Earnings Call Transcript
HELIOS TECHNOLOGIES, INC. (HLIO)
Earnings Call Transcript - HLIO Q1 2022
Operator, Operator
Greetings and welcome to the Helios Technologies’ First Quarter 2022 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Tania Almond, Vice President, Investor Relations, Corporate Communications in Risk Management for Helios Technologies. Thank you. You may begin.
Tania Almond, Vice President, Investor Relations
Thank you, operator. And good day, everyone. Welcome to the Helios Technologies First Quarter 2022 financial results conference call. We issued a press release yesterday afternoon. If you do not have that release, it is available on our website at hl.com. You will also find slides there that will accompany our conversation today. On the line with me are Joseph Matosevic, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Tricia Fulton, our Chief Financial Officer. They will spend the next several minutes reviewing our first quarter results, discussing our progress with our accelerated growth goals, affirming our outlook for 2022. And then we will open the call to your questions. If you turn to slide two, you will find our Safe Harbor statements. As you may be aware, we will make some forward-looking statements during this presentation and the Q&A session. These statements apply to future events that are subject to risks and uncertainties, as well as other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from where we are today. These risks and uncertainties and other factors were provided in our 10-K filed with the securities and exchange commission. You can find these documents on our website or at sec.gov. I'll also point out that during today's call, we will discuss some non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe are useful in evaluating our performance. You should not consider the presentation of this additional information in isolation or as a substitute for results prepared in accordance with GAAP. We have provided reconciliations of comparable GAAP with non-GAAP measures in the tables that accompany today's slide. And with that, it's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Joseph.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Thank you, Tania, and good day, everyone. Our team had another exceptional quarter as we are sticking to our game plan by executing on our strategy to drive accelerated growth. We are achieving this through innovation and the deployment of the Helios business system to keep us centered and focused on what we can control even while we continue to live with the backdrop of some of the most unusual times in recent world history. If you would please turn to Slide 3, I will review the quarterly highlights. We started 2022 off strong; in fact, on a run rate basis, we are well on our way to meeting our goal to reach at least $1 billion in revenue by 2023. We have been successful executing our manufacturing and our operations strategy to deliver outperformance, which led to our higher than anticipated $241 million in revenue in the first quarter. Our innovative, higher-value solutions are proving to be sticky with our customers and are building loyalty. This is how our brand is growing and how Helios is winning in our markets. Additionally, our responsiveness to our customers and our ability to deliver top-tier industry lead times help us beat the competition, and we continue to take market share. What is very apparent in our results is the strong operating leverage inherent in our business model, along with the benefits we are starting to achieve as we shift to a more integrated operating company. As we successfully grow our top line, we're expanding our bottom line at a greater rate. I am convinced it's the commitment of our world-class team executing against our business that is driving our earnings power. We are focused on continuous improvement in operational excellence while proactively managing our supply chain and inventory to ensure we keep delivering for our customers. I believe it is important for our investors to understand not only how well-positioned we are to capitalize on stronger economic conditions, but also our ability to weather the macroeconomic challenges. This attributes include: the strength of our balance sheet, our ability to quickly deliver, diversity of our revenue sources and geographies, our innovative culture that is part of our DNA, our leading market positions across our portfolios, our pure play focus within the hydraulics and electronics industries, and our growth-class people; without them, nothing else matters. We believe all these qualities create not only the buffers that protect us when times get tough, but also create the opportunities to help us further accelerate our operating model. Importantly, we have delivered on our promises for eight sequential quarters and are on track to achieve the milestone that we have accelerated by two years of reaching at least $1 billion in revenue by 2023. I want to thank all of our global colleagues for their dedication and hard work in achieving these amazing results. Now, I would like to provide some highlights on our most recent acquisition announcement, please turn to Slide 4. PME is an ideal demonstration of our board-down flywheel acquisition strategy. They bring differentiated technologies that expand our hydraulic segment offering. In fact, because the products are so complementary to ours, they have been partnering with our faster business to sell their products since October of 2020. So we already had an established working relationship with the team, and it makes sense to bring them into the Helios family to further accelerate our combined efforts. They manufacture rotating products that enable connections within the hydraulic system to eliminate leakage. The combination of our cartridge belts, quick release couplings, and sweet bodes create industry-leading solutions that are not only very high value and cost-effective for our customers but also have safety and environmental benefits as well. We believe the potential of this bolt-on is significant and it further strengthens Helios in the hydraulics market as the leading pure play provider of highly engineered solutions to both OEMs and our distribution partners. As we continue to target system sales across our segments over time, this type of technology enhancement only serves to extend our differentiation to be the most trusted strategic partner for our customers. Let me now turn the call over to Tricia to review the financial results and discuss our upturn outlook in more detail before I come back for some closing remarks. Tricia, please.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Joseph, and hello, everyone. On slides five to nine, I will review our first-quarter 2022 consolidated results. As Joseph noted, we started the year off strong, managing through the continued challenges of the global supply chain and broader macro environment. Net sales increased 17% over the prior-year period as we executed our growth plans and continued to take market share. We delivered strong organic growth of 14% during the quarter, even with a $4.7 million foreign currency headwind. First-quarter gross profit of $83.6 million increased by $8.2 million or 11% over the prior-year period from higher volumes. Our manufacturing strategy is driving results, even though the benefits are being partially masked by the current macro environment. Our teams have spent a lot of time formulating plans for each business segment to maximize us in the region for the region and make vs. buy strategies. As we integrate the acquisitions we have made over the last 18 months, gross margin was 34.8% in the quarter, down 200 basis points from the year-ago period. While volumes and pricing were up, increases in logistics, raw materials, and labor costs compressed margin. Adjusted EBITDA was $59 million, up 15% with an associated margin of 24.5% compared with 25.1% from the same period a year ago. Higher volume was offset by the cost increases I just described. Our effective tax rate in the first quarter was 22.4%, compared with 23.2% in the prior-year period, reflecting levels of income in varying tax jurisdictions. Diluted EPS improved to $0.94, up 34%, while diluted non-GAAP cash EPS improved to $1.18, up 19% for the first quarter over the prior-year period, reflecting higher sales, operational efficiencies, and strong operating leverage. Please turn to Slide 10 for a review of our hydraulic segment results. First-quarter hydraulic sales of $137.1 million were up 15% over the prior-year period and benefited from improved demand and market share gains in the Americas and EMEA, despite the $4.5 million headwind from foreign currency exchange rates. Organic growth in this segment was up 10% over the prior-year period, while acquisitions added $6.4 million. This is strong growth despite an estimated $6.6 million of sales delays due to supply chain shortages in this segment. Q1 hydraulic gross profit increased by 12% and benefited from higher volume. Gross margin of 37.1% versus 38.1% last year benefited from price increases and fixed cost leverage on higher volume, offset by increases in material, logistics, labor costs, and unfavorable FX. Operating income increased 13% due to strong leverage and cost discipline, while margin modestly declined 50 basis points to 23.1% from the prior year period. Please turn to Slide 11 for a review of our electronics segment results. Electronics sales were $103.4 million in the quarter, an increase of 21% over the year-ago period. Organic growth in the segment was up 20% in the first quarter. We're seeing strong demand from the health and wellness and recreational markets, and the growth was seen across all regions. For the quarter, we estimate that approximately $11 million of sales were delayed due to supply chain shortages. The electronics segment gross profit of $32.8 million in Q1 increased by 9% from the prior-year period on higher volume. Electronics gross margin of 31.7% was down from 35% in the year-ago period, reflecting price increases and fixed cost leverage on higher sales that were more than offset by increases in raw material, freight logistics, and labor costs. Operating income for the electronics segment of $20.5 million was up 12% from the prior-year period, although operating margin contracted 160 basis points. The operating margin reflects the flow-through of gross margin, partially offset by fixed cost leverage on higher sales and disciplined cost management. Please turn to Slide 12 for review of our cash flow. Cash from operations was $14.7 million in the first quarter compared with $15.1 million in the prior-year period. We are carefully balancing our working capital requirements with our efforts to provide timely deliveries to our customers amidst significant demand and material shortages. We have increased inventories to address our backlog and maintain our top-tier lead times, which is helping us take market share. For the quarter, CAPEX was $5.6 million or 2.3% of sales compared with $5 million or 2.4% of sales in the year-ago period. We are currently expecting CAPEX in 2022 to be between 3% to 5% of sales. Free cash flow was $9.1 million in the first quarter. Our free cash flow conversion rate was 76% for the trailing 12 months ending the first quarter of 2022. This is lower than our more typical rate, which was consistently over 100% from 2018 to 2020. We have made a conscious decision to invest in and grow inventory where demand dictates, and this strategy is reflected in our working capital needs regarding our capital structure. On slide 13, we consistently demonstrate our ability to rapidly deliver our balance sheet. Our strategy is to flex up leverage for strategic disciplined acquisitions and then quickly be leveraged using cash generated from operations. Our pro forma net debt-to-adjusted EBITDA leverage of 1.79 times remains below our long-term goal of two times. We will continue to use cash to pay down debt as we reload for future acquisitions. Cash and equivalents were $33 million at the end of the first quarter compared to $28.5 million at the end of 2021. Total debt at quarter-end was $438.1 million compared with $445 million at the end of 2021, reflecting repayments net of borrowings on our credit facilities of $4.3 million in the quarter. Total liquidity at the end of the quarter was $192 million. As a reminder, our capital priorities remain debt reduction, organic growth through new products and technologies, acquisitive growth, and distributions to shareholders. Now let's turn to slide 14. Even in the face of much greater macro uncertainty, just two months after we first established this full-year outlook, we are maintaining our guidance for 2022. Our guidance assumes constant currency using quarter-end rates. We are considering the war in Ukraine, which has no clear timeline, broader, extended lockdowns in major regions in China, the pace of inflation, timing and size of a potential recession, and the actions yet to be taken around the world by central banks. We will not include KMI in our expectations until the acquisition closes in the next few months, although it is not material in size. Our outlook currently assumes our markets are not further impacted by inflation, the global pandemic, or the geopolitical environment. We are responsibly taking into consideration all these current events as we look forward. We continue to expect revenue in 2022 to be in the range of $930 million to $950 million, which implies an annual organic growth rate of approximately 8% at the midpoint of the range. In terms of quarterly revenue flow, our first quarter exceeded our expectations. There is less visibility as we look at the second half of the year. While we have the benefit of pricing strategies coming into play, we want to remain cautious until we get further into the year and our visibility comes more into focus. Our adjusted EBITDA margin outlook remains 23.5% to 25%, which at the midpoint approximates our adjusted EBITDA margin for the full year of 2021. We will continue running our manufacturing strategy playbook, as Josef described, to find ways to offset the macro impacts. This implies that our expectations for adjusted EBITDA dollars remain in the range of $219 to $238 million or roughly a 7% annual increase at the midpoint of the range. We expect interest expense to be between $14 to $15 million at current borrowing levels and rates. The effective tax rate for 2022 is expected to be in the range of 21% to 23%. Depreciation should be between $24.5 million and $26.5 million, while the outlook on amortization is approximately $28 million to $29 million. Our expectations for diluted non-GAAP cash EPS remain between $4.35 to $4.60 per share in 2022. This represents a 5% increase over our 2021 results at the midpoint of the range. We're driving forward with our augmented strategy and delivering accelerated and profitable results while maintaining top quartile industry margins. As we address the highly unusual operating environment we're in, we are encouraged by the progress we are making and the success we're having. With that, I will turn the call back to Joseph Matosevic for some final comments.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Thank you very much, Tricia. These are unique times, yet I believe we are extremely well-positioned to execute at high levels. It is very important to us to continue to do what we said we're going to do. We believe taking a cautious stance on the second half of the year right now is part of us being good stewards of the business. As I said last quarter, I am very optimistic that our potential as an organization will be further unleashed as we move beyond these inflationary and macroeconomic challenges. Over the last two years, we developed and have been executing on our augmented strategy, which has taken us from a holding company to an integrated operating company. This has been perfect timing to make this transition considering the changes in the world around us. It is providing tremendous leverage and will continue to do so over time as we get further into executing and implementing our operating and manufacturing plans. Our business is significantly more diversified today as we continue to grow and cover more white spaces. Our R&D and sales teams are collaborating more than ever across all of the businesses. Our innovative product solutions that we are creating are stickier with our customers. In addition, our investments in manufacturing operations have contributed to top-tier industry lead times, which we have been maintaining throughout this volatile environment. We are also very focused on our corporate sustainability efforts as part of this strategy. We're working to better articulate our ESG metrics and activity and recently rolled out a new website with our ESG section to highlight those details. We are super excited about our future, and hope you share that excitement with us. With that, let's open up the lines for Q&A, please.
Operator, Operator
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. One moment, please, while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from the line of Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc, please proceed with your question.
Jeff Hammond, Analyst
Hey, good morning, everyone.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
Good morning, Jeff.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Morning, Jeff.
Jeff Hammond, Analyst
I was hoping you could provide us with pricing for the quarter and give us an update on your thoughts regarding price-cost progression throughout the year as you implement some of these price increases.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
On the price cost, we did get pricing in Q1. I think we talked about that on the last call. It wasn't fully active throughout Q1; we do expect that it will be fully in our numbers by the end of Q2. From a price-cost perspective, we're trying to remain neutral by the end of Q2 on that, and we are seeing some pricing pressures in areas that we maybe didn't anticipate, but we're also seeing, as we pointed out, really strong demand, so we're very encouraged by that.
Jeff Hammond, Analyst
Okay. And then, yes, I just wanted to understand within the context of holding the guide and I understand the high-level macro headwinds, but you mentioned tougher visibility. Maybe just speak to that and talk about what your backlog did in order trends through the quarter because it sounds like demand remains strong, and I'd expect with the shorter lead times you'd continue to outgrow.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Good morning. You summarized it well. We are experiencing consistently strong demand across our entire portfolio. We are closely monitoring the situation in Asia. In Europe, for instance, demand for electronics is slightly up, while hydraulic sales are slightly down. We expected some downtime at our Kunshan factory, but it is now fully operational again. We're keeping a close watch on Europe and the overall supply chain. There are still some areas showing softer demand, so we have been cautious. As you know, our business model is to follow through on our commitments. We do not yet have complete confidence for the second half of the year, which adds a cautious tone to our outlook. However, in terms of orders, demand, and our backlog, everything remains very strong.
Jeff Hammond, Analyst
Are you noticing whether the decline in hydraulics in Asia is primarily due to the lockdown or if there is a more fundamental slowing in demand?
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
It was purely around the lockdown. We do not see, well, we saw a little bit of slowdown, but in materials in the area, it was largely tied into the lockdown.
Jeff Hammond, Analyst
Okay. I'll get back in queue. Thanks.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Thank you.
Operator, Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Chris Howe with Barrington Research. Please proceed with your question.
Chris Howe, Analyst
Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Morning, Chris.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Chris.
Chris Howe, Analyst
Hey, good morning. Just wanted to follow up on some of the segment-level commentary you had on Electronics. It was highlighted that the Health and Wellness market did well, as well as some other markets. Perhaps you could break down your performance in the quarter for Health and Wellness and how you anticipate Health and Wellness progressing through the year versus your expectations, in addition to some of the other end markets that are performing well in Electronics.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Yeah, Chris. So there's, you can have a little bit more detail, if she sees fit. But our strategy has been, number one, to really create the leverage within the electronics segment, whether it's with innovation, new product rollouts, or joining ways in China. So what you're starting to see is really gross system sales and penetrating a broader market by just leveraging our products. We have heavily invested in new products and new innovation. In some cases, we simplified our products; in other cases, we just added features to really diversify. As for your question on the electronics segment, we are pretty confident we are going to continue to move the needle as we get further into rolling out our new products, and that goes not just with the North American market, but it goes for the global market. Still, a higher level of confidence in that area.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
I think also we pointed to the recreational markets, which remain very strong on the electronic side, especially in the U.S. markets. We're seeing really strong demand and a lot of good discussions coming out of our customer meetings that are really encouraging for the future and going forward for that end market as well.
Chris Howe, Analyst
Okay. That's helpful. My next question is about the environmental constraints. You mentioned that your facility in China is back operational after a 10-day shutdown. However, the direct and indirect impacts from this region are still ongoing. Considering these challenges, along with issues related to raw material, freight, logistics, and labor costs, how should we evaluate the second quarter compared to the first quarter regarding these challenges?
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Chris, we have been closely monitoring the global markets and gathering the necessary data. However, we are focusing more on our customers and our manufacturing strategy, along with our new product introductions. We feel comfortable with our progress despite ongoing supply chain challenges. In some instances, we can't operate on a just-in-time basis and find ourselves producing in the last few weeks. In other situations, the supply chain is running smoothly, and our lead times are aligned with our goals, ranging from six to seven weeks, which is significantly better than our competitors. We are successfully capturing more market share while balancing supply chain issues with broader economic factors. Our tone reflects a cautious approach, but I don’t see any reason why we can’t maintain our current level of performance.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
I also think one of the things that is upsetting up some of the issues that we're seeing in the supply chain is what we're doing on the manufacturing and ops strategy that continually opens up capacity and improves our processes, as well as moving around some of our production to the most efficient place for us to make product. So that's really going to help continue in the long term to drive margin as well.
Chris Howe, Analyst
Thanks for taking my questions and good to be on the call.
Operator, Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Mig Dobre with Baird. Please proceed with your question.
Mig Dobre, Analyst
Yes. Thank you, and good morning, guys. I got to admit I'm a little bit confused as to all the moving pieces here, and what's happening. I guess where I'd like to start is, Trish, you commented that you expected price costs to reach neutrality exiting Q2. That's what I heard. So if that's the case, then I guess that implies price costs were negative in Q1, it will get better in Q2. So going back to the prior question that was asked here, how should we think about Q2 relative to Q1? Are things getting better or are things getting worse? And then if you catch up on price costs, what does that mean for margin in the back half of the year relative to 2021? Because, I mean, 2021 had its own set of challenges, especially late in the year in the fourth quarter. Maybe we can start with some clarification there.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
So we are going to appraise cost for the end of Q2. Demand is very strong. So as long as we're getting supply for the orders that we need, we believe that we can drive a very strong Q2 as well. But there are some constraints there, as you know. Volume is really what is helping to drive margins as well. And we had a much higher Q1 than we anticipated on the volume side, which helps us get the tremendous leverage we can to the margin level, and I think that we can continue to do that. I think what you're hearing is that there's just some unknowns there, and I don't think those unknowns are any different than anyone else's. But we've been fighting these challenges for quite a while, and I think our results over the last eight quarters where we've outperformed have shown that we do a very good job in mitigating what those pressures are on us, and we will continue to do that not only in Q2, but throughout the rest of the year, where in the back half we just have a little bit less visibility than we have right now.
Mig Dobre, Analyst
You're essentially saying that your margins are going to be flattish for the full year, right? You started the year in a hole 60 basis points down in Q1; obviously, it has to get better from here in order to get that guidance. Presumably the fourth quarter is where you have the biggest tailwind, right? Because that's the easiest comparison. But is it fair for investors to expect flat or better year-over-year margin starting with Q2, or is this purely a second half of 2022 occurrence based on your operating plans? And what you know right now?
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
I think, Mig, it would be fair to say exactly what we said is as we see it right now, we're taking a little bit more caution than as we learn more. We will certainly learn more over the next few weeks. Our tone obviously could also change in a much more positive direction. We're not saying that the margins are dropping off; what we're saying is, clearly, we don't have enough visibility yet in the second half. Once we get comfortable with all the data, we will communicate accordingly. The transparency of our tone and our structure here is very important to understand.
Mig Dobre, Analyst
I see. Maybe a question for you, Josef. You highlighted the fact that demand is good; you're trying to be conservative with reiterating the guidance, I understand that. But when you're talking about evaluating risks for the back half of the year, can you give us a sense of what sort of risks you're talking about? Because as far as demand goes, everything you told us is that things are quite good. So what are some of the risks in your view that you're trying to balance here within the outlook?
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Certainly. The main factor has been China's full reopening, which is driving strong demand. For instance, our Kunshan factory was closed for ten days, and no one could leave the premises. Fortunately, we still managed to produce, but we faced shipping challenges. There's a chance we could experience similar disruptions again. However, our factories are operational now, and we are shipping products, albeit at a slower pace due to port congestion. We need the entire Chinese market to stabilize so we have better data and confidence in our shipping capabilities. As for Europe, order levels are robust, but we're cautious about rising pricing pressures and raw material costs. While the supply chain has been stable, we've recently seen a spike in energy expenses, which is something we need to monitor. The North American market has performed well for us, and our lead time has helped us gain market share, though occasional hiccups in the supply chain prompt us to be careful to avoid over-promising and under-delivering.
Mig Dobre, Analyst
Understood. Then if I may, one last one. I know Jeff asked about pricing. I'm going to try this question again because if I look at your guidance, even at the high end of revenue, it would imply that growth for the rest of the year is somewhere around, call it 6 to 7%. And given what we're seeing in pricing, pretty much across the end markets that you're serving and some of your peers and so on. To me at least, it would imply that there's very little volume growth that you are baking into the guidance for the subsequent quarters here. And the lift that we're seeing is mostly price. Am I correct on that? If I am, then why are we not seeing a little more volume coming through? Is it still supply chain, or is it some other factor of conservatism baked in?
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
It's a couple of things. Number one, it is still a supply chain issue. On the other hand, we are also rebalancing our capacity to be able to absorb more volume and spend more products. So to say, the market share gain in some areas has come much quicker than actually anticipated. And a couple of things with supply chain challenges. We decided to add capacity in our facilities as well. So we are undergoing a little bit of a transformation by adding more capacity and being able to ship the product.
Mig Dobre, Analyst
Okay. Thank you.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Thank you.
Operator, Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Jon Braatz with Kansas City Capital. Please proceed with your question.
Jon Braatz, Analyst
Morning, everyone.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Good morning, Jon.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
Good morning, Jon.
Jon Braatz, Analyst
Continuing on that line of discussion. Josef, when you look at maybe the volume for the second half of the year, for the last nine months. What end markets may concern you the most and might begin to be a precursor to a change in the volume outlook as you look out towards the end of the year? What end markets are you most concerned about?
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Yes, regarding the end markets, we need to pay close attention to the construction and agricultural sectors in China due to the ongoing effects of the pandemic. However, when I review all of our other markets, they are generally showing positive trends.
Jon Braatz, Analyst
Okay. Secondly, Tricia, you mentioned that the acquisition that you just announced yesterday, not really material, but I was reading about what they do and it sounds interesting. Two questions. Number one, can it become material going forward? And number two, did they have a lack of capital to really take this product line forward and that may be behind them now?
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, they definitely can become material. One of the benefits that we see from this is that it enables us to get further penetration into the hydraulics systems market, and certainly with the applications that we have through both faster and CBC, we believe that that business can grow pretty significantly. I don't think it was necessarily anything to do with their capital; I think they just saw the opportunity for it to be much bigger than it is by partnering up with someone like Helios, which is a very strong hydraulics segment player, and the idea there is to make one plus one equal three or four or five.
Jon Braatz, Analyst
True. Tricia, how unique is their product line?
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
It's very unique and it's different from other people in the industry, so it is more of a niche player in the swivel technology. They use a ball swivel, which is different; most of the industry does not use a ball swivel. And we believe this technology is a much better one and more sustainable; it doesn't have to be replaced. There actually are some very good YouTube videos about their technology. If you have some free time, we would like to look at them, but it does help explain what their products do and why they're important, especially in certain industries like forestry.
Jon Braatz, Analyst
Okay. Thank you very much.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Jon.
Operator, Operator
Our next question comes from Nathan Jones with Stifel. Please go ahead with your question.
Adam Farley, Analyst
Hi, good morning. This is Adam Farley on for Nathan.
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
Hey, Adam.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Hey, Adam.
Adam Farley, Analyst
I wanted to turn to the electronics segment. You called out an 11% headwind from supply chain. So what are the biggest issues there? I imagine it's mainly electronic components?
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
Yes, it's primarily electronic components. We have quite a few that come from the APAC region, and we're seeing a little bit of a slowdown there. But overall, I think in electronics, the supply chain has gotten better over time and we are starting to see things free up. But then with the China shutdowns, it slowed down a little bit again. But I think we have a pretty good handle on what's coming in and what the timing is of where it's going to be coming in.
Adam Farley, Analyst
Okay. And then in terms of the backlog within electronics, do you think your customers are overordering in an attempt to get in line? And if they are doing that, how do you manage your customer orders to avoid overordering?
Tricia Fulton, Chief Financial Officer
I don't believe they are overordering. Each of our businesses has a slightly different definition of backlog. In the Balboa business, we have a more substantial order book compared to Enovation, which typically experiences shorter order book timeframes. However, we have no signs of overordering. In fact, customers are reaching out daily, asking, "When can I receive my product?" We are working hard to expedite shipping. We did see significant past due orders in that segment at the end of the quarter, but the situation is improving compared to the past due figures we reported at the end of the year, thanks to some supply chain improvements during the first quarter.
Adam Farley, Analyst
Okay. Thanks for taking my questions.
Joseph Matosevic, President and CEO
Thanks, Adam.
Operator, Operator
We have no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the floor back over to you for closing comments.
Tania Almond, Vice President, Investor Relations
Great, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. We really appreciate your interest in Helios and look forward to updating you on our second quarter results in August. Please feel free to reach out to me with any follow-up questions. Have a great day and please stay healthy.
Operator, Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation and have a wonderful day.