Earnings Call
DNOW Inc. (DNOW)
Earnings Call Transcript - DNOW Q3 2020
Operator, Operator
Welcome to the third quarter 2020 earnings conference call. My name is Sylvia, and I will be the operator for today's call. All participants are currently in a listen-only mode. We will have a question-and-answer session later. I will now turn the call over to Vice President of Marketing and Investor Relations, Brad Wise. Mr. Wise, you may begin.
Brad Wise, VP, Marketing and Investor Relations
Good morning, and welcome to NOW Inc.’s Third Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. We appreciate you joining us and thank you for your interest in NOW Inc. With me today is Dave Cherechinsky, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Mark Johnson, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. We operate primarily under the DistributionNOW and DNOW brands, and you’ll hear us refer to DistributionNOW and DNOW, which is our New York Stock Exchange ticker symbol, during our conversation this morning. Please note that some of the statements we make during this call, including the responses to your questions, may contain forecasts, projections and estimates including, but not limited to, comments about our outlook of the company’s business. These are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. federal securities laws based on limited information as of today, which is subject to change. They are subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual results may differ materially. No one should assume that these forward-looking statements remain valid later in the year. We do not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements for any reason. In addition, this conference call contains time-sensitive information that reflects management’s best judgment at the time of the live call. I’ll refer you to our latest 10-K and 10-Q that NOW Inc. has on file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a more detailed discussion of the major risk factors affecting our business. Further information, as well as supplemental financial and operating information, may be found within our earnings release on our website at ir.dnow.com or in our filings with the SEC. In an effort to provide investors with additional information relative to our results as determined by U.S. GAAP, you’ll note that we also disclose various non-GAAP financial measures including EBITDA, excluding other costs, sometimes referred to as EBITDA; net income, excluding other costs; and diluted earnings per share, excluding other costs. Each excludes the impact of certain other costs and therefore, have not been calculated in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation of each of these non-GAAP financial measures, to its most comparable GAAP financial measure is included in our earnings release. As of this morning, the Investor Relations section of our website contains a presentation covering our results and key takeaways for the quarter. A replay of today’s call will be available on the site for the next 30 days. We plan to file our third quarter 2020 Form 10-Q today, and it will also be available on our website. Now, let me turn the call over to Dave.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Thanks, Brad. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I hope that you and your families are safe and healthy. Businesses worldwide are struggling as this pandemic continues to take its toll, and our thoughts are with all those impacted by COVID-19. As a company, we’re committed to working through these challenges to do our part, to improve the circumstances. We continue to execute on our COVID-19 response plan to enhance safety protocols. All locations have remained open operating under WHO and CDC guidelines by providing essential COVID-19 related products to our employees and customers. I am proud of the hard work, resiliency, and dedication our employees demonstrate every day. And I’d like to thank the frontline DNOW women and men for taking care of our customers, being loyal to our key suppliers, and supporting our communities. We announced last week that Dick Alario stepped down from his planned short-term role as Executive Vice Chairman of the company. Dick played a strategic role advising me and our leadership team. With his wealth of experience in the oilfield services industry, his insight, keen strategic mind, wisdom, and wit, Dick has been an invaluable leader and remains an incredible mentor to me and continues as a member of our Board of Directors. In addition to posting our financial results for the third quarter this morning, we also published our first sustainability report, which is now available on our website. Sustainability is not new to DNOW. We take our responsibility seriously to deliver products and solutions safely and reliably around the world that are essential and beneficial to our everyday lives. We also recognize the growing stakeholder interest in transparency around ESG practices and hope you find the report to be informative. Now, let me shift to today’s market view. Coming off a rapidly diminished level of activity within the oil and gas sector, we take solace that it appears, in the U.S. at least, that the market cycle bottom was reached in the third quarter. While not desirable for any industry, being here provides a good view for planning and calibrating the business for locating and sizing facilities, staffing, inventory pre-positioning, and capital allocation decisions. And this vantage point is instructive as we continue transforming DNOW by combining the strengths of our highly skilled people, geographic footprint, strategic inventory deployment, relationships with key domestic and import manufacturers, and our product expertise with disruptive digital innovation, which I’ll cover shortly. Our focus is on first, end-market expansion by accumulating market share in the upstream, while expanding our sales strategy into less volatile sectors. Second, digital disruption by leveraging technology to enhance the customer experience while strengthening our position in the market to enhance the value offerings. And third, structurally transforming our operations and supply chain towards a more efficient and flexible model. Turning to the recent industry trends and activity, customers have reduced CapEx budgets and have adhered to disciplined austerity measures around maintenance as well as SG&A spending. As such, the exploration and production landscape is changing as evidenced by recently announced customer consolidations. Fortunately, our focus on strong customer relationships and our value proposition creates an advantage in the market, one that offers significant benefits for customers to reduce their total cost of ownership and inventory risk and provides customers with unparalleled access to the top tier suppliers around the world via our physical locations and through our digital channels. For consolidating E&P companies, not only do our energy branches and process solutions offer differentiating value, but our supply chain services model offers customers the means to reduce investment and working capital, operating expenditures, and facility costs, which frees up cash and drives efficiency gains through the use of technology while adopting a customized product sourcing strategy. These are tangible differentiating solutions that allow customers to compete in a rebalancing global oil market while leveraging our advanced technology with the integration of systems, including order management, material planning, and inventory and logistics management. The results help our customers reduce cost and optimize their operations, making them more competitive. As the leading upstream pipe, valves, fittings, and pumps distributor, we expect to expand our share as customer acquisitions and mergers are completed and future opportunities arise. Of the six most recently announced customer consolidations in North America, three of the acquirers are among DNOW’s top echelon customers, one of which is a strategic supply chain services customer, and four are in our Canadian backyard where our market position continues to strengthen. While we take nothing for granted, we see these consolidations as opportunities for growth. Now, I’ll touch on financial highlights from the quarter. Revenue from the third quarter of 2020 was $326 million, a sequential decline of $44 million or 12%. We guided to a low-to-mid teens percentage decline sequentially but benefited from higher sales from maintenance work in the period. Gross margins improved 60 basis points sequentially to 19.0% as product margins were resilient, even during the period of elevated inventory charges and with the gravity of deflation. Some of this gross margin improvement is attributable to fewer large projects at lower margins than what we experienced on higher margin small dollar transactions. Order size mix can vary and we benefited from that mix in the third quarter. On the other hand, in a trough market, as we’ve cautioned, smaller, less well-capitalized regional competitors are using price as a competitive tool, which drives down prices and has an unfavorable effect on gross margins. But we see the impact of regional competitor desperation as temporary. In a depressed market, supplier selection discipline becomes an even more important strategic imperative, favoring strategic supplier partners and channeling the bulk of our purchases to them, while discouraging purchases to their competitors is key to product availability, inventory risk mitigation, pricing, and gross margins. Our efforts around favoring higher-margin product lines and focusing on key suppliers helps reinforce gross margins even in this deflationary period. Free cash flow for the third quarter was $57 million, as we expanded our cash position to a record high of $325 million while remaining debt-free. We generated nearly $200 million in free cash flow in the trailing 12 months and more than $400 million of free cash flow in the trailing 24 months. Having more cash allows flexibility around organic capital deployment and inorganic growth. Now I’d like to take a moment to share a few successes we’ve delivered in support of our strategy to expand market share and further diversify our end market participation. In terms of end market diversification, bookings within our Odessa pumps business related to the municipal water business accounted for a small, but growing percentage of revenues and reflects opportunities for growth. Another area of focus for us, and one not as susceptible to major swings in the cycle, is expanding our aftermarket capabilities on pump equipment. Over the past year, we’ve been investing and developing our certified pump technician program to expand these capabilities. During the quarter, we booked a sizeable preventative maintenance job with a large independent E&P company. Our overall share of this pump aftermarket is formative, but we see plenty of runway for growth. We shipped process measurement units, production vessels, and saltwater disposal units from our Casper, Wyoming facility to the Bakken and Rockies, while shipping to the Permian and Eagle Ford plays from our Houston, Tomball facility to both E&P operators and midstream companies. During the quarter, we secured orders in the mining industry for PVF and slurry pump applications, pump packages for dewater applications, and utility air compressors. As an example of expanding in the downstream refining market, two major refining companies in the Northern Rockies approved our Casper facility to deliver tower processing units for fractionation, distillation, and vapor recovery capabilities. We picked up a new MRO contract for a midstream water company that provides water management solutions for produced water transportation, disposal, recycling, and supply. In Canada, plant turnaround activity provided a tailwind to revenue for several midstream gas plants. The turnarounds leverage DNOW’s field inventory to aid work crews by expediting material availability. We enjoyed several successes from our total valve solutions line by providing valves and actuation products from midstream gas processing facilities, refinery coker applications, and power plants. For engineering firms, we supported their ability to configure and select actuated valve products for their client projects; a number of these projects are completed in Canada and exported to the Middle East and Africa. This exemplifies our teams adding value beyond the sale of commodity items, offering application expertise, and one of the components of our midstream strategy. We renewed an MRO contract from a major PVF and artificial lift, while expanding its potential value by adding our fiberglass piping solutions to the contract for this accretive market share gain. Further to our end market diversification initiatives, we saw several wins in the industrial sector in Canada. We saw increasing product sales in the potash mining sector with two separate operators. These are market share gains as we execute our strategy to increase our coverage of the mining sector, not only in Canada but in the U.S. and Australia. In international during the quarter, we executed a new MRO contract for an offshore driller with contracts in Brazil and an additional one with operations in Mexico. We executed MRO agreements with several land-based drilling contractors in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, and we renewed a key MRO agreement with an IOC in West Africa. We delivered a large number of valves for an FPSO customer in Brazil, in addition to production control valves for a large IOC natural gas producer in Australia. During the quarter, we have seen West Africa and Southeast Asia markets return with a modest degree of strength, however, the Middle East remained soft with fewer large projects resulting from attempts to adhere to OPEC agreed-to cuts. As touched on earlier, digital disruption combined with customer adoption is presenting new and exciting ways for us to provide greater value to our customers. I’d like to highlight several examples of the progress we’ve made on our expanding digital platform and also on the commercialization of the technology. First, our e-commerce platform shop.dnow.com is gaining traction, not only in new customer implementations but in continued enhancements. Key enhancements to our e-commerce platform include new features for customer viewing, recommended compatible products and convenience options, in addition to adding more SKUs, images, and product descriptions. Recently, expanding the value of our e-commerce channel, we introduced thousands of additional SKUs that would normally be traditional immediate resale non-inventory items, leveraging a key third-party drop ship partner. The realized customer benefit is access to an expanding catalog without the inventory risk while reducing transaction costs for this activity. One area of growth in user adoption has been with our mobile ordering app that enables customers to order material directly from their smartphone or tablet and define how that material is obtained and when it is needed. The orders are processed directly into our ERP system, resulting in real-time communication of customer order requirements and associated transactional efficiency gains. As we mentioned in our previous call, an independent oil and gas company has used our complex ordering feature to procure two, three, and four well pad tank battery orders on our e-commerce platform, and in this quarter, they have placed additional orders in that manner as well. This is an area of focus for us to expand the capacity of our system to handle large bills of materials, to minimize the time throughout the order process, focusing on eliminating non-productive work, while expediting kitting and procurement of customer hookups and tank battery orders. Last week, we rolled out our new DigitalNOW eSpec product. The eSpec tool is a digital product configurator that enables customers to select, configure and price out a number of Process Solutions products. We provided access to a limited group of customers so that we can drive continuous improvement in the application. An additional digital application is our life cycle asset management program, which is marketed under our DigitalNOW platform. Over the past month, a major IOC natural gas producer in Egypt, an offshore producer for Petrobras in Brazil, a customer with a facility in Indonesia, and two drilling assets in Saudi Arabia, partnered with us to pilot our life cycle asset management tool to maintain their assets. Finally, internally, we’ve completed our rollout of our new order management system with adoption increasing across the organization. Efficiency gains across the network allow employees to process sales more quickly and with increased accuracy. This technology results in increased order handling effectiveness for our customers and allows us internally to optimize our order management process. Our digital strategy is well underway. We have more to come with more exciting products and solutions in development. With that, let me hand it over to Mark for further commentary.
Mark Johnson, CFO
Thank you, Dave, and good morning, everyone. For the third quarter of 2020, our revenues outperformed our guided revenue percentage decline of low to mid teens with revenue of $326 million or down 12% sequentially. The U.S. segment third quarter 2020 revenue was $228 million, down $32 million or 12% from the second quarter of 2020. One piece of business transformation completed in the period was the combination of our U.S. supply chain services business, including its downstream, industrial, and our integrated supply chain solution offering into our U.S. energy business. This combination of similar purpose groups focused primarily on the energy market improves performance, accountability, and combined financial performance as a whole. This decision was made to foster new levels of collaboration and consolidation and will deliver operational efficiencies and spark additional innovation while providing increased value and attention to our customers. Our newly combined U.S. energy branch revenue was down 7% sequentially, as many of our customers deferred projects and continued with reduced drilling and completion activity during the quarter. Our U.S. Process Solutions revenue was down 28% sequentially, on lower customer activity. We felt the impact of several months of customer deferrals and elevated new order discipline as customers focused on conserving cash and drawing down their surplus pumps, vessels, and fabricated inventory. During the quarter, U.S. Process Solutions shipped existing orders for lax pump packages, measurement units, launchers, and receivers to active operators. The increase of completions does provide opportunity for U.S. Process Solutions and specifically our Power Service group to increase our vessel order activity that was relatively quiet during the third quarter. In our Canadian segment, third quarter 2020 revenue was $42 million, up $1 million from the second quarter. As we discussed on the last quarter 2Q call, Canadian revenue included a large $5 million project order, which did not repeat in the third quarter. Excluding that, our 3Q Canadian revenue was up 17% sequentially. Moving to the international segment, third quarter 2020 revenue was $56 million, down $13 million from the second quarter, as countries and locations adjusted to the lower activity levels and pandemic movement restrictions in place, particularly in the Middle East and Europe. In the third quarter, gross margins were 19%, an improvement of 60 basis points sequentially. Gross margins improved partially through increased pricing and favorable revenue mix with lower project activity in Canada and international. Inventory charges in the period were $9 million, as we adjust our product lines and locations that no longer align with our strategy and we evaluate current activity levels. We’ve historically experienced inventory charges to be higher than normal during depressed market conditions, and as we account for the change in our customer demand. In the third quarter of 2020, warehousing, selling, and administrative expenses, or WSA, were $83 million or down $14 million sequentially, ahead of our plan and beating our guidance of high-80s, low-90s. As a result of continued cost transformation initiatives and an increase of government wage subsidies by $2 million sequentially or $6 million for the quarter. We completed five location closures during the quarter, totaling 45 facilities year-to-date, as we continue to right-size our footprint according to our strategy. In branch operations, we are scaling back the number of employees, trucks, inventory, and facility size to favor a more centralized fulfillment model. From a product portfolio perspective, as you will notice on our balance sheet, we’ve included assets and liabilities held for sale at September 30. These primarily relate to the divestiture of a small regional lighting business in the UK that was successfully sold last week. Moving back to WSA reductions, these past few quarters, we focused on implementing numerous cost reduction initiatives. These include streamlining our customer service model to accelerate structural changes and optimize processes for near-term and long-term gains. We’re working every line on the financials with a focus on profitable market share gains, pursuing reduced costs for manufacturers, targeting high-margin product lines, and rigorously pursuing fitness at the expense line. We’re deploying technology to augment labor content, automating and digitizing processes and activities, and reducing discretionary and infrastructure costs, while also reducing headcount from 4,400 to 2,550 since the beginning of the year. Including current actions underway and recognizing unknown variability due to customer bankruptcies and separation costs, we forecast a year-over-year 2020 versus 2019 WSA reduction of over $140 million, exceeding our full-year cost out commitment discussed in February by over $100 million. While we are not done, this is a major milestone that would not have been possible without the customer focus and dedication of our talented employees. Moving to net loss, the net loss for the third quarter was $22 million or a loss of $0.20 per share. Net loss, excluding other costs, was $17 million or a loss of $0.16 per share. Non-GAAP EBITDA, excluding other costs for the third quarter of 2020 was a loss of $15 million, which includes $9 million in unfavorable inventory charges. With the ongoing liquidity challenges faced worldwide, we continue to stand in a position of strength. We took decisive and proactive steps during the quarter to focus on what we control and delivered a record cash position of $325 million. As of September 30, 2020, our total liquidity from our undrawn credit facility availability plus cash on hand totaled $534 million. Accounts receivable for the period were $213 million, down $29 million sequentially with Days Sales Outstanding of 60 days. Inventory ended the third quarter at $318 million, down $52 million sequentially with similar inventory turns to the second quarter at 3.3 times. Our accounts payable ended at $163 million with days payable of 56 days for the third quarter. Net cash provided by operating activities year-to-date was $133 million with $59 million in the third quarter and after considering $2 million in capital expenditures, free cash flow was $57 million. Our year-to-date free cash flow was $126 million, exceeding a quarter early, the high end of our full-year free cash flow guidance. During stress periods in our business, we focus on the preservation of liquidity and the management of variable and fixed costs. To that end, we reduced approximately $53 million in quarterly WSA, when compared to the year ago quarter. And when looking back on our successes in optimizing working capital and strengthening our financial position over the trailing eight quarters, we’ve generated $432 million in cash, when considering free cash flow and cash generated from our divestitures. This focus on balance sheet fitness can also be seen in our working capital execution. As of September 30, 2020, working capital, excluding cash, as a percentage of third quarter, annualized revenue was approximately 22%, when compared to the trailing 12 months of revenue; working capital as a percentage of revenue was approximately 15%. We have a strong balance sheet and ample liquidity that allows us to operate efficiently and intelligently in this environment. We will continue to execute on what is in our control. We are continuously developing a more agile business and remain focused on increasing productivity in everything we do.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
With that, I’d like to shift the focus towards our outlook for the fourth quarter. We experienced seasonal revenue declines from the third quarter to the fourth quarter each year due to weather delays on projects, fewer billing days, holidays, and seasonal customer budget exhaustion. For example, our third to fourth quarter revenue decline in 2019 was 15% while global rig counts declined 6%, producing a seasonal net revenue to global rig decline or spread of minus 9%. That spread from 3Q to 4Q was a decline of 7% in 2018. Thus, recent historical experience should suggest a decline in the high single digit percentage range from the third quarter to the fourth. This year, we expect these drags on sequential revenue to be negatively impacted by the broad range of customer reactions to macro conditions, where while some will spend more as rigs and completions inch up, others will ease activity due to COVID impact on demand and the potential for additional lockdowns. Moving to M&A, the current market uncertainty has created its share of new challenges, adding unpredictability to the typical M&A process. Notable for us are the expanded processes related to financial due diligence and the stress testing we discussed on our last call around current target earnings performance as we evaluate the requirements critical to trigger closing the transaction. We continue to update and refine our pipeline to confirm each deal is still aligned with our expectations. Though, our balance sheet affords us the ability to be patient and prudent, we are actively engaged in various stages of multiple deal conversations. We continue to remain highly selective and will strike at the right time for the right business for the right value to our shareholders. On the divestment side, as Mark mentioned, in October we will close on the sale of a business line in the UK, although it was a small part of the overall business. This move further exemplifies the proactive steps we’re taking to transform our business and prioritize providing long-term value. In closing, I’m excited about the momentum building in the execution of our strategy. DNOW’s performance reflects our employees’ steadfast dedication to provide superior service and value to our customers. We have produced strong gross margins despite the deflationary pressure in the market and have extracted historic levels of costs from the business with plans for further cost transformation. Our working capital discipline has resulted in a record cash balance and we are deploying disruptive technologies to simplify the customer experience, develop new revenue channels, and drive efficiencies. We remain debt-free with more than $0.5 billion in total liquidity to continue our investment in technology while judiciously pursuing inorganic opportunities that provide the optimal strategic fit. Now, let’s open the call for questions.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. The first question comes from Sean Meakim from J.P. Morgan.
Sean Meakim, Analyst
Thank you. Hey, good morning.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Hi, Sean.
Sean Meakim, Analyst
So David to start – good morning. Gross margin was elevated again. So if we exclude the impact of inventory charges, it’d be above 21%. Inventory charges aren’t necessarily new; you can have some each quarter, but you’ve been calling them out, given the magnitude while activity has collapsed. Have we moved past the larger inventory charge periods? Do you see that is ongoing into next year? And how should investors calibrate all the moving pieces to what a, call it, normalized gross margin could look like next year?
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Okay. That’s a good question, Sean. So we talked about over the last few calls that we’ve had kind of two phases of cost reductions. Those are behind us, and Mark has kind of spoken to the impact of those. Now we’re moving into another phase, which will take a little longer. So we have 200 locations around the world. We see in the future, repurposing them to be customer focused but with a narrower range of inventory – less inventory, fewer people, fewer vehicles, et cetera, to pull costs out of the business. That’ll take a little bit longer. So that’ll – so sizing up, how much inventory is at risk, as we repurpose our branches will take a little longer? We hope to do most of that by year end. So we would expect elevated inventory charges through the end of the year. And then maybe, if we do more dramatic changes in the New Year, we’d see some in the future. But we expect that to normalize at year-end. Inventory charges are part of our business; we’re a big distributor with a lot of inventory. Over time, we see about 0.5% to 1% of our revenues being the normal level of inventory charges, for example. But as we’ve said recently, they’ve been elevated. So in terms of what the normalized gross margins would be, we think there’ll be 20%-plus. Now, I say 20% and I say, plus, for a couple of reasons. You have a higher number than that. Part of that’s because we’ve talked exhaustively about growing our position in midstream. And while the transaction costs to handle large midstream orders are lower, meaning the WSA percentage of revenue would be lower, so goes the gross margin.
Sean Meakim, Analyst
Got it. I appreciate all that feedback. I think that’s really helpful. So in somewhat intertwined in all those efforts is – that’s impacting inventory is really about the cost reset. And so we made huge strides in WSA. But even with all the cost out, given where activity is getting back to consistently positive EBITDA number is a little bit challenging until we get more volume. Have you run forward analysis, once you’ve reset the cost base, where you want it to be in terms of how much volume of revenue is required to hit certain hurdle rates around EBITDA margin target? Can you maybe just talk – are you able to give us a framework around, kind of a trough peak versus normalized type of EBITDA margin going forward relative to maybe what you were able to accomplish in the prior cycle?
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Yes. So you want me to forecast an EBITDA target? I mean, what I first want to do is get the business to breakeven. Ultimately, we’ve talked – historically, we’ve been in the 5% EBITDA range; we definitely want to get back to that level and higher. But first, when you get to breakeven. So we’ve seen our North American market decline by 80% since 2014; we’ve made significant restructures in the business. We’re kind of pursuing a fulfillment central migration, where we’re moving our business to more of a centralized model. So getting to the right level of WSA in the business, forecasting the revenues, all that has to come together to where we – before we start talking about what kind of EBITDA progression. But I would tell you 5% is a minimum starting point and we need to get to break even first; we believe we’ll get to break even in the first half of 2021.
Sean Meakim, Analyst
Thanks, Dave. I know that’s not an easy question, but I appreciate the context around your goals. It’s very helpful.
Operator, Operator
Our following question comes from Jon Hunter from Cowen.
Jon Hunter, Analyst
Hey, good morning, Dave and Mark.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Good morning.
Jon Hunter, Analyst
So just wanted to dig into the revenue commentary a little bit for the fourth quarter. So your teams are guiding down high single digits. But perhaps, there’s a little bit of offset from the completion side of things that seems to be improving in the fourth quarter. So maybe that helps your Process Solutions business. So can you kind of talk to if there’s some conservatism baked into that expectation? And then how does that revenue decline look split between your Energy and Process Solutions segments?
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Okay. So if you look at just the seasonal – the normal seasonal impact, we would see a revenue decline. In the last several years, the only time we saw increases was in 2016 when rig counts really took off in the second half of the year. Then we look on a net basis at what happens with our revenues compared to rig counts, which is the better long-term gauge for revenue opportunities for us. We see that difference of last year, our revenues declined 15%, while rigs declined 6%. So we saw a 9% decline. So we’re kind of expecting that will happen. When you look at October, and of course, we’ve seen our preliminary October revenue numbers, they are flat with September. If you recall, what kind of the contours of the third quarter, September was among the weakest month in the third quarter. So our October numbers rivaled September, but September was a soft month in the third quarter. So we kind of start the fourth quarter and October generally is your best month of the fourth quarter. I expect the seasonal dip in November, December. That’s how we get to that number.
Jon Hunter, Analyst
Thanks. Thanks, Dave. And then I guess following on to that same line of thinking is, you did mention the municipal water and mining and industrial pieces of the business that could be growth areas for DNOW. Can you talk about what percentage of the business or what kind of revenue contribution you’re getting from those businesses today and a possible market size for those types of end markets?
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Yes, I noted in my commentary, those are small parts of the business. A lot of that activity is happening in Odessa pumps, and Odessa pumps is less than 10% of our business, and we’re seeing growth in the water disposal business, which represents about 10% of Odessa pumps. So we’re in the less than 3% range in terms of where we are today. What we do see, though, is more customer acceptance of the offerings we have in that area. So we see it as a potential to grow, especially after one of our most successful businesses in Odessa pumps to use our fixed cost branch network for Odessa pumps and add business to the existing revenue stream there.
Jon Hunter, Analyst
Understood. And then I guess, kind of a bigger picture question is looking into 2021 and your activity progression as things improve here. How do you think about working capital for the full year? Is there still some efficiency to be gained there, such that, your working capital consumption as activity improves could be limited, or is there any kind of range or way to think about that in 2021? Thank you.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Okay. So in terms of working capital next year, I think Mark mentioned that our working capital as a percent of revenue was 22% for the quarter, and for the tail end of the 2019 period, we had working capital as a percent of revenue in the 80% range. So I mean first, I’d say there’s room for improvement in terms of turning our inventory a little faster, improving collections. So there’s room for improvement there. If we see some modest growth next year, and again, we’re not forecasting 2021, but to the extent we do, we would begin to consume capital somewhat to add inventory, certainly for accounts receivable. So how much cash flow we’d have is going to be a function of revenues. But I think in the spirit of your question, while our inventory turns are 3.3, that’s kind of low. But in a market like this, we see that as pretty strong performance, given how illiquid most inventories are out there. Generally, room for improvement, but if there is growth, we may see muted free cash flow in the New Year.
Jon Hunter, Analyst
Thanks, Dave. I’ll turn it back.
Operator, Operator
Our following question comes from Doug Becker from Northland Capital.
Doug Becker, Analyst
Thanks. Wanted to get a little more color on the margin improvement in the quarter. I think in the prepared commentary, you mentioned pricing improvements as well as mix. Just wanted to make sure I heard that correctly, but also any color on where the strength was?
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Yes. So mix was – so there’s really three components to major impacts on gross margin. Sean asked about one of them, and that was inventory charges. They were a little bit lower in the quarter. That wasn’t the primary driver for gross margin improvement, though it was price, and the two components there would be mix, which we benefited from. In the international space and in the U.S. as well, we saw lower projects – lower levels of projects. Projects tend to be larger orders at lower margins. So that helps. So there’s a mix component. And we’re continuing the process of picking the right manufacturers, who support our customers to maximize margin. We have a better margin gain from saddling up at the right suppliers, and we are discontinuing lines that are less profitable. That’s kind of a mix effect too, but it also is – we’re picking the higher margin products, or with some customers pricing products better. We’re in the throes of a downturn; there is a lot of competitive activity. Some of that is behind us with certain customers, and now we’re re-pricing at a higher level.
Doug Becker, Analyst
Now that all makes sense. Is it fair to say that we’ve probably seen the trough in gross margins, maybe in the second quarter? Then given those – some of those things are more structural than transitory in nature?
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
So my sense is, yes. But let me qualify that. So it feels like we have. If you look at pipe prices, they’ve turned the corner. It’s a very slight turn, but we’ve seen pipe prices begin to improve maybe for one month. My caveat would be, we’re going into the fourth quarter, almost all of our competitors are going to decline in terms of revenues, and I think we’ll see a scrappy competitive response in the fourth quarter just due to the seasonal decline in revenues. We already guided to a revenue decline; we said we’re in a period of elevated inventory charges. We expect a competitive response from – especially the regional competitors, trying to make payroll to price, even their inventory below costs in the fourth quarter. So all those are kind of negative effects on gross margins in the fourth quarter, largely driven due to the evaporation of projects and volume opportunities in the fourth quarter. So on balance, we could see just a little bit of a slip in the fourth quarter. Inventory charges will impact that quite a bit. But I do believe from a pricing perspective, Doug, we have dropped.
Doug Becker, Analyst
That’s good. And then you mentioned, you expect to gain share as a result of the E&P consolidation. Where did those share gains typically come from? Presumably because your larger competitor is talking about share gains from consolidation as well. It’s the smaller players. But just want to get a little more context around that?
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Yes. So I talked very topically about that, and I’ll elaborate. We’re looking at six North American purchases or acquisitions or combinations, and three of those six are top echelon ranking customers, big customers of ours, with whom we have strong relationships. The company those – that are better being acquired, are not in our top echelon. So to the extent that the acquirers pursue a sole source or a singular procurement strategy, we should pick up share from the acquired companies, not so much from the acquirers, because we already have a strong position. Generally, the national distribution companies benefit from these kinds of mergers. The regional players find themselves kind of flat-footed; they can’t manage a nationwide or North American wide relationship, so we have an advantage there. We see the opportunity there to leverage our Process Solutions business. In each of these relationships, by the way, all of 12 of these companies are customers of ours. But our Process Solutions is becoming more and more important to our big customers. We see that as an opportunity to parlay that product offering set to the acquired company as well. So I see the pickup potential really being with the acquired company, and that’s kind of our target. We said on the call that while we are optimistic, this will be a hard scrabble fight, but we think we’re well-positioned.
Doug Becker, Analyst
Thank you very much.
Operator, Operator
Our next question comes from Walter Liptak from Seaport.
Walter Liptak, Analyst
Hey, good morning, guys.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Hi, Walter, good morning.
Walter Liptak, Analyst
Congratulations on controlling the costs. I wanted to ask about WS&A, and if I heard you right, you said we are tracking toward $400 million of WS&A for the full year, is that right?
Mark Johnson, CFO
Yes, $395 million – about $395 million is the guide.
Walter Liptak, Analyst
Okay, all right. And within there, there’s probably some transitory costs, both pluses and minuses, and I wonder if we could talk – if you can give us a little bit of color on those, like you called out government subsidies, at some point those are going to go away. You are spending on this digital. I mentioned that there might be some expenses going through. I wonder if you could just help us understand, maybe what – like a normal level of WS&A might be as we pull out some of those pluses and minuses?
Mark Johnson, CFO
Right. Yes, I think as we mentioned, we’re still pulling levers. So I think normalized, I don’t think we’re talking about that. We can call out, you’re right. Some of the government subsidies, albeit limited and capped based on some of them; those – as we see it, those peaked in the third quarter. And we see those trailing off in the fourth quarter, and then that’s in our expectation as well, that those will offset. We expect other initiatives that were underway to reduce costs. So I think right now, we’re in the process of planning – annual planning and visiting with customers and planning. As much as we can into the next year. A lot of those initiatives are underway, so next time we are on this call, we will have a little better line of sight, let’s hope, about the industry and activity levels to talk more about normalized levels of WSA.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Yes, I think Walt, we – I mentioned a little bit in the Q&A earlier on the call, that we’ve made significant reductions. Now we’re – and those were the – those were easier to make, in terms of – now we’re moving towards a system where we want to stay close to our customers. We want to maintain as much as possible our fleet of locations, which is 200 today. Tomorrow, we’re going to be pursuing branches half their size and with less inventory and fewer trucks, as Mark said, and that takes a little bit long to affect that kind of physical move of those branches. It’s harder for us to say what our normalized level of WSA is. We have said historically that a normalized WSA should be closer to 15% of revenues. So that’s where we have to end up, and that’s where we’re going to get. But that will be more of an evolution than what we’ve experienced so far, which is in terms of cost reduction, more revolutionary.
Walter Liptak, Analyst
Okay, got it. Yes, there’ll be some evolution to that – the WS&A line. I wondered about the DigitalNOW, if there is any data points that you can give us like what – how many orders were processed as a percentage or the number of users that were added? Any data for us to kind of help us understand where you are in that process?
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Yes. So similar to last quarter, our revenues – about a third of our global revenues happen through various digital channels, and that’s growing. If you look at our top 30 or three dozen customers, about 56% of our revenue comes through digital channels. So usually, our larger customers is where we do the bulk of our digital activity today. The opportunity is to fold in more smaller customers and to add product offerings, like we talked about earlier in the prepared remarks about making it easier for customers to make large purchases from us, to really accelerate that process. To kind of cut out the quoting and the price degradation process and the high cost of quoting process and make it simple for the customer to produce wells, et cetera. So that’s kind of where we’re at. Our midstream – or our upstream customers, where we see the most digital integration, we think the opportunity there is with our midstream, which is where we have the least, mainly because that’s a high quoting business, and we’re still working on making that process more seamless.
Walter Liptak, Analyst
Okay, got it. Thank you.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Welcome.
Operator, Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of our time for the question-and-answer session. I will now turn the call over to Dave Cherechinsky, CEO, and President, for closing statements.
Dave Cherechinsky, CEO
Okay. Well, thank you, everyone for attending the call. We appreciate your interest in NOW Inc., and we’ll talk to you soon. Stay safe.
Operator, Operator
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today’s conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.