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Earnings Call: Q3 2023

Nov 9, 2023

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Veolia conference call on Q3 2023 results with Estelle Brachlianoff, CEO, and Claude Laruelle, CFO. At this time, all lines are in a listen-only mode. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question and answer session. If at any time during this call you require immediate assistance, please press star zero for the operator. This call is being recorded on Thursday, November 9, 2023. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ms. Estelle Brachlianoff. Please go ahead, ma'am.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Thank you, and good morning to all of you, and thanks for joining us for this conference call to present Veolia's nine months results. I'm accompanied by Claude Laruelle, our Chief Financial Officer. I'm on slide three. Thanks to our strict operational and financial discipline, as well as commercial momentum, the performance achieved during the first nine months, 2023, is once again very strong and very similar to that of the H1. While our free cash flow generation has improved significantly. At constant scope and Forex, our revenue increased by 10.7% to EUR 33.2 billion, or +4.6%, excluding energy price, which are pass-through for us, as you know. So very similar organic growth at the next one. EBITDA grew by 7.7% and current EBIT by 14.2%.

Our free cash flow stood at EUR 435 million in Q3, a strong improvement compared to 2022, and our net financial debt decreased to EUR 18.9 billion. This once again, very strong set of results in a complex environment, shows that Veolia is strictly piloted, as evidenced by our synergy and efficiency delivery well ahead of schedule. In only nine months, we've almost achieved our yearly target for synergies, and we will, of course, not stop there and therefore exceed our yearly target. These very good sets of numbers are a result of Veolia's powerful business model of value creation. 85% immune to macro trends and with 70% of our contracts indexed, as well as, as of our unique positioning.

We are now 40% outside Europe, including $5 billion in the U.S., with unique technologies and know-how in decarbonization, in depollution and resource generation. It's a powerful engine for sustained growth. This was illustrated once again in Q3, with many new contracts, notably a EUR 2 billion contract in Hong Kong and a record high level of bookings in water technologies at EUR 3.1 billion. Given our nine-month performance, we are very confident about our 2023 guidance, which is fully confirmed, including the upper range of our EBITDA growth range. We can improve our targeted leverage ratio to below 2.9x at end, the end of the year, from around 3x. That is not even two years after the merger with SUEZ.

Of course, our net result of around EUR 1.3 billion is fully confirmed as well. To give you some additional color on our nine-month results, I'm on page four. The main feature of these nine months is essentially that all the strong operational leverage in H1 continued in Q3. Our revenue grew by 10.7% at constant scope and exchange rate to EUR 33.2 billion. Excluding energy price, our revenue grew by +4.6%, which is very comparable to H1. We registered strong growth in all our activities. Water increased by +7.2%, driven by tariffs and good commercial momentum, despite lower volumes due to adverse weather during the summer in Europe and in the U.S.

Waste activities continued to grow by +3.1%, which is the same pace as our 3.3% in H1. Excluding recycled prices, our waste activities grew by 6.1%, thanks to resilient volume in both solid and hazardous waste, good commercial momentum and pricing. Finally, energy activities grew very fast by +30.4%, driven mostly by energy prices, which are both essentially pass through for us and very seasonal, as you know. EBITDA growth reached +7.7%, above the high end of our EBITDA range, thanks to synergies and efficiency gains ahead of the yearly target. Current EBIT grew by 14.2% at the same pace as in H1.

Net free cash flow reached EUR 435 million in Q3, strongly up versus 2022, leading to a decrease in net financial debt to EUR 18.9 billion. These outstanding results were delivered despite softening economic conditions and continued flat waste volumes. And this is thanks to our strong foundations and powerful growth engine, which are the following: First, we benefit from a balanced geographical mix, 40% outside Europe, of which $5 billion in the U.S., and we enjoy the strong commercial momentum in all activities, thanks to perfect positioning in fast-growing markets. Second, strong business model are resilient with 85% macro immune businesses and protected against inflation, thanks to tariff indexation and pricing power. Moreover, our results are de-risked from commodity prices.

Third, our balance sheet is very solid, with a leverage ratio expected now below 2.9 x at the end of the year. And we have resumed our tuck-in and asset rotation policy after two years dedicated to the SUEZ acquisition and antitrust divestitures, and this is to enhance value creation. Fourth, the group is strictly piloted. We've maintained our discipline and sustained a strong delivery track record, both in synergies and efficiency gains, quarter after quarter. Both are ahead of schedule. Meanwhile, we continue to implement our strong ESG commitment, and in particular, in Q3, with the launch of our Veolia Cares program worldwide. All these elements allows us- allow us to forecast solid growth in our results and our dividends, and to fully confirm our 2023 guidance, as I've already mentioned. Slide six.

I would like to illustrate our strong commercial momentum with a selection of commercial successes of Q3. I've chosen, for instance, our recent success in Hong Kong, to illustrate our resource regeneration as well as decarbonization capabilities. Thanks to our unique expertise, we've been awarded a management contract of EUR 2 billion over 20 years. Veolia is building a state-of-the-art landfill site to maximize methane capture and thus avoid the emission of 10 million tons of CO2 over 20 years. The green electricity produced from the captured methane will cover 100% of the plant's energy needs, and the granite extracted from the site will be used by the Hong Kong construction industry, avoiding, therefore, imports. In Central and Eastern Europe, our decarbonization program continues at full speed. A new biomass and RDF facility is being commissioned in Czech Republic in Cheb.

We have already invested EUR 519 million out of our core exit CapEx plan of, as you know, EUR 1.5 billion by 2030 in Central and Eastern Europe. Slide seven. A few contracts in the energy spectrum, although we could qualify the Hong Kong one as energy as well. We have won two new major energy efficiency contract in Italy for Cosenza hospitals, as well as municipal buildings in Trieste, amounting to EUR 280 million. Each of these contracts will provide significant energy savings and CO2 footprint reduction for our clients, thanks to efficiency measures and the installation of photovoltaic systems on roofs. On page eight, in water technology, where we rank number one worldwide, we have registered record quality bookings in the nine months for a total of EUR 3.1 billion, up 20% versus 2022.

Thanks to our unique portfolio of technologies in reverse osmosis and ultrafiltration membranes, evaporative crystallization technologies, and desalination, hence contributing to reducing the water footprint of our industrial customers, reducing pollution of the effluents, and even extracting precious minerals from them, such as lithium. In particular, as illustrated on this slide, we have won one of the world's largest energy efficiency desalination plants in Abu Dhabi, a contract of EUR 300 million, and signed several contracts with lithium producers, as well as water treatment for semiconductor plants. On slide nine, you see the strength of our business models and of our pricing power capacity, which allows us to pass on cost increases. For 70% of our revenue, our tariffs are automatically indexed, and you have a few examples on the slide.

In municipal water in France, indexation increased by 6%, while in Central and Eastern Europe, tariff increased by double digits. In municipal waste in the U.K., indexation ranged between +9% and +15%. Moreover, our electricity output price are already 70% hedged for 2024, at the same level as 2023. Municipal heat price in Central and Eastern Europe increased sharply in 2023, in line with the cost of energy. For the non-indexed revenue, we really have a pricing power and are demonstrating it quarter after quarter, and we've continued this year to pass price increases in hazardous waste, in C&I waste, and chemical products, for instance. And we have not seen any sign of a reduction in our customer base as a result. On slide 10, I wanted to remind you of our strict balance sheet disciplines.

Veolia delivers solid growth and maintains strict balance sheet discipline. With below 2.9 x net debt expected at the end of the year, we are ahead of our plan barely two years after the SUEZ acquisition. We have continued to improve our net free cash flow generation in Q3, with EUR 435 million versus EUR 337 million in Q3 last year. We control our capital allocation with very strict investment criteria. Just to give you an idea, the IRR of a project must be above WACC + 4%, and ROC above WACC in year four. The leverage ratio will remain below or around 3 x, and we will of course keep our solid investment grade rating.

After two years dedicated to the SUEZ acquisition and antitrust divestiture, we've just resumed our normal policy of cutting and asset rotation to enhance our growth and create value. We maintained our focus on hazardous waste assets, for instance, with acquisition in Japan and recently in the U.S. with the acquisition of U.S. Industrial Technologies, a Michigan-based provider since 1996. At the same time, we divested a few non-strategic assets, such as our minority stakes in water concession in Italy for about EUR 100 million, and few other non-core assets in various geographies are in the process of divestment as we speak. Slide 11 and 12 illustrates our strict discipline in terms of cost and operational efficiency.

As already stated, the group is closely piloted, and we innovate regularly to enhance our performance, as we've announced recently with the inclusion of Generative AI in our Hubgrade live monitoring tool. In terms of synergies, we delivered EUR 131 million in nine months, leading to a cumulative amount of EUR 277 million since the start of the SUEZ merger, which was our community target at year-end. Therefore, I can confirm that we won't stop here for this year and that we will largely exceed our annual target. I can, of course, fully confirm our overall target of EUR 500 million cumulative at the result of the merger, which is bearing fruit at pace.

In terms of efficiency, and I'm on slide 12, we achieved EUR 284 million of efficiency gains in the nine months, which is ahead of our annual target of EUR 350 million, with 80% already delivered. Efficiency gains are part of Veolia's DNA and will remain so. Slide 13. As a global champion of ecological transformation and a benchmark ESG company, Veolia manages its business in accordance with its purpose, with a multifaceted performance approach, in which we measure success against financial as well as commercial, social, and environmental objectives. And I'm very proud to announce the Veolia Cares initiative, an unprecedented social protection program for our 213,000 employees worldwide. From September, Veolia guarantees a common base level of social protection for all our employees, even in countries where there are no such legal requirements.

Unprecedented in terms of its scope and scale, the Veolia Cares program gives each group employee access to parental leave, health and death coverage, support for carers, and the opportunity to dedicate one day a year to a charity or an environmental protection project. Veolia Cares is therefore fully consistent with the group's social commitment to ensure the professional and personal well-being of its employees. I'm on slide 14, and we'll see that, I am very confident about meeting the upper end of our EBITDA guidance range. Our current net income will be around EUR 1.3 billion, and we now expect our leverage ratio to be below 2.9 x at the end of the year, an improvement on our initial target of around 3 x.

I will now hand over to Claude, who will give you many details on the nine-month results, and then we will be able to answer your questions. Claude, the floor is yours.

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Thank you, Estelle, and good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I'm on slide 16, and as Estelle already highlighted, our nine-month 2022 results are remarkable and at the top end of the year's guidance. With EUR 33.2 billion revenue for the nine months, we experienced a very strong organic revenue growth of 10.7%, driven in all our businesses by increased indexation on our long-term contracts and the full impact of price increases on non-indexed businesses, and second, good commercial momentum and resilient waste volumes. EBITDA is significantly up, at EUR 4,793,000,000 million, an outstanding +7.7% at constant scope and Forex. Nine months EBITDA is above the annual guidance range, which makes us very confident for the rest of the year.

Thanks to the operating leverage, Current EBIT is growing faster at EUR 2,518,000,000 million and is up 14.2%. This shows the strength of our business models, highly resilient, delivering results quarter after quarter. Net free cash flow improved significantly in the nine months to EUR 357 million, thanks to working capital reduction due to strict cash collection discipline and lower non-current charges associated with the SUEZ deal. Free cash flow generation, as I, as Estelle highlighted in Q3, was very strong at EUR 435 million. Therefore, net financial debt decreased to EUR 18.9 billion. We now expect a net debt around EUR 18.5 billion at year-end and a leverage ratio below 2.9x.

You can also see on the slide the detailed Forex impact in nine months, which were slightly negative and more significant in Q3 than in H1. The negative impact in Q3 came from the U.K., Latin America, Australia, China, but also from the U.S. dollar. As a reminder, as we operate in local currency, Forex impacts are only translation and not transaction impact. We expect a continuation of this Forex trend into four. Moving to slide 17, you can see the quarterly growth of our main businesses. We continue to register a solid growth in Q3, +4% at constant scope and Forex, which was obviously lower than in Q2 due to the end of the heating season.

Excluding energy prices, organic growth was 3.3% in Q3, which is comparable to Q2 and only slightly lower due to adverse weather and water during the summer, and project completion in water technologies, with little impact on EBITDA. This is just a timing effect, and the bookings of Water Tech increased sharply in 2023 by 20% to EUR 3.1 billion. Focusing on Q3, we continue to register solid growth in our three activities. Water grew by 5%, driven by indexation and well-oriented works. Water technology revenue growth was slower due to project phasing, with little impact on EBITDA, as I said. Waste activities continue to grow by 2.8%, very similar to Q1 and Q2, and 5.8%, excluding recycled prices, thanks to resilient volumes, commerce impact, positive commerce impact, price increase, and indexation.

Finally, energy activities grew by 4.2%, as there is no heating activity during the summer. Moving to slide 18. Revenue increased strongly in nine months by 10.7% to EUR 33.2 billion. The majority of growth came from outside France. Water technologies, to start with, were up 6.3%, which is very good, with a very solid pipeline of new projects. We registered strong bookings in Q3 in desalination and lithium projects. In the rest of the world, strong growth continued in Q3, leading to +10.9% in the nine months, coming from all geographies. In the rest of Europe, all our operations were well-oriented and experienced high revenue growth, +16.3% in the nine months, with strong energy prices in Central Europe.

The U.K. continued to perform well, with resilient volume, good commercial, and price increases, leading to 5.6% revenue growth. Iberia grew by 8.3%, and Italy revenue decreased due to lower gas prices, immediately passed through into the tariff without any EBITDA impact. Front end hazardous waste Europe is up 2.2%, with lower water volumes due to adverse weather. Waste volumes remain weak, like in H1, while recycled still suffered a very high comparison basis, which should soften into four. On the next three slides, we detail our performance by activity, water, waste, and energy. We start by water, our largest activity, and I'm on page 19. Our water business experienced a solid organic growth of 7.1% to EUR 13.5 billion.

Growth was driven by increased indexation and prices, 4.2%, and volumes commerce works accounting for 3.4%. Weather impact was -0.5% due to rainy summer. In France, higher indexation of 6% were partly offset by the end of the Lyon contract and lower volumes, due to adverse weather. Commercial momentum remains strong. If you remember, we have the enlarged Perpignan contract for EUR 700 million backlog, the renewal of Lille, Lille contract, EUR 700 million as well, and a new wastewater treatment plant in Strasbourg for EUR 150 million backlog. In Central Europe, revenue was up 17.9%, driven by increased tariff indexation and strong works activity and stable volumes. In Spain, revenue increased by 9.7%, driven by tariff increase and strong works activities with flattish volumes.

U.S. water progressed by 6%, mostly thanks to tariff indexation. Latam revenue increased by 10.6% with both volumes and tariff growth. Our water technology business performed well, growing by 6.3%. Veolia Water Technology increased by only by 1.1% due to project completion, but bookings are sharply up EUR 300 million at EUR 1.4 billion, with significant wins in our priority segments. WTS revenue grew by 9.1%, with solid growth in all its business lines and continued price increase in the chemical business. Engineering backlog increased by 9% to $1.7 billion. The performance of the segment is very good, with EBITDA of Water Tech up by more than 10%. I'm now on slide 20, and you have the main trends of the waste activities.

Our waste activities perform well despite flat volumes and low recycled prices. We have delivered a strong performance, thanks to our pricing discipline and indexation in municipal business, contract selectivity, operational excellence, and an improved mix in hazardous waste in the U.S. Revenue grew by 3.2%, like-for-like, to EUR 11 billion. Excluding recycled price impact, revenue grew by a solid 6.4%. The scope effect is minus 7.1% is significant. It is due, of course, to the antitrust disposal made in November 2022. It includes SUEZ UK that was sold in November, and assets in Australia sold earlier in the year. The growth came mainly from pricing, complemented by resilient volumes and partially offset by the negative impact of lower recycled prices.

Volume were stable, with the rest of the world better than in Europe, like in the H1. Commerce +0.7% was solid, notably in the U.K. The main driver of revenue growth was pricing, with +4.6% impact, partly compensated by lower recycled prices. Recycled prices have decreased since August 2022 from record high levels. In the nine months, higher electricity prices contributed to 0.7% to revenue growth. The impact at the revenue level was mitigated by taxation and profit sharing at EBITDA level. Hazardous waste remain well-oriented, notably in North America. Moving to slide 21, you have the detailed business of our energy, the details of our energy business. As a reminder, energy activity is much lower in Q3 due to the end of the heating season in May.

Energy revenue in nine months was EUR 8.6 billion. Growth achieved 30.4% like-for-like, due to the sharp increase of energy prices for 27.4%. Our business models allow us to pass the costs to the, of, energy increase to our clients, which protects our results. Weather was unfavorable due to the mild winter in Central Europe, with an impact of -0.7%. In the nine months, we continued to implement heat price increases, notably in Poland, in line with our fuel, fuel cost increase. Electricity revenue is fully hedged for 2023, as well as our energy purchase, and we have hedged approximately three quarters for 2024. Our visibility is therefore very strong.

Building and industrial energy services have also performed well, with new contracts in the Middle East and in Spain, offset by lower energy prices in Italy. On slide 22, you have the usual revenue bridge detailing the different effects. Forex has a negative impact, as I said, of 2.2%, -EUR 663 million, due to lower GDP, Australian dollars, Chinese yuan, U.S. dollar, and Argentinian peso. Scope impact was -EUR 183 million and is including, as I said, the divestment of SUEZ UK. The 10.7 organic growth is fueled by good commercial momentum, resilient volumes, energy price increases, and price and indexation increases. The solid commercial momentum, as Estelle highlighted, is contributing 2.2% to revenue growth. Give you some examples that we talked about in the last presentation.

Gold Coast, City of Gold Coast waste contract in Australia started in Q1 this year. ADNOC hazardous waste project during the summer in Abu Dhabi, and many new contracts were signed in C&I waste in the U.K. and building energy service in the Middle East. The weather impact was slightly unfavorable, -0.4%. The contribution of price increases in water and waste was +3.8%. Energy prices contributed for EUR 1.9 billion, or 6.2%. It was partly offset by lower recycled prices for -EUR 240 million or -1.1%. I'm moving to slide 23, and let's have a look at the EBITDA bridge, detailing the remarkable 7.7% organic growth, above our annual guidance range. Scope and Forex impact were more significant than in H1.

As you can see on the slide, scope amounted to -EUR 23 million, and Forex negative impact reached -EUR 65 million after -21% in H1. Volume and commerce impact was +EUR 82 million or +1.8%. Weather impact was slightly negative for -EUR 48 million. As usual, the main contributor to our EBITDA increase is a net efficiency and synergies. The growth efficiency gains reached EUR 284 million, ahead of our EUR 350 million target for the year. Net of shared efficiencies with clients and contract renegotiation, net efficiencies amounted to EUR 99 million. The synergy delivery was also very good, reaching EUR 131 million, ahead of our annual target. In total, synergies and net efficiencies contributed to EUR 230 million.

Energy and recycled impact was EUR 84 million, with energy more than compensated the decline in recycled. The favorable energy impact mainly comes from the benefit of the new biomass project in Germany, generating higher EBITDA, higher electricity prices for incinerators in France and in the U.K. The positive impact of the catch-up of prices in Central Europe, China, and Italy, and few opportunity gains in electricity in Central Europe. Our energy business will remain a strong contributor to our results in 2024, thanks to our secure heat tariff for the next heating season, which represents a very large portion of our cogeneration revenue, and thanks also to our hedging policy. The negative impact of recycled prices of -EUR 87 million offset the exceptional positive impact of 2022, which was +EUR 79 million. So we are back to our normal level of profit in recycling.

I'm moving to slide 24, and let's see how the EBITDA increase is fueling the current EBIT, which is growing very strongly by 14.2% at EUR 2,518,000,000 million. Renewal expense of EUR 223 million are comparable with 2022. Amortization and provisions amounted to EUR 2,271,000,000 million, slightly above last year. Industrial capital gains, net of provision and asset impairment, EUR 129 million, includes notably EUR 54 million of industrial capital gains, pension scheme alignment between Veolia and SUEZ, combined with the implementation of the new pension law in France and lower asset impairment than in 2022. JVs amount to EUR 90 million compared to EUR 105 million last year, mostly due to divestments. I'm on page 25, and you have the detailed free cash flow of the nine months.

Comparing nine months, 2022, with nine months, 2023, free cash flow improved very significantly from EUR 33 million to EUR 357 million. First nine months CapEx reached EUR 2.5 billion compared to EUR 2.1 billion, due in particular to increase the discretionary CapEx from EUR 267 million to EUR 399 million. Decarbonization CapEx in Central Europe, EUR 123 million in the nine months, with a total, as Estelle said, of EUR 519 million since January 2020, well above our initial commitment of EUR 400 million at the end of 2023. Ongoing construction of three large hazardous waste projects in the U.S., in Germany, and in the Middle East, that will fuel the growth of the group in the coming years.

Second, we improve our working capital variation by EUR 103 million compared to nine months last year, despite strong revenue increase, thanks to our numerous cash initiative across the group. Net financial debt reached EUR 18.9 billion, including almost EUR 200 million of negative effects. After this very good Q3 performance, we expect net debt to be around EUR 18.5 billion euro at year-end and a leverage ratio below 2.9 x. I'm now on slide 26, and you have the details of the net financial debt variation, where you can see the different effects I have just highlighted. Moving to slide 27, you can see that we enjoyed a very good debt profile with a very smooth payment schedule, more than 80% fixed rate, a very high net cash position of EUR 6 billion, allowing us to manage our debt issuance program.

I'm on slide now 28, and you have on this slide, our 2023 guidance, which I fully confirm. EBITDA organic growth is expected at the high end of the 5%-7% range, driven by EUR 300 million, EUR 250 million of efficiency gains, more than EUR 280 million cumulative synergies at the end of 2023. Leverage ratio will be now below 2.9 x. Current net income will be around EUR 1.3 billion, which means a double-digit growth compared to last year. And as usual, our dividend will grow in line with our current EPS. Given our remarkable nine-month delivery, we are, of course, very confident for the full year. Thank you for your attention.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Thank you, Claude, and now we are together here to answer your questions.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press star followed by the number one on your touchtone phone. Again, that's star followed by the number one on your touchtone phone. You will hear a three-tone prompt acknowledging your request. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press star followed by the number two. If you are using a speakerphone, please lift your handset before pressing any keys. We have our first question coming from the line of Ajay Patel from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Ajay Patel
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Good morning, and thank you very much for the presentation. I have three questions, please, if I may. The first one is, look, these are very strong results. EBITDA is up 8% on an organic basis, and your guidance for the full year is 5%-7%. With cost cutting running very nicely, and the delivery that you've put through in the first nine months, how come that doesn't translate in a changing, either guidance for the EBITDA line or even guidance on the net income line of EUR 1.3 billion? Could you help us, one, with the EBITDA guidance in terms of, is it conservatism built in for Q4, or are there any dynamics in Q4 that we need to understand that may imply a lower growth rate in Q4?

And then could you help us with the dynamics from the EBITDA line down to the net income line, just to ensure that we've got those in the right place? And then I'll come back with the other two questions.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Okay. So we'll start with this one, which is a full one. A few answers. So first, I am very confident about reaching the upper range of the EBITDA guidance, which means, as you know, 5%-7%, and I'm saying I'm very confident we should reach the upper range of this range. That's the first answer. Do I expect anything bad in Q4? The answer is no. We have good visibility, and we don't see any change in trend in our businesses. I guess the only thing I would say I don't put any personal energy into trying to have an impact is the weather, as you may imagine. And, you know, we have the heating season just starting.

October was not particularly cold, so we have a little bit of certainty on this one. On the rest, I can tell you we are again very confident, no change in trend, and we target the upper range of the EBITDA guidance in terms of with full confidence. That's the answer. Do you want to comment on that one, Claude?

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Ajay, you will have the translation from EBITDA to EBIT, and you have the same translation from EBIT to net results. So we'll have a strong net result at your end, so, but as Estelle said, we are very confident for the rest of the year, so you have a very strong net result from the translation from EBITDA to EBIT to net results.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

So maybe your other two questions.

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Okay.

Ajay Patel
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

The other two are relatively short. So it's more on cost-cutting translation. So you delivered, if I take the net efficiency benefits, the EUR 99 million that you flagged at, and then take the cost cutting that you delivered, which is, EUR 284 million, it feels around 35% of the cost cutting is translating into underlying EBITDA gains. And I just wondered, is that the right way to think about how cost cutting will translate going forward, or is there something specific about the nine months that that number is a little lower? And then the last question is on working capital. You achieved EUR 745 million of benefits. Just wanted to understand what might unwind over Q4 so that I can model the full year a little bit better.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Claude, maybe for those questions.

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

So if I start by working capital, as you know, Ajay, we have a strong working capital with reversal in Q4. And so we don't expect any changes as what we have seen in the previous year in terms of working capital reversal in 2023. For the cost-cutting translation, we have always said that we keep 30%-50%. We are 35% in nine months, so nothing specific. We are in the range that we are, that has been always the range of Veolia in terms of net efficiency gains. At 35%, we are in the range of Veolia.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

In terms of synergy, you know, in a way, the translation is really fully to EBITDA, as you know.

Ajay Patel
Senior Equity Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Okay. Thank you very much for your help.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Arthur Sitbon from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Arthur Sitbon
VP of Utilities and Clean Energy Equity Research, Morgan Stanley

Hello, thank you for taking my question. So the first one is, I told you that you're gonna host several events in 2024, three of which will be thematic events on, I think energy, U.S. activities, and water technology and innovation. I was wondering if we should look into the selection of these activities as an indication of how you think about them. What I mean by that is, does that imply that these three activities are all core to you? Does it imply that you believe that they are not well understood by the market? Basically, I'd just like some thoughts around why did you pick these three activities to do a thematic event on? T hat would be very helpful. That's the first question.

The second question is on the Q3. I mean, there was slightly slower organic EBITDA growth, but if anything, it seems to be due mainly to the weather. So volumes seem broadly in line with previous quarters. I was wondering maybe if you can give some details on the areas that have been doing well, that have been very resilient, those that have been doing maybe less well, and how is it going so far in the Q4 from this standpoint? Thank you very much.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Thank you very much for your question. So I hope I understood your question right, because the line was not exactly great from this end. In terms of the why have we selected those themes for the deep dives, I guess, it's really are they core? Yes, they are. Are they fully understood? I don't know. We've had a lot of questions over the years, and we understood that at times you need to take a bit more time than just the usual quarterly or even CMDs to deep dive and to explain what it is. The energy at Veolia, which as you know, is local energy, which is a very specific sweet spot for us and quite unique, just to give one example, or even the U.S....

where there is probably an underappreciation, in my view, of our unique positioning in the U.S. following the merger with SUEZ, and the fact that we are now really very well positioned in key markets in this country, just to give two examples. So it's probably, I don't know, like a series of a lot of question about could we spend more time on this and that, plus underappreciation maybe of some of the key nuggets we have in Veolia, would be probably my answer. In terms of EBITDA growth from one quarter to the next, you're exactly right.

We're exactly on the same range as Q2 and Q1, with the slight difference being really the weather, which hasn't been wonderful in terms of the water in Europe and the U.S. this summer. But in each quarter was really at the upper range of our guidance range, and even above our budget. So I guess it's every single of the quarters have been good in a way, so far. I would say that if you look at EBIT, the Q3 was even higher, slightly, than the quarters before. So it's another way of looking at that. Where are we performing well? I guess we have a portfolio of activities.

I would mention hazardous waste, which is still performing super well, in the U.S. notably, where we really have a record revenue growth of +30%, and EBITDA translates into a very, very big EBITDA growth for us. As well as the energy activities, as I said, it's local energy activities which are performing very well. Not specifically in the Q3, because as you know, we have a seasonal effect on energy. But in the overall year, it will be a good year for energy activities, local energy, as I mentioned. Claude, you want to?

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Yes, and if you look at Q3, it's mostly the water volumes. The water volumes, you know, we have bigger volumes sold in during the summer. So the impact of water volume, even though it's in the same range as the start of the quarter, is slightly higher, but nothing, nothing very specific. So, EBITDA delivery in Q3 is very similar to what I said. And the biggest impact is the water over the summer, which was rainy, if you have been in France, and even in Spain, that was slightly negative. And for Q4, maybe Estelle, the Q4, the start of October?

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Oh, start of October is good, as in we don't see any change in trends. And in terms of the rest of the year, you know, again, as I said, we don't see any specific negatives there, anywhere. The only uncertainty being the weather, so far, in my opinion, for the heating season to come. I shall, if I may, insist on the fact that we are delivering these very, very good results quarter for quarter with flat waste volume. And they've been flat for now pretty much one year, since September in 2022. If you have a look at our quarterly presentations. So I think it's a proof, and I'll come back to my introduction.

It's a proof that it's based on the solid foundations and piloting, as we've highlighted a few times already.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Vincent Ayral from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.

Vincent Ayral
Equity Research Analyst for Capital Markets, Utilities, and Energy Transition, JPMorgan

Yes, good morning. Thank you for the presentation. Three questions on my side. One, bouncing off just your last comment. Yes, indeed, this is very good, despite flat waste volumes to keep delivering organic growth in the waste segment. There is the U.S. and the ramp up of activities. But, the question I have is when you look at your presentation, you say continued favorable impact of price increases and indexation in waste. Could you explain to us a bit like the dynamics if the volumes remain in some areas in a negative trend? Y ou don't seem to see any price war.

I would be very interested in having some color on what's the situation as of now? The other question would be regarding synergies. You've been doing very well. Could you give us a couple of example of actions and key synergies you've managed to unlock, and the way you see the main areas of progress going forward? I'm thinking not Q4, but 2024 and beyond. And finally, on inflation. Inflation has been quite a positive, but in your indexation for contracts, but there is also the cost inflation. You have last year increased, among other things, on the......

On the employee wages and everything, what do you see going forward, and the situation, the net between cost inflation and contracts indexation? Is it that we should remain very steadily in a net positive position as we are now, or should we assume some level of temporary compression? What is the mechanics between top and the top line and OpEx on that one? Thank you.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Thank you for your questions. So in terms of your question about the volumes, price, and price wall, I would say, if you look at, for instance, the slide 20 of our presentation, which is on waste, which I assume was the underlying part of your question. We haven't seen decline in volume. We've been seeing flat volumes, so a bit of minuscule minus or minuscule plus for the last four quarters, basically, quarter-on-quarter, so it's flat volume. But you can see quarter-on-quarter prices increasing on this one is, I guess, on nine months is +4% or +6%, and, you know, I don't have top of my mind last year, but it was again three point something.

So, so we are good at using our high pricing power. I think, you know, the key word here for the 30%, which are non-index, because again, 70% are index, so it's not even pricing power, it's automatic. But for the 30%, which is not, pricing power is key. Do we see a price war? No, because we have, again, a pricing power. We are very good at what we do. We have the quality of service. It is well understood by our customer. We are an essential service for them. When I say it's well understood by our customer, we measure our Net Promoter Score, which is very good and increasing year-on-year. So we are happy customer, good position on our market.

We are, as I highlighted a few times already, in the top three, usually of our markets, so we are not a small player. When we play, we want to play big and strong in the country. And this what is what allows us to have this price power, pricing power, which I've just highlighted. In terms of synergies, yes, we're very happy about, you know, the track we're in because the quality of the delivery of the merger with SUEZ is as important as the merger itself in my opinion, and this is what demonstrates the synergies. If you want example, as I guess it started more with HQs, and it's now more down to operational stuff.

I say HQs, because of course, I'm not talking only about the central corporate HQ, but countries HQs we have in each country which have merged. That was for the first part of the synergies. Now we're more down to more operational stuff, such as rerouting of trucks by merging depots in waste collection or purchasing power, which is, you know, taking off, as we speak, and will go on until 2024. So, the two examples I mentioned, you know, are really already starting, but will deliver fully in 2024 and 2025. So that's for your second question. In terms of inflation, we always said that, you know, inflation was neutral or slightly positive to Veolia.

And, when I say that, it means neutral or slightly positive for our margin and results, of course, you know, revenue is something else. But, you know, what we tend to target is to protect our margin. Again, we've demonstrated with high inflation, or higher than, I guess, the norm, in the last 18 months, that we have been able to protect our margin and even slightly benefit from it from time to time, including in the energy price as well. Do we expect any squeeze in the other direction next year? The answer is no.

Because, you know, I monitor that very closely from employees' wage through to everything we buy, as in, you know, chemical products or energy, and it goes back to your previous question about purchasing, for instance. So, no negative to anticipate. Again, inflation is neutral or slightly positive for Veolia and will remain so, even if it goes down like it is now.

Vincent Ayral
Equity Research Analyst for Capital Markets, Utilities, and Energy Transition, JPMorgan

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have our next question coming from the line of Jenny Ping from Citi. Please go ahead.

Jenny Ping
Managing Director of Equity Research for Utilities and New Energy, Citi

Hi, thanks very much. Firstly, two questions. First out, please, just on the price inflation, can you help us to understand when we will start to see some of the lower inflation, i.e. the reset coming through, starting to impact your numbers? And I know you said net is neutral to positive. I just wanted to see when some of that starts to flow through. Secondly, can you just comment and update us on what's the latest around the SEDIF contract? Obviously, there's been some press coverage around the process and the issues with various processes. Is there going to be a re-tender of the contract, which will effectively drag out the process a bit, a bit longer? So can you give us an idea on that? And then two numbers questions, please.

If I can refer back to slide 23, just on the base EBITDA number for the full year 2022. For the nine months, you sort of talked about roughly around EUR 88 million for FX and scope as a base year base adjustment for nine months. So are we looking for the full year to the tune of EUR 120 million-EUR 130 million for those two elements together? Just to give us a sense of the starting point. And then on the EUR 1.3 billion net income, which you've reconfirmed today, can you just tell us what the FX drag you're expecting on that would be? Thanks.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Okay. On, so it's four questions, or three and a half, because three and four are about Forex. I guess, I would start with the first, but I think, you know, you will have element to complement Claude. On inflation, inflation is already lowering. Of course, it depends on each country and each type of contract. As we said, you know, we have a lagging effect of our mechanism of indexation for the 70%, which is indexed. And of course, we monitor it so that the cost is not squeezed by increasing, whilst the inflation starts decreasing and therefore the indexation. So we plan all that, in a nutshell. So nothing negative to expect here.

And by the way, we, we don't see any—we, we don't have any price decrease, so it's more... I would say what we start to see is the increase slowing down. So I'm talking about, you know, like, the +10% is more +8% here, or, you know, nothing like, you know, decreasing price. And I'm very confident we should not see any, decrease in price, and indexation formula work like that, so it's quite protective for us. Maybe an example?

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Yeah, an example on Water France. Water France, escalation formula, they were 6% this year, with a lag effect. As you know, Jenny, that will be, between 4%-5% next year. So, but it remains a very strong, escalation formula impact on the Water France, to give you an example.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Our cost base has increased less than those numbers, including the lower of the two. So no anticipation of squeezing our margin there. In terms of the SEDIF tender, which we know is a large contract we have in providing water for the outskirts of Paris. Shall I remind that we've renewed this contract in 2010 already. This tender was launched two years ago. We've already answered to thousands of questions and providing cubic meters of documents, and I can tell you, we have a very, very good, high quality offer I'm very proud of.

You know, there was an incident in April, where there was data provided to us by the SEDIF tools, which were not meant to be sent to us. And the SEDIF have therefore taken the stance that they had already all the information they needed to judge the merit of both offers on the day before this incident. So that's the decision they've announced they've taken. So as we speak, they are analyzing the merits of both offers based on the data the days before.

In terms of facts, the SEDIF again said they would decide by the summer next year who is the best contender, having in mind that the end of the contract is at the end of 2024. In terms of Forex, Claude?

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

So in terms of Forex, let's start at, you know, Jenny, it's always difficult to predict the Forex, but what we see, we had a higher Forex impact, of course, in Q3. And if we don't have many big changes in Forex, we expect quite the same trend as I said in Q4. In terms of scope is different because we have made a few tuck-ins. They will have the full year impact, including the last one in hazardous waste in the U.S. And we, if you remember, the divestment of SUEZ UK was done in November last year, at the end of November. So you will have to correct a little bit the scope impact with this.

For the at net income level, Forex impact, as you know, is much, much more limited. We expect very, a very small number in terms of, Forex impact at net income. We are very confident with the delivery of the net income for the full year 2023.

Jenny Ping
Managing Director of Equity Research for Utilities and New Energy, Citi

So sorry, just to follow up. So can I read that as EUR 100 million in totality, assuming FX stays where they are currently?

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Jenny, we don't know the Forex of November and December, but if we have the same trend as in Q3, you're correct.

Jenny Ping
Managing Director of Equity Research for Utilities and New Energy, Citi

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have our next question coming from the line of Olly Jeffery from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Olly Jeffery
Director and Equity Research Analyst for European Utilities, Deutsche Bank

... Thanks very much. A couple of questions, please. So the first one I'd like to ask about is just coming back to the waste volume trend that you've seen in the last quarter, which has been a repeat of what we've seen over the preceding quarters. You know, French PMI volumes or PMI reading was not very good for September. Can you comment on the mix of how you're seeing waste volumes? So I suspect with France and Germany is probably not doing as well as others, but can you at least talk to whether you're seeing any stabilization within those markets or if you're seeing volumes getting worse? S o some detail on that would be great. Could you also please give an update on what's happening with the Lydec contract in Morocco?

There's been a few things in the press regarding that. And then last question I have is just slightly more, slightly broader. You know, with synergies, I mean, clearly that's going very well. And you know, your target initially is four years to do the EUR 500 million. You know, I presume that you're not gonna stop at EUR 500 million, and when we start to think of, you know, going beyond 2025, there might be a possibility of looking to push beyond that. Any commentary you can give on those questions would be great. Thank you.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Thank you very much. First on waste volume. I will, you know, slightly start with not talking about waste volume, but waste revenue, which is basically volume times price. And highlight what we've put on slide, is it 18 or 17, Claude? Q2 17. Slide 17, where you see that it's +3.1%, 3.2%, whatever, depending on the quarter. So it's super stable revenue, hence my comment on the price, because the underlying volume is more like 0+, 0-, depending on the quarter. In terms of the detail behind those volume being flat, because you're right, you know, the various geographies has quite a different stance, Claude.

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

So, but if you, if you talk about France, we have the same trend in Q3 than in Q2, pretty much. And in Germany, we have seen in October a stabilization in mixed industrial waste, meaning that mixed industrial waste in October 2023 was at the same level and even slightly better than in 2022, to give you two examples.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

If you want to have an idea of the various weights of our various type of business within the waste, it's page 20, where you see the percentage in solid waste and hazardous waste, and with those percentage, you have basically the 80/20 rule of where we're big. So you're thinking your question was about France and Germany, but we are big in the U.K. We are very big in Australia as well, which is in a very positive, I guess, you know, trend as we speak. And in terms of hazardous waste, we are very strong in the U.S., for instance. So I guess I would dezoom a little bit to your question, because as I said, we are very much more outside Europe than we were a few years ago.

So U.S., Australia, typically, have taken a bigger share than it used to be the case. In terms of your question on Lydec, there is no specific news. We are going on with discussing with the antitrust authority on one side and the interim minister on the other, to try to find, you know, a solution which will be compliant with, you know, like, all the parties, you know, constraints and wills. And we are really under discussion as we speak today. So there is nothing specifically new to say today. In terms of synergies, yes, you're right. We are really on a very good trend.

That's why I can confirm that this year we will exceed our targets, which are accumulated from day one to 180. Of course, we'll do much more. You can do the math, so it will be much more this year, and I don't intend to slow down the pace. The EUR 500 million accumulated over four years, I guess, you know, I'm very confident we should achieve it, and I'm more a delivery than promise type of lady. So I want to secure this, and I'm very happy we are really securing this delivery. Of course, if we can do more, we will. But so far, I'm focusing on delivering those EUR 500 million to start with.

Olly Jeffery
Director and Equity Research Analyst for European Utilities, Deutsche Bank

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have our next question coming from the line of Juan Rodriguez from Kepler. Please go ahead.

Juan Rodriguez
Equity Research Analyst for Utilities, Kepler

Hi. Thank you, and good morning. Thank you for taking our questions. I have a follow-up, if I may. It's mainly on the leverage side. I think I heard correctly that you signaled something around EUR 18.5 billion target for the end of the year. And looking at the new adjustment on the leverage target, if we look at the top part of the range, would be something closer to 2.8x-2.9x net debt. Is that correct? And the second one is on the pricing of new contracts. You signaled something around 4%-5% on the water in France. What have you—what other trends are you expecting on or have you seen in H2 already?

Because you signaled there was already a pricing for the energy sector and expected early in 2024, this could be quite helpful. Thank you.

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

... Maybe I will start with, the first one. On the leverage side, if you do the math, you're right, EUR 18.5 billion divided by the EBITDA at the end of the year, you are EUR 2.85 billion. So yes, so that's the reason why we, we, we said below 2.9x. Well, and, we, we know that we will be below 2.1x at year-end. This, that's the reason why we have improved our guidance, for the full year.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

I guess, the only uncertainty would be the Forex, Claude , right?

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Good question. Yes. And your second question, Juan, was about pricing of new contracts for... Sorry?

Juan Rodriguez
Equity Research Analyst for Utilities, Kepler

Yes, pricing of new contracts in H2, and what do you expect for early 2024?

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

On new contracts in general? So there is no big change in terms of pricing. We continue to increase our pricing, sorry, and as we said, the escalation formula.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Maybe I haven't understood fully your question. If you could rephrase it, so maybe we give you a more precise answer.

Juan Rodriguez
Equity Research Analyst for Utilities, Kepler

Yes. On the pricing, you signal already around 4%-5% increase expected for water in 2024. I saw on the presentation that you signaled that you already negotiated the energy contracts for the winter season. And what are your expectations going forward as well? It's, it's just to get a better idea of what the review dynamics is in terms of inflation against price under indexation and contract review.

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Mm-hmm.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

So, I guess on water, the way it works is, you know, we have anniversary dates of the contract, which could be in January, in April, in July. So it's a bit of a mix, hence my comment on the lagging effect. So, the 6% for this year, which, Claude mentioned, is a series of, 4% here, 7% there, depending on the date, if you want, the anniversary date, which is a mix, which altogether will be, around 6% this year. And again, as I said, our cost base is increasing by lower than this amount. In terms of the 4% next year, we don't know what we don't know about inflation, but, you know, we have some anniversary date in January, so we have a little bit of visibility here, and then April, and so on, so forth.

So our expectation is that, yes, it slowed down to something around 4%, and therefore, we won't have, you know, like, our cost base increasing by more than this amount. We will try to be, of course, increasing by less than this amount, in order to protect our margins. So just to try to detail a little bit, you know, the logic and our thinking here. In terms of energy contracts, we have two type of energy contracts, roughly. The district heating on one side, and the building energy services on the other. But on both case, we buy the energy in a way, on behalf of our customers, and, that's why I said it's pass-through for us.

And therefore, as you know, we are hedged for the energy price for next year, around three-quarters of it, as Claude mentioned. So which means that whether the energy price is up or down, you know, we protect against next year's results. But maybe on the second point, you want to comment, Claude?

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Nothing much to say, Estelle. We can give you one more comment on energy contracts. The energy that we sell from the waste to energy businesses-

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Mm-hmm.

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

So we have also hedged in the U.K. and in France, which are the two main contributors. In France, we are, we have better prices than last year, and in the U.K., it is in same range as for 2024, we will have better prices than 2023, and in the U.K., that will be in the same order of magnitude.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

So all in all, in the energy, that's why we always said it's, again, neutral or slightly positive. And the slightly positive comes from the various opportunities we have of selling extra services when the energy price is high, say, on C&I waste services in U.S. is an example. So it's an indirect impact, which makes it slightly positive.

Juan Rodriguez
Equity Research Analyst for Utilities, Kepler

Excellent. Quite useful. Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. We have our next question coming from the line of Philippe Ourpatian from ODDO BHF. Please go ahead.

Philippe Ourpatian
Pan European Utilities Analyst, ODDO BHF

Yes, good morning to all of you. Just two question. The first one is, could you just, Claude, mainly regarding what Ajay request in terms of net efficiency, could you just remind us what could be the reason to be positioned between the 30% of keeping the net efficiency to the 50%? What are the main, I would say, moving parts which are positioning your net efficiency on one side of the range versus the other side of range, just to remind us this how this 34% is linked to? That's the first question. And the second one, you mentioned in your presentation that you have EUR 6 billion of net cash and no seni- no issue, I would say, of new debt.

Could you just provide us also the level of liquidity you have, so mainly the guaranteed undrawn credit line in your balance sheet, please? Many thanks.

Claude Laruelle
CFO, Veolia

Maybe I will start by the first question. On top of this, we have, in terms of, our RCF, we have a new RCF that we have been renewed for EUR 4.5 billion. In total, it's, the cash that we have, plus EUR 4.5 billion to answer the first question. The second question-

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

... So in terms of the first question, so what are the typical moving parts? One is, how much does it cost us to deliver those efficiency plan? Because at times you have to invest a little bit, invest as in not CapEx, but invest as in there is a bit of a cash cost, to deliver this. This could be, for instance, I don't know, you know, when we merge, we change location, to go for a lease which is less expensive in a city. At times, you have a little bit of a breakup cost, to exit your existing lease to go for a less expensive one, just to give you an idea. So that nets off the gain. So that's one moving part.

The other one is what you give back to the customer, because when we renew contract, we tend to give back some of our efficiency to the customer, so it's the typical moving part. So it's those which goes up and down, and over the years are between 30 or I guess, a third and half, which we retain net of those costs.

Philippe Ourpatian
Pan European Utilities Analyst, ODDO BHF

Many thanks. Very clear.

Operator

Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Ms. Brachlianoff for final closing comments.

Estelle Brachlianoff
CEO, Veolia

Thank you very much, for all your questions. You've understood that, we are, very, very confident, not only very happy about the very solid results, but the foundation of the company out there, as well as the pilot team. So we are confident not only for this quarter, but for the quarters to come. Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your lines. Have a lovely day.

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