Worldline SA (EPA:WLN)
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May 14, 2026, 5:35 PM CET
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Earnings Call: Q2 2023

Jul 26, 2023

Operator

Good day. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Worldline H1 2023 Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star 1 and 1 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 and 1 again. Please be advised today's conference is being recorded. Now, I'd like to hand the conference over to our speaker today, Gilles Grapinet, CEO. Please go ahead.

Gilles Grapinet
CEO, Worldline

Many thanks. Ladies and gentlemen, good morning. This is Gilles Grapinet speaking. Thank you for attending today's Worldline conference call on our first half 2023 results. I will start this presentation providing you with some key highlights of our first semester. Marc Henri, our Deputy CEO, will make a deeper dive on merchant services dynamics. As we regularly do, we'll update you on some innovation topic today, with a focus on artificial intelligence in Worldline. Hereafter, Grégory, our Group CFO, will present you in detail our first half results before a wrap up from myself for the conclusion before opening the Q&A session. Let me start by stating that I believe that Worldline did deliver a good first half 2023, completely in line with our full year guidance.

Indeed, after our solid full year 2022 and Q1 2023, our Q2 is showing again a good organic growth with 9.4%, bringing the H1 at 9.3%. This performance has been fueled again by our merchant services activities, up 13.1% in H1, of which +13.5% in Q2. It reflects the good commercial dynamic achieved during the semester in terms of acquiring volume development, merchant count growth, and several new large merchant wins. This overall growth could translate into 80 basis points improvement of our OMDA margin, while our OMDA conversion rate into free cash flow reached a high level, close to 45%.

Now, regarding the strategic initiatives of the group, during the first half, as you know, we've been very active with the entry into exclusive discussions mid-April with Crédit Agricole to create together a new major player in merchant services in the French payment market. Since then, we have reached some first important milestones in our roadmap to closing. In parallel, we have completed the closing of Banco Desio in Italy and are now in the integration and migration process that I will update. All this taken into consideration, we believe this H1 2023 has been a positive semester for our group. It is paving the way to a successful execution of our full year 2023 guidance and our midterm trajectory that we, of course, will both confirm today.

Regarding our key H1 figures now, revenue stood at EUR 2.24 billion, representing an organic growth of +9.3%. Regarding profitability, our OMDA stood at EUR 519 million, representing a 23.1% of revenue, or an 80 basis points improvement. This margin improvement highlights our ability to deliver the expected 2023 synergy, to take advantage of our operating leverage, and to start to benefit from our repricing efforts and cost containment actions. All this allowed us to overcome the inflationary pressures weighing on our cost base and deliver an H1 OMDA in line with the anticipated 2023 trajectory. Free cash flow was EUR 232 million, representing a very good conversion ratio, close to 45% of OMDA.

Normalized net income group share reached EUR 243 million, representing 10.8% of our revenues. Normalized diluted EPS reached EUR 0.84 per share, up 10.5%. On the strategic initiative side, as said, we've been very busy, and we believe very successful, too. First, fully in line with our well-known strategic roadmap to expand our distribution network through bank partnerships, the announcement made in April of our entry into exclusive discussions with Crédit Agricole is a very important achievement. Together, we target indeed to create a new major player in merchant services in the French payment market, which is the largest European acquiring market, where so far, Worldline was not operating as an acquirer, as you know.

Doing so, we will also get access to the local domestic scheme, Cartes Bancaires, one of the very few that was not in our portfolio of local European domestic scheme. It will be also, doing so, creating for Worldline a new and strong long-term organic growth engine that will actually be visible in our figures, primarily from 2025 onwards. As it has been structured as a contribution in kind for both parties, it is preserving our balance sheet for other potential M&A on which we work. Since the announcement, we have quite well executed the roadmap to closing, hand in hand with Crédit Agricole, and already reached timely, important first milestone with the finalization of the social processes and the antitrust filing process, which is now officially initiated.

This allows me to confirm a target signing in the course of Q3 2023 and a closing in Q4 2023. Talking about strategic development, we have also completed earlier this semester, the closing of Banco Desio, and we have actually started our integration and migration process right away. The main important point here is that the merchant migration on our targeted platform of the Banco Desio portfolio is executed very efficiently, and we target to finalize this process in the course of the current quarter as per plan. This asset represents a very nice add-on to our existing Italian activities, leveraging the banking network of Desio and its distribution. I will now give the floor to Marc-Henri Desportes, to guide you through the commercial dynamics in our Merchant Services division.

Marc-Henri Desportes
Deputy CEO, Worldline

Thank you, Gilles. Good morning to you all. I'm very pleased to take the floor and to guide you through this part of today's presentation, zooming on our merchant acquiring business market performance in the 1st half. I will comment three types of business information and KPIs, as we now regularly do. Regarding the merchant services mass market segment, I will share with you the evolution of our net number of small merchants over the period. I will share with you the main wins and upsells of Q2 on the large merchants, and the new partnerships signed, allowing us to further accelerate our monetization strategy. I will conclude by sharing some updates on Worldline acquiring MSV growth.

To end this part of my presentation, I will update you on the innovation strategy of Worldline, with a focus this time on artificial intelligence, as it has been a topic of interest for many of you in our latest interaction. Deep diving on merchant services dynamics with merchant KPIs. In H1 2023, we have onboarded circa 40,000 new merchants, pushing our merchant base at the end of June 2023, at well done 39 million merchants. It represents a very satisfactory growth of Worldline acquiring merchant base versus 2022, which is fully in line with our midterm objective. It's a great achievement since the acquisition of Ingenico, fully illustrate that what we have built through our strategic approach, based on distribution partnership with banks and direct sales channel.

This is also noticeable that we have delivered these good numbers despite some repricing actions in the current inflationary context. Since 2021, we have grown our merchant base by circa 120,000 merchants on a net monthly average growth of 7,000 merchants in both in-store and online. Commenting now on some big names. Let us start with the development of existing customers. In the online space, with Blizzard Entertainment and Valve on the gaming industry, we have strongly expanded the scope of services, offering them access to new geographies using specific domestic corridor, such as LATAM or Turkey. In the in-store with Areas, one of the world's leading providers for travel, food, and retail services, we have extended our geographical scope.

Also in store, in the in-store domain with SNCB, the National Railway Company of Belgium, we have expanded our global one-stop-shop payment solution, coupling acceptance and acquiring, offering a seamless interface for all channels, such as web or online, while covering all payment means, from domestic schemes to alternative payment methods. With a large airline in the top 10 worldwide, we have extended our product offering with an Apple Pay solution, increasing our share of wallet. Coming to new wins on full service and omni-channel solution on the electric vehicle charging space. We made a difference again for Evonity, a Belgian manufacturer of fast chargers for electric vehicles. This is one of many example in this successful vertical. Regarding Camping Vision, especially in the campsite bookings, Worldline ability to manage complexity on a full service offering has been key.

In the online space, a full service offering, including multi-countries and multi-currencies, coupled with value-added services, allowed us to gain AmazingTalker, a one-to-one learning native teachers platform. Regarding the partnerships, our scale, reach, and single entry point of circa 15% of the European retail give us a key advantage and strong attractivity in the payment ecosystem. This position allowed us to pursue the momentum in numerous partnership signings during the second quarter with Fintechs and digital native players. On this side, you can see VTEX, with whom we made available a plug-in payment solution embedded into the enterprise Digital Commerce platform and enhancing authorization and conversion rates. With Travelplanbooker, an all-in-one planning and booking platform, we have integrated our full cross-border acquiring and payment services, improving efficiency and performance.

Last, as announced by Apple in May and July, we have been selected among over players as a partner in Australia and in the U.K. to introduce Tap to Pay on iPhone. Overall, a very successful quarter with a sustained commercial momentum. Let's look at another building blocks of our revenue growth, the MSV. During the first half, it was up circa 10% in H1 2023, to reach a level of EUR 220 billion. After Q1, still supported by some favorable comparison effect, we enter in Q2 on a more normalized dynamic, i.e., with no more post-COVID effects, translating into a mid to high single-digit growth as expected. We continue to see this dynamic at the beginning of Q3 2023, with a steady trend in MSV expansion, in line with the Q2 developments, fueled by both in-store and online volumes.

Regarding innovation, as said, I will share with you a focus on artificial intelligence in Worldline. Coming to this topic of AI, as a tech company, we did not discover it with the new attention for generative AI. We are already an intense user of the previous generation of tools. We fully recognize generative AI comes with new promises that we are exploring without delay to get the maximum benefit of its potential. Let me first start with what we already have in terms of standard AI in our live offerings and services to improve merchant performance and internal efficiency. Globally, artificial intelligence is embedded in our fraud detection offering, in our customer retention tools, in our anomaly detection and monitoring services.

We offer to our most demanding customer a dynamic routing of transaction based on AI, able to predict where transactions are the most, more likely to be accepted, and thus increasing the authorization rate. We leverage our data set from multiple merchants to derive insights internally to determine patterns across different merchant verticals, currency, cardholder, origin, as an example. We use this combined data set to optimize pricing strategy and assess the probability of success for upselling or cross-selling campaigns based on the past behavior changes of other customers. Part of our payment performance, sorry, optimization strategy uses this combined data set to best determine the likely behavior of schemes and help our customer present payment with a greater likelihood of approval.

Combining customer data set is also obviously instrumental in our ability to combat fraud and money laundering, provide our customer with better products to address those. Now, regarding the new generative AI opportunities, we secured very early a widespread but controlled access to the latest tools, the first of which, naturally, ChatGPT-4. We launched in parallel, dedicated task force and encourage experimentation to assess the potential impact and benefits of generative AI. We already have several live proof of concepts to determine potential use case that we could develop at scale.

Main topics of investigations today are the merchant onboarding, to assess potential faster onboarding through KYC procedure, evolutive dashboard for the merchant, enriching our value proposition for topics such as dispute management handling, efficiency improvement on the coding side, supporting our teams to go faster with go-to market for faster go-to market. We've already 100 of internal users in this domain, software coders. Increased user experience on the customer service front with upgraded self-service tools. As these are still proof of concepts, we have no doubt that we will be able to boost our productivity and quality of service leveraging this technology, and we do believe that our tech DNA will be key to be a front runner in this domain. I will now give the floor to Grégory to present you our financial performance.

Grégory Lambertie
Group CFO, Worldline

Thank you, Marc-Henri, and good morning, everyone. Glad to be presenting another set of strong results. During H1 2023, Worldline posted EUR 2.2 billion in revenues, up 9.3% versus last year, mainly driven by the strong growth of our MS engine. In H1 2023, the main highlights are as follows: MS is up 13.1% for H1, supported by very good 13.5% growth in Q2. This performance is good in all business segments, driven by both payment volume growth and repricing actions. Our pure-play enterprise online business, Digital Commerce, is now strongly accretive to MS growth. After this very strong start of the year, we anticipate to remain in double-digit territory, with Q4 better than Q3. FS was up 1.2%, with good transaction volume dynamics.

Q2 was softer, as expected, mainly due to the lengthening of sales cycle on our bank prospect side. For H2, we expect FS to remain soft across the semester. MTS came in flattish as in Q1, with healthy underlying growth and solid commercial successes, but still impacted by a telco contract re-insourcing at the end of H1 2022 in France. For H2, we expect growth to re-accelerate along the semester. Overall, a good start of the year, in particular in MS. Moving to the next slide regarding OMD performance. During H1 2023, Worldline's OMD reached EUR 519 million, representing a 23.1% OMD margin or 80 basis point improvement versus last year.

In more detail, MS margin is up 100 basis points at 24.8%, benefiting from good growth and solid operating leverage, as well as the on-track execution of Ingenico synergies. FS margin is down 70 basis points to 27.4%, as expected, absorbing the majority of cost inflation on a mostly fixed price structure, thanks to mitigation measures put in place in Q2. MTS profitability is up 50 basis points to 13.1%, as mitigation measures are slightly ahead. Finally, on the corporate side, our corporate costs have reached EUR 30 million in H1, versus EUR 32 million in H1 2022, as a result of the full implementation of our corporate business model and the cost mitigation actions also put in place. Overall, as for revenues, a good performance in H1.

This expected evolution is fully in line with our expectations for 2023, given business seasonality and the headwinds we faced. Moving to the other elements of the income statement. Non-recurring items reached EUR 245 million, and consisted mostly of purchase price allocation, amortization on past acquisitions for EUR 133 million, and integration and post-acquisition costs of EUR 70 million, corresponding to the Ingenico integration costs on the one hand, and costs related to the new scopes acquired, in particular, ANZ, Axepta, Eurobank, and Banco Desio. As a result, operating income for the first half 2023 was EUR 120 million.

Net financial expense amounted to EUR 15 million, showing a decrease versus last year, mainly due to an increase in interest income in our cash balances for EUR 7 million, as well as an EUR 11 million positive one-off effect related to the EUR 385 million bond repurchases executed during the semester. The tax charge was EUR 25 million, with an effective tax rate of 23.5% in H1, stable versus last year, and consistent with our objective to remain around 24% for the year. As a result of the items above, consolidated net income group share stood at EUR 81 million. Finally, on a normalized basis, net income stood at EUR 243 million, or 10.8% of total revenue. Our normal diluted earnings stood at EUR 0.84 per share, an 11% improvement versus last year.

On the cash flow statement, we have CapEx at 7.8% of revenue, or EUR 176 million, in line with H2 2022 level and consistent with our full year trajectory at around 7%. Change in working cap brings a positive contribution of EUR 77 million, reflecting seasonality effect, as well as M&A and integration impact. Integration costs were fully in line with expectations and mostly relate to Ingenico, as well as more recent scopes. Overall, H1 free cash flow stood at EUR 232 million, representing 44.7% cash conversion, supporting our full-year trajectory. Finally, looking at net debt evolution, we delivered strongly throughout the semester, and group net debt decreased to EUR 1.8 billion versus EUR 2.2 billion at the beginning of the year.

The main drivers for this evolution are the solid free cash flow generation of EUR 232 million we just mentioned, and the positive last cash in coming from the successful disposal of TSS, net of cash outflow related to Banco Desio and OPP acquisition in H1. Overall, we're fully in line with the plan and on an LTM OMDA basis, our current leverage ratio stands at 1.6 times at the end of June, and reflects a strong deleveraging versus the 3.4 times LTM ratio at the end of H1 last year. Based on this very good H1 2023, we confirm our 2023 guidance with 8%-10% organic revenue growth, an OMDA margin improvement above 100 basis points, and finally, an OMDA conversion rate into free cash flow between 46%-48%.

This full-year guidance remains based on unchanged macroeconomic conditions. Let me hand over to Gilles to conclude.

Gilles Grapinet
CEO, Worldline

Many thanks, Grégory. Now moving to some key takeaways of this first half. The four key messages that I would like you to keep in mind following this publication are the following ones: First, Worldline did a good first half in term of revenues, with a very solid growth in merchant services, fueled by continuous commercial developments, market share gains, and a very strong dynamic at work for large merchant wins. This is more than compensating the anticipated post-COVID normalization of payment volume dynamics. Second, on top of the solid growth that generates operating leverage, we could fully execute all our actions to improve profitability, synergies extraction, first wave of repricing, cost containment actions. This is allowing us to stay fully on track in term of margin expansion, while absorbing, as any other companies, wage inflation and other headwinds we must face in 2023.

Third, we believe that the payment market in Europe still offer meaningful M&A opportunities to expand our distribution network and enhance our market position in certain countries or certain market segments. The Crédit Agricole deal is, from that standpoint, an important strategic development for Worldline, even if its financial contribution will only start to be visible in circa 18 months, once the deal will be fully up and running. Thanks to the disposal of TSS and good cash flow generation, we keep a very strong financial flexibility and stay committed to pursue other potential value creative acquisitions. Four, as a conclusion, I want to share with you that as a management team, we feel that H1 2023 has been a semester of real and fundamental progress for Worldline, not only from a financial standpoint, but as well on many other key dimensions of our transformation journey since the acquisition of Ingenico.

Every semester, indeed, we reach new milestones on our integration roadmap. We improve both our technology stack and product portfolio. Thank you very much for your attention. I am now ready with Marco and Greg to take your questions.

Operator

Thank you. To ask a question, you need to press star one and one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced, and to withdraw your question, you can press star one and one again.

Gilles Grapinet
CEO, Worldline

Many questions.

Operator

Thank you. We'll now take our first question. Please stand by. Your first question is from the line of Frédéric Boulan from Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Frédéric Boulan
Head of European Software Research, Bank of America

Hi, good morning, Gilles, Marco, and Grégory. Two questions, please. First of all, on the margin side, if you can maybe share a little bit of elements on the main moving parts into the second half and 2024 around headcount and other items, and in general, you know, what drives the confidence you have in the ability to accelerate margin development this year and next year? Then following up, Gilles, on your last comments around M&A opportunities. As you pointed out, I mean, the Crédit Agricole deal structure does not consume much balance sheet. We have a net debt that's contracting quite quickly.

You know, can you share a little bit with us a framework to think about further M&A or potentially eventually return cash to shareholders in the medium term, if that balance sheet remains very much under control? Thank you.

Gilles Grapinet
CEO, Worldline

Hello, Frederic. I'll get Greg to take the first one, and we'll come back on the second.

Grégory Lambertie
Group CFO, Worldline

Indeed. Thank you. Good morning, Fred. On your first question regarding margin outlook for H2, what we expect is progress for the three GBLs. MS should remain the main contributor, fueled by operating leverage and synergies. On FS, we should stabilize the margin in H2 in percentage terms, thanks to several ongoing cost mitigation actions, of which we start to see the effect at the end of H1. On MTS, we expect to continue the margin increase trajectory, thanks to growth acceleration in H2 and new organization put in place at the end of 2022. As you know from our history, we've always delivered our margin development, and that's what we're going to do in H2.

Gilles Grapinet
CEO, Worldline

Thank you, Greg. Frederic, regarding your second question, indeed, that's true. Crédit Agricole is a very small deal from balance sheet standpoint, on top of being certainly a very strong growth performer, once it will be up and running from 2025 onwards. Personally, I can't wait being there. Coming back to your question, that is allowing the balance sheet to remain quite strong, and indeed, we will deleverage fast. Which is good news, because, number one, there are still a significant number of opportunities in our M&A radar screen as we speak, particularly still in Europe. We have many banks that are driving strategic reviews of their payment portfolios, particularly in the Merchant Services space, fully cognizant that the market has been transforming, and they need really to do serious things to adapt to this new reality.

The form it may take, of course, may vary. In certain cases, there are actually cash consideration still significantly in play in such discussions. It's why I believe we may use a part of the balance sheet definitely to get there. It is also why, at this point in time, M&A remain the priority focus for capital allocation on top of CapEx and R&D, where we want to pursue investing. For the time being, the board has still considered that M&A offers a better value creation for shareholders. Of course, you can be sure that it is a topic that is regularly discussed at board level, and of course, this may change over time. For the time being, at least, let's say for the next 18 months' time, it is what we believe is appropriate.

Of course, any change here will be actively communicated to the investor base, but so far, I think we will stay focused at work in Europe in particular.

Frédéric Boulan
Head of European Software Research, Bank of America

Perfect. Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. We'll now take our next question. Please stand by. This is from the line of Alastair Nolan from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Alastair Nolan
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Great. Thank you. Morning, everyone. Can we just dig in a little on the volume dynamics? I think you mentioned they slowed in the, in the second quarter. Can you maybe talk a little bit more about what you're seeing there, what drove that slowdown, how that is looking as we enter the third quarter? Also the dynamics between volume and price into the second half, and then maybe even beyond into 2024, just to get a better understanding of how you're thinking about that and what's been baked in terms of internal plans. Thank you.

Marc-Henri Desportes
Deputy CEO, Worldline

Thanks, Alistair. I will take that one, Marco speaking. It's a fact that we saw that MSV evolution was a bit softer in Q2 versus Q1. We are not interpreting it as a clear evidence of an economic slowdown. We are rather at this stage, considering that we are what we expected post-COVID, rather normalization when you had this acceleration of travel also throughout 2022, that is now well established. Still, the MSV momentum remains strongly positive. As we said, we continue to see this dynamic as the beginning of Q3, even slightly better. This being said, we are in a position to maintain a very strong growth on this basis.

The growth, you may have it in mind, the MSV we are publishing is only for the acquiring business. Only 50% of our revenue in merchant services is directly, pure commercial acquiring. And when we grow, we grow not only on volumes, we grow also in terms of service, in terms of cost selling, and in terms of pricing. In this inflationary complex, we mentioned it, we had to reprice. We did it in a very sustainable way without significant impact on churn. We were able to continue handling a positive evolution of number of net merchants.

We are very much in the range of price inflation. We think that this is sustainable and this is also something we can push throughout 2024, as you were mentioning the next coming year. For the overall dynamics in terms of cost selling, adding new products, developing overall activities, also something on which we are, since the integration of Ingenico, managing the combination of offers, enhancing the portfolio, investing quite a lot, as you could see also in our numbers. We feel confident that this is a momentum that we sustain, and we will sustain also in the coming months.

Alastair Nolan
Equity Research Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Very helpful. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. I'll now take our next question. Please stand by. This is from the line of Hannes Leitner from Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Hannes Leitner
Managing Director, Senior Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

Yes, thank you for letting me on, there was a couple of questions. The first one is, also on merchant services. Could you talk about the impact of scheme fees? We are expecting the H1 report, I guess, in a couple of days. Then, just like philosophically, can you maybe zoom out, looking at the medium-term ambition, financial services and MTS is substantially underperforming your targets, your set targets there. Maybe you can elaborate what really changed compared to October 2021. Then maybe I have a follow-up. Thank you.

Grégory Lambertie
Group CFO, Worldline

Thank you, Hannes. This is Grégory speaking. On scheme fees, as we discussed last publication, there is indeed a difference between the reported growth with scheme fees and without scheme fees. For us, it's always a similar impact at round about 2%, and this is mainly due to the fact that we have a mixed impact with our commercial activity growing. Regarding MTS, as you mentioned, we had a flattish H1, it's very identified in terms of one single contract impact with the rest of the business is still on a very strong path.

Also noticeable that we reworked the profitability of this business, and the profitability, despite the flat margin, has improved. We have a good visibility on continuing to improve this profitability. Grégory mentioned it, but the level of signature in this business or new business signature was exceptionally high in H1, and so it sustained visibility on reaccelerating and coming back to the growth we are targeting progressively throughout H2. Given this overall situation of back to the growth we ambition when we mentioned October 21 or CMD and the improvement of profitability, it's not the time for a change of philosophy as we speak. Hannes, just one point on the scheme fees.

The 2%, as I mentioned, is at MS level, just to be clear.

Hannes Leitner
Managing Director, Senior Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

That's very helpful. I meant actually on financial services. MTS is clearly a very small segment. On financial services, you seem to track behind and, you know, like you clearly initiated cost initiatives, your offshore headcount increased substantially last year. Where do you see your this phase? Because if you look at IT service cycle, IT services seems to go into a much tougher comparatives. What is your expectation for financial services into second half and then into next year?

Grégory Lambertie
Group CFO, Worldline

Yeah. On financial services, it's a fact that we have a good underlying growth in terms of run activity, but we lack new signature in a context where decision cycle at the bank side is getting longer. We still observe and have a good pipe quality, and the size of this pipe is satisfactory, but its maturity is still back and loaded. That give us clearly an H2 that will be soft as well. We have accelerated the action of cost management throughout the semester, as you referred to.

In particular, if you look at people equation or people number in one line, you will see that all the growth is now in offshore resource, and that's particularly true, even more so for FS. We are acting, and that gives us the confidence to restore the profitability of this business. In terms of top line, we are in a situation where for H2, it still remains soft. Too soon to tell about further revision. That would be a topic we will come back to in the virtual.

Hannes Leitner
Managing Director, Senior Equity Research Analyst, Jefferies

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll now take our next question. Please stand by. This is on the line of James Goodman from Barclays. Please go ahead.

James Goodman
Research Analyst, Barclays

Well, thanks very much. I'll add a couple of questions around the cash flow, please. Firstly, just on the working capital, strong inflow in the first half. I think you mentioned that will normalize in the second. Just looking back, we had EUR 100 million or so inflow last year, I think EUR 60 million or so the year before that. I wondered if you could just help us on the sort of underlying structural working cap dynamics of the business, how you've been able to generate such a strong inflow from working cap, and how we should sort of think about that into the future. The other one was just on the CapEx. How comfortable are you there to get that down to the 7% for the year?

what's going to help you to lower the CapEx ratio? Presumably, the Crédit Agricole CapEx is outside that. Thank you.

Marc-Henri Desportes
Deputy CEO, Worldline

In terms of the working capital, what we've seen is an inflow this year, as was the case last year in H1. This is still the effect of aligning a number of T&Cs from our acquisitions with the Worldline way of purchasing effectively. There's a seasonality effect in H1, and finally, the impact of M&A integration. That's what we're seeing, should normalize and neutralize in the medium term. In terms of the CapEx, I mean, we've continued to significantly invest in our products. We are pushing for the rapid integrations in our more recent JVs.

For H2, CapEx intensity and percentage of revenue should be lower, and we intend to be back into the 7% range.

James Goodman
Research Analyst, Barclays

Okay, thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll now take our next question. Please stand by. This is from the line of Antoine Hucher from UBS. Please go ahead.

Antoine Hucher
Analyst, UBS

Hello, good morning. I was wondering if you could come back on the pricing actions you said you are taking in merchant services. Is it something that you already went through completely in Q2 and did it help materially, like as a revenue growth number? My second question is on the impact of inflation. I think you mentioned the tailwind of 130 basis points last year. Could you give some color on what was the tailwind from inflation in H1? Thank you.

Marc-Henri Desportes
Deputy CEO, Worldline

Thank you, Antoine. Marco speaking. On the repricing, it's not something that started in Q2. It's something we started also already at the end of 2022 and accelerated. We are not talking about something huge, we are still in the low single percentage, in terms of impact on our growth, so impact on our price as well as you can understand. It remains reasonable and in the range of the inflation we are experiencing, and we are going to accelerate it in H2, in also still reasonable terms. That's what we intend to do, which is to factor the current environment in which we are.

It's also, by the way, reflects our ability in this market and given our customer base, to have a price maker dimension for our activity. On inflation, we indeed communicated last year about a headwind that we've been facing of round about 130 basis points at group level. This is something that we are still facing in a similar level of magnitude. That's the extra inflation that we're facing, and that's why we are putting in place, on the one hand, the cost mitigation, including offshoring that Marco mentioned, and on the other, repricing, to which we just alluded to.

Antoine Hucher
Analyst, UBS

Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. We'll now take our last question today. Please stand by. Last question is from a line of Antonin Baudry from HSBC. Please go ahead.

Antonin Baudry
Equity Analyst, HSBC

Yes, good morning, everyone. Thank you for taking my questions. The first one is on Merchant Services. You have this price increase. When do you expect to have the full impact of the price increase on the revenues? I mean that the basis of comparison is more favorable in H2, especially Q4. Should we expect Merchant Services revenues growth to remain stable at H1 level? This is my first question. The second question is about financial results. A good results in H1. How should we see the evolution of financial costs in H2 going forward after the bond refinancing on what is the normalized level for financial costs? Thank you.

Gilles Grapinet
CEO, Worldline

Well, thanks, Anthony. Good, coming back on on repricing and top-line momentum for merchant services. As I said, it's something on which we already got a significant impact in H1, but we are continuing this action, and we'll get even further impact in H2. That, as we are adding some action, will materialize a bit more in Q4. Take it that we intend to remain at a low double-digit growth on merchant services in H2, with a Q4 that will be better than the Q3. That would be the big picture, talking about top line and talking about merchant services. Now, on financial results.

Grégory Lambertie
Group CFO, Worldline

Results. Yeah. As I mentioned versus last year, we benefited from a couple of elements. First, the fact that we are managing, we're taking advantage of the inverted interest rate curve, therefore benefiting from a good yield on our cash, that had an impact of EUR 7 million positive in H1. Absent any major change in the yield curve shape, we should benefit from the same impact in H2. In terms of the bond repurchase, this was a one-off. It helped us for EUR 11 million. That's something, that should, I mean, there's no plan at this stage for H2.

I would say that a normalized level for H2 is at around EUR 30+ million, versus the EUR 41 we had last year and the EUR 15 we have in this first semester.

Gilles Grapinet
CEO, Worldline

Yes, thank you, Grégory. Antonin, to expand a bit to Marc's answer regarding indeed MS dynamic, I think what is really important in the repricing is that as importantly, it will pursue having its full effect in 2024. It will be, of course, an important contributor also to the 2024 MS growth dynamics, because, of course, this is ramping up progressively, as Marc-Henri said, when it started. The first wave started end of 2020. Depending on market reality and inflationary context, of course, we don't exclude to pursue it. Clearly, we are, as Marc-Henri said, somehow having a real pricing power that we are mobilizing here, and we will pursue using it, of course, where appropriate and in the proper magnitude.

On top of that, of course, the business model that we've been building in MS is working extremely well, as you could see in Marc-Henri's report. I mean, there is a continuous merchant count expansion. We continuously add new names into the large merchant group that we have. Of course, on top of that, we enjoy also this ability to upsell added value services down the road. I think what we can see this semester is the engine, a couple of years after the start of the integration of Ingenico at full speed. Of course, many things we anticipated by then. What is a bit new indeed, is the repricing impact.

That was not factored as such, that's been allowed somehow by the inflationary context and the real pricing power that we start to have as a quite prominent payment brand that is appreciated by customers. Of course, all that need to be managed in the proper magnitude, I think it's exactly what we did over the last quarters very successfully.

Grégory Lambertie
Group CFO, Worldline

Thank you very much.

Gilles Grapinet
CEO, Worldline

Thank you, Antonin. I think we come now to the end of this meeting. I would like to really thank you very much. Looking forward to interact with some of you, and many of you, most probably, in the coming weeks, and in between, for the one that are going, I guess, to take a very well-deserved summer break, enjoy. Talk to you soon, guys.

Operator

Thank you. This does conclude the conference for today. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

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