS Smith? Because doesn't that add some complexity to the system? I mean, you mentioned trying to keep things simple. Speaker 400:27:15And so with DS Smith being, if when it closes, I guess just can you walk us through how you're thinking about deploying it from a standalone and then ultimately trying to do that approach with DS Smith as well? Thank you. Speaker 200:27:26Yes. Mike, that's another great question. So the first thing is let's start with first principles when we buy the business, right, which is we want to segment. The reality is what happens in the North American market has very little influence on what happens in the European market, right? From a competitive standpoint, because of the nature of the geography and the fact that the box businesses compete in a 150 to 200 mile radius, the competitive issues don't overlap. Speaker 200:27:58And frankly, the teams don't overlap. And so as we acquire DS Smith, what's really important is to treat it as its own platform in Europe. So there are really, as I've said a few times to people, think of this as kind of 3 different pieces of integration. There's a relatively simple integration that happens in the Americas, right. They have a small handful of assets in the Americas that will integrate into our mills, into our box system. Speaker 200:28:23It's a pretty small footprint. And at the in Europe, it's really DS Smith that is integrating our European footprint. They are multiple times our size. They have done large acquisitions in the past. It's a capable team of people. Speaker 200:28:39And so, we have a wonderful team by the way in Europe that punch way above their weight. And so we're going to end up with a terrific overall team in Europe, but the integration is going to happen that way. And so that's the second. So we'll focus our eightytwenty efforts specifically in those regions, in those sub regions where they matter. And then the third part is corporate. Speaker 200:29:01And we had a call with our top leadership here this morning and I was very clear to them. We need to be incredibly smart about this integration at the corporate level. At the corporate level, there's really only 3 things that have to happen. There are a few things that are shared and they're relatively small to get the savings that we know are out there and we should go get. And it's a very small team of people who need to work on that. Speaker 200:29:25More importantly is we need to bring them in so we can close the books and be compliant, right? This is a public company that's very capable. What I don't want to do is overburden them, drive unnecessary administrative BS and things that destroy value, right? So the beautiful part is we're going to do this from scratch and we're doing it with a business that is really terrific. And so that thinking has to start upfront, Mike. Operator00:29:56Our next question will come from Charlie Muir Sands with BNP Paribas. Go ahead. Speaker 500:30:04Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. Just regarding the Hi, there. Thanks. Just regarding the reliability spending, which is one of the sequential increases in the cost that you've called out in the bridge into Q3. Speaker 500:30:21I guess you were talking about that a quarter ago already. How much of this EUR 80,000,000 step up it relates to that kind of spending as opposed to the seasonality and other aspects? And how much of that should we think about being part of an ongoing run rate now? Or is it just a sort of short surge and then you compare it back again? Thank you. Speaker 300:30:43Yes. Hey, good morning, Charlie. It's Tim. So I would say there's a significant portion of it that's directly tied to reliability. We do have there's a little bit of timing between quarters and we did understand the estimate that we thought for the 2nd quarter. Speaker 300:30:59So some of that is bleeding into the 3rd. But in terms of ongoing reliability spending, I think you can think of it over the next 3, 4, 5 quarters where we are getting the system to the point that it can sustainably be reliable and open up capacity. Speaker 200:31:19Yes. I'd add to that Charlie. I think very importantly, the eightytwenty methodology, if you think of it in 2 buckets, one is you improve profits, right? So we put some of it in our pockets and it's for you guys. And then a big piece of it is about liberating resources, right? Speaker 200:31:36And we know full well that we're not coming to you guys and asking for more money, right? We've got to figure out how to do this, in the resource base we have and we got plenty to go from with tough choices. And so this should be self funding, we should liberate resources and we should be able to accelerate spending on reliability. I mean, it is it's hard to overstate how important this is, right? When you look at the vast majority of customers and I'm going to say 80 plus percent of customers, they by far their number one concern or their number one goal is reliability. Speaker 200:32:10They do not want to think about us to be very clear, right. They do not want to think about us. And if we are a partner with them, who solves their problems and does it in the right way, we're in great we're in a great spot. And we've let folks down, right? We have let folks down in the last 5 to 10 years on this regard. Speaker 200:32:29The nice part is this is something that's relatively easy to fix, right? So if you look at the focus reliability spending that's happened just since I've been here, you're already starting to see benefits. So if you think about our corrugator and converting assets, right, that dramatically improves our capability. And as you up maintenance spending and you don't have breakdowns, that also dramatically improves reliability. So this is a critically important part of the game. Speaker 200:32:58If you break into 3 pieces, right, reliability, the reach that we have, our depth and breadth geographically is tremendous asset and then ultimately innovation. And so we need to invest in those pieces and we need to self fund it. Speaker 500:33:17It. Thank you. And my follow-up question just relates back to the go to market strategy. It's obviously been another 13 weeks since you effectively implemented it. It appears so far that the pace of market share losses has probably been stable. Speaker 500:33:33We haven't obviously seen every competitor report or the industry data yet. But are you confident that there is a NPV positive payoff going on and there's no risk that customers aren't still shopping around and maybe 3, 6 months down the line, you're going to see another wave of departures? Speaker 200:33:54That's a great question, Charlie. So what I would say in terms of high confidence, right, so we're tracking that and we know what has been what agreements have been signed and we know what has been what agreements have been signed and we know what has been what is unsigned, right? So, we know where we have gotten deals are done and where they're not. I think Tim was we think we're 75% plus from a 75% kind of through that in terms of the contractual deals, how that flows still takes time, right? It takes time to flow through the system. Speaker 200:34:23So we are we're very much on track with the expectations. If you look at the accounts where we have really applied this go to market strategy, we are very much in line with the expectation. So that feels good. The negative surprise and I think the negative surprise over the next few quarters and why I'm signaling exactly what I'm signaling is that there is a lag to reliability, right? So the stuff that was being shopped in the 1st and second quarter because people weren't getting the things that they needed, how they needed it, that's showing up now and will continue to show up. Speaker 200:34:58So those two things together are the net of market share loss. And that pipeline, unlike some businesses that go into a quarter with say half the business book. So in my IDEXX days, we have about half the business book when we went into a quarter. We don't have that here, right. So it's hard to look at a correlation against something like that. Speaker 200:35:20So what you're really looking at is the health of the pipeline. And I would say we're okay at that. We got work to do to get really good at that. I'm working with Tom Hammock and team to get much, much better at understanding the pipeline, what that looks like over time and having the ability to call that in a way that's based on stuff that we know uniquely versus the overall economy. And so we got to get better there. Operator00:35:50Our next question will come from Mark Weintraub with Seaport Research Partners. Speaker 600:35:56Thank you. First, thanks for laying out an exciting vision for the future, but I'm still sort of trying to work through a little bit why the magnitude of pain short term Speaker 200:36:09And Speaker 600:36:12has reliability or those issues become even more significant that's leading to what looks to be an accelerated decline in the box volumes? And maybe if you can just kind of walk how much of it was the go to market versus the reliability? And is that different? Speaker 200:36:36Yes. If you actually look at the balance of go to market and I'll call it other stuff, right, let's just call other, the total is about fifty-fifty, So if I look at now through really the Q2 and we believe that that with the investments in reliability that other part shrinks and we feel like we've got we're dialed in on the go to market piece of that. So that's kind of how it plays out. No reliability hasn't gotten worse, but I think what it's doing is the timing of how it moves through the system. And look, the overall, the pricing environment has gotten more robust, right? Speaker 200:37:15So people are shopping more in the overall environment. And so, our ability to make sure we're the leaders in reliability consistently on an ongoing basis is the game. And so, look, Mark, there's no doubt in my mind that this is going to be bumpy, right, as we work through this and the investments are going to take some time. It's not 3 years away. That's not what I mean. Speaker 200:37:41But I think the next 3 or 4 quarters, we're going to see some chop in there and it's going to be a little bit hard to call. And that's a conversation I know I've had with a lot of people who are on the call today. That is my expectation and that is what's playing out. Speaker 600:37:54Can you share I know you noted that you expect now the industry to be up about 1% to 2%. Can you share what you expect IPs box shipments this year to be relative to last year? Speaker 300:38:08For the quarter or for the year, Mark? Speaker 200:38:10For the year. Speaker 300:38:11For the year, it's really hard and we can't forecast the Q4 because of issues with the transaction. Look, I think Andy said it, there's CHOP and we're going to have some up and down, but we're working with the market 1% to 2%, and we've got to see how all of these negotiations play out and the follow through on getting the price to a competitive level and then what that means for volume. Speaker 200:38:46Yes. And I think I'd add on there, Mark. Just so everyone on the call is very, very clear and so you don't think we're being cagey about it. We actually have a legal responsibility for the U. K. Speaker 200:38:56Takeover code. We cannot say anything that is construed as a forecast for the Q4. That would trigger a whole bunch of things. So we can share in the normal course of business how we look at the Q3. We're not allowed to share with time specificity and outlook past that without going through some very specific steps that we will go through as we post the proxy. Speaker 200:39:20We do have to go through that, but we have to be very on this call. So I apologize for that opaqueness, but we really have a responsibility that we have to keep to. Operator00:39:32Your next question will come from Gaurav Jain with Barclays. Speaker 700:39:38Thank you for So 2 from me. 1, this uplift in EBITDA from $2,000,000,000 to $4,000,000,000 dollars does it include D. Smith's EBITDA or this is just for Speaker 200:39:51IT? No, that is not included. No, that for the current IP portfolio. Speaker 700:39:58Sure. Thank you. And then like it's a very big jump in EBITDA and you are not really calling out any incremental CapEx over and above what the run rate has been. So like the return on these incremental investments is significantly high and probably more than anything we have seen in the industry. So what does like are you budgeting for CapEx in the guidance properly? Speaker 300:40:29So I think the question was around capital spending to support the value growth? Speaker 500:40:35Yes. Speaker 300:40:37Yes. So what we're looking at is somewhere between $1,000,000,000 and $1,100,000,000 on a normalized basis. There could be periods where because of the opportunity, we might want to invest a little bit above that level to support the strategy. But it's really largely around the same level of capital that we normally target. We think we can do it within that. Speaker 200:41:01But I think very importantly, right, how that capital is going to be spent is going to be different, right? So I would say one of the sins of the past so to speak, if you look at all that capital spending that I outlined in the discussion in the prepared remarks, If you look at that capital spending over the last 10 years, that peanut butter spread mentality, the whipsaw of chasing bad investments or assets that are deteriorating that eats up a dramatic disproportionate amount of our investment. And so our ability to focus that on the right assets in the right geographies box plant and in mills in the U. S. And in Europe is going to be very important, right? Speaker 200:41:49So as you think about the sheer change that can happen by location, it can be pretty substantial. And we did that pretty dramatically at IDEXX, right? When we made those choices, our CapEx, it went up a little bit, but more than anything else, it got proportioned very differently. It got proportioned toward building sustainable competitive advantage. It got proportioned to drive productivity. Speaker 200:42:15It got proportioned to really create great work environment. And in that environment, right, we drove about 700 basis points, 800 basis points of ROIC over that timeframe. And so I know it can be done. And the great part of yours is we have because of the nature of our assets and the focus of our assets, we know how to pull this off, right? We just have to have the courage to move the resources and make the tough choices. Operator00:42:49Your next question will come from the line of Gabe Hajde from Wells Fargo Securities. Speaker 800:42:56Thank you. Andy, Tim, Mark, good morning. Speaker 200:42:59Hey, Gabe. Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 800:43:02Appreciate the candor and transparency and also tomatoes, pumpkins and peanut butter getting me ready for lunch. I wanted to go to Slide 8. The prior question sort of asked what I was thinking, the point and a half differential and CapEx relative to your peers, you addressed that. The piece that I was spending per 1,000,000 square feet, the $0.40 differential, should I interpret that as, okay, maintenance costs have come up to, I think this year now you're talking about 530 $1,000,000 ish, that there's another $40,000,000 to $50,000,000 in there all else equal? Or does that piece of it get reflected in ops and costs? Speaker 800:43:43How should we think about that? Speaker 200:43:46Yes, I think it's going to more it's going to show up in ops and costs. There is capital investment that goes into maintenance and repair, but this number is about operating costs. Speaker 800:43:56Okay. And then you talked about wanting to be self funded, free up resources. And one of the implications here is seemingly free up some capacity, which in today's environment isn't necessarily what IT or the industry needs. And you're also saying, hey, eightytwenty, we need to focus on what's important. Should we take away from that that there could be some additional capacity coming out of the system as you work through this process over the next medium term, if you will? Speaker 200:44:28You have to expect that, right? I mean, ultimately, when you think about our overall cost buckets, we've got to make sure we match capacity with overall demand with opportunity to be successful, right? So we've got to be very thoughtful about that. We'll do it appropriately we do that. But as we think about structural costs, we got to be honest about where the structural costs are. Operator00:44:59Your next question will come from the line of Philip Ng with Jefferies. Speaker 900:45:06Andy, the presentation was pretty inspirational here. I guess in many aspects, this is a hard reset in the IP culture, kind of running it from more of a commodity business to more entrepreneurial and focus on the box side of things being profitable. I guess my question is how has the buy in been internally? And then these investments you're making on reliability, certainly there's going to be some drag in the next few quarters. When do we kind of start seeing that ramp up on the positive side and flow through a little more fully? Speaker 900:45:38And lastly, do you have the right people in infrastructure to help you be informed to make these decisions in terms of where you want to align capital in the right places? Speaker 200:45:50I think, look, one of the major positive surprises when you come into a situation like this, right, long term poor performance and not kind of dealing with some of the major issues that need to be deal with. You worry about what you're going to find, right? You worry about what you're going to find. And I will tell you, I have been extremely positively surprised by the capability and the willingness. So the team is willing and they are able. Speaker 200:46:23The pent up frustration and the pent up excitement about running this company the way it should be run is palatable. And what I have seen is just people grabbing on to a desire to get better and very specifically grabbing on to eightytwenty, right. We are moving at a pace again, I've done this an awful lot and the pace at which this group has been willing to engage and their ability to engage has been frankly inspiring. They've done a great job with that. And so we've got great people at IP. Speaker 200:47:04I'll put this group against any group of people And I mean up and down the organization, I spent a lot of times in box plants and mills. We've got great people. My father-in-law was a 37 year IP employee. He when IP bought Champion back a long time ago, my father-in-law went with that. He retired as an IP employee. Speaker 200:47:26So right after he asked me whether or not his pension was safe, he we talked a lot about maintenance. And so, I have a real affinity for those folks within our business. And when I go and I talk to them, these people are fantastic, right? They're absolutely fantastic. I came in this morning. Speaker 200:47:45I was given a hat at our from our Regalwood facility and it's a precision maintenance hat. I went there and had a chance to sit down on some bearings training and listening to these folks. These are incredibly capable folks who they need the focus and they need Speaker 400:48:01the resources to win. They know how to do it. Speaker 200:48:01The list of high return awesome. And they need for us to allow them to win. We need for us to they need us to allow them to win. So, I feel really good about the team and about the engagement. Look, we're going into the next phase of this, right. Speaker 200:48:22In the next phase, there are kind of 2 tough phases here. One is the buy in, which you talked about and we've got it. We have got buy in. And frankly, our overall performance and other events that have happened recently, those are things that really solidify people into where they are, right? They understand what the stakes are. Speaker 200:48:49And that sense of urgency is very high within this group. They're very capable people. So we've passed that first test. The second test is now the doing of the hard things. Right now, we've got to go do them. Speaker 200:49:03And that will be we're going to move very quickly, but you also have to move intentionally, right? You've got to be very smart about that. You've got to think about those strategies of how you win with customers, where you win with customers and you need to invest very intentionally and ahead of the curve, so you make sure you're winning not hurting them. And we've got to do that and do that well. But I think this team is ready to do that. Speaker 900:49:32Got you. And then do you have all the infrastructure in place, Andy, to make some of these decisions where you need to put capital work and where you've over invested perhaps? Have you aligned KPIs in terms of sales force and the box managers to be more aligned with reliability pricing, net promoter scores kind Speaker 700:49:51of stuff for customer engagement? Speaker 200:49:54Yes. That's a great question. So I call it the scorecard, right? So one of the things that we've got to get better at here across the company is really having clarity of the metrics that drive results for our customers and drive results for our owners. And those things obviously we've got tons of data. Speaker 200:50:16You can imagine in our process environment there's tons of data. But the data that really matters has got to stick out. So the basic stuff around safety, quality, on time and full, productivity and profitable growth, Those are the basics ones. I was in Cedar Rapids, Iowa last week and the team does a great job there. It's an OCC mill that just does a phenomenal job and they have they're probably our leader in terms of the linkage between what happens upstream in terms of our reliability capability, our production capabilities, you name it, you name the metric. Speaker 200:50:58And so they understand the levers. They're also are probably 1st or second in the fleet and cost per ton, right. They're outstanding from that perspective. And so they really demonstrate, they're kind of a great forerunner so to speak of what happens when you really measure cause and effect. So we are seeing that. Speaker 200:51:18Specifically commercially, right, as you think about the commercial side, moving incentives, they're more tied to profitable growth versus volume is very important. Understanding, however, that you've got to be competitive in the market, right? You've got to be competitive. You've got a price to value. And that is very important, right? Speaker 200:51:36You've got a price where customers see your value. And we're getting better at understanding that. We've got room to go. We are significantly improving our sales talent across the business in terms of the number of people that we have and their capabilities. And we're seeing that pipeline grow because of that. Speaker 200:51:56But you got to have clarity of metrics and incentives have to be tied to those metrics from the customer all the way through your production capability, all the way through the supply chain. And that's something we've got work to do and we're going to get better. Operator00:52:12And your final question comes from Matthew McKellor with RBC. Speaker 400:52:18Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Are you able to give any more specificity around the approximate timeline to achieve that $4,000,000,000 EBITDA target? And maybe give us a sense of contribution from the global cellulose fibers business that may be embedded in that target? And maybe with that, is there an updated view on whether that business is core to IP going forward? Speaker 400:52:41Thanks. Speaker 200:52:43So in terms of timing, look, I apologize. We just and as you can imagine, we wrestled with that question internally and we had to talk to lawyers and whatnot. But as we're involved with the D. S. Smith process, we can't and if we do, it constitutes a forecast and it triggers a whole bunch of messy things. Speaker 200:53:01So we have to be very, very careful of that. What I would say is that is a mid cycle number and it's not forever away, right? So we're not talking about 10 years away. It's not something like that. And so for those of you who know me, you know my track record is to move and we're going to move. Speaker 200:53:23And that's going to be very, very important. Specifically, as we talk about GCF, let me talk about that more from the whole portfolio. We're looking at our whole portfolio. You have to, right? And you have to do it all the time. Speaker 200:53:35You don't do it once. You're doing it all the time. You're reviewing your portfolio. And what I've said to folks is, I started on May 1 and what I said out of the gates was we will not get to the May 1 and not have a decision. And I've said that to our people internally. Speaker 200:53:49I've been very transparent that we got to go through the decision making process and we will make those decisions. Sooner is always better, right? It's always better to do those things. And so that would be my goal, sooner is better. And we have to follow a deliberate process. Speaker 200:54:08In terms of the magnitude, the impact of GCF on that overall number, it's very small, right? So it's there is no expectation that GCF is a giant proportion of that. And so, we'll obviously be more detailed over time when we can be more detailed, when we're allowed to be more detailed. And also you're going to see some detail in the proxy. So the proxy is going to be filed in August. Speaker 200:54:36And the timing, I'm not exactly sure of Tim, it's in August, is that right? Yes. Yes. So you're going to get more detail there. We'll have to we'll give more detail on the roadshow what we can give, again within the bounds of what we can give. Speaker 200:54:49So between now and the Q3 earnings call, if you kind of bracket that timeframe, so 90 days from now, we're going to give you a lot more Speaker 400:54:58detail here. Great. Thanks very Speaker 200:54:58much for the help. Say So look, I want to say thank you again to everybody. We've got important work to do. We're very much in the data analysis phase and building the implementation plans. I think it's important to note that we're going to make decisions based on facts and we still have some data together and that is going to point us towards how to get a bunch of these opportunities. Speaker 200:55:30It's very clear however how much opportunity is out there and the detailed work we've already done shows that. So, we will get more specific. We will time bound it as we move between now and the end of the year. But I think the key thing that I would ask people to take away is that we have control of the vast majority of this. We have control of that. Speaker 200:55:53We can control our own destiny. Yes, things are going to move in the market. We can't control that, But we can control what we do. We can control how we approach understanding our business and where we apply our resources and focusing on the right customers, the right products and the right assets to drive really outstanding results over time. So with that, I want to thank everybody very much for your time, for your partnership. Speaker 200:56:17And I look forward to talking to you here over the next months as we move through this process. Thank you. Operator00:56:24Once again, we'd like to thank you for your participating in today's International Paper'sRead morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallInternational Paper Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) International Paper Earnings HeadlinesInternational Paper's (IP) Underweight Rating Reaffirmed at Wells Fargo & CompanyMay 12 at 2:51 AM | americanbankingnews.comQ3 EPS Forecast for International Paper Reduced by AnalystMay 10 at 3:23 AM | americanbankingnews.comTrump wipes out trillions overnight…Is there anybody more powerful than Donald Trump right now? In a single tariff announcement, he wiped out nearly $5 trillion in wealth from the S&P 500 and $6.4 trillion from the Dow Jones… Not to mention the countless trillions of dollars lost in every market around the world… leaving the major political powers scrambling in fear of Trump’s next move.May 12, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)Wells Fargo Downgrades International Paper (IP)May 9 at 6:50 PM | msn.comInternational Paper cut to Sell equivalent at Wells Fargo on weak containerboard fundamentalsMay 9 at 1:49 PM | msn.comInternational Paper Announces Facility Alignment in the Rio Grande Valley as Part of Strategic Growth Initiative in North AmericaMay 9 at 8:30 AM | prnewswire.comSee More International Paper Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like International Paper? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on International Paper and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About International PaperInternational Paper (NYSE:IP) Company produces and sells renewable fiber-based packaging and pulp products in North America, Latin America, Europe, and North Africa. It operates through two segments, Industrial Packaging and Global Cellulose Fibers. The company offers linerboard, medium, whitetop, recycled linerboard, recycled medium and saturating kraft; and pulp for a range of applications, such as diapers, towel and tissue products, feminine care, incontinence, and other personal care products, as well as specialty pulps for use in textiles, construction materials, paints, coatings, and others. It sells its products directly to end users and converters, as well as through agents, resellers, and distributors. The company was founded in 1898 and is headquartered in Memphis, Tennessee.View International Paper ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Nearly 20 Analysts Raised Meta Price Targets Post-EarningsOXY Stock Rebound Begins Following Solid Earnings BeatMonolithic Power Systems: Will Strong Earnings Spark a Recovery?Datadog Earnings Delight: Q1 Strength and an Upbeat Forecast Upwork's Earnings Beat Fuels Stock Rally—Is Freelancing Booming?DexCom Stock: Earnings Beat and New Market Access Drive Bull CaseDisney Stock Jumps on Earnings—Is the Magic Sustainable? Upcoming Earnings JD.com (5/13/2025)NU (5/13/2025)Sony Group (5/13/2025)SEA (5/13/2025)Cisco Systems (5/14/2025)Toyota Motor (5/14/2025)Copart (5/15/2025)NetEase (5/15/2025)Applied Materials (5/15/2025)Mizuho Financial Group (5/15/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning and thank you for standing by. Welcome to today's International Paper's Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent background noise. Operator00:00:11After the speakers' remarks, you will have an opportunity to ask questions. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Mark Nellison, Vice President, Investor Relations. Sir, the floor is yours. Speaker 100:00:44Thank you, Alan. Good morning and thank you for joining International Paper's 2nd quarter earnings call. Our speakers this morning are Andy Silvernail, Chief Executive Officer and Tim Nicholl, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. There is important information at the beginning of our presentation, including certain legal disclaimers. For example, during this call, we will make forward looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Speaker 100:01:09These and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward looking statements can be found in our press releases and reports filed with the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission. We will also present certain non U. S. Speaker 100:01:23GAAP financial information. A reconciliation of those figures to U. S. GAAP financial measures is available on our website. Our website also contains copies of the 2nd quarter earnings press release and today's presentation slides. Speaker 100:01:36With that, I'll turn it over to Andy Silvernill. Speaker 200:01:38Thanks, Mark. Hey, good morning to everybody the Americas and good afternoon to all of our friends in Europe. I'm excited to have joined the IP team with our rich history, important mission and dedicated talented people. Prior to joining IP, I spent a decade as CEO of IDEX Corporation where we delivered strong consistent results through great teams, customer obsession and embracing an eightytwenty operating system. I also spent several years working with private equity where speed and impact are at a premium. Speaker 200:02:08I've been asked many times since my announcement why IP? The bottom line is that through my due diligence very similar to how I approach acquisitions, I found a company that matters in terms of its mission, a company with solid underpinnings and a company with a lot of opportunity for improvement and significant upside potential. It is absolutely a diamond in the rough. I spent my first 90 days on a learning journey with the goal of getting fact based insights, aligning the team, dimensionalizing the opportunity and launching the improvement plan. It's been a powerful experience, an opportunity to speak with employees, customers, suppliers and investors. Speaker 200:02:48All of this has reinforced my initial beliefs and open new insights. Let's turn to Slide 5. So before we go through the quarter, I'm going to talk about the case for change in International Paper. And later in the presentation, I'm also going to talk about what we're playing to do differently to drive significant change at IP and significantly improve performance. So I'm going to spend a few minutes walking you through some of the data that highlights the challenges we faced as a company in a very candid fact based way. Speaker 200:03:19The data and feedback have told me that most of our performance issues are self induced. And as a result, these can be fixed with intense focus on the right strategy and courage to do what must be done. I'm going to start on Slide 6. You can see 10 years of data here. These are the facts that I know as owners of IP you appreciate. Speaker 200:03:42We have underperformed on every meaningful metric. You can see the realities of sales, margin and profitability decline. And although it's not on this chart, our return on invested capital has followed the same trend and is underwater today. I want you as our share owners to know I understand this is totally unacceptable and we are going to fix it. But to fix it, we need to understand the root cause, we must face the brutal facts and do something very different. Speaker 200:04:11Let's go to Slide 7. IP's performance deterioration has been exacerbated by some very important choices in capital allocation and resource allocation. You can see over the past decade, we spent more than $35,000,000,000 including returning cash to share owners, making investments and improving the balance sheet. Let me start with the efforts around the balance sheet. We made excellent choices here, deleveraging and funding our pension. Speaker 200:04:39A strong balance sheet is foundational and gives us great degrees of freedom for value creation. But we've also spent more than $12,000,000,000 on dividends and share repurchases. Both of these tools can create substantial value if used well but are value destructive if used poorly. IP will pay an attractive dividend. We can support our dividend at the current level and we will grow into it as performance improves. Speaker 200:05:02But as I think about share repurchases, when and how you do it really matters. As with most companies, IP purchase shares when cash is generated, but not in the mind of maximizing the opportunity based on market factors and intrinsic value. The remaining spend $2,000,000,000 on acquisitions and $12,000,000,000 on CapEx have not generated the returns we expect. Now turning to Slide 8. Importantly, our spending since 2018 on investments that drive performance for customers and productivity have lagged. Speaker 200:05:38I'm not saying that we can't be more efficient with capital than our competition, but we push the envelope too far. While our mills are well capitalized and advantaged, we spent too much on unproductive capacity and haven't stayed ahead of the curve. We have under invested in our box system. On the right hand side is where you can see this show up. We've underspent on maintenance and repair and this is the heartbeat of operations and what drives reliability for our customers and productivity. Speaker 200:06:05These numbers are supported by the conversations I'm having with our folks across our system, particularly in maintenance. We've got an incredibly long list of great opportunities that need capital to drive performance for our customers and expand profitability. When we're driving excellent reliability internally, we get excellent reliability externally and we will sell for our customers and get paid for value. That means we've got to spend some money and I believe we can do that with capital plan in the range of $1,000,000,000 to $1,100,000,000 per year. If opportunities exist to drive results by expanding those investments, we will do so. Speaker 200:06:42I'm turning to Slide 9. This is probably the most important slide that we're going to go through here today, that and capital allocation. The lack of investment back into the businesses has directly contributed to a cost problem. Operating costs have ballooned on modest sales growth. The good part here is that it's in our control. Speaker 200:07:03We can attack this and control our own destiny. What doesn't show up on this page is the impact of the slippage of reliability our customers. Reliability defined as quality, delivery and service is the most important factor for the vast majority of our customers. We made our own bed here under investing in cost that has lost us market share over the past decade. The share loss will continue over the near term, but again, we know how to reverse this and can control our own destiny. Speaker 200:07:34We've done a lot of work commercially to position ourselves correctly in the market. We've made sensible value over volume trade offs recently and we're ramping up our commercial talent, capability and incentives. We have lost other share where we let customers down. We will change this by being the leader in reliability. We've made some solid progress in on time delivery and our corrugator and converted capacity is up. Speaker 200:07:59But we have more to do to address the share slide. I'm now turning to Slide 10. I'll talk about this of where to build from and things to improve. IP has a strong culture of ethics. We work with integrity. Speaker 200:08:16This is a really hard thing to change within our organization and we have a great foundation here. We have talented, experienced people up and down the organization. I'm finding them willing to face the reality and embrace significant change. My team wants to win. They are tired of getting their butts kicked. Speaker 200:08:33My job is to focus and align them on the critical few and away from the trivial many. The strongest thing we have to build from is our North American packaging franchise. Our packaging franchise is incredibly valuable and has tremendous upside potential with the right strategy. And as I mentioned earlier, we have a strong financial foundation. Turning to the opportunities for improvement, we are embracing the N eightytwenty operating system to do 4 things. Speaker 200:08:591st, an outside in customer driven strategy that differentiates through reliability and leverages our reach. 2nd, optimize our cost structure. 3rd, align our team and resources toward differentiation and profitable growth. Finally, we will instill a high performance culture that achieves superior results. In a little bit, I'm going to talk about how we are embracing eightytwenty to drive results. Speaker 200:09:26So now let me turn to the Q2 of our performance and the outlook. I'll share some highlights and then turn it over to Tim to walk through the details. I'm now on Slide 12. Our 2nd quarter earnings were higher than the Q1, but relatively unchanged year over year. We saw sequential improvement driven by higher sales across higher selling prices across the portfolio and we got benefit from seasonally higher box volumes. Speaker 200:09:52Regarding the market environment, there is stable to moderately better demand. However, IP's packaging volumes came in below our expectations and continue to lag the overall market and that will continue for some time. We're seeing expected volumes decline from repositioning our optimization and optimizing value and volume. We do have residual effect from a history of under investing in certain regions and markets where we have ongoing reliability and capacity issues that we are addressing and have seen improvement in already. We need to make sure that we are close to the market, pricing appropriately and investing to be the leader in reliability. Speaker 200:10:31As I mentioned earlier, we're focused on investing in differentiation and we are seeing specific results that are leading indicators to positive change. It will however be messy over the next 3 to 4 quarters. We expect near term performance to be challenged by seasonally lower volumes and higher mill outage expense. With that, I'll turn it over to Tim to provide more details about our Q2 performance and our outlook. Speaker 300:10:57Thank you, Andy. Good morning, everyone. I'm on Slide 13 now, where I'll provide the details around the Q2 as we walk through the sequential earnings bridge. 2nd quarter adjusted operating earnings per share was $0.55 as compared to $0.17 in the Q1. Recall that the Q1 included a $0.10 per share drag related to the January freeze and the Ixak box plant fire. Speaker 300:11:21Price and mix was higher by $0.23 per share driven by the flow through of prior price index movements as well as margin and mix benefits from successfully executing our Fox go to market strategy and our GCF optimization strategy. Volume was favorable by $0.06 per share. Although we continue to see favorable demand trends, deploying our commercial strategies across the portfolio continues to impact volumes in the near term as expected as we transition based on our strategy. Operations and cost was unfavorable by $0.01 per share sequentially. This is largely from the impact of inflation, higher S and A and spending to improve reliability in our Packaging business, partially offset by mill efficiencies following the pulp machine closure at our Regalwood mill. Speaker 300:12:14Maintenance outages were lower by $16,000,000 or $0.03 per share in the 2nd quarter and input costs were overall flat sequentially with decreased costs for energy and freight offsetting increased costs for OCC and chemicals. And finally, corporate items favorably Turning to the segments and starting with Industrial Packaging 2nd quarter results on Slide 14. Price and mix was higher due to the realization of strategy contributed approximately $25,000,000 of earnings benefit from improved margins and mix, and higher export and mix contributed approximately $21,000,000 Volume was higher by $27,000,000 sequentially, is about making choices that impacts our volume in the near term. Although we expect to trail the industry for the next few quarters, we believe our box go to market strategy will allow us to improve our margins and mix over the long term. Operations and costs was $43,000,000 unfavorable sequentially due to the impacts of inflation, higher S and A and spending to improve for liability. Speaker 300:13:45Planned maintenance outages were higher by $3,000,000 sequentially and input costs were $3,000,000 favorable primarily due to lower energy more than offsetting higher OCC costs. Moving to Slide 15, I'll cover the Global Cellulose Fibers 2nd quarter. Price and mix was sequentially higher by $22,000,000 due to the price index movement and GCF optimization strategy driving benefits from higher absorbent pulp mix and the reduction in commodity grades. Volume sequentially was relatively flat overall as improved demand for absorbent pulp was offset by lower sales of commodity grades as we segments. Operations and cost was favorably was favorable sequentially by $36,000,000 A large portion of this benefit is related to the pulp machine closure at our mill in Regalwood, North Carolina. Speaker 300:14:49Planned maintenance outages were lower in the second quarter by $19,000,000 as planned. And finally, input costs were higher by $1,000,000 with lower energy costs not quite offsetting higher chemical and wood costs. Turning to Slide 16. I'm going to provide our outlook for the Q3. As Andy said earlier, we expect lower sequential earnings due to volume decline and higher costs, offsetting benefits from the prior price index increases. Speaker 300:15:19For our Industrial Packaging segment, earnings are expected to be down sequentially in the 3rd quarter by approximately $160,000,000 and earnings will be relatively flat for Global Cellulose Fibers. Now let me give you the breakdown. I'll start with Industrial Packaging. We expect price and mix to improve earnings by approximately $60,000,000 sequentially. This is the result of prior index movement in North America as well as higher export prices to date. Speaker 300:15:53I would also note that approximately $13,000,000 of the expected improvement is related to our box go to market strategy. Volume is expected to decrease earnings by approximately We expect operations and costs to decrease earnings by approximately $80,000,000 This includes higher reliability spending, labor and benefits costs during the summer months and higher unabsorbed fixed costs. Higher maintenance outage expense is expected to decrease by approximately $44,000,000 And lastly, higher input costs are expected to decrease earnings by approximately $30,000,000 primarily due to higher energy costs. Switching to Global Cellulose Fibers, we expect price and mix increase earnings by approximately $10,000,000 as a result of prior index movement. Volume is expected to decrease earnings in the Q3 by approximately $5,000,000 due to seasonally lower demand. Speaker 300:17:00We expect operations and cost to decrease earnings by approximately $25,000,000 largely due to higher distribution costs and timing of spend as well as higher unabsorbed fixed costs. Lower maintenance outage expense is expected to increase earnings in the Q3 by approximately $25,000,000 And lastly, input costs are expected to be stable. With that, I'll turn it back over to Andy. Speaker 200:17:27Thanks, Tim. I'll pick back up on Slide 17. For over a decade, I've embraced an eightytwenty operating system that has consistently produced superior results for customers and shareholders. At IDEXX, eightytwenty became part of our DNA and we delivered over 500% CSR over my tenure. One of the reasons I joined IP is that through my diligence, I found a very compelling case where eightytwenty can produce significant results. Speaker 200:17:56Eightytwenty is a data driven methodology that creates laser like focus on customers, products and resources that drive dramatic profitable growth. It's about simplifying so we can say yes to the critical few and no to the trivial many that create value destroying complexity. Using this approach, we are reviewing the entire portfolio and sub segments as well as our enterprise functions. I'm now turning to Slide 18 to talk about our Eightytwenty methodology. There are 4 steps to Eightytwenty that we're taking our entire business through and then sub segments of our business and the enterprise. Speaker 200:18:33Step 1 is about simplifying customers and products quickly to focus on attractive markets. We should never become good at something we shouldn't have done in the 1st place. Step 2, we want to segment unlike businesses so we can focus on winning for the customer and driving results. Step 3, we're going to align minimum resources. Different businesses have different resource intensity. Speaker 200:18:56We need to give them uniquely what they need to win. Step 4 is accelerating profitable growth through customer obsession that shows itself in great quality, delivery, service, value based pricing and innovation. Now let's turn to Slide 19. The most important insight of eightytwenty is the misalignment of what drives the business and how resources are typically applied. I've deployed eightytwenty dozens of times and found it to be universally true. Speaker 200:19:27We have 40 businesses at IDEXX and I brought the approach to private equity also. The bottom line is that unaffected complexity grows out of control in each resources. IP is a very complex business, but we're complex by choice, not by necessity. We will simplify and focus IP. We will improve profitability, while at the same time liberating resources to invest in differentiated capabilities for the most attractive customers, products, productivity and capital allocation. Speaker 200:19:59My experience is that eightytwenty is a highly differentiated approach that demands facing the brutal facts and by making courageous choices that dramatically improve results. Now let's turn to Slide 20. So what will you, our customers and our team experience? 1st, we will simplify to focus on the businesses, customers and products where we will invest long term and differentiate. 2nd, we'll segment the businesses to stand on their own. Speaker 200:20:293rd, we will 0 up each business. You're going to hear that term 0 up often, but we're going to 0 up each business. This means we will rigorously understand what resources are needed to win for customers and deliver attractive profitability. 4th, Speaker 400:20:43we Speaker 200:20:44will commit and align our people and our investment. Finally, we'll place authority and accountability close to the customer and decision making to drive outstanding results. We'll take the same approach to Corporate Center. Through the 0 up, we are determining the minimum resources required to be a public company and then be very strategic about a small handful of things we will invest in to differentiate across the company. Turning to Slide 21. Speaker 200:21:13We will be relentless in applying eightytwenty across IP. We launched eightytwenty shortly after I joined. We actually started the data process before I joined. We've completed much of the analytics that point us towards opportunity. IP has attractive and substantial upside. Speaker 200:21:30I believe that the current portfolio of IP has the potential to deliver $4,000,000,000 of EBITDA in a mid cycle environment. The key drivers will be optimizing our cost structure to improve profitability and very importantly liberate resources, investing in box plants for reliability and productivity, investing in our mills for long term performance and cost advantage and investing in our commercial capabilities for innovation and sales talent. Ultimately, these will allow us to win for our customers and be rewarded for the value that we create for our customers. I'm turning to my final slide on 22. We're going to be laser focused working with the teams to accelerate Eightytwenty and begin implementation. Speaker 200:22:17I commit to continue to engage with you and share updates. We're planning a road show in September, and we're also attending conferences. We'll update you on our progress at our next earnings call in October. We expect that required disclosure documents related to DS Smith acquisition will be published in late summer and related meetings held in the early fall. And we will offer an 80 20 101 webinar on August 14 to give you an opportunity to learn more about 80 20 and how it drives change and results, so you'll get an invitation to attend that. Speaker 200:22:52Finally, we're going to have an Investor Day in March. This will give us an opportunity to share our progress at that time. The last thing that I want to say is I want to say thank you to the IP team. I have pushed them very hard in a very short period of time. I found people to be willing and able to tackle this important mission. Speaker 200:23:10People are bought into what we're trying to do. They understand the stakes at hand and we're going after it. With that, let me turn it over to the operator for questions. Operator00:23:20Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Mike Roxanne with Truist Securities. Speaker 400:23:47Thanks very much, Andy, Tim and Mark for taking my questions and congrats on a good quarter. Speaker 200:23:54Good morning, Mike. Speaker 400:23:55Good morning. I want to get a little more color for you, Andy, on the eightytwenty and also the box strategy. Obviously, you're pruning the portfolio for unprofitable business. How much of the business you intend to walk away from or that you have walked away from is truly unprofitable where IP is actually losing money rather than maybe it's just lower EBITDA or lower EBITDA margin business relative to other businesses? Speaker 200:24:22Yes, Mike, that's a great question. So, look, a lot of people have the first experience that effectively what you're saying is you're going to exit a bunch of business. And what I have found to be true is, and again, having done this many, many times, that is actually not practically what happens over a very short period of time, an intermediate period of time, call it a year or 2. What ends up happening is what you're doing is you're segmenting your business, you're understanding the drivers for those customers and those products and you are really aggressively aligning resources, minimum resources for what's required to win. And so when we think of profitability, if you peanut butter spread overheads, which is what most companies do, right? Speaker 200:25:10You peanut butter spread most overhead. What you do is you're effectively overburdened with overhead. So it actually, it shows them in a typical accounting system, right, the peanut butter spreads overhead. It spreads them usually by revenue. And so what you end up having, right, is an understatement of profitability for your most attractive segments and an overstatement of profitability for your less attractive. Speaker 200:25:44That being said, when you structure this correctly, when you go through segmentation, you simplify and go through segmentation, you're aligning the appropriate resources. And what I found when you're doing that, we use a gardening example, right. We use a farming example. That's why I showed those farming pictures. So think of it as you're farming and you make a decision that the thing you're going to farm for are tomatoes and pumpkins, right. Speaker 200:26:08That's what you decide you're going to farm for. So you simplify, that's what we're going to do. When you segment, you realize that tomatoes and pumpkins actually need different resources. So a pumpkin will take as much water as you can possibly give it. And a tomato, if you give it too much, you're going to kill it. Speaker 200:26:27And so if you actually put them together, you give them just enough water so both of them die, right? And it's a tough analogy, but it's a true analogy. And what I would say is we are going to aggressively segment and we're going to give them just the water that they need to flourish. And what I found historically is you can actually recover any volume loss that you decide. You can actually recover from it pretty shortly because you're satisfying customer needs, you're meeting customers where they are with the right amount of resources and you're getting real profitability, which then drives returns long term. Speaker 400:27:03Got you. Very, very clear. My follow-up then is, how do you tend to deploy Eightytwenty with DS Smith? Because doesn't that add some complexity to the system? I mean, you mentioned trying to keep things simple. Speaker 400:27:15And so with DS Smith being, if when it closes, I guess just can you walk us through how you're thinking about deploying it from a standalone and then ultimately trying to do that approach with DS Smith as well? Thank you. Speaker 200:27:26Yes. Mike, that's another great question. So the first thing is let's start with first principles when we buy the business, right, which is we want to segment. The reality is what happens in the North American market has very little influence on what happens in the European market, right? From a competitive standpoint, because of the nature of the geography and the fact that the box businesses compete in a 150 to 200 mile radius, the competitive issues don't overlap. Speaker 200:27:58And frankly, the teams don't overlap. And so as we acquire DS Smith, what's really important is to treat it as its own platform in Europe. So there are really, as I've said a few times to people, think of this as kind of 3 different pieces of integration. There's a relatively simple integration that happens in the Americas, right. They have a small handful of assets in the Americas that will integrate into our mills, into our box system. Speaker 200:28:23It's a pretty small footprint. And at the in Europe, it's really DS Smith that is integrating our European footprint. They are multiple times our size. They have done large acquisitions in the past. It's a capable team of people. Speaker 200:28:39And so, we have a wonderful team by the way in Europe that punch way above their weight. And so we're going to end up with a terrific overall team in Europe, but the integration is going to happen that way. And so that's the second. So we'll focus our eightytwenty efforts specifically in those regions, in those sub regions where they matter. And then the third part is corporate. Speaker 200:29:01And we had a call with our top leadership here this morning and I was very clear to them. We need to be incredibly smart about this integration at the corporate level. At the corporate level, there's really only 3 things that have to happen. There are a few things that are shared and they're relatively small to get the savings that we know are out there and we should go get. And it's a very small team of people who need to work on that. Speaker 200:29:25More importantly is we need to bring them in so we can close the books and be compliant, right? This is a public company that's very capable. What I don't want to do is overburden them, drive unnecessary administrative BS and things that destroy value, right? So the beautiful part is we're going to do this from scratch and we're doing it with a business that is really terrific. And so that thinking has to start upfront, Mike. Operator00:29:56Our next question will come from Charlie Muir Sands with BNP Paribas. Go ahead. Speaker 500:30:04Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. Just regarding the Hi, there. Thanks. Just regarding the reliability spending, which is one of the sequential increases in the cost that you've called out in the bridge into Q3. Speaker 500:30:21I guess you were talking about that a quarter ago already. How much of this EUR 80,000,000 step up it relates to that kind of spending as opposed to the seasonality and other aspects? And how much of that should we think about being part of an ongoing run rate now? Or is it just a sort of short surge and then you compare it back again? Thank you. Speaker 300:30:43Yes. Hey, good morning, Charlie. It's Tim. So I would say there's a significant portion of it that's directly tied to reliability. We do have there's a little bit of timing between quarters and we did understand the estimate that we thought for the 2nd quarter. Speaker 300:30:59So some of that is bleeding into the 3rd. But in terms of ongoing reliability spending, I think you can think of it over the next 3, 4, 5 quarters where we are getting the system to the point that it can sustainably be reliable and open up capacity. Speaker 200:31:19Yes. I'd add to that Charlie. I think very importantly, the eightytwenty methodology, if you think of it in 2 buckets, one is you improve profits, right? So we put some of it in our pockets and it's for you guys. And then a big piece of it is about liberating resources, right? Speaker 200:31:36And we know full well that we're not coming to you guys and asking for more money, right? We've got to figure out how to do this, in the resource base we have and we got plenty to go from with tough choices. And so this should be self funding, we should liberate resources and we should be able to accelerate spending on reliability. I mean, it is it's hard to overstate how important this is, right? When you look at the vast majority of customers and I'm going to say 80 plus percent of customers, they by far their number one concern or their number one goal is reliability. Speaker 200:32:10They do not want to think about us to be very clear, right. They do not want to think about us. And if we are a partner with them, who solves their problems and does it in the right way, we're in great we're in a great spot. And we've let folks down, right? We have let folks down in the last 5 to 10 years on this regard. Speaker 200:32:29The nice part is this is something that's relatively easy to fix, right? So if you look at the focus reliability spending that's happened just since I've been here, you're already starting to see benefits. So if you think about our corrugator and converting assets, right, that dramatically improves our capability. And as you up maintenance spending and you don't have breakdowns, that also dramatically improves reliability. So this is a critically important part of the game. Speaker 200:32:58If you break into 3 pieces, right, reliability, the reach that we have, our depth and breadth geographically is tremendous asset and then ultimately innovation. And so we need to invest in those pieces and we need to self fund it. Speaker 500:33:17It. Thank you. And my follow-up question just relates back to the go to market strategy. It's obviously been another 13 weeks since you effectively implemented it. It appears so far that the pace of market share losses has probably been stable. Speaker 500:33:33We haven't obviously seen every competitor report or the industry data yet. But are you confident that there is a NPV positive payoff going on and there's no risk that customers aren't still shopping around and maybe 3, 6 months down the line, you're going to see another wave of departures? Speaker 200:33:54That's a great question, Charlie. So what I would say in terms of high confidence, right, so we're tracking that and we know what has been what agreements have been signed and we know what has been what agreements have been signed and we know what has been what is unsigned, right? So, we know where we have gotten deals are done and where they're not. I think Tim was we think we're 75% plus from a 75% kind of through that in terms of the contractual deals, how that flows still takes time, right? It takes time to flow through the system. Speaker 200:34:23So we are we're very much on track with the expectations. If you look at the accounts where we have really applied this go to market strategy, we are very much in line with the expectation. So that feels good. The negative surprise and I think the negative surprise over the next few quarters and why I'm signaling exactly what I'm signaling is that there is a lag to reliability, right? So the stuff that was being shopped in the 1st and second quarter because people weren't getting the things that they needed, how they needed it, that's showing up now and will continue to show up. Speaker 200:34:58So those two things together are the net of market share loss. And that pipeline, unlike some businesses that go into a quarter with say half the business book. So in my IDEXX days, we have about half the business book when we went into a quarter. We don't have that here, right. So it's hard to look at a correlation against something like that. Speaker 200:35:20So what you're really looking at is the health of the pipeline. And I would say we're okay at that. We got work to do to get really good at that. I'm working with Tom Hammock and team to get much, much better at understanding the pipeline, what that looks like over time and having the ability to call that in a way that's based on stuff that we know uniquely versus the overall economy. And so we got to get better there. Operator00:35:50Our next question will come from Mark Weintraub with Seaport Research Partners. Speaker 600:35:56Thank you. First, thanks for laying out an exciting vision for the future, but I'm still sort of trying to work through a little bit why the magnitude of pain short term Speaker 200:36:09And Speaker 600:36:12has reliability or those issues become even more significant that's leading to what looks to be an accelerated decline in the box volumes? And maybe if you can just kind of walk how much of it was the go to market versus the reliability? And is that different? Speaker 200:36:36Yes. If you actually look at the balance of go to market and I'll call it other stuff, right, let's just call other, the total is about fifty-fifty, So if I look at now through really the Q2 and we believe that that with the investments in reliability that other part shrinks and we feel like we've got we're dialed in on the go to market piece of that. So that's kind of how it plays out. No reliability hasn't gotten worse, but I think what it's doing is the timing of how it moves through the system. And look, the overall, the pricing environment has gotten more robust, right? Speaker 200:37:15So people are shopping more in the overall environment. And so, our ability to make sure we're the leaders in reliability consistently on an ongoing basis is the game. And so, look, Mark, there's no doubt in my mind that this is going to be bumpy, right, as we work through this and the investments are going to take some time. It's not 3 years away. That's not what I mean. Speaker 200:37:41But I think the next 3 or 4 quarters, we're going to see some chop in there and it's going to be a little bit hard to call. And that's a conversation I know I've had with a lot of people who are on the call today. That is my expectation and that is what's playing out. Speaker 600:37:54Can you share I know you noted that you expect now the industry to be up about 1% to 2%. Can you share what you expect IPs box shipments this year to be relative to last year? Speaker 300:38:08For the quarter or for the year, Mark? Speaker 200:38:10For the year. Speaker 300:38:11For the year, it's really hard and we can't forecast the Q4 because of issues with the transaction. Look, I think Andy said it, there's CHOP and we're going to have some up and down, but we're working with the market 1% to 2%, and we've got to see how all of these negotiations play out and the follow through on getting the price to a competitive level and then what that means for volume. Speaker 200:38:46Yes. And I think I'd add on there, Mark. Just so everyone on the call is very, very clear and so you don't think we're being cagey about it. We actually have a legal responsibility for the U. K. Speaker 200:38:56Takeover code. We cannot say anything that is construed as a forecast for the Q4. That would trigger a whole bunch of things. So we can share in the normal course of business how we look at the Q3. We're not allowed to share with time specificity and outlook past that without going through some very specific steps that we will go through as we post the proxy. Speaker 200:39:20We do have to go through that, but we have to be very on this call. So I apologize for that opaqueness, but we really have a responsibility that we have to keep to. Operator00:39:32Your next question will come from Gaurav Jain with Barclays. Speaker 700:39:38Thank you for So 2 from me. 1, this uplift in EBITDA from $2,000,000,000 to $4,000,000,000 dollars does it include D. Smith's EBITDA or this is just for Speaker 200:39:51IT? No, that is not included. No, that for the current IP portfolio. Speaker 700:39:58Sure. Thank you. And then like it's a very big jump in EBITDA and you are not really calling out any incremental CapEx over and above what the run rate has been. So like the return on these incremental investments is significantly high and probably more than anything we have seen in the industry. So what does like are you budgeting for CapEx in the guidance properly? Speaker 300:40:29So I think the question was around capital spending to support the value growth? Speaker 500:40:35Yes. Speaker 300:40:37Yes. So what we're looking at is somewhere between $1,000,000,000 and $1,100,000,000 on a normalized basis. There could be periods where because of the opportunity, we might want to invest a little bit above that level to support the strategy. But it's really largely around the same level of capital that we normally target. We think we can do it within that. Speaker 200:41:01But I think very importantly, right, how that capital is going to be spent is going to be different, right? So I would say one of the sins of the past so to speak, if you look at all that capital spending that I outlined in the discussion in the prepared remarks, If you look at that capital spending over the last 10 years, that peanut butter spread mentality, the whipsaw of chasing bad investments or assets that are deteriorating that eats up a dramatic disproportionate amount of our investment. And so our ability to focus that on the right assets in the right geographies box plant and in mills in the U. S. And in Europe is going to be very important, right? Speaker 200:41:49So as you think about the sheer change that can happen by location, it can be pretty substantial. And we did that pretty dramatically at IDEXX, right? When we made those choices, our CapEx, it went up a little bit, but more than anything else, it got proportioned very differently. It got proportioned toward building sustainable competitive advantage. It got proportioned to drive productivity. Speaker 200:42:15It got proportioned to really create great work environment. And in that environment, right, we drove about 700 basis points, 800 basis points of ROIC over that timeframe. And so I know it can be done. And the great part of yours is we have because of the nature of our assets and the focus of our assets, we know how to pull this off, right? We just have to have the courage to move the resources and make the tough choices. Operator00:42:49Your next question will come from the line of Gabe Hajde from Wells Fargo Securities. Speaker 800:42:56Thank you. Andy, Tim, Mark, good morning. Speaker 200:42:59Hey, Gabe. Good morning. Good morning. Speaker 800:43:02Appreciate the candor and transparency and also tomatoes, pumpkins and peanut butter getting me ready for lunch. I wanted to go to Slide 8. The prior question sort of asked what I was thinking, the point and a half differential and CapEx relative to your peers, you addressed that. The piece that I was spending per 1,000,000 square feet, the $0.40 differential, should I interpret that as, okay, maintenance costs have come up to, I think this year now you're talking about 530 $1,000,000 ish, that there's another $40,000,000 to $50,000,000 in there all else equal? Or does that piece of it get reflected in ops and costs? Speaker 800:43:43How should we think about that? Speaker 200:43:46Yes, I think it's going to more it's going to show up in ops and costs. There is capital investment that goes into maintenance and repair, but this number is about operating costs. Speaker 800:43:56Okay. And then you talked about wanting to be self funded, free up resources. And one of the implications here is seemingly free up some capacity, which in today's environment isn't necessarily what IT or the industry needs. And you're also saying, hey, eightytwenty, we need to focus on what's important. Should we take away from that that there could be some additional capacity coming out of the system as you work through this process over the next medium term, if you will? Speaker 200:44:28You have to expect that, right? I mean, ultimately, when you think about our overall cost buckets, we've got to make sure we match capacity with overall demand with opportunity to be successful, right? So we've got to be very thoughtful about that. We'll do it appropriately we do that. But as we think about structural costs, we got to be honest about where the structural costs are. Operator00:44:59Your next question will come from the line of Philip Ng with Jefferies. Speaker 900:45:06Andy, the presentation was pretty inspirational here. I guess in many aspects, this is a hard reset in the IP culture, kind of running it from more of a commodity business to more entrepreneurial and focus on the box side of things being profitable. I guess my question is how has the buy in been internally? And then these investments you're making on reliability, certainly there's going to be some drag in the next few quarters. When do we kind of start seeing that ramp up on the positive side and flow through a little more fully? Speaker 900:45:38And lastly, do you have the right people in infrastructure to help you be informed to make these decisions in terms of where you want to align capital in the right places? Speaker 200:45:50I think, look, one of the major positive surprises when you come into a situation like this, right, long term poor performance and not kind of dealing with some of the major issues that need to be deal with. You worry about what you're going to find, right? You worry about what you're going to find. And I will tell you, I have been extremely positively surprised by the capability and the willingness. So the team is willing and they are able. Speaker 200:46:23The pent up frustration and the pent up excitement about running this company the way it should be run is palatable. And what I have seen is just people grabbing on to a desire to get better and very specifically grabbing on to eightytwenty, right. We are moving at a pace again, I've done this an awful lot and the pace at which this group has been willing to engage and their ability to engage has been frankly inspiring. They've done a great job with that. And so we've got great people at IP. Speaker 200:47:04I'll put this group against any group of people And I mean up and down the organization, I spent a lot of times in box plants and mills. We've got great people. My father-in-law was a 37 year IP employee. He when IP bought Champion back a long time ago, my father-in-law went with that. He retired as an IP employee. Speaker 200:47:26So right after he asked me whether or not his pension was safe, he we talked a lot about maintenance. And so, I have a real affinity for those folks within our business. And when I go and I talk to them, these people are fantastic, right? They're absolutely fantastic. I came in this morning. Speaker 200:47:45I was given a hat at our from our Regalwood facility and it's a precision maintenance hat. I went there and had a chance to sit down on some bearings training and listening to these folks. These are incredibly capable folks who they need the focus and they need Speaker 400:48:01the resources to win. They know how to do it. Speaker 200:48:01The list of high return awesome. And they need for us to allow them to win. We need for us to they need us to allow them to win. So, I feel really good about the team and about the engagement. Look, we're going into the next phase of this, right. Speaker 200:48:22In the next phase, there are kind of 2 tough phases here. One is the buy in, which you talked about and we've got it. We have got buy in. And frankly, our overall performance and other events that have happened recently, those are things that really solidify people into where they are, right? They understand what the stakes are. Speaker 200:48:49And that sense of urgency is very high within this group. They're very capable people. So we've passed that first test. The second test is now the doing of the hard things. Right now, we've got to go do them. Speaker 200:49:03And that will be we're going to move very quickly, but you also have to move intentionally, right? You've got to be very smart about that. You've got to think about those strategies of how you win with customers, where you win with customers and you need to invest very intentionally and ahead of the curve, so you make sure you're winning not hurting them. And we've got to do that and do that well. But I think this team is ready to do that. Speaker 900:49:32Got you. And then do you have all the infrastructure in place, Andy, to make some of these decisions where you need to put capital work and where you've over invested perhaps? Have you aligned KPIs in terms of sales force and the box managers to be more aligned with reliability pricing, net promoter scores kind Speaker 700:49:51of stuff for customer engagement? Speaker 200:49:54Yes. That's a great question. So I call it the scorecard, right? So one of the things that we've got to get better at here across the company is really having clarity of the metrics that drive results for our customers and drive results for our owners. And those things obviously we've got tons of data. Speaker 200:50:16You can imagine in our process environment there's tons of data. But the data that really matters has got to stick out. So the basic stuff around safety, quality, on time and full, productivity and profitable growth, Those are the basics ones. I was in Cedar Rapids, Iowa last week and the team does a great job there. It's an OCC mill that just does a phenomenal job and they have they're probably our leader in terms of the linkage between what happens upstream in terms of our reliability capability, our production capabilities, you name it, you name the metric. Speaker 200:50:58And so they understand the levers. They're also are probably 1st or second in the fleet and cost per ton, right. They're outstanding from that perspective. And so they really demonstrate, they're kind of a great forerunner so to speak of what happens when you really measure cause and effect. So we are seeing that. Speaker 200:51:18Specifically commercially, right, as you think about the commercial side, moving incentives, they're more tied to profitable growth versus volume is very important. Understanding, however, that you've got to be competitive in the market, right? You've got to be competitive. You've got a price to value. And that is very important, right? Speaker 200:51:36You've got a price where customers see your value. And we're getting better at understanding that. We've got room to go. We are significantly improving our sales talent across the business in terms of the number of people that we have and their capabilities. And we're seeing that pipeline grow because of that. Speaker 200:51:56But you got to have clarity of metrics and incentives have to be tied to those metrics from the customer all the way through your production capability, all the way through the supply chain. And that's something we've got work to do and we're going to get better. Operator00:52:12And your final question comes from Matthew McKellor with RBC. Speaker 400:52:18Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Are you able to give any more specificity around the approximate timeline to achieve that $4,000,000,000 EBITDA target? And maybe give us a sense of contribution from the global cellulose fibers business that may be embedded in that target? And maybe with that, is there an updated view on whether that business is core to IP going forward? Speaker 400:52:41Thanks. Speaker 200:52:43So in terms of timing, look, I apologize. We just and as you can imagine, we wrestled with that question internally and we had to talk to lawyers and whatnot. But as we're involved with the D. S. Smith process, we can't and if we do, it constitutes a forecast and it triggers a whole bunch of messy things. Speaker 200:53:01So we have to be very, very careful of that. What I would say is that is a mid cycle number and it's not forever away, right? So we're not talking about 10 years away. It's not something like that. And so for those of you who know me, you know my track record is to move and we're going to move. Speaker 200:53:23And that's going to be very, very important. Specifically, as we talk about GCF, let me talk about that more from the whole portfolio. We're looking at our whole portfolio. You have to, right? And you have to do it all the time. Speaker 200:53:35You don't do it once. You're doing it all the time. You're reviewing your portfolio. And what I've said to folks is, I started on May 1 and what I said out of the gates was we will not get to the May 1 and not have a decision. And I've said that to our people internally. Speaker 200:53:49I've been very transparent that we got to go through the decision making process and we will make those decisions. Sooner is always better, right? It's always better to do those things. And so that would be my goal, sooner is better. And we have to follow a deliberate process. Speaker 200:54:08In terms of the magnitude, the impact of GCF on that overall number, it's very small, right? So it's there is no expectation that GCF is a giant proportion of that. And so, we'll obviously be more detailed over time when we can be more detailed, when we're allowed to be more detailed. And also you're going to see some detail in the proxy. So the proxy is going to be filed in August. Speaker 200:54:36And the timing, I'm not exactly sure of Tim, it's in August, is that right? Yes. Yes. So you're going to get more detail there. We'll have to we'll give more detail on the roadshow what we can give, again within the bounds of what we can give. Speaker 200:54:49So between now and the Q3 earnings call, if you kind of bracket that timeframe, so 90 days from now, we're going to give you a lot more Speaker 400:54:58detail here. Great. Thanks very Speaker 200:54:58much for the help. Say So look, I want to say thank you again to everybody. We've got important work to do. We're very much in the data analysis phase and building the implementation plans. I think it's important to note that we're going to make decisions based on facts and we still have some data together and that is going to point us towards how to get a bunch of these opportunities. Speaker 200:55:30It's very clear however how much opportunity is out there and the detailed work we've already done shows that. So, we will get more specific. We will time bound it as we move between now and the end of the year. But I think the key thing that I would ask people to take away is that we have control of the vast majority of this. We have control of that. Speaker 200:55:53We can control our own destiny. Yes, things are going to move in the market. We can't control that, But we can control what we do. We can control how we approach understanding our business and where we apply our resources and focusing on the right customers, the right products and the right assets to drive really outstanding results over time. So with that, I want to thank everybody very much for your time, for your partnership. Speaker 200:56:17And I look forward to talking to you here over the next months as we move through this process. Thank you. Operator00:56:24Once again, we'd like to thank you for your participating in today's International Paper'sRead morePowered by