Transcripts
Carrier Global Corporation (CARR) Oppenheimer’s AT Annual Industrial Growth Conference Call Transcript
Operator
Well, good afternoon, everyone. Thanks so much for joining us at day two of Oppenheimer’s AT Annual Industrial Growth Conference. The last session of the day for us, and very pleased to be ending it with the management of Carrier. CFO, Patrick Goris, VP of IR, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome. Thanks so much for being here today.
So we’re going to spend the bulk of this conversation on the portfolio transformation. But I think it’s good to start with some industry fundamentals and aspects of your strategic growth that perhaps got overshadowed this quarter. So I want to start by asking you about commercial HVAC orders. Can you characterize the continuing strength you saw there? Talk about where you saw strength geographically and among verticals in 1Q? Any color you’ve seen quarter-to-date as we head into the seasonal uptick? And I’m particularly interested for any color on office and retail, just given some investors’ concerns around commercial real estate.
Question-and-Answer Session
A – Patrick Goris
Sure, Noah. Let me start with the sales actually, we’ve a set of orders. In Q1, our sales, again, were pretty strong. They were up mid-teens, and they were up strong across our portfolio of commercial EBITDA. Applied equipment was up mid-teens. Our aftermarket sales were up high teens. And we’ve spoken a lot about our European commercial heat pump capabilities. And again, there, we had a quarter of up 20% in Q1.
So overall, sales continue to be pretty strong. If you look at the order intake, order intake in the first quarter was up mid-single digits, a little over 5%, and that’s after, I think, 8 or 9 quarters of double-digit order growth. Now we’re really double lapping really strong orders or quarters with orders double-digit order growth in North America, so continued strong trend there. Asia Pacific up high single digits, EMEA was down. EMEA was down mid-single digits. But if I look at the end markets, continued strength in education, we talked a lot about higher education. We talked a lot about K-12, data centers, and healthcare all continue to be strong.
If I think about industrial and manufacturing, again, end markets that are pretty good for us in commercial HVAC, not just chips and batteries, but also anything that’s related to decarbonization with heat pumps.
You mentioned commercial real estate. Commercial real estate is what item, of course, given what’s happening. I’d say to date, we haven’t seen any change in activity there. I would also say that commercial real estate for commercial HVAC trust in North America, we estimate it to be less than 10% of our overall commercial HVAC sales in North America. So not a very big part of our business. But overall, commercial HVAC tends to do well. And of course, healthy buildings. We talked a lot about that also continues to be strong. Pipeline continues to build.
You mentioned seasonal uptick, probably a little bit less applicable in commercial HVAC compared to resi. But overall, we see continued strong momentum and with backlogs that are up 20% year-over-year in Q1, we expect another good year in this business.
Operator
Yes, that data point on the commercial exposure with the real estate exposure within the commercial, I think it just goes to the point at what we think of as non-res is not at all monolithic. It’s highly diverse. I want to ask you about the residential side as well. You reported that residential HVAC orders up, I think mid-to high single digits in 1Q despite the sales decline and everyone saw sales decline. Can you frame up the destocking you saw in the quarter and what you’re now expecting in residential moving into the seasonal strength?
Patrick Goris
Yes. So maybe a few data points. In the first quarter, residential sales down high single digits. Our orders in residential were down mid-single digits. The residential light commercial was up. So light commercial volumes were pretty strong. Like commercial orders were up 30%. So that’s what drove the strength there. Q1 residential had a really tough comp. If you look at what residential did the first quarter of 2022, sales were up over 23% or about 23%. So we expected the most difficult comp of the year, that’s kind of what we saw. But overall, resi volumes, we continue to expect them to be down for the year.
And within resi, clearly, heat pumps continue to be really strong. You’ve heard us say before that we think we have leading positions in heat pumps in U.S. resi. Heat pump sales were up 20% in Q1 alone, and about 40% of our splits have heat pumps with them. So really no change also for the outlook for the year. We still expect our sales to be flattish overall, and that’s a net of volumes down high single digits, offset by pricing and then the mix-up. And we expect — actually, we expect the second half of this year to have some modest year-over-year growth in residential. We still expect Q2 to be probably a little down year-over-year in terms of revenue, but we expect our current outlook to be modest year-over-year growth in the second half for us.
And then I think you mentioned destocking, not really a big factor in Q1. We think that that will be mostly later in the year after the summer season. And so that’s really something we’d start seeing in the end of Q2, early Q3.
Operator
Very helpful, Patrick. Just listening to your last 2 answers and thinking about some of the secular stories that have been working for Carrier really since the spin. I want to ask you about Applied. I mean, again, you saw nice growth in Applied this quarter. You’ve been gaining share since the spin. Talk to us a little bit about that trajectory. Frame for us how the share gain trajectory has been Applied since the spin, where you think it can go, call it, over the next year or 2, and what are some of the key elements that help you get there.
Patrick Goris
Yes. So at the time of the spin, you had to say that we wanted to be the #1 player in a flight. And I don’t think that objective has changed, but I think our timeline has probably changed. And it has changed because of our own doing, meaning we don’t want to be the #1 in Applied at all costs. And so clearly, we see margin improvement opportunities within commercial ADAC. And so we are very careful in ensuring that we gain market share at attractive markets. And so I think that is what you see.
So objective has not changed. Time may look different, but I think there is some discipline there that’s really important. I think a very important element here is we can’t talk about applied HVAC without talking about the aftermarket opportunity, and that is something where we know we have an outsized opportunity compared to some of our peers, frankly, because we started later. And so that’s why we put the playbook together. Since we put the playbook together, our aftermarket revenues have grown double digits as an overall company point of view. They grew double digits in ’21, ’22. In 2023, Q1 overall company aftermarket up high teens, but the same in HVAC and commercial HVAC.
So given the very large installed base, connecting those chillers, providing services, and attaching services digitally enabled with our bond platform remains key to our strategy, and that will not go away given the announcement of our focus on the aftermarket, whether it’s commercial or any other part of our business remains critical.
Operator
Yes. That’s a great point, Patrick. That this has been a secular growth story, again, since the spin and lingo of that playbook. So you set out the goal of $7 billion in aftermarket revenues by 2025. So your confidence level in getting there and kind of the blocking and tackling that you’re doing over the next couple of years to get there. That’s all intact, no change to that trajectory.
Patrick Goris
We’re certainly on the path to be there. And as a reminder, obviously, the EUR 7 billion-plus included fire and security. But what we’re seeing is with the exits of fire and security and commercial refrigeration and the addition of Wiesmann, we think that it really doesn’t change the overall equation. So we think it’s about roughly it’s a one-for-one replacement in aftermarket revenue with the exception, we believe is that the growth opportunity in the aftermarket with Wiesmann is more attractive, meaning we see more attractive growth rates in their aftermarket just as we see a very attractive growth rates in Wiesmann overall business.
Operator
That’s really interesting. So give us an update on the TCC integration, what start-up expenses you’re carrying into this year, how that organization has evolved, and where you see opportunities to better capitalize on the Toshiba Carrier technology portfolio.
Patrick Goris
So first of all, and everybody remembers this, but we bought out our majority partner last year in this JV. And what this gave us was basically direct access to VRF technology in the market. And it’s a faster-growing market of the overall HVAC market. So we’re very pleased with the acquisition. I have to say that the integration is going very well, and the business is performing better than we expected, better than our business plan. We mentioned at the time of the acquisition or the announcement, I should say, that we were targeting $100 million of synergies from the deal cost synergies. We’re quite comfortable we will be well ahead of that.
You mentioned integration expenses. This year, we estimate them to be about $55 million. We’re running a little bit below that, but we still expect that to be the number for the year that will then come down starting next year. But after 1 quarter, again, I was mentioning the business performing better than we expected, but both sales and operating profit performing better. Japan became profitable in Q1. That was not the case before. And the operating profit for this business was over 10% in Q1. So overall, a pretty good start.
You mentioned the link between TCC acquisition and Wiesmann and clearly, there is a significant opportunity there, and the key opportunity there relates to the inverter technology that DCC has and there is an opportunity to use that technology with Wiesmann’s heat pumps in Europe.
And so actually, of the $200 million of cost synergies that we announced for Wiesmann, about 1/3 of that relates to the insourcing of some of that technology and inverters is #1. But there is not a technology from the PCC how that we can probably use elsewhere. And another example of that is their compressor technology. So overall, very pleased with the acquisition so far. The team in Asia is doing a really good job, still early, but all indications are really positive.
Operator
Just curious for any additional color on that metric. Is the outperformance due to just better price cost? Is it due to higher take rates for VRF share gains? What surprised you positively about the performance?
Patrick Goris
It’s probably a little bit of everything, but I think what our team has done really well early on is to look at what happened with the input costs and the price-cost equation. And what the team noticed is that the price cost was actually negative. And so early on after the acquisition, the team pushed through aggressive price increases to offset some of the input costs that we have seen. So that is providing a significant benefit to us. So no longer in, call it, a negative situation. But the team is doing well on the business. We’re seeing growth in attractive markets.
I mentioned Japan’s profitability. That was not always the case historically. That has been a focus on us. Clearly, prices helped us there a little bit as well. But overall, business is performing well.
Operator
Very helpful. So let’s move towards the portfolio transformation topics. Maybe start by walking us through the evolution of the deal for Wiesmann, when and why these emerged as the best fit for carrier?
Patrick Goris
So maybe let me start a little bit by rewinding and say, why be in that market at all? And I think it’s fair to say that we’ve been very clear over the last year or so that we had a very strong interest in becoming an active player in the European residential heating and cooling market. It’s an attractive market. There are some strong secular drivers, decarbonization being one of them. And all of that has been accelerated by government regulations and incentives. And so as we identify different players in that market, and they’ve given, as you know, met with many of the different companies, there was one asset that — or one competitor or one company, I should say, that more and more stood out as being the premier asset and brand in this space, and that is Wiesmann.
Not just the channel with direct-to-installer access, but their technology. And I remind people, it’s much more than a heat pump company. There are many companies who can manufacture heat pumps. But Wiesmann not only has the heat pumps, but they also design and develop a complete integrated solution. So the link between solar PV, battery systems for the house for energy storage, linking that with sanitary hot water and the heat pumps and the hill energy management system to optimize the energy generation, storage, and consumption, they have a span out of that. Other companies sell heat pumps as well, no one that we could identify sells that overall solution. Combine that with their position in the market as being a premium player with a very strong reputation and quality. And if it became [indiscernible] company, we wanted to partner with, and that is exactly what happened.
Operator
Maybe you can — for the U.S. investor base, in particular, better on tax of the European market dynamics, you found attractive. Those that are driving this business, the regulatory environment, the market sponsor, how do you see consumer demand evolving? What makes the market attractive.
Patrick Goris
Yes. I’ll try and summarize that, and it’s exciting because there are several tailwinds there. The first one, frankly, is that the European market consumers, they have been very much focused on moving away from fossil fuels for heat. And that move towards decarbonization has only become more important as European countries have started to reduce their dependency on Russian oil and gas and moving more towards electrification. And so that has been — so one is decarbonization objective, two, moving away from Russian oil and gas, move towards electrification. Combine that with regulations and incentives by European governments to basically accelerate that trend, and you get into a much higher-than-typical growth environment.
And some of the examples from European governments include banning fossil fuel heating systems or providing incentives to increase the number of heat banks. So in that attractive market, Wiesmann is really in the middle of that. And so Wiesmann, as I mentioned earlier, they have the differentiated climate solutions, not just the HPA, but the combination of that would be integration, I should say, with solar PV, battery storage, sanitary, hot water, and then the home energy management systems. And what makes this also attractive other another reason this makes it attractive is heat pumps sell at a multiple of the price of boilers they replace. And so what this means is there can be strong revenue growth moving forward without having substantial unit volume growth.
So a heat pump sells at a multiple of the boiler. So there’s revenue growth there per unit. But if you then combine it with the solar, the battery, and all the accessories, again, there are additional revenue and profit pools associated there. So very attractive Wiesmann’s clear leadership in this space, and it basically gives us a lot of confidence that this is going to be a market that would attract the growth opportunities for several years going forward.
Operator
It’s very interesting because, and you know this, I did spend time myself in my family’s HVAC contracting business is a boiler business predominantly, right? And my own focus has evolved from boilers over towards now heat pumps and the AC and the light.
And it’s just interesting to see Veasman’s journey because this started out as a multigenerational family business started out really on that sort of traditional heating side. It’s amazing to me how they’ve been able to pivot in not that long a period of time. So talk to us about that a little bit and the kind of the innovation and agility that you see in that business and how it plays into what you’re doing in Carrier.
Patrick Goris
Yes. Frankly, I think it’s reflected in their overall offerings. As I mentioned earlier, many different companies can manufacture heat pumps, but we have not seen a lot of companies that combine or can provide the overall integrated solutions, the solar, the battery, the other elements. They just don’t do this only that, but they also do it in a footprint that’s differentiated, less time to install smaller equipment. As you may know, in Europe, it’s not unusual for some of this equipment to be inside the home, visible to the inhabitants in the U.S., it may be in a garage, sometimes in a basement. But so their design is also differentiated. And they have a Veasman invisible offering. It is in your room or in the house, but you really don’t see it so well built in.
And then the other thing that differentiates them is they call it this one base. And basically, you don’t have to buy or install their entire offering all at once. You can start with one of the elements you can then add the other elements over time, and they integrate seamlessly. And so the attractiveness for us of this is we think that over time, we’ll be able to use some of this technology in the U.S. where we a large share or a good market position, I should say, in the U.S. I was starting with a residential AVAC just this morning, in parts of the Northeast and the U.S., we have gas furnace heating water and the hot water is being pumped through homes to heat the homes through radiators. That’s air-to-water heat pump technology. With the acquisition of Veasman , we now have this for the U.S. market. Our heat pumps in the U.S. market tends to be air-to-air, meaning [indiscernible]. And so this is just one of the revenue synergies we see with Veasman and how their strong technology can help us in our home market here in the U.S.
Operator
That’s very interesting. I think a great follow-up to that question would be just to talk about potential revenue synergies and how you see those phasing in. We got a lot of questions about that from investors. But maybe you can move from what you see as the lowest-hanging fruit for potential synergies to maybe later-stage opportunities.
Patrick Goris
I think the early-stage opportunities will be some of the procurement and sourcing synergies that I referred to earlier. We’re in the same industry with our scale. We think we can get some procurement savings. Some of the $200 million, about 1/3 of that is what I mentioned earlier, I think that Tresiba carrier technology on inverters. That’s something we’ll see mostly over the first 3 years. We mentioned on the call a few weeks ago, the vast majority of the $200 million we expect to achieve by year 3. Then you get into revenue synergies, which we have not quantified externally. And there, it goes both ways across the oceans. One, opportunity for Veasman 75,000 to sell some of Carriers’ products or Tresiba’s products for that matter through the channel.
But also I mentioned earlier, for example, in the United States or in other parts of the world, selling some of Tresiba’s technology. And in the U.S., we don’t see a company that has an overall integration of PPM, solar, battery, home energy management systems. That’s not going to happen tomorrow. But clearly, now with Veasman, we will have the technology and the capabilities to do so. And then another synergy is basically Veasman has been very successful growing not just in Europe but in other parts of the world as well. In those other parts of the world, it’s fair to say I think that Carrier has a larger presence. And so we may have some infrastructure that we can scale and enable them so that they will have to build less, call it, overhead to support the sales growth that they can use our existing capabilities.
Operator
So you’ve mentioned solar and battery storage now, and it’s a small but emerging revenue contributor for Veasman. And here, you’re highlighting the sort of software-enabled integration, right, of HVAC and solar and battery. And that’s the future of the net 0 home. I think it’s clear. Maybe talk to us about the attach rates Veasman seem right now for solar and battery on new HVAC sales and I suppose as a follow-up, you talked it might be further away, but talk us through how you might port those offerings to North America over time.
Patrick Goris
Yes. I don’t believe, Santa, we’ve shared the specific attachment rates. But if we look at the growth rates of solar and battery within their portfolio compared to the overall headcount growth rates, we see attractive growth rates, let’s put it this way. So the growth rates in these parts of the portfolio is also quite attractive, which frankly helps explain how large the heat pump and associated accessories already is as a percent of the overall Veasman sales. And so clearly, there is an uptake there of those accessories. That is something that we today do not do in the U.S. And so part of the integration team is going to be how can we look at the offering from Veasman and how can we use some of that in the United States, knowing that there may be some differences in technology, U.S. versus in Europe, but it’s one of the revenue synergies that we clearly want to go after besides the one that’s probably more short term, which is air-to-water heat pump technology using that technology from Veasman in parts of the United States.
Operator
Very helpful. Let’s turn to the planned divestitures. Inspire & Security, look at recent margins. They were above the corporate average, very strong brands. Obviously, the market has been signaling to companies for a while now that it wants more focused plays. But why does the move make sense internally for Carrier? And how do you see the company being better positioned following the divestiture?
Patrick Goris
Yes. First of all, I think we’ll be a simpler company and easier to understand the company. And we shared our vision that we want to be an intelligent climate in an energy solutions provider. And frankly, there are parts of our portfolio that are not aligned with, and that includes our fire and security portfolio. You mentioned it earlier, they’re all good businesses. They tend to be #1 or 2 in their respective markets. We know there are good businesses also because the number of inbound calls we have received about these individual businesses or the overall fire security portfolio recently. But for us, again, we have our new vision. And what we’ve learned from the spin from UTC is that focus can provide a lot of value, and we’ve seen that. And basically, this is just a next logical step. We are further focusing on becoming a simpler company to manage, a simpler company to allocate resources to the growth investments. And so we think it will be beneficial to Carrier and beneficial to those businesses just as Carrier benefited significantly from the spin from UTC.
As to the exits themselves, as you can probably imagine, we’re in the process now of assessing are we better off selling fire. First of all, commercial refrigeration will be a sale that is pretty clear in our view. Fire and security, we’re in the process of assessing is it a sale of the entire business at once? Is it in parts? Or is there a scenario in which we would spend, although, of course, the spin would not be the preferred outcome. But that is what we’re going through now. And clearly, as soon as we have additional information we can share with investors as to what our plans are and the timeline, we will do that. Our priorities are very clear. We want to have a clean exit. We want to maximize our proceeds. And then, of course, the timing is important. What is not dependent on the exits is our deleveraging and what we have laid out a couple of weeks ago is our intention to get back to our existing net leverage ratio about 2x by the end of 2025, excluding proceeds from exits. If we do exit, of course, that could accelerate the deleveraging and would, of course, also accelerate the timing at which we would return back to share repurchases.
Operator
Very helpful. On the CCR exit specifically, you’ve been very open. This is a mid-single-digit margin business for you. How would you frame it as differentiated? And what type of multiple would you be targeting on the exit?
Patrick Goris
Yes. So there is no reason why it needs to be a mid-single-digit operating margin business. And actually, over the last 12, 18 months, management actually has done a lot of work on taking cost out of that business. And so it’s one of the businesses together with container that now is going through a market downturn, but we expect to be in a better market position later in the year. As that happens, clearly, we expect the earnings conversion of that business to be quite attractive and much more attractive than what we’ve seen historically. So the exit operating margins of this year are significantly higher than the mid-single-digit operating margin that you were referring to. It’s one of the leaders in its space in Europe. It has a very large footprint. It’s just a business that I think that we believe would benefit from additional focus by a new owner. But what we’re doing now is we’re positioning it pretty well. And clearly, we want to get paid for some of the upsides of that business, which we know will be there.
Operator
Very helpful. I think tying this all together, I go back to 2022 and your Investor Day there in the framework you laid out, mid-high single-digit organic growth and 30% to 35% incrementals. When you think about the composition of the business when you give effect all these divestitures, how do you assess the ability of the portfolio to deliver on that framework? Is it better positioned now? Is it about the same? Just curious to think about how we assess.
Patrick Goris
The way I’d like you to think about it is just that value creation framework we laid out remains valid, remains in place. We’re now just more comfortable and confident we can get to the high end of the organic growth range. Just like we shared with our investors that the acquisition of Preesman alone, we believe it adds 100 bps or more to our revenue growth, organic growth, yes, organic revenue growth game.
Operator
Whereas the divestitures do they impact the organic game?
Patrick Goris
They tended to be on the lower end and particularly in commercial refrigeration.
Operator
Right. And if we think about the opportunities for strong incrementals and self-help, think about the secular growth stories like aftermarket, again, that all points towards maybe stronger incrementals in the business going forward than what it’s been?
Patrick Goris
I think consistent with the value creation framework we laid out, there is a tremendous growth opportunity there, and we know that we’ll have to make some investments to make sure that we get the full benefit that we capture all that growth. So I’m not ready to alter our incrementals yet that we laid out at Investor Day.
Operator
Yes. No, I think that’s fair not to do that on this call. But I do want to thank you both for the time and for the great discussion. There’s a lot going on with the story. Obviously, a lot of catalysts to come over the course of the next year plus. I would encourage anyone who wants to do work on the story please reach out to us or of course, to Sam at Carrier. I want to thank you all for the time. Our conference continues tomorrow for everyone who will be joining us then, see you then, and thank you all for the time. Appreciate it.
Patrick Goris
Thanks for having us, Noah. Thanks.