Thank you for standing by. Welcome to Ansell Limited FY23 half year results.
All participant are in the listen only mode. There will be a presentation followed by a question and answer section. If you wish to ask a question, you will need to press the star key followed by the number one on your telephone keypad.
I would now like to hand the conference over to Mr Neil Salmon, CEO. Please go ahead.
Thank you, and good day to you all.
Thank you for joining today and for your interest in Ansell.
I'll start with a business update. We'll then cover financial results with Zubair, come back to me for some comments on outlook for the rest of this fiscal year, and then we'll take questions.
Let me start with a business update. Overall, our external environment saw mixed trends between our industrial and healthcare market presence. Generally favorable demand trends for industrial, supported by key verticals such as automotive and energy. In contrast, difficult market conditions for healthcare, where destocking was a prominent feature across most of the verticals that we serve. As many have noted in this earning season, market conditions remain variable, difficult to predict, not least of which are FX rates, which were unfavorable to us during this period.
Within this market environment, let me summarize the key results that we've delivered. We saw strong organic constant currency sales growth in industrial with a particularly strong result in mechanical. Another half of double-digit growth in surgical was pleasing. Our consistent and multi-year strategy of growth in emerging markets continued to show dividends in the half year.
We anticipated and did indeed see lower sales in exam single-use, but we also saw lower sales in life science as this customer destocking effect extended to that vertical too, and as both businesses experienced lower selling prices as planned as we adjust selling prices to post-Covid norms. Our EBIT margin improved 120 basis points, the improvement coming in healthcare and that comparison also on an organic constant currency basis. A quick summary of key elements of our strategic progress.
Our greenfield surgical facility in India is progressing well. A few hours ago, we announced that we'd acquired the other 50% in our Careplus manufacturing JV. As I'll cover in a moment, we believe that's an important step in enhancing our surgical and exam single-use manufacturing capability. Our recent capacity expansions are performing well, particularly our exam single-use facility in Thailand.
We continue our focus on R&D and with a particular emphasis on more sustainable product solutions. I'll cover the financial impacts of those results in a moment, but before I get there, let me say a few words on our sustainability objectives. Of course, and as always, we begin with safety. Last year set a very good benchmark on safety. Some of our best results ever.
This year, I'm pleased to say our lost time injury rate remains at last year's good level, and our medical treatment rate has reduced further. We also see a continued increase in the leading indicators of safety, where we report and observe unsafe conditions or acts before they become causes of injury. I do want to highlight an accident that, while not in these statistics, under the OSHA reporting regulations that we follow, was nevertheless a serious accident and one that's led to a number of follow-ups.
During transportation back from a work shift to accommodation, 39 workers were injured in a bus accident. They've all made a full recovery. As with all serious accidents, this has led to a comprehensive review of transportation safety, and we have a program across all our countries in place and improving according to the learnings from that.
Moving now to our labor rights objectives, here again, a half year period in which we've made some important steps forward. We continue to implement our Supplier Management Framework that we set out in some detail in our sustainability report. We've largely completed wave one, which is the onboarding of our major finished goods suppliers, and are progressing with wave two, which encompasses many of our key raw material suppliers. We've also adopted an enhanced internal risk assessment process that guides decision-making in the event that we have concerns about whether a supplier is following our code of conduct and is operating in accordance with our key principles.
In order to ensure we have effective management of our supplier base, we're in the process of consolidating our spend to fewer suppliers where we have in-depth insight and are confident that they themselves also are leaders in their sustainability performance.
Linked to that, it's important that we strengthen our insights across the entire supply chain, and we continue to supplement the SMETA audits that have been in place for some time with more in-depth forced labor assessments against the 11 indicators of forced labor as set out by the International Labour Organization. We are making progress. A key milestone achieved in the half is that all our Malaysian finished goods suppliers have now confirmed that they have completed their recruitment fee reimbursement for currently employed workers. That's to the benefit of more than 30,000 migrant workers across Malaysia. Generally, we see good progress by finished goods suppliers in closing out audit issues.
I'm also encouraged at the level of attendance we've seen by our suppliers in the training sessions that we are conducting, describing our code of conduct, covering our expected labor standards and our broader sustainability objectives.
Finally, in this section on progress against environmental goals, you'll remember a little over six months ago, we made a series of new commitments, including, most importantly, that we will be at net zero by 2040 with regards to our own internal operations emissions, otherwise known as Scope one and Scope two. We are on track to achieve that goal.
A couple of highlights here. When our 25% of our electricity is sourced from renewables, we continue to invest in solar at a number of facilities, and we continue to also ensure that we are connecting to the best insights and available information in the world of sustainability with further progress shown on this page. We're also on track against our water withdrawal target and continue to invest in advanced reverse osmosis systems. Finally, effectively, all our plants today are now zero waste to landfill.
Six have been officially certified as such by Intertek, and the other 4 are in the certification progress. That means that in the last 6 months, just 0.5% of waste generated by manufacturing went to landfill. That compares to over 17% just 3 years ago. Moving on to financial results. Overall sales lower with the constant currency sales growth in Industrial more than offset by lower Healthcare sales, with FX translation effects and the exit of our Russian operations at the end of last fiscal year, contributing additionally to the decline in reported sales.
EBIT margin, as I mentioned, improved on an organic constant currency basis. Healthcare margins increased substantially after being negatively affected in the prior period by the sell-through of relatively high cost finished goods exam, single-use inventory. Industrial margins were lower, but we expect to improve in the second half.
Comparing EBIT period on period, the key factors here are a decline of $5.7 million due to the loss of the contribution from our Russian business in the prior period, and a decline of $13.8 million from unfavorable foreign exchange effects. If I exclude both these factors, EBIT was broadly unchanged on the prior year, as you can see in the organic constant currency column on this page. The board has declared an interim dividend of just over $0.20, which is a payout ratio of 40% and consistent with our dividend policy.
Turning now and providing you with some more detail on organic growth under our strategic business units. Exam single-use down significantly in the half, important to note that still showing a favorable three-year growth trend. Customer destocking was a significant contributor.
The long period of destocking in medical, which we anticipated to continue this half, was joined by a greater impact than expected on destocking extending for these products sold through other verticals, in particular, industrial distributors of exam and single-use products. Prices were also lower, but this in line with expectations.
Overall, I'm pleased with how we're managing unit margins for this business, and they are trending somewhat above our expectations at this point. Looking at the 3-year picture, and the mix of this business has improved significantly, and that is largely driving favorable revenue as we've exited and reduced our presence in the most commoditized and least differentiated products, and strengthened our presence in more differentiated, higher selling price and higher margin product ranges. That, of course, also links back to our manufacturing investment strategy.
For surgical, another half of double-digit growth, and we saw that in all regions, which is particularly satisfying. I would note though, that we're clear that in H1, there was some benefit from customer inventory builds, particularly in North America, and also recovery of back orders as we and the industry generally have now restored more normal supply.
Over the 3-year period, we see both volume growth and continued mix improvement for surgical as the general trend away from powdered and powder-free natural rubber latex to more advanced, higher price and more specialty synthetic alternatives continues and still has a long way to run around the world. Our life science business went from a multi-year period of significant growth to a decline in H1. Again, we believe that's primarily a result of destocking, with major distributors reducing inventory levels by many months.
This was most pronounced in our EMEA and APAC businesses. Our distributors confirm and our sales team observe that underlying market demand continues to be favorable, although we are clearly not seeing that on Ansell in this period of destocking. Looking over the three-year time period, we see double digits three-year CAGR, even with the current period being affected by destocking, we're confident that market fundamentals in this business remain very favorable to long-term growth.
Turning to the industrial business units now. In Mechanical, a very strong half-year performance, growing at 7.6%. We saw that growth come from all regions supported by double-digit expansion in emerging markets. Particularly satisfying that the growth came in the areas where we've invested. Our new products are gaining traction and winning business in cut protection.
Our recently acquired Ringers business was behind a very strong performance in specialty, especially to energy markets, which of course, are seeing very strong demand currently. Looking at the three-year picture, what we see in Mechanical is that the broadening of our vertical exposure there. Energy is already mentioned. Our presence in warehouse and logistics now give this business more areas to compete and succeed in and reduce its exposure to any one particular element of the economic cycle.
Chemical returned to growth in the half, largely through price improvement in hand protection, we do see improving trends in body protection, another part of our business that is, I believe, towards the end of its post-COVID destocking Phase.
Over the 3-year period, we see growth in both hand and body protection, these are weighted to our more differentiated high-end chemical portfolio, where we continue to invest in differentiating our go-to market, including through our Chemical Guardian safety audit system. A few more details on our growth in emerging markets. It's particularly satisfying to see emerging markets reach almost 25% in the half, and that's without the contribution of our significant Russian business.
An overall organic constant currency growth after excluding currency and Russia from the prior period of 4%. We saw strong results, particularly in both surgical and mechanical portfolios, with both growing over 20%. Yes, in emerging markets, we did see declines in exam, single-use and life science as everywhere, but these were not enough to offset the surgical and mechanical growth.
By region, double-digit growth in China, even with all the headlines around the more challenging economic conditions in that country, our teams found ways to continue winning and a particularly strong result for our surgical team in China. Latin America has a multi-year track record of success, grew again by 8% with good results in Brazil and Mexico, especially. In India, we saw strong growth in surgical, although India did experience lower sales from exam single-use. That mix shift was very favorable to India margins, and the India business overall remains in good shape.
On Russia, we've completed the exit of our operations. We are in the process of selling our manufacturing facility. We have reached agreement with a third party on all key terms of a transaction.
We're now waiting for the final stages of government approval before that transaction can close. I will not be able to give any details about that until we have achieved those government approvals. Let me now turn to the recently announced acquisition, full acquisition of our joint venture, Careplus. We announced a few hours ago that we've agreed to acquire the 50% shareholding that we didn't already own in the JV from Careplus Group for around $9 million.
Accordingly, when the transaction closes sometime in March, this will make Careplus a wholly owned subsidiary of Ansell. I believe that this investment, together with the investment we've made in Thailand in our industrial grade TouchNTuff exam single-use, has transformed Ansell's position within the exam single-use market.
Now for exam single-use, as with all our other SBUs, we are primarily a branded innovator, marketer, and manufacturer. Bringing those key qualities together sets us apart from almost everyone else in the industry. Why does it make a difference to manufacture our own products? Well, firstly, in an era of increased scrutiny and lack of tolerance for any issues, it gives us greater control over our single-use exam supply chain. It also gives us additional surgical capacity, and this capacity particularly suited to continued expansion of our emerging market strategy. It also brings us important protection over innovation.
The single-use business has largely been focused on supply chain challenges over the last couple of years. Now, as those normalize, we're turning our attention back to innovation.
As we bring new products to market and in particular develop solutions to the sustainability challenge in this business, we want to ensure that those innovations are exclusive to Ansell, that customers know they can only get those products from us, from no one else. We also know that by introducing Ansell technology, we can achieve enhanced manufacturing productivity at this facility, but we did not want to do this without full ownership and control.
The acquisition will be funded from existing reserves. We expect the PNL impact of the manufacturing entity to be EPS neutral, but the main return from this manufacturing entity comes in the sale of the products which are already in the Ansell PNL. Closing is expected, as I mentioned, by the end of March. Let me conclude here for the moment.
Let me hand it over to Zubair to give you more detail on financial results, and then I'll come back in a moment with some comments on the outlook. Zubair, over to you.
Thank you, Neil. Hello to everybody listening in to the call.
I'll begin with a review of our first half profit loss summary, as I always do. Neil's already covered detail behind sales performance in the half. Let me focus more attention on the other lines of the PNL. You've just heard the foreign exchange movement negatively affected sales by $48 million and EBIT by just under $14 million. The major drivers of this were the double-digit depreciation of the euro, that hurts revenue, offset by a couple of our cost currencies, namely the Malaysian ringgit and the Thai baht, both weakening versus the US dollar.
Our hedge book gains in fiscal 2023 softened some of the bottom line impact, but that will act as a comparative headwind as we move into fiscal 2024 and Neil will cover a bit more about that shortly. Moving to the gross profit after distribution expenses line. Here, a 450 basis point improvement in organic constant currency terms is largely driven by that exam single use rebasing in both price and cost. The unfavorable FX movement Neil's just covered and I've just mentioned also hit GPADE margins on a reported basis.
Now, as we were cycling through that high-cost inventory last year, I did outline even then that the depressed margin percentages were simply a phenomenon of that corresponding GPADE math on a much higher outsourced product cost. This should reverse as pricing and costs normalize back towards pre-pandemic ratios.
The GPADE percentage now, as you can see, it's indeed moved in line with that narrative. Moving forward, I'd expect further normalization, albeit to a lesser extent than the benefit we've just seen or experienced in H1. In terms of GPADE dollars, we're down nearly $21 million on a reported basis, and of course that's explained by that Russia exit, the unfavorable foreign exchange and destocking in both the exam, single use and the life sciences segments as highlighted earlier.
Moving to the SG&A investment in the half. Again, not dissimilar to so many companies I would say around the world, our prior year SG&A included very little travel expense and other costs related to in-person customer-facing activities.
As travel, et cetera, has picked up, that SG&A as a percentage of sales, it's also risen back towards that 19%-20% mark that you've seen us historically trend at. At the same time, however, given clearly the uncertain macroeconomic backdrop, we've remained very cautious and disciplined in pacing the overall expenses and at least where they're discretionary in nature.
Lastly of note on this slide, despite the despite a significant increase, I'd say in the tax rate, and that was driven by Sri Lanka, corporation tax increasing from 14%-30%, our group effective tax rate benefited from us using up some unbooked tax losses in the half. We conclude in H1 there with nearly $0.51 CPS, and that's 10% growth in constant currency terms.
The healthcare business unit performance, is shown here on the next slide 15. Now at the GBU level, you can see the more pronounced effect of that exam pricing normalization and despite a 22% decline in organic constant currency growth rates, the business unit experienced double-digit EBIT growth and nearly 400 basis points improvement in constant currency margins. Again, Neil's covered so much of this sales performance and so I'll not repeat that commentary.
Moving to the industrial business unit on slide 16. Here we see the reverse situation, and despite a strong constant currency sales growth, we have a double-digit decline in EBIT performance. Now that's explained by the softness in the chemical business unit margins and some temporary difference with our overall price recovery.
I did mention in our last earnings call that given that sheer depth of our product ranges and how those products move through our supply chain, we're not always going to perfectly line up price against the cost increases. In the second half, I would anticipate that we recover any pricing gap we have from H1. Already in January, for instance, we do see achievement of further price increases and some of those cross pressures diminishing. That should help overall IGBU margins in H2, although that chemical disposable clothing segment does remain highly competitive.
Next up is a review of our raw material costs. Slide 18. Overall, cost of goods sold was about $530 million in the half. As you'd expect here, the composition of outsourced costs is now much lower and more in line with those pre-pandemic percentages.
At the same time, we're also seeing 10%-20% reductions in natural rubber latex and NBR feedstock costs. However, offsetting those are increased labor costs and energy costs in Sri Lanka and Malaysia, as we highlight here in the slide. I'm also calling out here inflationary pressures against other raw materials such as that chemical yarn, packaging costs. Overall, it's a pretty mixed picture in terms of raw material costs, but I would still summarize this as an inflationary cost environment and one in which we must maintain pricing discipline as we move across that second half.
Switching to the cash slide. Overall, given our usual H1 to H2 skew here, I think satisfied with 65% cash conversion in the half, and we have positive operating cash flow. However, we did invest more in working capital than I would've liked.
I'll speak more about that in a moment. In the second half, I target a much stronger second half in terms of cash conversion, and I'd be pretty disappointed if we couldn't get back towards that 90% conversion we saw last year in fiscal 22. In terms of operating cash here, you can see also we spent $33 million in CapEx in the half, and I think that's pretty good run rate for the second half as well.
We're pleased with how capacity expansions are progressing, and my operations colleagues will start to focus attention on more automation and productivity projects as we move into fiscal 24. Turning to the balance sheet. Please, next slide. On slide 21.
I remained pleased here with low net debt to EBITDA levels, which of course affords us good capital allocation options. As I've just mentioned, that working capital and specifically the inventory, remains a focus area. In the half, we did intentionally build up some surgical and mechanical safety stocks, but inventory also increased because of those destocking effects Neil mentioned earlier. With long manufacturing lead times and transit times, any major deviation with our demand forecasts can take 5 or 6 months to course correct.
We either wear more inventory investment than we would like, or we have the opposite problem of increased customer backorders. Neither situation, of course, is optimal. We continue to drive a myriad of internal initiatives to improve the reliability of our forecasting and of our supply chain.
As Neil will shortly comment on, we're cautiously optimistic that we're on the right track for sustained improvements in this regard. Lastly, return on capital employed is lowered because of several factors. Firstly, with that increase in working capital, we've invested in in-house manufacturing capacity, as we've told you in the last few earnings calls. Then, of course, we've invested now in the Careplus consolidation or the step up balances relating to that consolidation.
All of these factors are outpacing our earnings growth. Now, although ROCE is lower for the time being, we are building solid platforms for future revenue and earnings growth.
Moving to the last slide here in this section.
In here, in an environment of sharp and uncertain interest rate movements and those debt markets which we're all reading about, are so much more selective than a year ago. I did want to end my section here with a quick review of our funding profile. In summary, we have nearly $600 million of liquidity available to us at 31st of December. With our debt profile, I think you'd agree here, well-balanced from a maturity perspective with largely fixed interest debt. We don't really see significant refinancing risk or indeed our PNL, I would say, is largely protected from sudden heights in interest rates.
To wrap up, I say this in most of our earnings calls, and I'm pleased to be able to continue saying it. At Ansell, we remain a very strong cash generator. We've got relatively low levels of debt.
Clearly, this preserves our optionality when it comes to deploying that capital, and that's whether it's for high yielding internal investments, M&A, or indeed returning cash to our shareholders via dividends or buybacks .
Thank you for taking the time to listen in to the call.
With that, I'll hand back to Neil for guidance, commentary, and then onto Q&A.
Thank you, Zubair.
Turning to our views on EPS and some other key assumptions for the year. Let me recap firstly on those operating environment conditions. We continue to see favorable trends for industrial and expect continued good organic constant currency growth for that GBU. Healthcare, though, we expect can remain difficult for at least part of the second half. Overall healthcare demand conditions are weaker than we had expected at the beginning of this year. As I commented earlier at the AGM, we saw destocking trends broaden beyond medical to include industrial and life science distributors of these products.
Although customers do indicate that the stocking effect should moderate in the second half, and we already see that in some cases, the overall timing of this moderation is delayed versus our earlier assumptions.
I would also note that, it's quite a challenging environment, as you have read, I'm sure, frequently for healthcare systems around the world. The pressures on those hospitals, on the acute care environment, together with a reduced, need to change with regards to surgical gloves as competitor supply has improved, has resulted in a slowing of the conversion rate of new surgical opportunities. There is still significant opportunity, and I remain very confident in the long-term growth rate of surgical, but we expect to see a moderation in the growth rate over the next six months. I will not be satisfied with the year, to be clear, unless we do deliver an EPS result within our original guidance range that is shown here at $1.15 to 1.35.
Those market conditions that are more challenging than I originally expected do mean it is prudent for me to update this range with a new low, lower end, starting at $1.10 and extending up to $1.20 that is achievable. The change in the guidance range largely reflects those market conditions that I've covered. The unfavorable impact of strong US dollar in the year, it should be noted, has been mitigated by our long-established FX hedging program, and the benefit of that mitigation is in the order of expected to be in the order of $11 to 15 million for the full year.
From here on, whatever, not quite whatever, but most changes in FX rates will have limited impact on EPS because we are now a high % hedged on key currencies for the rest of the year. Zubair commented on key drivers to our tax rate that result overall in a net favorability for F-23, but without the expected hedge book gain contributing in F-24, we'll also lose the tax rate benefit of that. We see an increased tax rate in F-24. Full-year CapEx for this year expected to be in line with the previously indicated range.
Dividend policy also expected to be maintained. As part of our continued and active capital management strategy, we do expect our, or intend our on-market share buyback to be active in the second half.
Now let me conclude with a return to our key strategic priorities as I outlined six months ago and our status against them. Top of the priority list is to ensure that we continue to execute against our strategies for long-term growth and differentiation. Our capacity expansion plans are on track. I believe the Careplus acquisition announced today is a significant step forward in our exam single-use differentiation. We do see building customer interest in our sustainability differentiation and the product solutions we are bringing to market linked to that.
Product innovation success in mechanical is evident and very satisfying. Now we need to broaden that success across the healthcare business as well as healthcare gets back to its innovation agenda. I've mentioned before that key to Ansell's long-term success is an improvement in our internal operational effectiveness.
This is where we're spending a significant amount of time and also investing in systems. As Zubair indicated, we are seeing progress. The performance of our recently installed capacity is satisfying. I was in Thailand on Friday and very happy with the progress that I saw there. As Zubair mentioned, manufacturing focus is now shifting to productivity and automation, and we're building momentum against that objective. The investments we've made in supply chain resilience and our planning capability are showing results in improved reliability and improved service levels to keep customers, as many customers have noted and observed.
Our continued vigilance on supply labor rights compliance has now ensured that we've achieved that key milestone of 100% completion of recruitment fee reimbursement. I expect us to be ahead of target this year on our environmental goals.
What are our key focus areas for the remaining four or five months of the year, in order to deliver the best possible result against our EPS expectations? We anticipate continued organic constant currency growth in industrial. Key is that we see a sequential volume improvement versus the first half in exam single-use. Although the surgical growth rate overall is expected to slow, we do want to ensure we're building momentum in the number of conversions we secure in the acute care space.
We have secured already industrial price increases. We need to maintain those and ensure that industrial margins improve as the price and cost equation comes back more in line with our expectation in the second half. That will lead to an improvement in EBIT margins, particularly in industrial.
As already mentioned, we will remain active in our capital management, including as appropriate under our buyback program.
Well, thank you for your attention to our earnings summary. Now I would like to go over to questions.
Thank you.
If you wish to ask the question, please press star one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. We ask that you limit yourself to two questions. If you have more than two questions, please rejoin the queue.
Your first questions come from David Low from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi, David.
Thanks very much. If I could just start with, hi, with a question on the destocking that you saw in exam single-use in the industrial space. At the same time, you commented that the industrial division did well and demand's reasonably solid there. Just wondering, what segments are you seeing that destocking in, and are they subject to different economic headwinds than the other parts of the business?
Yes, it's a little confusing this, but let me just recap. Within healthcare, we include sales of exam single-use to all verticals. Some of those products, particularly the Touch N Tuff range, are used more in an industrial setting than a medical setting. What I'm commenting on is sales under the healthcare division that go to industrial end markets.
Yes, you're right to say that there's quite a difference between. There are some destocking effects in mechanical, also through the same distributors, largely linked to the warehouse and logistics sector, where we saw very, very strong growth during the COVID period, as everyone is aware, that sector is retracing somewhat, but still much bigger for us than a couple of years ago. A limited piece of destocking in mechanical.
What I think we see across the board, single-use is that customers, were very concerned about availability of those products for quite a while, and therefore were running with many months more inventory than their targeted level. As they saw product availability improve and as they saw the risk of supply chain disruption reduce, recede, they have collectively decided to go back to more normal inventory levels. We knew this would happen at some point.
We did not anticipate it happening as quickly as it did, and so that's where we see this, destocking effect occurring for healthcare, but for products sold through industrial, and similar effects happening in life science. In life science, it's the distributor set is fairly concentrated.
There are two key leading global distributors of life science globally, and when they take the decision to take out several months of inventory, clearly in the short term has quite a sizable impact on the demand on Ansell. I hope that gives you a bit more color, David.
Yeah, no, that's helpful. I mean, you to some degree could see that it was coming, it's happened more quickly and I heard from the comments earlier that you're thinking that that's largely, well, there'll be further impact in the second half, but less. Is that the right conclusion?
Yes, that's right. Yes. I'd say, our ability to forecast this should be better. It links back to what Zubair was saying about improved supply chain reliability, and we're putting quite a bit of emphasis together with our customers on the importance of collaborative forecasting. We're actually making quite important steps forward. Too late, unfortunately, to have seen this more clearly seven, eight months ago, but an opportunity for improvement going forward for sure.
Okay, great. Just one other question. On very similar. The surgical part of the business, you sort of benefit from restocking and from back orders being filled.
Yes.
What does that mean for second half versus first half? D o we still see growth? Or without that effect, you might see a bit of contraction in the second half numbers in the surgical division?
Yes. Within the range of both those statements. Overall growth on the year and still surgical will show very strong three-year growth, but it's possible that the second half will be moderately negative just half on half. If that is the outcome, that's of no concern to me, as the fundamentals for surgical remain very positive.
Perfect. Thanks very much for that.
Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Lyanne Harrison from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Hi, Lyanne.
Good morning, Neil and Zubair. I might just follow on from David's questions there about the exam single use, and the destocking. Do you see any material difference or difference in the customers between the United States and the rest of the world?
No, I'd say we see pretty similar trends. There's a difference in the nature of the distribution landscape. It tends to be concentrated in a small number of very big players in North America. In Europe, we have fewer big players and many more country-specific players. It's a little harder to get a consolidated view across the distributor landscape in Europe. Through key conversations we've had with individual distributors in Europe, it's a very similar picture. I'd say it's less pronounced-
Okay.
in some of the emerging markets where these destocking effects were worked through a little earlier.
Okay. Thank you. Just to follow up there in terms of the selling prices, obviously you mentioned that both examples, single use and life sciences, obviously seeing some pressure on prices. in your view, how much left do you think is to go before we get some stability there?
It's difficult to be 100% confident in that. We've now completed the final plan stage of price reductions in exam single use. We trailed this to customers some time ago, and we passed those through. It's a little bit different timing in different markets, but essentially complete as we begin the second half. We don't plan any further price changes for that segment through the next six months. Our goal will be actually to maintain pricing or even perhaps the next step in pricing in exam single use will be increases. At the commodity end, and before I make further comments on that note, that is not the segment in which we're a major player, but it's still an indicator.
We know that large commodity producers in exam single use, whether Malaysian or Chinese, are suffering with very compressed margins. You've seen that in the reported results of many of the major players. There is talk of the next step of pricing being up, but I think yet to be seen in the marketplace. Certainly if the low end of the market starts to move up, then that further supports the statement that I just made. For industrial, yes, we secured price increases. A further round of price increases.
Again, a little bit different market to market. The last set of increases went into place in January, and they are holding, and now we're reviewing whether we need to take further price in industrial as we do see continued inflation across many parts of our input costs.
Thank you very much.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Gretel Janu from Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Hi, Gretel Janu.
Hi. Good morning, Neil. Good morning, Zubair. Just my first question.
Hi.
I just want to be clear on the guidance commentary here. In second half, do you expect group organic sales to be negative given the continued healthcare pressures, or will industrial offset that to be positive?
The FX effects and the currency effects will continue to be negative, and then the single use pricing will still be lower on the half on half. Yes, those are all unfavorable to sales in the second half.
On a constant currency basis, still negative though?
Constant currency set to be favorable for industrial. I expect it unfavorable still for exam single use. The overall healthcare results depend on outcomes in the other SBUs.
Okay. Just in terms of industrial margin, looking forward, so obviously there's quite a bit going on at the moment that's impacting the margin, but just trying to work out where you see this margin getting to in the next 12-18 months. Do you see it recovering back to what you saw historically, or will it remain kind of depressed for a longer period of time?
We do expect it to recover to historical levels. It's hard to predict it exactly in the half as you say, there are moving parts. Fundamentally, we believe the business margin is strong. Mechanical margin is being was strengthened by the manufacturing restructuring we did some years ago and now has continued to be supported by innovation, which is generally favorable to mix. There is work to be done to improve the chemical business margin further from the level that we'll achieve in the second half. We're looking at options to do that. Fundamentally, I think industrial margins, when looking through these factors, are in a good place, with further opportunity.
Most likely it's still going to take over 12 months before we see it kind of recover to where it's been historically. Is that a fair statement?
I'm not going to be pinned down on exact timing. We'll see an important step in the right direction in the Second Half. That much I'm confident of.
Great. Understood. Thanks very much.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Vanessa Thomson from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Morning, Neil.
Hi, Vanessa.
Zubair. Thank you for taking my question. Hi. I just wanted to ask about the tax rate. Firstly, it's increasing at the midpoint by 2% in FY24. I know there was some mention of the FX hedging effect. I just wonder if you could talk me through that please.
Zubair?
Vanessa, we've had an increase, as I mentioned in my comments. The Sri Lanka corporation tax rate increased from 14%-30%. That was enacted on 19th of December in 2022, and it was retrospective back to 1st of October 2022. That was one factor. However, in the current year it was kind of muted because we had the ability to offset that with some unbooked tax losses we utilized in Australia against some FX contract gains. That kept us right there in the 20.5%-21.5% range, and which we're forecasting for the remainder of FY23. When all of that unwinds in fiscal 2024, basically we're going to get the full year impact of that Sri Lanka corporation tax rate increase.
Therefore we're expecting that booked tax rate to move towards the 22.5%-24.5% range that Neil's indicated. Again, those unbooked losses will come in to some extent, but a lot less than what we've experienced this year or in this half.
Okay, thank you.
Hopefully that answers.
Yeah. Thank you. Your next question comes from Andrew Paine from CLSA. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Thanks for taking this question. Just circling back to the surgical. Just want to get a bit more insight there in terms of the inventory build and competitive returning to the market. Just trying to get an understanding of, what this second half looks like. Are you going to, potentially have a double hit from the, high inventory in the system and increased competition there?
I think that's, I mean, so to be clear, it is a challenge that when we're working on still three to four monthly times, there's a lag between when demand trends change and when inventory adjusts. That's always going to be the case, for our business and also should not be over read either favorably or unfavorably. We need to be perhaps clear about that and communicating that, and that's what we're trying to do at this point.
We continue to gain share across surgical markets globally. Over the last couple of years, we've put a lot of emphasis on an opportunity to gain share in North America linked to this overall strength of our product portfolio, our consistent product quality, and also some supply disruption that other competitors have experienced.
That very unusually favorable demand scenario in North America is now normalized again as competitive supply has returned, and that's what we expected to happen at this point. Our market position in North America is much stronger than it was, and we have some very strong arrangements with leading GPOs that we expect will continue to drive share gain. What's happened in the short term is that the pace of that activity has been slowed by those many disruptions experienced by hospital systems worldwide.
When there are shortages of nurses and shortages of key components required for surgeries, you see attention focused on those issues, obviously, and perhaps less time and availability to continue with the surgical conversion program.
That's what I'm flagging here, that particularly in North America as a result of that, we've seen a pause in the rate of share growth, and our goal now is to pick that up again over the next six months, but any pickup will be more for next year benefit than this year. What's encouraging is, as we have and as we flagged we would be doing this, as we have shifted our surgical focus back more evenly around the globe, we're seeing good results everywhere else. EMEA growth was good in the half, and as I mentioned earlier, we've built strong emerging market success in India and China, and those countries are still at the very early stage of the surgical opportunity.
Our inventory build in surgical is more just restoring surgical inventory levels to more normal levels. But we are aware that because that pace of conversion in North America has been slower than anticipated, our channel partners now have higher than normal inventory levels, and there will be a period of adjustment over the next six months as that returns to equilibrium. I hope that gives you the additional color that you were looking for there.
That's great. Thanks very much. Just on raw material and freight costs, they look like they're easing at the moment. Is that, something that you think will become a benefit over the next, couple halves, going forward? Just trying to understand any impacts here and expected timing of that impact.
Zubair, do you want to take that as well?
I think in my section of the update, I did mention we've seen 10% reduction in NRL costs, nearly 20% in NBR costs. Given the excess capacity still prevalent, I'd say in the market for exam and single-use product, I wouldn't be surprised, of course, to see those trends continue into H2, and you'll see that in the external narrative as well. I don't expect to see fully the cost reductions both for that and freight to drop through to the bottom line and increase margins, et cetera, in H2, because of course, as we've highlighted in the raw material cost slide, we do have labor inflation and increased energy costs that we're contending with in Malaysia and places like that.
That coupled with the COGS lag, our normal COGS lag over the supply chain period means any residual savings will take time to appear in the P&L. I would say mostly that inflationary headwind will offset a lot of this raw material cost. We're ensuring our sales teams maintain that pricing discipline and remind our customers we do have these inflationary headwinds.
That's great. Thanks.
Hopefully that answers your question.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Dan Hurren from MST Marquee. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Thanks very much. I just previously on some of your Investor Days, you've talked about Ansell pricing. It's a premium product, et cetera, which I think we all understand. I just want to get an update, and we've seen some pretty, the mid-market players seem to have dropped their prices quite significantly, certainly in some geographies. Is that price premium under pressure? Or are you able to maintain it with the brand name, et cetera?
Just before I answer, are you thinking of any particular business unit in making that comment, Dan, or?
All my apologies. I should have said. I was talking about, specifically more on the healthcare single-use surgical side here.
Yeah. Okay. So yes, the price points indeed. A reminder, we are a tiny percentage of the overall world's exam single-use volume, and the very large majority of that market is on what we call a standard thin nitrile. That basic glove that is used in acute care settings around the world for simple procedures. And we have almost no business in that space. When you're talking about pricing, you're really talking about that product category. Indeed, if you look at some of the pricing that is being quoted on major volume tenders and so forth, it would be at or below pre-COVID levels. That's why you see margin pressure on the major Malaysian producers.
Although the Chinese producers don't report results as transparently, we're pretty sure that they're similar margin pressures in China. That's, that only influences a very, very small piece of our own pricing. We've actually been successful in maintaining a much more measured progress on pricing of the more differentiated products. We have brought them down, as I mentioned, and as planned. The key point is that the average unit margin that we're seeing overall for that portfolio is improved, and that's partly in pricing by product category, but it's also partly a mix shift benefit. That's not something that we see changing. We've been able to maintain the value that you would expect if these products are indeed differentiated. We expect that to continue going forward.
Now with the greater opportunity we have in manufacturing, we have further avenues in which we can drive productivity and margin in that business going forward. Really the most important thing, for single-use at this time, is that we get back to the innovation agenda. This is at the heart of Ansell. We've had almost no ability to innovate in that business where its entire focus has been on supply chain continuity. Now with that pressure easing, the team is fully back on the focus of innovation, and we have some exciting things coming through the product portfolio there.
Thanks for that. A more philosophical question. I mean, historically, Ansell and the industries that you have operated in have been pretty predictable. there haven't been too many surprises over the years, but obviously operating conditions now creating quite a bit of volatility. Do you see, are we getting close to returning to normal operating conditions for both yourself and your customers? Or do you think that we'll continue to see sort of this unpredictability that's kind of plagued the last sort of couple of years I guess?
We're getting closer, certainly. I would say the challenge of supply chain unpredictability has largely moved through and lead times are getting back to where they were previously. Still perhaps not quite as reliable as pre-COVID, but pretty close.
That's a big factor. That's had a negative effect on us in the short term, as mentioned, because customers have decided, "I don't need as much inventory against supply chain risk," and have moved quite swiftly to address that. But fundamentally, as you say, that removes an element of uncertainty. there's no report I can look at that unfortunately shows me at a glance the level of the number of boxes of product sitting ahead of us in the supply chain.
Anecdotally, I feel, yeah, we're certainly closer to the end of that story than the beginning. Once that moves through, then demand on us and demand will more closely match end user demand, which is the second key source of volatility. I think the one piece of volatility that I expect to continue is around foreign exchange. Of course, that's driven more by global economic and geopolitical trends. That's hard to predict as we go into next year. A reminder that that's what our hedging program is there for. It successfully muted the effect of unfavorable FX this year. Not fully, but in large part.
We'll see how that plays out into next year. Yes, I think. There's nothing I wouldn't say there's anything, once all these effects move through, I don't think there's anything fundamental that says we won't get back to that more consistent performance that you describe. We should be better at delivering on consistent performance because of the operational effectiveness agenda that I've described and which has been a significant focus of ours and where we're seeing progress. I think an important point, and I hope that gives you some additional data against that.
Thank you. Appreciate it.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Mathieu Chevrier from Citi. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Thank you for taking my question. Just had one on the contribution of price increases to revenue growth in the period.
Yeah, we don't give that number to the percent, but perhaps, Abe, you would repeat a few of the key influences even if we don't give you the exact number.
Yeah. Thanks, Neil. I could probably do this rote by now, and it's consistent with my previous answers in respect to price volume questions. As Neil said, we don't give a single number here because we don't think, quite frankly, it's helpful. Instead, let me outline in the half versus prior year where we saw some trends. Mechanical growth was largely volume driven with price recovery netting against the inflationary cost increases. Chemical, on the other hand, was largely price growth because of the competitive pressures on the disposable clothing segment, as I discussed, we had some negative volumes there. The exam single use, it was largely a price decline, and of course, that was pretty significant. Surgical, that's largely volume growth.
Lastly, life sciences, again, largely volume growth, or sorry, largely volume decline. Forgive me. That was driven by the destocking Neil mentioned earlier. I guess if you wanted to summarize all of that at a group level because of that outsized nature of the exam single-use decline, you could say overall we've had price decline at the group level. Again, I'm not sure you can do anything with that on a go forward modeling basis until all of those prices reset. Hopefully you can take some color out of that.
Understood. Thank you. Just another one on CapEx. I believe you have about $10 million less in the budget than you did six months ago. Zubair, you talked about automation earlier and obviously efficiency is a big focus of yours. I was just wondering what we should think CapEx should look like for, FY 2024 and going forward, and whether FY 2023 is a good guide.
Just to be clear, we did about $33 million of CapEx in H1. We've said in our guidance notes here we could see anywhere between $60 to 80 million on a full year basis, that will be largely as a result of finishing our India expansion or Kovai, as we call it, expansion there, our greenfield site. We said again, consistent with prior comments, that the capacity additions of these greenfield sites will largely be behind us in fiscal 23. That $60 to 80 million number perhaps will trend a bit lower in fiscal 24. We haven't finalized the budget there for next year, we will come onto that in H2. I think for your modeling purposes, I would maintain that $60 to 80 million number is a good range for now.
We will sharpen that up as we give guidance for fiscal 24, of course.
Yeah. Great. Thanks very much.
Thank you. Your next question is a follow-up question from Vanessa Thomson, from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks again. I just wanted to follow up. You mentioned higher plant costs, especially in chemical in the industrial unit, and we've also spoken about lower prices for rubber and nitrile. I just wondered, should we be thinking about higher input costs, in particular for fiber and yarn? Is that what's driven up the industrial costs, or is it something altogether different? Thank you.
So we were seeing-
No. The industrial. Es, you go ahead, Neil.
We were seeing.
I was going to say the industrial cost. Sorry. Go ahead, Neil.
You go. No, you go I'm stepping back here.
I was going to say the industrial costs are FX related. The foreign exchange had a big drag on that business unit. Of course, there was that chemical disposable garments that are priced down and the overall chemical business unit margins deteriorated as a result. We had some slight mismatch, and this is what I said in my commentary on the pricing that we needed to recover in the half against those costs. That will catch back up in H2. As a result, as Neil said, we should see a recovery of the industrial margins in H2, whether they get back to historical norms, that's yet to be seen, you'll certainly see a leading indicator of that in H2.
Maybe let me pick up on the productivity point a bit related to that and the previous question I mentioned it too. We have a very big pipeline of opportunity for automation with a particular focus on packaging activities, which is where a lot of our more manual tasks exist today. Progress against that over the last couple of years has been limited by the fact that many of those operating lines have been running flat out and/or recovering from COVID disruptions that were a feature, as you remember, of last year. As we get caught up on back orders and supply-demand comes more back into balance, that actually frees up line time to allow these initiatives to proceed.
I'm encouraged by the progress. This, these, this level of automation is really necessary just to offset the ongoing input cost inflation that we see in key countries such as Malaysia, linked to wage rates and also energy costs, as Zubair described. It's chemical that has the toughest challenge in ensuring that productivity offsets inflation. So we're looking at that further, and looking at ways that we can make more quicker progress in productivity for chemical. We'll come back to you with updates once we've developed those plans.
Thank you.
There are no further questions at this time.
I'll now hand back to Mr. Salmon for some closing remarks. Please go ahead.
Well, thank you to everyone for your attention, your interest today, for the questions. It continues to be an uncertain environment in which there are many short-term trends that added up in this half to some unfavorability, and have also caused us to moderately lower the bottom end of our guidance range overall for the year. It's important to keep those shorter trends in perspective, because in my view, they have no correlation to our long-term performance as a company, and there, I believe our fundamentals are in good shape. We remain focused on our key strategic drivers of long-term value creation, and I'm satisfied that on that front we made good progress in the half and will have further good progress to report as we close out this fiscal year.
I look forward to updating you on that in August of this calendar year. Thank you for your attention and goodbye for now.
This concludes our conference call today. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.