Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, to Mr. Heath Sharp, CEO. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone. Welcome to RWC's FY 2024 full year earnings call. This is Heath Sharp. I'm joined here in Sydney today by Andrew Johnson, our CFO. We will provide a short overview of our results for the financial year ended 30 June 2024, followed by a Q&A session. But before we get underway, I would like to note that we have released our 2024 ESG report today, along with our annual report and FY 2024 announcement materials. We're very pleased to have achieved this milestone of concurrently releasing our annual report and our ESG report. Now, moving on to our results. We will start with an overview of the year on slide three. We are pleased to present these financial results for FY 2024. We believe these are strong numbers delivered due to a combination of our resilient market sector and our ongoing execution focus.
The year again demonstrated the resilience of our business due to our end market exposure to repair and maintenance. This continues to provide a solid base from which to combat the impact of weaker discretionary remodel and new construction activity. We're pleased that we were able to meet our guidance in terms of revenue and operating margins. The work we've done across the business to drive further cost reductions enabled stable margin performance, despite lower volumes in all regions. At the same time, our focus on working capital has delivered a strong operating cash flow result. Andrew will take you through this in greater detail shortly, but I'm certainly proud of our team's work to generate sufficient cash to allow us to fully fund the acquisition of Holman, while also reducing our leverage and net debt.
Operationally, we had a standout year with the delivery of a number of key new product initiatives. During 2024, we substantially completed the rollout of the SharkBite Max product range in North America. I'm proud of how well we executed on this critical new product. The rollout was seamless. This is a testament to the caliber of the people here at RWC, and the collaboration between the Australian and U.S. teams. Importantly, SharkBite Max is delivering the commercial value we expected. Another important initiative during 2024 was the rollout of PEX-a pipe and expansion fittings in the U.S. During the year, we completed the load-in to Lowe's. We also made inroads with a number of wholesale channel partners in the U.S. Other new products launched during the year included HoldRite fixture boxes.
This range aids our push into commercial construction, while also providing a value-add product for residential new construction and our core repair and maintenance business. The U.S. team also released an extended range of EZ-FLO gas appliance connectors, increasing penetration into the retail channel. In the Asia Pacific region, the integration of Holman with RWC is progressing well. We moved quickly to integrate the two management teams and now operate under one combined organizational structure. The revenue opportunities we identified at the time of the acquisition are being actively pursued, and we continue to be excited about the long-term value of this combination. From a cost perspective, we are well advanced in our plans for rationalizing the RWC and Holman distribution network around Australia. We are also working on the combined manufacturing footprint. Progress in these areas will help to deliver our projected synergy savings.
Considering our operations globally, a key outcome for us this year was a 52% reduction in the Reportable Injury Frequency Rate. This is a key metric of our health and safety performance. We launched a multi-year health and safety program in FY 23, and this is having a positive impact on our safety, culture, and performance. The initiatives we've undertaken to reduce our Scope 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions continue to deliver. We have now achieved a 35% reduction in our Scope 1 and 2 emissions relative to the baseline we set in FY 21. You will recall that we set a goal of 42% reduction in Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions by 2030. We are on track to meet or exceed this goal. During the year, we established group-wide projects to optimize supply chain, strategic sourcing, and operations and fulfillment.
These are new initiatives which leverage our global expertise to develop a common approach across all RWC businesses. I'll talk about these later in the presentation, but we are pleased with the early progress we have made. These actions are strengthening our operational foundation, positioning us to efficiently deliver future growth. Turning to slide four, I will briefly cover some of our financial highlights. Net sales were up 0.2%, including a four-month contribution from Holman. Excluding Holman, net sales were down 2.4%. This is in line with the guidance we provided at the start of the year. Andrew will cover our performance at a regional level. Operating earnings, as measured by adjusted EBITDA of $274.6 million, were exactly in line with the result we recorded in FY 23.
Adjusted EBITDA margin ex Holman was up slightly to 22.3% from 22% in FY 23. This was achieved by our solid execution, coupled with our cost out initiatives, despite low volumes in all our regions. Adjusted net profit after tax was 5.7% lower than the PCP. Cash generated from operations was $314 million, up 7% on the PCP, and represented an operating cash flow conversion of 114%. We've announced a final distribution of $0.05 per share. In line with the new distribution policy we announced in February, this will be split between a $0.025 per share dividend, together with an on-market share buyback of $19.6 million to be undertaken in the coming weeks.
In summary, we believe this is a strong result, delivered against a challenging market backdrop in all regions, with operating earnings maintained and a strong cash outcome. I will now hand over to Andrew to step through our financial results in more detail.
Thank you, Heath. On slide five, we have set out our key performance metrics. Net sales were up 0.2%, reflecting a four-month contribution from Holman. Excluding Holman, net sales were 2.4% lower than PCP, reflecting lower volumes in all regions. While non-discretionary repair and maintenance activities held up well, we did see demand weaken for products tied to remodel activity and commercial construction. Lower turnover of existing homes in the U.S. was a headwind for remodel activity, and we saw significantly lower levels of residential new construction activity in both the U.K. and Australia. As Heath mentioned, adjusted EBITDA came in at $274.6 million, which was 22% of revenue compared to 22.1% in FY 23. Holman was diluted from a margin standpoint, and when you exclude Holman, EBITDA margin increases to 22.3%.
The FY 24 adjusted EBITDA result includes 27 million in one-off items related to the closure of the Supply Smart business in the U.S., the EMEA restructuring, and the Holman acquisition in APAC. In the Americas, 10 million was related to the closure of the Supply Smart business, which we acquired along with EZ-FLO . This charge was a non-cash write-off of the customer relationship intangible we booked at the time of the acquisition. We announced the closure in February, and this is now being completed. With the exit of Supply Smart, we were also able to close two distribution centers that supported that business, which leaves us with a total of 4 DCs in the Americas, down from 11 shortly after the EZ-FLO acquisition. In APAC, the one-off items relate primarily to the acquisition of Holman.
These include acquisition and integration costs of AUD 4 million and the unwind of the fair value inventory uplift recorded at the time of the acquisition of AUD 3.4 million. As we mentioned in February, we undertook further restructuring in the EMEA region, which resulted in a charge of AUD 4.1 million for the year. In addition, we impaired the value of property, plant, and equipment at our manufacturing plant in Spain, which gave rise to a AUD 4.3 million charge. Pipe sales to Eastern Europe out of that plant have been severely impacted by the war in Ukraine and its ongoing effect in Eastern Europe. The drop in demand has impacted the operating and financial performance of the plant, which led to the impairment charge being taken.
Depreciation and amortization charges were a little higher than we guided, and that reflects, in part, the impact of the Holman acquisition, in particular, the accounting impacts of operating leases under AASB 16. The increase also reflects the depreciation on recent capital projects related to new products and capacity expansion. Turning now to slide six and looking at the Americas result in a little more detail. Excluding Supply Smart, Americas' external sales were down 0.6% versus PCP. The success we've had in rolling out new products have helped to offset lower volumes, driven by weaker market activity. A key highlight of the Americas performance has been the EBITDA margin expansion. EBITDA margin increased from 17.9% in FY 23 to 21% in FY 24. This was partly due to the benefit of the transfer of SharkBite assembly and manufacturing from Australia to the U.S.
The increase is also due to the cost reduction and efficiency initiatives we've had underway in the Americas region, which the team has done a really good job executing on. Now on to slide 7 in the Asia Pac region, where the transfer of SharkBite manufacturing to the U.S. was a benefit for the Americas, it negatively impacted volumes and margins for the APAC region by approximately AUD 11 million. We are pleased that the same respective amount can be seen as an uplift for the Americas, so no profit leakage is part of the manufacturing move. APAC external sales were down 3%. We feel this result outperforms the market, given that Australian new housing commitments were down 13% in the year at the end of March. 60% of Australia's end market exposure is to new home construction...
We're really pleased with the performance of sales through our wholesale channel partners, with sales up year- on- year due to product initiatives and market share gains. Looking at EMEA on Slide 8, this was our most challenging region from a volume perspective. Sales overall in local currency were down 7%, and external sales for EMEA were down 9.6% relative to FY 23. U.K. external sales were down 9%, with U.K. plumbing and heating sales down by 6%. Specialty product sales were down by 20%. This latter category includes sectors which have been under some pressure, including telecommunications, automotive, and underfloor heating. Continental European sales for the year were 11% lower than the PCP. What is encouraging is that we saw an improvement in the sales trend in Continental Europe in the second half.
First half sales were down 21%, while second half were down just 1%. While this is partly a function of cycling weaker comps, it is pleasing that volumes have generally stabilized at these lower levels. As we saw in the first half, EBITDA margin was impacted by lower volumes. For the full year, EBITDA margin was 29.3% versus 32.3% for the PCP, and 28.8% in the first half. The restructuring we have undertaken in EMEA and ongoing cost reduction should help improve EBITDA margins, even if there is no uplift in volumes in the short term.
Turning to Slide nine and looking at our cash flow performance for the year, we're really proud of what the team has achieved this year, managing working capital with a focus on reducing inventory, keeping our accounts receivable current, as well as extending payment terms with our vendor partners. Heath has already given you the headlines, but just to repeat, cash generated from operations of $314 million was up 7% on the prior year, and operating cash flow conversion was 114%. Another really strong result for us, and the second year in a row in which we've had operating cash flow conversion above 100%. In FY 25, we're targeting to again deliver an operating cash flow conversion above 90%.
However, given our progress in reducing working capital over the last couple of years, it is unlikely that we'll be able to achieve operating cash flow conversion meaningfully above 90% in FY 25. On Slide 10, we have set out in a little more detail, the movements we saw in working capital balances. Holman contributed to an AUD 22 million increase in inventory. When you exclude Holman, we saw a reduction in net working capital of AUD 43 million, bringing our working capital intensity down to 28% of net sales. CapEx for the year came in at AUD 41 million, which was lower than our forecast. We are forecasting a similar level in FY 2025, which is the lower end of our CapEx range historically. The investments we've made in manufacturing capacity and plant modernization over the last three years mean we are well positioned for the near term.
Looking at our balance sheet briefly on Slide 11, the strong cash flow performance of FY 24 enabled us to not only fund the AUD 160 million acquisition of Holman, but also further reduce our net debt. Our leverage ratio, net debt to EBITDA, reduced to 1.59 times at year-end versus 1.69 times in the PCP. Our target leverage is 1.5-2.5 times net debt to EBITDA, so the progress we've made in FY 24 means we're now close to the bottom end of that range, which we're comfortable with. During the year, we extended the duration of our bank facilities, which put our average debt maturity at 6.3 years.
57% of our drawn debt was at fixed rates, and this has provided a degree of interest rate protection, and the average cost of funding in FY 24 was just over 5%. With that, let me now hand you back to Heath to discuss the outlook for FY 25.
Thanks, Andrew. Now moving to Slide twelve, we set out our outlook for financial year twenty twenty-five. Forecasting twenty-five continues to be challenging. Markets are expecting interest rate cuts potentially later in calendar twenty-four and into calendar twenty-five. There is considerable uncertainty around the timing of these cuts, their magnitude, and how quickly they might feed through into positive demand. Given this uncertainty, we're confining our guidance to the first half of FY 25. From a revenue perspective, we're expecting consolidated net sales to be broadly in line with FY 24 for the first six months of FY 25, within a range of plus or minus low single-digit percentage points. We expect a similar trajectory in each of our three regions. This guidance excludes both the impact of Holman, which will be positive for revenues, and the closure of Supply Smart in the U.S.
We're targeting an improvement in EBITDA margin for the first six months of 25 relative to the PCP. Despite a subdued volume outlook for the first half, we believe that our ongoing cost management initiatives will enable us to achieve margin expansion in the first half. We are targeting an additional $10 million-$15 million of cost out in FY 25. With regards to Holman, we continue to be pleased with this acquisition. Their capabilities and customer relationships are very strong. In this first full year of ownership, we expect to realize results in line with the numbers we presented at the time of the acquisition. I would remind everyone that this business is somewhat more cyclical than the traditional RWC Asia-Pac business. We would expect approximately 60% of Holman earnings to be realized in the first half of the financial year.
On Slide 13, we have set out our strategic growth priorities in each of our three regions. These are all aligned with our global growth strategy, but as we note in the headline, the execution is regional. Market conditions and market sector maturity dictate these local priorities. For the Americas, our efforts will continue in our core residential repair and remodel market. We will expand our offerings through our channel partners, both in-store and online. Further penetration of the commercial plumbing market will continue to be a priority in the Americas. Our PEX-a offering will lead our incremental growth within the larger remodel and residential new construction markets. In Asia Pacific, the prime opportunities center on the integration of Holman and delivering on the revenue synergies the combined businesses offer.
These include drain, waste, and vent product into the professional wholesale channel and the expansion of our product offering into the retail channel. We also see opportunity for our irrigation products across a broader range of channels, including the pro sector. In EMEA, we will continue to focus on driving day-to-day operational performance. This ensures we maintain margins despite the volume outlook and also positions us well for the future market recovery. Beyond that, we continue to work on new product developments that will help drive incremental organic growth. Finally, I'll hit the highlights of Slide fourteen before we open it up to Q&A. Broadly, our focus for the new financial year continues to be on execution excellence. From a culture perspective, we will continue the progress we have made in the critical area of health and safety.
Over the last couple of years, we have made great strides in terms of our safety culture. We are developing effective and authentic safety leadership at all levels of the organization. This is beginning to shine through in our injury numbers. But of course, there is always more we can do, and the health and well-being of our employees remains a clear priority. We will maintain our focus on risk, our culture, and our people, and maintain our commitment to ensure everyone's safe every day. Additionally, we will continue to pursue the ESG priorities we've outlined in our ESG report. In terms of supply chain, we have a group-wide project centered around strengthening and standardizing our S&OP process, that is, sales and ops planning. The benefit of this will be improving delivery performance to our customers while also optimizing our inventory levels.
We're working to strengthen our strategic sourcing operations to ensure that we are leveraging our scale across the group. We are increasingly taking a global approach to sourcing to enable us to achieve optimum cost while also maintaining highest quality. Another key benefit will be increasing supply redundancy and ensuring we can respond quickly to changes in demand. Coupled with this is our increased attention to assessing supplier ESG practices, including modern slavery and greenhouse gas emissions. From an operations perspective, we're doing a lot of work around our global manufacturing footprint. Our priority at the moment is Australia, following the SharkBite Max transition, coupled with the Holman integration. But it is fair to say that our work here is catalyzing a broader review across the globe. It is critical that we continue to challenge ourselves and to always strive to achieve the lowest cost of manufacture.
Finally, in terms of innovation, we will continue to work on new product releases, product updates, and range extensions as we do every year. The fruits of this work certainly helped 2024 revenue in a down market. This was clear in the U.S., but perhaps the largest impact was Australia. Our initiatives were able to deliver a positive comp in local wholesale revenue in the second half, in a market that is down significantly. Beyond these ongoing incremental product releases, we of course have a longer-term R&D program in place. This program seeks to create new solutions that improve the productivity of end users, while also increasing value on the shelves of our distributors. So in summary, we will continue working on the business, driving efficiencies and chasing cost out, while ensuring we are ready to capture the upturn in demand when it eventuates.
With that, I will pause and open up to questions via the conference call.
Thank you, sir. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. We ask that you keep your questions to no more than one question and one follow-up, and if time permits, we'll be more than happy to take more questions. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster.
Sam Seow.
I show the first question comes from the line of Sam Seow from Citi. Please go ahead.
Oh, morning, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Look, just one on the U.K., the 9% decline in sales matches your first half, so it appears things haven't gotten any worse. So I guess my questions are, one, is that correct? And two, on the cost out, are we to assume most of that $10-$15 million benefit you called out will be in EMEA in the first half 2025? Thanks.
Sam, thanks for your question. I think that's the right observation. The comps in first and second half were pretty similar. I'm not sure I wanna sort of step all the way out on the limb and say we think it's troughed over there, but certainly we're seeing a similar run rate or and have been for some months now, and we are projecting that going forward into the first half. In terms of savings, I think those savings really are driven across the board, Andrew. They're not exclusively U.K.
That's correct.
Okay.
The majority of those, Sam, will fall in the Americas.
Got it. Okay, and then just on the U.S., I know one of your, one of the big boxes called out plumbing comps were positive in the last quarter. I guess, given they're your largest customer, is it fair to say you've seen a similar trend in your last quarter? Anything to call out why that exit rate may not be reflective of the current trading conditions? And two, was there any, SharkBite Max launch costs that you might cycle out this period? Thanks.
I think in regards to the announcement you're referring to, we were not surprised by that. That's sort of in keeping with what we've seen. There's a little bit of variability across our different channels, and that feels right there. Andrew, I don't know if there's any particular SharkBite?
Really, the cost associated with Max we saw in our factories in the form of start-up costs as we transferred that production over, and that was primarily something that we saw in the first half. Didn't see. That was pretty much all worked through by the time we came through the second half.
Thanks. Appreciate the color, guys.
Thanks, Sam.
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Peter Steyn from Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Hi, Heath and Andrew, appreciate your time. Perhaps just a bigger picture question, Heath, around supply chain and strategic sourcing. You've outlined a little bit of what one could expect, but could you give us a sense of how you're thinking about policy and maybe geopolitical scenarios here, and how that's influencing the flexibility with which you're trying to implement some of these thought processes?
Sure, Peter. Thanks. Thanks for your question. Look, there's a few, I guess, fundamentals at play here, is wherever we can, we would like to manufacture or source close to the market. It's just reducing the length and the complexity of that supply chain helps from a robustness point of view. So that's one of our key tenets. You know, so providing redundancies where we can is important. At the same time, we do have a lot of IP in our manufacturing processes. We will always want to apply that wherever we can, but underlying all of that has to be an approach of having the lowest cost to manufacture. If you're gonna go into battle, that's the right place to be.
So that's kind of a given, and then the rest of those tenets kind of apply as you can.
Yeah. Gotcha. So, just as a follow-up then, we've got $23 million worth of cost reduction in this year. Is there an annualization process and then incremental reductions that you're anticipating 2025 and beyond, as you implement some of the plans?
Hi, Peter. The AUD 23 million that we were able to achieve this year, within a year, if you annualize that, that would result in carryover savings into next year between AUD 7-8 million, which of course is part of the AUD 10-15 that Heath mentioned, that we're targeting for savings next year.
Perfect. Thanks, Andrew. And anything beyond that, as you go through this process?
Oh, I think there is. I mean, it's got to be an ongoing forever process. I mean, it falls under that broad heading, continuous improvement. We're certainly not calling out anything beyond that, but there's absolutely no complacency in our approach. I think you should expect at some level of CI every period going forward.
Perfect. Thanks, Heath. Appreciate it.
Thanks, Peter. Cheers.
Thank you. And I show our next question comes from the line of Simon Thackray from Jefferies Australia. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much. Hi, Heath. Hi, Andrew. First of all, thank you very much for being able to go top to bottom in that preso in 25 minutes, much appreciated. You can't have a discussion, I guess, in the current environment, without talking about cost inflation and the role of price to recover that, appreciating that the conditions are a little softer. Could you just give us a bit of a regional summary of inflation expectations and the ability of price in each of the regions to be able to recover cost?
So I'll comment broadly to start with. No question inflation is having an ongoing impact. It's certainly reduced quite a lot from the peak. But whenever we think we're through it, then you'll see something happens, and our biggest battle right now is with container costs. They've jumped quite significantly recently. So that, you know, bring us back to the question Peter just asked. That really does put pressure on your CI programs, and we'll take that action as best we can. In terms of pricing, I think our pricing in pretty much all of our regions is appropriate for the raw material costs that we've got at the moment, so we're comfortable with that.
We're also comfortable with the process that we need to go through in the event that there are swings in key commodities. So you know, that's been, as you know, a really big factor over the last few years, and I think we navigated that pretty well, and are pretty comfortable that we can deal with that going forward. Andrew, I'm not sure if you want to add anything.
I think that covers it. I think that, you know, where copper is currently, so for the Americas and Australia, I think we're in a pretty good place from a pricing standpoint. EMEA did have a price increase in FY 24 that they went out with at the start of the calendar year. So we feel like we're well positioned there as well. But, in terms of FY 25 pricing, still evaluating and, looking at how commodities are moving and, but currently, we feel like we're in a good place.
That's very helpful, and this should be a follow-up question, but it's not. It's not related. Just on the effective tax rate, which is a bit of a range there, Andrew, 18%-21%, what are the key assumptions we need to think about in that effective tax rate that you've provided?
You know, regional mix always comes into play, depending on profitability that we're seeing in the different regions. As we do make more profits in Australia, that'll push the effective tax rate up a little bit. But we think 18%-21% is a good range, and I think in the half, I said to, you know, if you're gonna put something in a model to put 20%, and I would stick with that.
Okay. Good as gold. Thanks, gentlemen.
Thanks, Alan.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Lee Power from UBS. Please go ahead.
Hi, Heath. Hi, Andrew. Heath, just on the EBITDA guidance that you've got, you've obviously had pretty solid margin expansion through the year, cost out. I think the second half was high, 22% EBITDA margin, and that obviously then rolled into 25%. Why do you set the guidance relative to the first half twenty-four, rather than use the second half as an appropriate starting point?
I guess in general terms, we just restricted all our guidance to the first half, so I thought it was relevant to peg that as the reference point. But I would also note that the first half is when we roll through new salary and wages, which inevitably impacts the first half just a little bit, so we thought that was a more relevant number.
Okay, I wish-
I'll also add to that. Sorry, I would also add to that, that volumes are always different, first half, second half in our business. Second half is always a higher volume half, and that's gonna drive higher margins. So it's, you really have to look at it, the first half in isolation. We expect volumes will be lower.
Okay. Yeah, that makes sense. I just, there's obviously a very big differential between the two, and you've got this cost out rolling, so I was just trying to work out how relevant it is. And then, Andrew, just on the D&A number, is it just Holman that drives that into 25, or is there something else going on there? I just probably would have thought maybe some of the other closures and other work you've done might have partially offset that 25 guidance number.
Now, look, of the $11 million increase from 2024 to 2025, over half of that is Holman, roughly 6 million of that 11. The remainder of it comes from the new product and capacity projects that we've had over the last few years. You know, of course, we make those decisions. Those are longer-term decisions, and they position us well to be able to respond to volume when that does come back. But it's 60% of it's gonna be Holman, and the remainder will be things that we've talked about over the last few years: PEX-a, SharkBite Max, increased automation in EMEA. Those are the highlights that are bringing that number up.
Okay. Excellent. Thank you. Appreciate the color, as always.
Thanks, Lee.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Harry Saunders from E&P. Please go ahead.
Morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Just firstly, back on that margin point, if we're comparing margin on the first half of last year in that case, can you talk through what's the overall cost out we've seen across the year, and then expected for twenty-five sort of cumulatively? Just so we can work out the potential improvement that we're talking to here.
Hey, Harry. Sure. So 23 million in FY 2024 probably 50% of that's gonna be procurement, and those activities were mainly centered and driven by the Americas team. If you look at EMEA, we did talk about the restructuring at the half, and then the additional restructuring that we did really towards the end of the year. And then from an APAC standpoint, they've had some good initiatives, but it's the smaller piece when you look at it regionally. So going forward, I think as I mentioned to Peter, we'll see carryover savings of approximately 7-8 million next year. So we've got at least half of that 10-15 million in the bag, and of course, we've got a good line of sight on how we're gonna get the remainder of that.
But if you look at the split in twenty-five, first half versus second half, it's probably gonna be pretty, pretty much fifty-fifty. So half of that we'll see in first half, and the other half we'll get in the second.
All right, thanks. And then, so perhaps just the overall dollar cost out for the first half alone, 2025 versus 2024. Could you just give us an idea of that? Cumulative savings.
I'd go with approximately eight million in the first half.
versus first half 2024?
Correct.
Thanks. Just to follow up as well on EMEA, I mean, how are you seeing the recovery in EMEA end markets play out? You know, is there upside from a UK residential construction rebound? And what is the margin upside from a recovery there? You know, could you see additional productivity when you see volumes come back?
Oh, for sure. For sure. There's no question there's a significant pent-up demand in the UK. That market's been tough for a long time. There's some sort of anecdotal green shoots coming through, if you like, but the unknown is when that manifests itself in an increase in demand. We are pretty confident that it's there. It's just a matter of when. And I guess two things I would note is, you know, we have made some restructuring changes over there and taken some cost out of that business. We've also invested pretty significantly over the last few years on capacity. So that would point to there being a nice uptick to the bottom line margin rate when that volume comes back.
Again, it's just a matter of when, so.
Thanks. And just to follow up as well, given the guidance was all sort of ex Holman, can you just talk through how you're sort of anticipating Holman performance in the first half and perhaps how it's performed to date?
So overall, very, very pleased with Holman. Really pretty good business, really good people, executing really well, really good relationships. It's absolutely as advertised, which is always pleasing when you get into, into the details of a new business. Very pleased from that point of view. In terms of performance for the, for our first full year of ownership, I really would direct you back to the numbers that we posted at the time of the acquisition. I think we gave a twelve-month rolling revenue and EBITDA number, and I think they're still valid, and as I called out earlier, you should think generally of a sixty-forty split, first half, second half on how those earnings apply.
Right. So effectively, assume pretty much flattening in your underlying assumptions?
I think that's reasonable in the current environment, yes.
Great. Thank you.
Thanks, Harry.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Daniel Kang from CLSA. Please go ahead.
My question's already been asked, so I'll hand it back to you.
Thank you.
Thanks, Daniel.
Our next question comes from the line of Brooke Campbell-Crawford from Barrenjoey. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Good morning, Heath and Andrew. Just a couple from me, please. Back on the margin, appreciate there's been a few questions on this, but just wanna clarify: You're talking about margin improvements in the first half, excluding Holman. We can see what the dilution is there from Holman. So I just wanna clarify, does this mean you wouldn't expect margin expansion, including Holman, so over and above the dilution there?
Good morning, Brooke. We would expect margin expansion, including Holman. Holman is dilutive, but not to the extent that it's gonna take us below where margins were in the first half of 2024.
Excellent. Thanks, thanks for clarifying. And then maybe just one on this potential opportunity to restructure the manufacturing base. I think a lot of it's relating to Australia, and Heath, you've commented on in the past on this one, but can you provide an update, just what stage of planning you're at the moment, when you might be ready to provide some details to market around what's gonna happen there? And maybe early indications of the range of potential benefits when that all works itself through. Thanks.
So, you know, as you indicated, Australia's the focus right now, and there's quite a few things that we're working through there following the SharkBite Max change and also Holman. There's a lot of moving pieces there with the number of DCs and manufacturing sites we now have. So working through that over the next six months, 12 months, to be honest, to work through all of that, at least. But as I said earlier, that's, I think, correctly moving us to just question everything else. I don't think there's anything at the moment we wanna put on the table.
I'd say probably in six months' time, we'll have a better view of what that might look like and be able to discuss it further then.
Sounds good. Thanks for the answer, and congrats on the result.
Thanks, Brooke. Appreciate it. Cheers.
Thank you. And I show our next question comes from the line of Rohan Gallagher from Jarden. Please go ahead.
Heath, Andrew, good morning. Good morning, everybody. With respect to everyone's been focused on FY 25, understandably, I'm just looking at more margins on a mid-cycle basis, particularly in the U.S. and APAC, following the respective transfer of your manufacturing assembly operations. Within your sort of plans on a medium-term basis, what sort of margins should we be aspiring to, with a return to more normal market conditions across your key jurisdictions, please?
So, you know, I would say in APAC, with the acquisition of Holman, it gives that business scale, and which will create opportunities to help drive margins. We talked about AUD 5 million in synergies that we'll get over the next three years. And so when all that comes through, we would anticipate or would like to see those APAC margins back into the mid-teens for that combined business. If you look at EMEA, of course, last year we had margins of roughly 32%. We're slightly below 30% for this year. In the second half, we got close to 30%, but didn't quite get there. But we're confident that the team can get that margin really 30 plus.
And then when the volume comes back, we can see that margin getting back to that 32%-33% range for EMEA. In the Americas, look, the team has done a lot of work to get margins where they are today at 21%. That's margin expansion is certainly a good thing, but our focus going forward will be on growth. We'll need to invest in order to achieve that growth. So I would expect that Americas' margins, we could maintain in the low twenties. But look, across all of our regions, we're gonna need volume in order to significantly expand margins over and above where they are today.
That's excellent. Thank you, Andrew. And just to follow up, associated with CapEx, your CapEx is sort of in that sort of 45, I think you're targeting. It's well below DNA. How sustainable is that in terms of not only maintaining your footprint, but then, you know, pursuing those growth ambitions over the medium term to facilitate that business plan you just articulated? Thank you.
I think the current level it's appropriate. We did invest quite a bit over the last few years. I think that positions us really well from a capacity point of view, but also from a new product point of view. SharkBite Max is a pretty significant move to PEX-a. An expansion fitting investment was pretty significant, and that had some way to play out. That's a multi-year growth story. So I think we're well positioned right now. So it doesn't at all feel like we're leaving any investment or projects behind.
That's excellent. And just related with that, Heath, can you just sort of highlight to people or us where you see the latent capacity at the moment with Cullman? You know, when we were there, there was seen to be plenty of scope for you to grow before you have to consider, you know, additional sort of assembly manufacturing plants.
I think we're in a good spot with Cullman. As you know, we put in quite a lot of new equipment there as part of the SharkBite Max implementation. We took the approach of essentially duplicating capacity as opposed to simply moving all that we had from Australia. So we've got quite some headroom there. I certainly think in terms of 30% plus capacity, and the U.K. is probably the same or even more, to be honest. They've partly because their volumes have come off so much from where they were, but we've also invested, as you've seen, quite a bit in equipment there. So that's spare capacity there is well beyond 30%.
And in both those cases, I'm talking about our core products, so SharkBite Max in the U.S. and Speedfit in the U.K., but they're the most manufacturing-intense activities we do. So generally some nice headroom right now.
That is excellent. Thank you, gentlemen. Appreciate your time.
Thanks, Rohan.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Keith Chau from MST. Please go ahead.
Hi, Heath and Andrew. First question, just on the channel. I noticed, you know, given the still some uncertainties around the macro backdrop or demand backdrop at the moment across all geographies.
Some of your channel partners are certainly still trying to manage down inventories. So from that perspective, Heath, would you describe the current channel as being lean, full, or normal for Reliance's products? And if you could highlight whether are there any variations across each of the geographies? And in relation to that question, Andrew, whether you think we should be factoring any kind of seasonality for cash generation in FY 25, please?
Okay, let me deal with the first part there, Keith. I would say there's nothing to call out. Generally, it feels pretty normal in most parts of the world. I think looking backwards, I think OEM probably was the last to unwind, but even that feels pretty normal right now. So nothing I would call out.
And Keith, on cash, you know, the first half, we typically generate a little less cash than we do in the second half. And part of that reason is that we're building inventory for that winter season. And so, you know, if I were to call it, if we're gonna be, you know, in that 90% or low 90% cash conversion range, we'll be a little below that in the first half, maybe a little bit above that in the second half.
Okay. Thank you. Appreciate that and just a couple of quick questions following up on Holman. Just firstly, around the earnings seasonality, Heath, you talked about a 60-40 number. I think at the time of the acquisition, it was 75-25 so you know, the change in seasonality there, is that a reflection of you know, how the end markets are progressing, or there's something fundamentally changed in that business, which means the earnings seasonality is different now under our ownership?
Yeah. No, I certainly wouldn't call that any different. I think it's just us getting a better handle on the profile of that business, so there's nothing to call out there.
Okay, great. And then just covering off on the synergies for Holman. You know, Heath, it sounds like you're pretty confident about the transaction or the business that you've acquired. So any further guidance or direction on how the synergies of that acquisition transpire in the next coming years?
No, nothing significantly different from what we've spoken about previously. I think we called out a $5 million target over the first few years. I think it's fair to say it's probably the second year that we will see most of those. Right now, we're just getting our arms around it, making a few small changes, getting some new systems in place, but that won't really deliver much in year one. I'd say it's year two where most of it would come home. I don't want to change our guidance, but I'd suspect by the end of year two, we won't be talking about that number anymore, so.
Okay. That's great. Very helpful. Thank you.
Okay, thanks, Keith.
Thank you. And I'm showing our last question in the queue comes from the line of Shirley Zifen from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Morning, Heath, morning, Andrew. Just a quick clarification on the margin guide, please. So for the first half, just saying, you know, margin slightly improving versus the first half of last year. Is that similar across regions, or is there anything you would want to call out? Looks like Europe should be higher. Is that a fair understanding? Thank you.
Thanks for the question. I think that, we do see a slight margin improvement in the first half versus last year. Certainly, that's true in Americas and APAC. We do see EMEA currently being flattish, and that's simply because we haven't baked in volume coming back in the first half. Actually, we haven't baked in volume coming back in the first half in all of our regions, but, we think of the U.K. will continue to be subdued. So think more in line with last year, as opposed to slightly ahead for the EMEA region.
Great. Thanks. Thanks, Andrew. That's good. Thank you.
Thank you. That concludes our Q&A session. At this time, I'd like to turn the call back over to Heath Sharp, CEO, for closing remarks.
Very good. Thank you so much. I appreciate everybody connecting this morning. And with that, we will leave you back to your day. Thanks so much.
Thank you. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.