Collins & Aikman Announces Delay in Form 10-K Filing,
Restatement and Unaudited Summary Results for 2004 TROY, Mich.,
March 17 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Collins & Aikman Corporation
(NYSE:CKC) announced today the following: -- The Company did not
file its Annual Report on Form 10-K containing fiscal 2004 audited
financial statements by its due date yesterday since it requires
additional time to complete the review of the accounting issues
referred to below, the financial reporting process, and the
Company's assessment of controls over financial reporting. As
permitted by Rule 12b-25 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
the Company today filed a notification providing that, among other
things, its Form 10-K filing will nonetheless be timely filed if it
is filed no later than 15 calendar days after its original due
date. The audit, and other necessary work required for the Form
10-K to be filed, may not be completed within that extended time
frame. -- During the course of finalizing its financial statements
for its fiscal year ended December 31, 2004, the Company identified
certain accounting for supplier rebates that led to premature or
inappropriate revenue recognition or that was inconsistent with
relevant accounting standards and the Company's policies and
practices. The Company immediately initiated an internal review of
these matters and expects to restate its results for the nine
months ended September 30, 2004 to reflect the correct accounting
for these rebates. The Company is continuing to evaluate whether a
restatement of its 2003 results will be necessary. The Company
presently expects to reduce its previously reported operating
income by $10 - $12 million for the nine months ended September 30,
2004. The Company's outside auditors have not reviewed these
conclusions, and additional adjustments may be required.
Preliminary Summary Results The Company further announced today
anticipated summary results for 2004, which reflect the Company's
present assessment of the impact of the accounting issues referred
to above, and are subject to change. The Company announced fourth
quarter 2004 net sales of $937 million compared to $1.013 billion
in the fourth quarter of 2003, a 7.5% decrease which mainly
reflects reduced volumes in the fourth quarter on several key North
American programs and the delay in new program launches that were
scheduled for the fourth quarter. For the full-year 2004, the
Company reported sales of $3.904 billion compared to $3.983 billion
for 2003. Additional information regarding the Company's results of
operations will be available via the teleconference and related
slide presentation referred to elsewhere in this press release.
During the fourth quarter 2004, the Company continued to achieve
solid marketing progress by adding more than $175 million of annual
newly booked business. This brings the last-twelve-months' total to
over $880 million. These programs begin with model years incepting
2005 to 2008. A significant win for the quarter included an
instrument panel, cockpit and console program for a valued European
customer. Additionally, the Company secured numerous contracts for
our instrument panel, carpet and acoustic, accessory mat and
plastic interior trim products. The Company has completed its
annual impairment test as required by SFAS 142 as of November 1,
2004 and took into consideration, among other factors, the impact
of increased raw material prices in 2004, increased pricing
pressure from customers, general economic conditions, the state of
the automotive industry, and other factors beyond management's
control. The Company determined that the fair values of its U.S.
and Mexico Plastics reporting unit and its Global Fabrics reporting
unit were less than the respective units' carrying values. As a
result, the Company expects to recognize an impairment charge of
approximately $500 million, which will reduce U.S. and Mexico
Plastics' goodwill by approximately $325 million and Global
Fabrics' goodwill by approximately $175 million. The Company has
also performed an analysis of future taxable income and believes
that there is now sufficient negative evidence and uncertainty as
to the timing of when the appropriate level of taxable income will
be generated in the U.S. to recover the deferred tax assets,
necessitating a full valuation allowance against those deferred tax
assets. As a result, the Company's provision for income taxes for
the fourth quarter of 2004 includes a write down of the U.S. and
Italian net deferred tax assets of $175 million. In addition, the
impact of the valuation allowance on the 2004 operating results for
the U.S. and Italy was approximately $25 million. The above
preliminary results have not been audited or reviewed by the
Company's outside auditors and may be impacted by our continuing
review of the accounting matters referred to herein, any expansion
in the number of transactions under review and new information or
situations that may arise prior to completion of the audit. These
results are summary and a complete disclosure of financial
statements would necessarily reveal additional information that the
Company is not presently in a position to provide. EBITDA before
Restructuring and Impairment Charges EBITDA before restructuring
and impairment charges is expected to be approximately $72 - $73
million for the fourth quarter of 2004. The fourth quarter 2003
EBITDA before restructuring and impairment charges was $91 million.
EBITDA before restructuring and impairment charges for the full
year 2004 is expected to be approximately $320 - $321 million. The
comparable result for 2003 was $311 million. Due to the status of
the accounting investigation and the pending audit, we are not
presenting net income at this time. A reconciliation of our EBITDA
before restructuring and impairment charges, a non-GAAP financial
measure, to U.S. GAAP operating income, our most comparable GAAP
figure, is set out in the attached reconciliation schedule. The
Company believes that EBITDA is a meaningful measure of performance
as it is commonly utilized in the industry to analyze operating
performance. EBITDA should not be construed as income from
operations, net income (loss) or cash flow from operating
activities as determined by generally accepted accounting
principles. Other companies may calculate EBITDA differently. Net
Debt and Liquidity The Company's net debt, including outstandings
under an off-balance sheet accounts receivable facility, was $1.613
billion at December 31, 2004. As of December 31, 2004 the Company
had undrawn commitments under its revolver and accounts receivable
facility, along with cash equivalents, of $86 million. The
liquidity available to the Company in the ordinary course is
impacted by seasonal factors, the timing of cash inflows and
outflows and the general level and timing of industry build
volumes. In general, the Company's cash requirements are highest
during the first two to three weeks of a month. In the first
quarter, the Company's cash requirements increased due primarily to
slow industry build volumes, the timing of interest payments and
the termination of certain accelerated pay programs. The Company
has taken several actions to enhance its liquidity position,
including agreements with customers, and modifying its accounts
receivable securitization facility to increase the advance rate and
availability. Continued access to credit facilities in satisfactory
amounts is essential to the Company. Adverse developments in our
cash flows or credit terms could materially impact us. Certain
impacts of the delay in our Form 10-K filing and the accounting
matters under our facilities are discussed below. Internal
Accounting Investigation and Related Matters In the ordinary
course, the Company has received and continues to receive rebates
as a result of arms length transactions with its vendors. Depending
upon the terms of the rebate agreement, these rebates are either
recognizable in the quarter in which the rebate agreement is
reached or recognized over an appropriate future period. In the
course of finalizing the Company's 2004 financial results, the
Company identified certain issues related to accounting for
supplier rebates that led to premature or inappropriate income
recognition or that was inconsistent with relevant accounting
standards and the Company's policies and practices. The Company
immediately initiated a review of all vendor rebates it received
from 2002 through 2004 to ensure that it has properly recognized
the rebates in the appropriate quarterly period. The Company has
completed its accounting review of these rebates, but expects to
undertake a thorough review of its controls, procedures and other
circumstances that led to the premature or inappropriate income
recognition and that was inconsistent with relevant accounting
standards and the Company's policies and practices. The nature and
scope of that review is under consideration. The Company's Audit
Committee and outside auditors have been informed of these issues
and are evaluating an appropriate course of action. The Company's
internal review of vendor rebates covered an aggregate of
approximately $88 million of vendor transactions in fiscal years
2002 through 2004. Of such amount, the Company believes that net
adjustments of approximately $10 - $12 million, are required
primarily occurring during fiscal 2004. The Company expects to
restate its results for the nine months ended September 30, 2004 to
reflect these revisions. The Company is continuing to evaluate
whether a restatement of its 2003 results will be necessary. We
have not taken into account this impact in our preliminary report
of 2004 results. These preliminary results remain subject to
material change and have not been reviewed by our outside auditors.
The Company is working towards completion of its assessment of
internal controls over financial reporting required under Section
404 of the Sarbanes- Oxley Act and has concluded that certain
material weaknesses, in addition to the matters leading to the
restatement described above, existed at December 31, 2004, but its
assessment of the effectiveness of the Company's control over
financial reporting is ongoing and the extent of those material
weaknesses remains under review. The Company's outside auditor is
in the process of completing its audit of internal controls over
financial reporting and has communicated the existence of material
weaknesses. The potential material weaknesses identified include
the following: (i) the adequacy of the Company's resources with
appropriate accounting expertise to address accounting and
reporting matters in certain areas, including revenue recognition,
vendor arrangements and post-retirement benefits, and to supervise
the Company's decentralized and disparate accounting environment
and ensure an appropriate segregation of duties; (ii) the adequacy
of the Company's internal audit function's resources and ability to
monitor compliance with established policies and procedures; (iii)
the effectiveness of certain information technology controls and
the sufficiency of documentation to assess the effectiveness of
such controls including embedded system application controls; (iv)
the adequacy of procedures to consistently identify and reconcile
fixed assets and periodically review assets for impairment; and (v)
the completeness and consistent adherence to Company policies and
procedures. These issues include a range of documentation- related
issues and reconciliation issues. Other material weaknesses may be
identified as a result of further investigation of the
circumstances surrounding the expected restatement arising from
vendor rebates. Our review and the audit is ongoing. While the
Company has implemented remediation steps with respect to certain
significant deficiencies and material weaknesses, a number of
issues still need to be addressed. The Company's remediation plans
include the assignment of specific resources with given timelines
for each finding. Measurement criteria have also been established
to monitor the progress of these remediation efforts. To ensure
that the Company addresses these issues thoroughly, effectively,
and timely, the internal audit department has been supplemented
with the services of several outside specialists. Further required
remediation will be identified and undertaken as a result of the
internal accounting investigation. Impact on Financing Arrangements
The Company intends to operate in the ordinary course, but it
cannot presently comment upon the timing for completion of, or the
ultimate scope or outcome of, the internal accounting
investigation, the audit and the restatements. Until the audit and
any restatements are complete, it will be difficult to determine
the full scope of any financial restatement or prior period
adjustments arising from these irregularities. Consequently, the
Company is still evaluating its financial covenant compliance under
its senior credit facility, as well as other compliance issues
under other financing arrangements. If necessary or desirable, the
Company will seek a waiver of relevant provisions. The Company is
obligated to provide audited financial statements under a number of
its debt, receivables facility, operating lease and other
agreements within prescribed periods. The Company relies upon its
receivables facility with GE Capital Corporation for its liquidity
and the unavailability of funds thereunder would be material and
adverse. The Company has received waivers of various provisions of
its receivables financing facility and its Hermosillo, Mexico
funding arrangements, both of which are held by GE Capital
Corporation, so that it will continue to provide the Company with
access to financing under those facilities in the ordinary course
of business until May 20, 2005, absent certain new adverse
developments. The Company also intends to seek waivers and
amendments of its bank credit facilities and of various lease
agreements, as required or desirable. There can be no assurance
that any other required or desirable waivers will be received on a
timely basis and the failure to obtain waivers could be material
and adverse. Heartland Investment in Preferred Stock held by
Textron The Company also announced today that it has been informed
that its largest shareholder, Heartland Industrial Partners, L.P.,
has entered into an agreement with Textron Inc. that gives
Heartland and its designees the right to acquire all of the Series
A-1 and B-1 Preferred Stock currently outstanding. It is presently
anticipated that Heartland will acquire a majority of the
outstanding preferred stock itself and will seek co-investors for
the balance, although such co-investment may not occur. Public
Briefing As previously announced, the Company will hold a briefing
with automotive institutional investors and security analysts, news
media representatives and other interested parties, including its
security holders, at 10:00 a.m. EST on Thursday, March 17, 2005 to
discuss the matters described in this press release. To participate
by phone, please dial (973) 582-2745. The briefing will also be
audio webcast, on our website at:
http://www.collinsaikman.com/investor/confcalls.html. A slide
presentation will also be used in conjunction with this
teleconference and will be available on the Company's website.
Collins & Aikman Corporation, a Fortune 500 company, is a
global leader in cockpit modules and automotive floor and acoustic
systems and is a leading supplier of instrument panels, automotive
fabric, plastic-based trim, and convertible top systems.
Headquartered in Troy, Michigan, we have a workforce of
approximately 23,000 and a network of more than 100 technical
centers, sales offices and manufacturing sites in 17 countries
throughout the world. Information about Collins & Aikman is
available on the Internet at http://www.collinsaikman.com/.
Cautionary Statement Concerning Forward-Looking Information The
foregoing reflects the Company's views about the accounting
investigation, its financial condition, performance and other
matters that constitute "forward-looking" statements, as that term
is defined by the federal securities laws. You can find many of
these statements by looking for words such as "may," "will,"
"expect," "anticipate," "believe," "estimate," "should,"
"continue," "predict," "preliminary" and similar words used herein.
These forward-looking statements are intended to be subject to the
safe harbor protection provided by the federal securities laws.
These forward-looking statements are subject to numerous
assumptions, risks and uncertainties. Because the statements are
subject to risks and uncertainties, actual developments and results
may differ materially from those expressed or implied by the
forward-looking statements. Readers are cautioned not to place
undue reliance on the statements, which speak only as of the date
hereof. Various factors that may affect actual outcomes and
performance and results include, but are not limited to, general
economic conditions in the markets in which the Company operates,
declines in North American, South American and European automobile
and light truck builds; labor costs and strikes at the Company's
major customers and at the Company's facilities; fluctuations in
the production of vehicles for which we are a supplier; changes in
the popularity of particular car models, particular interior trim
packages or the loss of programs on particular vehicle models;
dependence on significant automotive customers; the level of
competition in the automotive supply industry and pricing pressure
from automotive customers; risks associated with conducting
business in foreign countries; and fluctuation in the price of
certain raw materials, including resins and other petroleum-based
products. In addition, the following may have a material impact on
actual outcomes and performance and results: the results of the
pending investigation; the Company's ability to maintain
satisfactory relations with its sources of liquidity, suppliers,
customers and creditors; the Company's high leverage and ability to
service its debt; and the impact of any defaults under its material
agreements and debt instruments. The cautionary statements set
forth above should be considered in connection with any subsequent
written or oral forward-looking statements that the Company or
persons acting on its behalf may issue. The Company does not
undertake any obligation to review or confirm analysts'
expectations or estimates or to release publicly any revisions to
any forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances
after the date of this report or to reflect the occurrence of
unanticipated events. COLLINS & AIKMAN SUPPLEMENTAL DATA --
PRELIMINARY EBITDA RECONCILIATION SCHEDULE (unaudited) Three months
ended Year ended December 31, December 31, 2004 2003 2004 2003 (In
millions) Operating income ....... $(475) $ 30 $(409) $102
Depreciation and amortization ........... 42 39 155 140 EBITDA
................. $(433) $ 69 $(254) $242 Memo: Goodwill Impairment
.... $ 500 $ 500 Restructuring charges... 1 $ 14 30 $ 41 Impairment
of long-lived assets ...... 5 7 45 28 Total restructuring and
impairment charges.. $ 506 $ 21 $ 575 $ 69 This supplemental data
presented above is a reconciliation of a certain financial measure
which is intended to facilitate analysis of Collins & Aikman
Corporation's business and operating performance. EBITDA is defined
as operating income plus depreciation and amortization. The Company
believes that EBITDA is a meaningful measure of performance as it
is commonly utilized in the industry to analyze operating
performance. EBITDA should not be construed as income from
operations, net income (loss) or cash flow from operating
activities as determined by generally accepted accounting
principles. Other companies may calculate EBITDA differently.
DATASOURCE: Collins & Aikman Corporation CONTACT: Bryce Koth,
Chief Financial Officer, +1-248-824-1520, ; David A. Youngman,
Director Corporate Communications, +1-248-733-4355, Web site:
http://www.collinsaikman.com/ x
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Collins & Aikman (NYSE:CKC)
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