Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Evonik Industries AG Q3 2025 earnings conference call. I am Matilde, the course call operator. I would like to remind you that all participants will be in listen-only mode, and the conference is being recorded. The presentation will be followed by a Q&A session. You can register for questions at any time by pressing star and one on your telephone. For operator assistance, please press star and zero. The conference must not be recorded for publication or broadcast. At this time, it's my pleasure to hand over to Christian Kullmann, CEO. Please go ahead.
Thanks a lot, and welcome to our Q3 earnings call. Looking around in our boardroom, I see a very different setup here today. First of all, welcome to Claus Rettig, our Interim CFO, who is sitting left to me. Many of you already know him. In his previous roles, he represented Evonik at many investor conferences and capital markets days. His extensive experience and knowledge of our company is helping us in his new role. While the search for our CFO is ongoing, I would like to take the opportunity here today to thank Maike Schuh for her many years in different roles at Evonik. She has left the company at her own request in September. While this was very sudden, we have to accept that. I would like to thank her for her efforts and the positive impact she had in our organization.
Second, after 49, worthwhile to repeat, after 49 reported quarters as a public-listed company, Tim is not sitting on the right side of this table anymore. For more than a decade, he has built an investor relations program, which is highly regarded by all of you out there. Now he is taking a well-deserved sabbatical. Thank you, Tim, for your lasting commitment to the Evonik equity story. Christoph, whom all of you already know pretty well, will have a strong foundation to build on in the coming years. With that, let's go into today's results release. We will be largely focusing on the outlook during these short prepared remarks. You will know that we are facing a very tough environment currently. Although already coming from quite a low level, customers currently are acting even more cautiously across all segments and in nearly all end markets.
Demand stayed very weak, exiting the summer break. That is why, with our pre-release end of September, we had to lower our full-year guidance to around EUR 1.9 billion of adjusted EBITDA, coupled with a cash conversion rate between 30%-40%. Your and our look today goes ahead into the fourth quarter. For that, I am now handing over to Claus, who will show you why we are confident to achieve our outlook for both EBITDA and cash conversion in the last three months of the year.
Yeah, thank you, Christian. As you already said today, I'm here in my role as Interim CFO, which I took over a good month ago. I have to say, during my almost 30 years at Evonik and in my different roles, I've joined quite some meetings, events, investor presentations, discussions with customers, suppliers, and partners. Nevertheless, this earnings call marks a first for me, and unfortunately, we have to report a weak quarter three for Evonik. However, I spent most of my time in my new role already on the future. Let me therefore comment on the fourth quarter in two parts. I would like to start with the supporting factors for our earnings development. Then I would like to comment also on our free cash flow and networking capital expectations. Starting with the EBITDA. There are several supporting factors in Q4.
We will see the typical year-end recognition of sales and earnings in our healthcare segment, which will be more pronounced this year versus a weaker last year. In Animal Nutrition, we will see a pickup in sales coming from the low levels in Q3, especially compared to the previous year. These low levels were, of course, impacted by a planned maintenance shutdown. In Q4, almost full capacity will be available again, and we have already rather good visibility on the booking levels today. Another aspect to address are lower personnel costs. For several quarters, we are seeing a reduction in our FTE numbers, which will come through more and more into the bottom line. In addition, bonus provision releases are further supporting our earnings and also in the upcoming quarter.
All in all, with the environment that will stay tough, the finish until the end of the year will also certainly not be easy. There are good reasons why we are confident to deliver around EUR 1.9 billion of EBITDA this year. The same is true for the free cash flow. We are on track to deliver our guidance, which we gave as between 30% and 40% cash conversion. In the first six months of the year, the weaker-than-expected environment has made it difficult for us to reduce the networking capital as intended. Now we have adapted to the new situation, which has resulted in a positive free cash flow of around EUR 300 million in Q3. We have seen an acceleration in networking capital reductions throughout the quarter, making most progress in September. This makes us optimistic for further significant steps in quarter four.
To reach the midpoint of our guidance range, we will need another EUR 380 million of free cash flow in Q4. Again, as with the EBITDA, it will not be easy, but looking into the past years, it is doable, and that's what we are going to do. With that, I hand back to Christian.
Thanks a lot, Claus. Ladies and gentlemen, in this tough environment and facing clearly weaker results than we would like to see, the execution of our long-term strategy is more important than ever. Continuing to transform our portfolio and to optimize our administrative and operational processes is a necessity, and we have made good progress in both regards this quarter. A significant milestone is for sure the carve-out of our infrastructure activity, although maybe not so visible from the outside. This is one of the most complex reorganization projects in our history. More than 3,500 employees are directly affected, many more indirectly. It is good to see that we are well on track in our initial project plan. The new SYNEQT, that is the name of the new company, will start in January of next year as a 100% subsidiary of Evonik Industries.
The different options for the future will then be evaluated. Also, our Evonik Tailor Made program and the business optimization programs, like in high-performance polymers or healthcare, are progressing as planned. Compared to the end of last year's third quarter, the number of employees has shrunk by more than 740 without divestments. These are mostly leadership roles, mostly in Germany. This impact will be lasting and felt all the more once demand recovers. Executing those projects will help us to focus, to focus on our core activities, which is essential in these difficult times. Having said so, we are now happy to take your questions.
We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touch-tone telephone. You will hear a tone to confirm that you have entered the queue. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use only handsets while asking a question. Anyone who has a question may press star and one at this time. The first question comes from the line of David Symonds from BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Yeah, two from me, please. Just the first one, if you could give any comments on October trading and what you are seeing so far and whether it is supportive of hitting the EUR 1.9 billion on the nose. The second one, I am a little bit confused by Advanced Technologies. If I bridge from last year, taking relatively minor impacts from price, volume, and FX at sales and the standard drop-throughs, then I would probably come to an EBITDA number of around EUR 260 million for this year's Q3. Then you have reduced full-time employees in this division by around 450 year- on- year. I would think that would contribute sort of EUR 10 million-EUR 12 million positive. Yet the eventual number was only EUR 202 million EBITDA. There is arguably a EUR 70 million gap compared to what I am able to bridge.
I am just wondering, are there any sort of production effects or anything in this quarter? I can see that you have reduced working capital. Did you reduce production in Advanced Technologies in Q3 in order to support cash and so had less coverage of fixed costs? Where does that gap come from, please? Thank you.
Yeah, thank you, David. Both questions actually go to Claus. The first one on Q4 and October trading and the second one and then on Advanced Technologies.
Yes. Yeah, thank you for the question. Let me answer them as following. Maybe first on current trading and outlook. Like I said before, we are absolutely confident to reach our guidance around EUR 1.9 billion. There are certain factors that are supporting this. Like I said, we have a very strong demand on the Health Care side, which we see in Q4. We have some of the negative impacts we have seen in Q3 not anymore. That goes into costs for maintenance shutdowns we had. Our miscellaneous business was really weak in Q3 because of this maintenance shutdown cost plus the lower business. This we do not have in Q4 anymore. We also, like I said, have already a good visibility in our order book on the miscellaneous side. This is clearly giving us confidence.
Another piece that gives us confidence is when you look to our Q3 development month by month. September was already clearly on the upside. We had a weak August, but also not as weak as August, but a weak July. September certainly better. September contribution margin from the market was above the average of Q2. First indications of October are also that we are on the level of September. We head into the Q4 really along what we are expecting. That makes us very, let's say, confident that we can reach our guidance range as published. Maybe so far for this one. The other one was.
On Advanced Technologies.
Advanced Technologies, yes. It looks when you on the first glance, when you look to the numbers, of course, it looks strange because the EBITDA is much weaker than you would expect when you look to the loss on sales. However, some of the factors I already mentioned here is we had maintenance shutdown, which created quite a bit of cost on the cost side. Even more so weighing on the EBITDA was quite a big step in inventory reduction. As we said, last year we have done inventory management maybe a little bit earlier than this year. That is why we had a better cash flow last year at the same time. Now in Q3, we really, really go down on the cash flow side. Management of cash flow, reducing inventories is a big portion of this.
When you look to the numbers we provided to you with our KPIs, financial KPIs, you will see that when you look into the Advanced Technologies, yes, we dropped down from EUR 1.5 billion in Q3 2024 to EUR 1.4 billion, you can say, in Q3 2025. We almost lost the same amount on the EBITDA line from EUR 296 million to EUR 202 million. When you look on the cash flow side, you see that cash flow increased from EUR 146 million previous year's quarter to EUR 182 million this quarter. That gives you a clear indication this is due to working capital management. As we all know, this is suppressing EBITDA. These are the two factors: working capital reduction, maintenance shutdown costs, mainly on the maintenance side, with also a force majeure on the cross-linker side in the last quarter, which also was jeopardizing our cross-linker business.
These elements have contributed to this low EBITDA in Q3.
Thank you, Claus. Super clear. Thank you.
The next question comes from the line of Martin Rödiger from Kepler Cheuvreux. Please go ahead.
Hello, and thanks for taking my three questions. Number one, the earnings effect from the release of bonus provisions in Q3 has been obviously above the EUR 20 million level you had in Q2 already. Can you provide some color how much above EUR 20 million was it? What are the targeted bonus provision releases in Q4? Secondly, on the cost savings, based on what you have announced or done already so far. With restructurings and disposals, what are the incremental cost savings in 2026? Thirdly, a more general question, do you see any rising imports from Chinese competitors into Europe because export volumes, which were initially dedicated to the U.S. market, are now rerouted to Europe due to the implemented tariffs? If so, in which product categories is this the case? Thank you.
Yeah, a lot of questions for Claus today. We will start with the cost savings and incremental savings in 2026. Then going to the additional imports from China. On the bonus provisions, Martin, I think I can answer that. We do not comment and break that down in detail. Of course, it has been an impact in the other line in the third quarter. It will continue to support us to a certain degree, but there is also a structural element to that, as we mentioned during the prepared remarks. We have 740 FTEs less this year. On the personnel cost side, it is a combination of both. With that, over to Claus for the two points on cost savings and imports from China to Europe and the rest of the world.
Yeah. Yes. Let me comment on this as well. Like I said, we have the structural cost savings from all our cost savings programs, mainly ETM, Evonik Tailor Made. We heard before, they are actually proceeding fully as planned. One of the most significant key performance indicators is we are now year- on- year 740 FTEs less by the end of September. That is a very hard cost saving element. This is by far the biggest one. Like Christoph said already, we do not disclose and publish bonus pieces. Of course, they play a role, but to a much lesser degree. I think the structural part is going on, is going to continue into the next year, and also going to continue into Q4. We have the 740 less as we speak, but of course, they are being released or leaving us during the course of the year.
That means we do not have the 740 FTE cost impact for a full year yet. In Q4, we have a full element of this, and even more so in 2026. From that point of view, there is no doubt about it, we have compensating factors. We have inflation. Unfortunately, this year, we had pretty high salary adjustments in the chemical industry. They are on the other side. That is counteracting these cost savings. Nevertheless, without the structural improvements, we would have a bigger problem. That is maybe to the cost saving. Maybe inflation last year, salary cost inflation, to give you a number, around 7%. I think that is a pretty high number. The other one, imports from China. When you look to the general statistics, imports from China into Europe have been rising. That is clear.
We have certain areas in our business where we see this as well. It is sometimes indirectly. I will give you one example. We have imports on the silica side, which are used in tires. There we see directly, but you see also indirect impact that the entire tire is coming from China. Therefore, tire demand or tire production in Europe is going down. Yes, we have these effects. I could not quantify it at this moment in time exactly, but there are elements like this. The cross-linker, I think we mentioned this sometime before, we have pretty tough competition from China as well. It is not across the entire range, but in certain areas it is. From that point of view, it has an impact. Unfortunately, I cannot quantify it for you right now.
Thank you.
We now have a question from the line of Chetan Udeshi from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Thanks for taking my questions. My first question was following up on Martin's question in a slightly different way. Maybe this goes to Christian. I think the message you gave us, it seems, is much more of earnings pressure due to what you called broad-based demand weakness. I'm just curious, if I look at what BASF mentioned last week, that they think the global chemical production is up 4% year- on- year. I mean, it doesn't feel like the demand itself is so bad. What I'm trying to understand is how much of the pressure that you see, and not just you as in Evonik, but also as an industry right now in Europe, is actually structural in a way because there's just genuinely more competition across many product segments than we ever used to.
If that's the case, why should we think next year perhaps will be any different? That's one. Second, maybe a bit related to that, if I look at your Q3 earnings or Q3 EBITDA, if I just run rate that, we are close to EUR 1.8 billion annualized EBITDA right now. I mean, what are the key moving parts into next year which can help your number grow versus that run rate? Thank you.
Thank you, Chetan. Christian with that. I think Claus can then add a few points on 2026 performance, maybe a bit more on the business side.
Chetan, hi. Appreciate it to take your questions. Maybe first about the market environment. The simple math is the higher your businesses are positioned in respect of specialties, the better will be your chance in 2026. If you look at our numbers and figures in respect, for example, of our Custom Solutions businesses, you could see that they have been able, even in the tough environment, to hold the prices up. That is somewhat I would take as sign which is providing me with confidence. First. Second, it was about your expectations now in detail. Chetan, as you know, if I could, I would provide you with the very specific details, but it is a little bit early to give you now a complete picture about what we do see in 2026.
What for sure is that we, and I guess you could do the same, so it's fair to assume that the macroeconomic environment will stay somewhat challenging also in next year. Are there reasons that it could become better? Are there signs? For example, the German stimulus program, which we think German industry, and that means also we, could benefit from the second half of the year, that is something we see as supportive. It is to see how the weak U.S. dollar will next year, how the Americans will manage. On the other side, that is what I guess it is in those times of uncertainty worthwhile to underpin that we do remain, that we do remain delivering on our revised EBITDA and our free cash flow guidance in here. As Claus has already conveyed to you, we are confident to get it.
In a nutshell, it is about the long view. It is about executing our strategy of reducing costs and bettering our positions in regards of growth and optimization. I guess having said so, I do hand over to Claus.
Yeah. Thank you, Christian. Yeah, Chetan, so maybe to add. The Q3, I think, would not be a good quarter to extrapolate. Because I think the reasons I tried to explain before. This is a very weak quarter. For certain also extraordinary factors, like we said. 2026. Super difficult to judge right now, even though we are in the middle of the discussion. How to see 2026, what kind of budget we are going to have. Of course, we always have the ambition to be the next year better than the year before. But so far, super difficult to judge. However, there are certain areas which clearly make us confident that 2026 for Evonik can be better and should be better than 2025. The total environment, we do not believe will change much.
Even though you have seen President Trump and President Xi in South Korea agreed upon, let's say, call it a ceasefire, which helps. Since it is only a year, it does not really remove the underlying total uncertainty. It certainly will help. From that point of view, we believe the environment will be as tough as it is in 2025. Will it be worse? I do not think so. It comes back to our own kind of elements that we believe are supporting us in 2025. We have a very weak Oxeno business. Our C4 business in 2025. Here we clearly see an improvement coming up in 2026. Oxeno this year is not contributing at all, as you know. This will be different in 2025. Will it be back to 2024 levels? No. But something in between. That is certainly a major element which we see.
We have, like we said, capacities that are ramping up. One is older, our polyamide 12. By the way, polyamide 12 also in 2025 has volume growth. It is on the way up and it is going to continue. We have the membrane business, whereas this year a little bit weak. We expect better business next year. We have the price erosion on the cross-linker side that has come to a standstill. It is starting to reverse. Yeah, then we have Methionine. Not to forget, we have Methionine as, of course, a challenge. Maybe new capacity coming on stream, or most certainly on stream. When exactly, not clear yet. That can have a suppressing factor on the price. At the same time, we have improved our cost position.
In Singapore, where I am living, we have put a new technology into a Methionine plant this year, which is not only increasing the capacity, but also improving the cost. Over and above, even bigger cost improvement will come in our U.S. plant once we have the back integration in methylmercaptan on stream, which also will happen next year. We have new plants. We have a new alkoxide plant in operation now in Singapore. The demand for biodiesel catalyst and biodiesel is strong. There it is going to ramp up, contributing next year. We have just started a new plant for aluminum oxide. Highly dispersed aluminum oxide used in two big fields. One is lithium-ion battery, and the other big field is coatings. This is moving into markets where the demand is there. We have this new plant will contribute. Maybe. I already mentioned healthcare.
Healthcare is also a market segment where the demand is strong. It is not really affected by the general weakness. You know that we have also tendencies that healthcare production is coming back from Asia to the United States into Europe. I think we are going to benefit from this. There are these kind of elements which make us confident that we can increase our business in 2026 a little bit, despite still remaining challenging market conditions.
That's very clear. Thank you.
The next question comes from the line of Geoff Haire from UBS. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. I was wondering, could you help us understand what the sustainability of the profitability of the Infrastructure & Other is? Obviously, that was a big surprise, at least relative to what we were forecasting and consensus going forward, because obviously there's one-offs from bonus releases in there and what proportion of that's one-off and what portion is ongoing.
Yeah, thank you, Geoff. This goes to Claus.
The sustainability. Just to make sure I understood it correctly, sustainability of.
The earnings level was better than in the past quarters in the Infrastructure and Other lines.
Okay. Others. Yeah. Okay. As you know, in Infrastructure and Others, we have grouped our, like I said, infrastructure business, which we are currently carving out into a separate legal entity. We have also our Oxeno business in this. Here, the profitability improvement is coming from Oxeno in the next year. This year, like I said, it is weak. Here, of course, we have profited from—this is a very FTE-heavy operation. Many of the FTE reductions are taking place there. Also, in the course of the carve-out, we streamlined the processes. Absolutely sustainable. The Oxeno part in it, like I said, we really had a deep dive into our Oxeno business, you can believe me.
Here we are also confident that we are improving step by step over the next years, and we will certainly make a step in 2026, which we also—okay, this is, of course, also depending on market conditions. The part which is on the bonus side, which is the lower part in the end, is—I have to say, hopefully not sustainable. I think we all would not want to have a normal bonus again. We are aiming for not making that sustainable, that is for sure.
Next question, please.
We now have a question from the line of Anil Shenoy from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Good morning. Thanks so much for taking my question. I have two, please. The first one is on lipids. We have spoken about lower demand for lipids in Custom Solutions in Q3. I was just wondering if you could quantify in terms of percentage, how much was it down quarter on quarter and year on year as well? I mean, any kind of color on it would be very helpful. On that note, if you could give us an update on the new lipids plant in the U.S. I'm trying to understand what kind of a contribution could we expect in 2026 from it. If you could remind us the EBITDA contribution that you expect once the plant is fully ramped up. That's my first question. The second question is on the divestments, especially SYNEQT.
Now that you have carved it up as a separate entity, do you have a timeline or would you like to give any color on it as to when can we expect the sale of SYNEQT? Would you be okay with the JV structure like the one McGuire did with the infrastructure assets of Dow? Would you expect similar kind of multiples to that of Dow's assets? Those are my questions. Thank you.
Okay. Thank you, Anil. This time, both questions will go to Christian. So lipids and then SYNEQT.
Hi. Maybe first about the lipids. We are quite happy with the ramp-up of the capacities we have started to build in the United States of America. Here we make good progress, so we are confident that we will benefit from it in future. Besides, it is a long-term perspective. Maybe give us now, first of all, a chance to finalize the construction and then to ramp the capacities up. Nevertheless, and worthwhile to underpin it, here we are confident that it will in future become a good and attractive EBITDA contribution business. All the more, as you see, the government of the United States of America has started some reshoring initiatives to bring pharmaceuticals and in particular these on this very high-level, high-technological level back to the United States of America. Here we are confident.
In respect of infrastructure, first of all, yeah, we are progressing pretty well in respect of separation. This is close to be completed. From January next year onwards, we will have a legal entity with SYNEQT, fully organizationally and legally independent. As you know, all options are lying on the table. What do I mean talking about this? Could it be a partnership? Could it be a straight divestment? Could it be a JV? Yes. For us, it means that we will tackle these different opportunities and that we will judge upon how to move ahead over the next year. For Evonik, it is quite clear that the main benefit will be that we will have a less amount of CapEx which we will pump in future, which we would have to pump in future into our infrastructure businesses. That is for sure helpful.
Having said this, and then maybe that was you have asked about the revenues, some of the revenues in the EBITDA. In 2024, these infrastructure businesses have gained around EUR 1.8 billion of revenues. Here it is fair to say mild plus vested in plus C4. In respect of the EBITDA, it was half, the first half of this year, EUR 100 million in the infrastructure plus C4. Because C4 was virtually, they have not contributed to the results, you could take this as, by some rule, EUR 100 million half a year, EUR 200 million full year in respect of our infrastructure business. I guess these are the two questions I have taken pride to answer.
Thank you. Thank you so much.
The next question comes from the line of Thomas Wrigglesworth from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much. Two questions, if I may. Firstly, on Custom Solutions, you've done well with pricing, but volume has fallen 8%, which might suggest that pricing is coming at the expense of volume, which in itself might be a harsh statement. I look at the EBITDA change, much like Advanced Technologies, and it's substantially weaker in 3Q for the loss in sales than we've seen in 2Q. Is it that we're losing high-value tons in the volume? Or yeah, I'm just kind of keen to unpack that a little further. Secondly, on Methionine, I think you called out the Methionine prices are down, and yet you've been taking maintenance in 2Q and 3Q. Indirectly managing the volumes into the market. As you add tons and have full availability into 4Q, how do you expect pricing to perform?
Do you think that your return of tons will weigh on prices into 2026 as well? Thank you.
Thank you, Tom. First one, Custom Solutions to Claus and then Christian on Methionine.
As always.
Okay. Good. Yeah, Custom Solutions, I can actually first say, when you look, you can do the same as with Advanced Technologies. If you look to the data we provided you, you will see that some of the EBITDA decline is not reflected in the cash flow. That is because we have also here, not to the same degree as in Advanced Technologies, but also certainly substantial networking capital reduction to align the inventories mainly to the current sales and demand. You can see that even though the EBITDA is down from EUR 287 million in Q3 2024 to EUR 215 million in Q3 2025, cash flow remains the same at EUR 172 million. This is something you have to consider. Yes, volumes are down, which is unusual, I have to say, for this usually very stable business.
It shows also how broad, I have to say, the weakness in the market is, because here in Custom Solutions, as you certainly know, we have a very broad portfolio, which makes it usually resilient because not all markets go down at the same time. When I look right now to the performance in Custom Solutions, you can see impact everywhere. I can see it in almost all the businesses. I think in Custom Solutions, all the businesses have an impact to different degrees, yes, but also in all regions. It shows, first of all, it is a general slowdown of the demand. Nevertheless, I think what we are looking into is exactly what you are mentioning, is our price volume strategy the right one? Are we not sacrificing volume to keep the margins high? That is certainly on our agenda for the next months to come.
From that point of view, pricing, I think in these days remains super critical. Also in the market, everybody knows in the market, going for market share is not a good idea, because with lowering the prices, you do not create more demand. Nevertheless, we will look into this. It is one of the agenda points on our agenda.
Okay. I take then the Methionine question. First, maybe let me split my answer up into two parts. First, about the expectations in the fourth quarter. Here, we see a demand which remains overall pretty healthy. Yes, fair to say. That is what we could give to you because we have a quite good visibility on the already booking level for the fourth quarter. In a nutshell, the volumes will be up compared to the last quarter. In respect of the prices, it might end up a few cents lower, but it depends. It depends first on the ramp-up of a new capacity of NHU. Here, it depends. I would not call it a question, but let's say it depends. Second, on the other side, we do have the situation in the United States where the businesses are protected by the U.S. tariffs.
That is why I do say for sure, volumes up compared to last quarter. In respect of price, could be down some cents, but do not forget that there is an exception in respect of the trade tariffs in the United States. Now, maybe outlook 2026, what do we think about this? First, it is somewhat like an evergreen. An evergreen that we do see market growth. It will continue in an average between 3%-4%-5%, maybe by some rule around 4%, which translates into an additional capacity of 80,000 tons per year. On the other side, we are aware that there are some new capacities which could come on stream over the course of the next year, but it is hard to judge as of today when they will come on stream. You should keep in mind that there is a brand new competitor in.
We could not really calculate if he could bring his capacity without having any experiences in this market and with this technology right into the market in the first step. Let's see how this will work. On the other side, do not forget that some older capacities could be taken offline. That is what we have seen, what we have observed over the course of the last year. For sure, the market is in a restructuring period. Let's see how this will work over the course of 2026. That is what we could give to you in respect of Methionine for 2026 as of today.
Thank you, Christian. Thank you, Claus. Really helpful color .
Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Christian Kullmann for any closing remarks.
Yeah, ladies and gentlemen, it was great having had you today. This is what now ends our call. So far, thanks a lot for your attention. Have a happy autumn and hope to meet you soon in person. Take care and goodbye.
Ladies and gentlemen, the conference is now over. Thank you for choosing Chorus Call and thank you for participating in the conference. You may now disconnect your lines. Goodbye.