Dear ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the conference call of NORMA Group SE regarding the presentation of the full year 2021 results. At our customer's request, this conference will be recorded. As a reminder, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. After the presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. If any participant has difficulties during the conference, please press star key followed by the zero on your telephone for an operator assistant. May I now hand you over to Dr. Michael Schneider, CEO of the NORMA Group SE. Please go ahead, sir.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to NORMA Group's analyst conference, 2022. Last year's March analyst conference, we mentioned that an exceptional crisis year is behind us. With 2021, we had another crisis year, and I'm of course very happy to welcome you all to our today's conference, not in person, unfortunately, but remotely. What was NORMA Group's development in 2021? I refer to page two of our presentation that we distributed in terms of key figures. Our sales in 2021 were at roughly EUR 1.1 billion. This is an organic growth of 16.2%. Based on this EUR 1.1 billion of sales, we increased our adjusted EBIT significantly versus last year, 2020, to EUR 113.8 million.
These 113.8 million reflect an EBIT margin of 10.4%. Out of that EBIT, we generated an adjusted earnings per share of EUR 2.27 per share and reported earnings per share of EUR 1.76. Our NORMA Value Added increased to EUR 16 million, while the NORMA Value Added in 2020 was at -EUR 46 million. On the next page three, we have a couple of key figures relating to balance sheet and finance structure. Equity based on that profit development increased to 44.6%, versus 41.7% the year before. Based on a strict cash flow cash focus and cash collection, we decreased our net debt to EUR 318.5 million, nearly -EUR 20 million, versus 2020.
Based on that cash development, leverage is at 1.9x EBITDA, which is far better than any covenant level that we currently have. This is based on an increased net operating cash flow of EUR 100 million in 2021 versus EUR 78 million in 2020. We will have a dividend proposal of EUR 0.75 for the fiscal year 2021, which we will propose to the annual general meeting on May seventeenth. The EUR 0.75 per share in relation to EUR 0.70 per share in the year 2020. Key figure as well, based on our ESG focus and ESG criteria, we reduced our CO₂ emission in 2021 by 12.8%. With that, these key figures, some business environment aspects on page four.
In 2020, 2021, we had a scarcity of raw materials and severe cuts in light vehicle production. You all know all of these developments, which then resulted overall in global supply chain disruptions and lowered production rates, which led to a price inflation, especially in higher logistics and energy costs and overall in a material cost inflation. We saw a delayed economic recovery with a strong H1, 2021, with good recovery, but a challenging environment in the second half of 2021. Unfortunately, from our point of view, we still have an ongoing corona challenge, ongoing corona-related costs in production and health, and even more important, a high sick leave of staff and quarantine development in 2021. A few details on the top line starting on page six of our presentation.
Looking into the top line, we increased our sales in 2021 versus 2020 by 14.7% with a very strong Q1 in 2021. This increase by 14.7% to EUR 1.1 billion of sales is mainly due to the economic recovery in the last year. Organic growth, as mentioned, 16.2%, was a good recovery in all regions, especially in EMEA and Americas. That EJT sales increased to EUR 620 million, showing an organic growth of 13.2%. We had in the Standardized Joining Technology a strong organic growth of nearly 20% in 2021, which is mainly driven by EMEA and Americas with a very strong water management. Looking on page seven, segments in terms of regions.
If you look into the Americas sales, these Americas sales increased by 18.5% to EUR 457 million. We also increased in EMEA sales from EUR 410 million to EUR 462 million in 2021. In APAC, we increased nearly 10%, 9.9%, so that we ended up at EUR 173 million in 2021. That is split based on this sales development is, 42% of our sales is generated in EMEA and Americas, each 42%, and 16% in the APAC region.
If you have a look into the regions on page eight, we saw a high single-digit growth in EMEA EJT business based on this very good recovery, especially in the first half of 2021, and a strong double-digit organic growth of the SJT business of 20%, due to a good business development and even a restocking effect in 2021. Americas, as mentioned, a good rebound in the first half year, which led to double-digit recovery. Our EJT +22.3% in fiscal year 2021. Standard Joining Technology with a strong double-digit organic growth, 22.6%, driven mainly by the water management business, showing another really record organic growth of more than 20% in 2021.
APAC region, organic growth, double-digit organic growth, 10.6% for EJT and 6.7% for the Standardized Joining Technology. If you look at the long-term perspective on page nine, we see that in a 10-year perspective, we have a sales CAGR of around 7% and a sales CAGR of around 3% on average organic development over 10 years. With EUR 1,092,000 sales in 2021, we are nearly at the 2019 level, but could not completely reach that 2019 level. On page 10, we see the sales mix that we have. We have a balanced sales mix with focus on water management and industry business in terms of industry applications and industrial suppliers.
That water management, meanwhile, has a share in our sales of 24%, industry applications of 19%, and industrial suppliers of 24%. We have light vehicle business of 23% and heavy vehicle OEM business with 10%. This shows a balanced sales mix with the focus for NORMA Group on water management and industry business. Coming from sales to the margin development on page 11, we generated an EBIT of 10.4% in the fiscal year 2021. It shows a very good increase versus 2020. Although we did not reach our targets in 2021, in terms of margin, but a double-digit EBIT margin, 10.4% and 11.2% in terms of EBITA. With that overview, I hand over to my colleague, Annette Stieve, our CFO. Annette, it's yours.
Thank you. Hello all together, first of all. Well, let's have a look together to the profit and loss development all in all. Looking to our material costs. Material costs increased by 19.8%, and the material cost ratio increased by 200 basis points, mainly due to higher costs related to global supply shortages all over. Our gross profit ratio only decreased by 30 basis points, mainly due to increase in inventory. Always keep in mind, we are in the total cost or total expenditure method here. Personal expenses, there we have a strong improvement. We could improve from 31.3% to 26.1%. This is even better than our comparable year, 2019, where we had a level of 27.5%.
Our OpEx, we had higher OpEx, which are absolutely in line with our sales increase, mainly due to the increase of temp workers, and the economic recovery in this case related to business recovery, leading to a stable OpEx and to a stable OpEx ratio, which is equal in this moment. We could achieve an adjusted EBITDA of 11.2%, and an adjusted EBIT of 10.4%. This is mainly due to sales recovery and lower Get on Track costs, which we do not adjust. Referring to the next page, our operational adjustments and the outlook to the outer years, 2022 and 2023.
You can see in our P&L scheme here that on operational level, on EBITDA level, we have no adjustments anymore. Get on Track, we do not adjust as our major recovery program. Our adjustments here, in terms of, are mostly dedicated to prior acquisitions and only related to prior PPAs. If we look to the earnings per share, it's EUR 1.76. Our adjustment for that in 2021 was EUR 0.51, and we come to an adjusted EPS of EUR 2.27. Looking then to the outer years, you can see really a linear development. That remains under these conditions by EUR 0.51 or EUR 0.50 in this moment.
Seeing our EPS and dividend development, we can see here again our 2.27 EUR and our reported EPS of 1.76 EUR. Our net income in 2021 of EUR 72.3 million and reported of EUR 56.1 million. Our dividend per share, as Michael already mentioned, we will propose a dividend of 0.75 EUR to the AGM, which is a ratio of 33% of our adjusted group net profit of the fiscal year 2021. Referring to the profit and loss statements, I think we already had a look to sales gross profits, EBIT, EBITDA. What is new here is that our financial result could improve significantly from EUR 14.8 million in 2020 to EUR 12.4 million in 2021.
We have a tax rate of 28.6%. Coming now to the balance sheet and referring there to our working capital development, we can see that our working capital ratio slightly increased by 50 basis points due to higher inventories, mainly, which we only partly compensated by higher payables. Our factoring programs increased by EUR 10 million towards 2020 to EUR 62 million in order to optimize our financial flexibility. Equity ratio, net debt, and debt ratio on the next slide. In this moment, we can see that our net debt decreased by EUR 20 million or by 5.9% due to a strict cash collection and cash management. We show a strong improvement in our leverage, which amounts now to 1.9.
We could further improve our equity ratio to 44.6%, which increase to EUR 669 million. Looking to our maturity profile, you can see that we have a very strong maturity profile here, solid, no potential cross-default risk anymore with long-term financing strategy, which is established. Our next larger refinancing is due in 2026. There, I think we have a strong balance sheet and a strong maturity profile in this case. Balance sheet-wise, you can see that we increased our assets, equity and liabilities. This is mainly on the asset side due to our increase in inventories and the recovery of the business. On the other side, our equity gained by 79.1 million to EUR 669 million.
What is new now, we have a look to the cash flow, the NORMA Value Added, and then we have a new page, which leads us to the EU taxonomy. Cash-wise, we still provide a very strong net cash flow. We could increase our net cash flow to EUR 100 million. Our working capital outflow of EUR 20.4 million is mainly due to higher business activity and growth. We increased our CapEx due to investments in our actual and future business growth, and our cash is amounting to 100 and could increase from EUR 78.3 million last year, which means we finance future business recovery. NORMA Value Added. Our NORMA Value Added increased from minus EUR 46.4 million to plus EUR 60 million.
Our ROCE, our adjusted ROCE increased from 4.6% to 11.9%. Let's come now to the EU taxonomy and this new reporting. I think everybody in all these companies took a lot of time in order to develop together with the European Commission, these, I would say, hot needle printed legislation. We all did our best in order to really solidly show that in our figures. It's the first time adoption of EU taxonomy in the fiscal year 2021 required by the EU Commission. The preliminary step in this moment is that the EU taxonomy reporting of 2021 covers the so-called eligibility reporting.
From 2022 onwards, we need to come to eligible economic activities, which fulfill finally technical criteria in order to get classified from eligible to aligned. The EU taxonomy focuses mainly on three performance indicators, which is revenue, CapEx, and OpEx. In these two boxes under it, you can see that NORMA Group's eligible economic activities out of the EU taxonomy refer on the one hand to our water management products. They are referring to the economic activity 5.1, construction, extension and operation of water collection and treatment and supply systems. On the other hand, on the pure e-mobility products, this refers to economic activity 3.6. There we refer to the manufacturing of other low carbon technologies. In the right box, you can see what we achieved there.
NORMA Group's eligible revenue, CapEx and OpEx. Our revenue amounts to 24%, our CapEx to 5%, and our OpEx to 7%. Having said that, I give back to Michael to have a look to the Get on Track status.
Yeah, thanks, Annette. Get on Track. We described our scope for the Get on Track program in the last years. We defined this Get on Track program end of 2019 and also in the year 2021. This Get on Track program developed excellently. We saw, and I'm on page 27 of the presentation. We saw a net effect out of Get on Track of EUR 25.9 million in the EBITA. We expected to have EUR 25 million net effect, it's EUR 25.9 million. Get on Track program comes as expected, helping us and further improve in 2021 and even in the future.
Future means also that in 2022, we will expect a net impact then of EUR 30 million, based on around EUR 40 million of benefits accumulated and EUR 10 million of costs of one-time costs. Coming to the outlook and to the guidance, 2022. We of course have to mention that this forecast is made under the assumptions that no significant negative impacts in connection with the pandemic situation and even additional impacts coming out of the Russia-Ukraine war is done. We expect organic sales growth mid- to high-single-digit percentage in 2022, also for the EJT business and for the Standardized Joining Technology. Region-wise, we expect a mid-single-digit percentage organic sales growth in EMEA, while we expect Americas and APAC in the mid- to high-single-digit percentage development.
Overall, we expect an EBIT margin of around 11%, a NORMA value added between EUR 20 million and EUR 40 million, and a net operating cash flow of around EUR 100 million. We of course have additional guidance components. I think we do not read through everything. You see it on that page, the most important ones. I mentioned medium- to high-single-digit organic growth, EBIT margin around 11%, EUR 100 million in net operating cash flow. This also fits into our strategy, and I'm on page 30 of that presentation. We expect in 2022 growth, medium- to high-single-digits. We expect that global growth in water management and industry applications, and even selective expansion in mobility and new energy. We continue with the dialogue in M&A activities, focusing on water and industry business in 2022.
Especially for our Standardized Joining Technology business, we will further expand and strengthen the e-commerce channel. Of course, we will go on with the execution of the different measures in the Get on Track program, so that the Get on Track projects also will contribute for further profitable growth of NORMA Group. Of course, it's more important than ever. We have to see the volatile market environment. Of course, we have a handling of that market environment with a close monitoring of the market dynamics, and even from the geopolitical conditions and tensions. A clear growth strategy, 2022, in a very volatile economy and volatile geopolitical situation. Thank you so much for listening, and of course, we are happy to take your questions.
Our first question is here. It's from Ingo Schachel, BNP Paribas Exane. The line is now open for you.
Yes. Thanks for taking my question, and the first one would be on your guidance for 2022. I mean, you're making the caveat that there should be no major Russia-related disruptions. During the last weeks, we've seen very massive spike of raw material prices. Could you clarify a bit how much of those raw material price increases are already baked into your guidance? It looks like you're implying a stable raw material cost ratio. Is that really realistic? If you think it's realistic, maybe you can explain a bit more to what extent and how successfully you've already implemented price increases.
Yes. Ingo, thanks a lot for the questions. Regarding the guidance 2022, we included all these issues we could include so far. That also means that we, for example, included the direct impact from the Russia-Ukraine situation. Our direct business with Russia and Ukraine is around EUR 8 million-EUR 9 million sales per year, which we included as a risk in that guidance with sales, direct sales and margins. We anticipated the high level of material costs, and we also anticipate that the increase of material costs will be transferred, can be transferred to our customers in terms of price increases. We are changing, or we changed our price increase system. It is more direct. It is quicker to the customers, especially also in the EJT business.
That we work with monthly price adjustments for prices that we also fix for one month, so that we have a direct price roll over to our customers. Of course, this is in tough negotiation, but it runs very well. This was your last part of your question, how does this go on? We also had that price increases already in Q4, and we are very well on the way with these price increases also in 2021, especially H2, when we started, and also in the first two months of 2022, where we had good development of that pricing increases to our customers.
Okay. Do you already have full visibility on the magnitude of price increases that were accepted, let's say, for the second quarter, for example? Or, is the margin that you see for achieving the second quarter still very much dependent on whether clients accept what you've announced or asked them to do?
Well, we had very good development in Q2, Q3, Q4 last year. We also have visibility on the first two months of pricing. Of course, we have our budget for 2022 with the resulting pricing effects. This is volatile. We have to be flexible with those price increases because we have to make sure in the volatility of these material price developments. If you check the nickel price, which is volatile, 10% changes within few days, we have to be flexible in transferring that, and this works very well.
Okay, understood. Maybe just on your inventory level, which was, as you said, quite elevated at the end of last year, also included a lot of work in progress and semi-finished products. Can you give any guidance on how quickly you would expect to release that? I'm guessing probably not on the first half because of the ongoing parts shortages, but maybe, let's say, at some point this year? Or is it more, let's say, a midterm perspective that you would get back to previous inventory levels?
At the end, it's a question if we, for the time being, even want to get back to the original ones. On the one hand, we have the safety stock, which is clear. On the other hand, we utilize still cheaper prices, which are, I would say, transferring to gold for the time being. For sure, we are in a seasonal, as water business is getting more and more our, in our balance sheet and in our economic activity, there is for sure a seasonal stocking what we need in the season. Therefore, we don't feel too bad with our inventories there.
We could say we will optimize our inventories, which does not necessarily mean minimize.
Yep.
Okay. There, yeah. Thank you.
Welcome.
The next question is by Nicolai Kempf, Deutsche Bank. The line is now open for you.
Hey, thank you for taking my question. It's Nicolai Kempf from Deutsche Bank. My first question would be on supply chain. Many OEMs have already announced some production stop days due to missing parts from Ukraine. Can you just highlight if you're also impacted by this, and if you're missing some parts, if your production is hampered by that?
We also see that customers have some production stops temporarily in March, one week reducing shifts, et cetera. This is what we see. This is also where we are impacted, and this is what we put into our forecast. I can also follow that view. We also see that from our customers.
Okay. Just to follow up, what you also hear from the customer for the OEMs is that demand is still quite good and the consumer confidence is quite good, especially in China and North America, which are probably far away from this. Do you also see demand still good in Europe, or has there been a higher rate of cancellations recently?
No. From our point of view, the demand is in the market. The question is how do our customers, especially or very concretely, get cable channels and cable parts from Ukraine, for example. From our point of view, demand is in the market. The question is from where do our customers get the parts that they typically get from Ukraine, especially in that area of cable parts.
Okay. Understood. Thank you.
Welcome.
The next question is by Jürgen Pieper, Metzler. The line is now open for you.
Yes. Hi. Hi, gentlemen. Oh, sorry. Lady and gentlemen, I have two quick questions here. The one is on, you mentioned your outlook guidance is based on today's situation, which is absolutely fair. Just a what if question, if we decide to stop in the end all imports from Russia from, let's say, one week to the other, okay, can you just give a rough picture what this would mean to you as an additional burden on the cost side or maybe followed by some shutdowns or whatever? The second one is more concrete. You mentioned the Get on Track that you expect more higher net effects this year than last year, so around about EUR 30 million.
That should be made with a constant personal cost ratio, which is a little difficult to understand. I mean, last year you this went down by more than 500 basis points. The total net effect was EUR 20-some million, and now you're expecting a higher effect, a constant material cost ratio and a constant personal cost ratio. How does it work out?
Maybe I start with the impact on top of Russia. At the end, we are only in brackets impacted indirectly. We have no direct big supplier connection to Russia. What we already suffered with everybody was a bit the fear around the nickel price, but that is also the question how psychologically this is driven or really driven by impact. At the end for us, we get all our material elsewhere, and we are not endangered by at any kind of time in terms of our production. For sure, that might have been again a pressure on material prices. This we need to confront with different measures, like Michael already said, like everybody is doing that upfront by markups, by whatever.
I think what is important also is these are the direct impacts from imports from Russia, but we also have to see what are the indirect conclusions out of that for the whole economy. This is, from our point of view, far too early to see on a concrete picture. For the direct part, it is like Annette pointed out. Your second question, Get on Track, higher net effect. Not sure if I got your question correctly, but if you look on the Get on Track charts of the accumulated benefits and net effect, so this is the accumulated impact that we show in the charts on page 27. It is EUR 4.1 million additional impact in 2022 versus 2021.
that the accumulated amount over the years is accumulating then in 2022 to EUR 30 million.
Okay. No, understood. Isn't it normal that you make this program, you reduce your headcount and still, I mean, the average headcount in 2022 should be slightly down year-over-year, shouldn't it? Then you in the end would have still a small effect on the personnel cost ratio. Isn't that the case?
Yeah, you have to see that we have a reduction of headcount on the one hand side, and we also have an impact coming from sales growth on the other side. If you take, for example, the 2021 headcount figures, as of December versus last year, we have reduced around 586 people in 2021, December versus December. We have to make sure that we, for example, reduce in Germany by closing a production location in 2022, with a constant reduction over 2020 and 2021. On the same journey, we increased our headcount in Czech and in other areas. We are transferring from high cost countries into best cost countries, and it is not just reducing the headcount as absolute figure.
Okay. Thank you.
Welcome.
The next question is by Peter Rothenaicher, Baader Bank. The line is now open for you.
Yes. Hello. Firstly on your sales guidance. You're guiding for mid- to high-single-digit organic sales growth. Now we have a significant effect from price increases. What is your expectation then on volume growth in the current year?
Peter, that's a very good question. If we assume a high single digit growth, I would say that's half/half volume and price.
Okay. In terms of material costs, last year, one burdening factor was also the strong increase in material costs for NDS. How is the situation now? Has this somewhat normalized? Do you see here still headwinds? With that, what is your expectation then on profitability also NDS in the current year?
Well, we see NDS on a very good level regarding sales and even margin. Of course, NDS also has headwinds from the material cost side. Especially at NDS, we are also familiar with our pricing policy. Over a period of a year, one and a half years, we are confident that we have good price increases also for NDS.
Overall, can we expect for NDS then margin improvement in the current year?
NDS has already pretty strong margins. At the end, if we would have all these margins everywhere, I would be happy like hell, no. At the end, they are suffering by transportation, they are suffering by energy. These are things which they are confronted with. We already did a price increase this year and give the cost further, and then it depends on the product. We have products where we even can increase margins, and others we stay with a very high margin.
NDS will grow nicely on a high margin level.
Okay. Then we have talked about material costs, but if we look into the upcoming months, we will see also, I think, strong headwind from wage increases. How are you prepared to pass on these burdens from wage increases, particularly in your EJT business?
Yes. Regarding the wage increases, it's two steps. It's what I mentioned earlier, that we transfer to best cost countries and overall constantly improve our cost ratios. That's one point. We also include these topics into the necessity of productivity gains that we need per year, 3%-4% with the Global Excellence Program. Part of that in terms of logistics, et cetera, also may go in the price increases to customers. It's three areas, footprint, best cost countries, productivity areas and pricing.
You do not expect here significant additional net headwinds in the second half this year than going into 2023?
I think that's a year of inflation, no question. Everybody is speaking about inflation tracking, and that is, for me, personnel costs are a part of that. Energy, any kind of transportation, these are the cues. So there you can see already nowadays that people are working with markup and whatever. Towards our OEMs, we declared already in writing that we need a compensation of that, and we are there very early in contact.
Then is it fair to assume that your profitability in the current year is more back-end loaded? I think in the first quarter this year, you might be below the full year margin target. Can we then expect that second quarter perhaps in line with the margin for the full year, and then the second half hopefully considerably better?
Well, Peter, that's the plan. I can only speak under the current conditions, but to be honest, if the Ukraine-Russia crisis gets even worse, I even don't know what kind of business environment we are still facing. At the end, under the current conditions, I think we are there on a good track, and we are, I would say cautiously optimistic. However, for the time being, I think everybody is a bit more cautious in terms of guidance and in terms of profitability statements.
Clearly back-end loaded, so that Q1 will be, let's say, below average of that 2022 year. Beginning Q2, Q3, we see then increasing margins on a nice level.
Okay. The last point is more the medium to long-term outlook. You always mention supported by Get on Track. You're targeting to return to your former peak margin levels, I think in terms of adjusted EBIT margin, it's 16%-17%. Is this still your ambition to reach this perhaps by 2024 or latest 2025?
Clear, yes. We are talking about EBITA margin, 17%, so EBIT margin somewhere, I don't know, 15%-16%. EBITA level as we had in the past, 17%, 2024, 2025, clear, yes.
Okay. Thank you.
Welcome, Peter.
Our next question is by Richard Schramm, HSBC. The line is now open for you.
Yes, good afternoon. Two clarifications, quickly. One, coming back to the sales growth. I mean, just assuming that you achieve the high single-digit rate, let's say 10% to make it easy. You said it's half/half volume price. This would imply only a price increase of 5% year-on-year, which I found surprisingly moderate compared to the drastic price increases we have seen on the material side. I would have expected much higher price increases on average over your product portfolio. Is this really so that you will only come out with a price increase of 5% on average?
Well, if we compare the price increases, we have to keep in mind that if we are talking for example about nickel prices, which are increasing significantly, there is a very small portion in our products defined by nickel. Our overall price increases is 5%, and we give to our customers in our products the referring material ratio for the nickel prices. We of course include the high raw material price increases, but our products are not consisting of 100% of that highly increasing raw materials, but it is a mixture of nickel, of chromium, of steel and so on, or even plastics products, et cetera. It's a mix. Of course we give the high material cost increases depending on the material share for our products to our customers.
Interesting. I just must say I would have expected a much higher figure here, but okay, fine, if it's only a relatively moderate increase then. You mentioned-
Well, maybe Richard, one comment on that, because if you have a 5% overall, we have single products that we have 8%, 9% increases and other products that are not impacted by these highly increasing materials. It's of course a mix, so that there are products with a significantly higher increase and products with a significantly lower increase. On average, it's half half if you take a high single-digit growth.
Okay. Thank you. Then, mentioning on this, monthly price adjustments you mentioned, I'm not quite sure if I got it right, but is this valid for your whole portfolio, that you make these monthly adjustments? Because I think that especially the automotive customers might be pretty resistant to this thing. Or are they still changing their attitude and accept these short-term price increases for their deliveries?
Well, Richard, it is a monthly price increase, where we have monthly price changes, especially if you are looking onto our OEM customers. We have it a different business structure in our SJT, Standardized Joining Technology business, where we are only also over the months are increasing our prices. It's depending on the customer structure. Of course, no customer is happy about price increases. This is of course a matter of negotiation, but it's a fair play between supplier and OEM customer, having some cost increases per month, depending on price increases on the material side. So far, this works, and I think there is a good win-win strategy.
That refers also for example, in the automotive industry, we have surcharges. For example, in terms of nickel and alloys, we have surcharges which are mostly stable between six months, three months, six months, 12 months, and then they are charged. This we change now to really a monthly charging because the prices are running away. We cannot wait six months in order and stay with the stable alloy surcharge from nickel while the price is exploding. This is mainly where we changed the pricing policy to really invoice that monthly and not every six months.
Okay, thank you. Last one on the visibility. You mentioned that you are facing these production stops from OEMs, which quite obviously makes it difficult to plan ahead here for you and you said you have taken this into account, which I think is hardly possible if the visibility also for the OEMs is very limited. What is your assumption in this respect on volume growth in automotive and do you have to build in a certain safety cushion if these supply chain disruptions would even get worse in the second half of the year?
Well, if we have a very close contact to our customers, and if they have production shortages during the next three-four weeks, we have a very good visibility and a good contact to them so that on a short-term basis, we can plan these issues. If you look on volume increases, we are cautiously expecting volume increases in OEM businesses. For example, if you take the latest LMC figures, they now reduce from 19% LVP growth organically volume in EMEA to 15%, and the last one from 15% to -3% or minus whatever percent.
We also are expecting cautious volume developments for the OEM business in EMEA, for example, and insofar we are in close contact with our customers.
On top, one big advantage of the NORMA is that we are not purely automotive supplying. We have 50% other products. We can shift our product portfolio also to a certain extent between automotive and industry business. That is one of our big advantages to shift that to standardized technologies and to give resources to auto.
Okay. Thank you much.
Welcome.
The next question is from Adrien Ouillon , Gardner Capital. The line is now open for you.
Yes, hello. I have two questions about the cash flow and about slide 22, where you claim a strong cash flow. First about net debt. Net debt has decreased by EUR 20 million. Is the change in the factoring program included there? Is that part of net debt? I guess not. That would mean that EUR 10 million of this improvement come out of the factoring. Is that interpretation correct?
That's included. Sure, sure. That is our part to brief at the end. That's cash.
Yeah.
That's included in the cash, clearly.
Okay. If you hadn't increased the factoring program, the decrease in net debt would be EUR 10 million, not EUR 20 million. Is that correct?
That's correct.
Okay. My second question. You show EUR 100 million net operating cash flow after CapEx. Why is the change in net debt not EUR 90 million? Well, EUR 100 million. Where does all this cash go?
If you have a look at page 22, you can see that on the one hand, we have a working capital outflow in the trade working capital of EUR 24 million, which is financing of business recovery at the end because the year before we had COVID and co, therefore, we invested really in active business.
Yes, I understand that. After change in net working capital and after CapEx, you have EUR 100 million net operating cash flow. That's nowhere near the reduction in net debt. Where is the difference going to?
I think what you also should see is that this is an operating cash flow coming from the operating business. After that, you have taxes. After that, you have interest that you have to deduct. If you take a free cash flow bottom line, that is of course lower because from that EUR 100 million, let's deduct taxes, let's deduct interest, and then you see that this is a high amount and the rest of that then it goes into reduction of net debt.
Don't forget the dividend which we paid last year, which was EUR 0.70 per share. That's an equivalent of roughly EUR 22 million.
Yeah. All right. When I add up taxes, financial expenses-
Expenses, taxes.
And, and dividend-
Dividend.
I'm at EUR 60 million, right? Mm-hmm.
Taxes, interest, dividends, that's the financial figures out of it.
Yeah.
Yeah, you have to see that this net operating cash flow comes from an EBITDA development. At the end, it's EBITDA minus CapEx minus change in working capital, but coming from a pure operating view and all these financial parts like taxes, interest, dividends, some other positions you have to deduct.
Yeah. You're still pleased with the cash flow, although net debt has virtually not decreased. That puzzles me a bit, right? That you're showing EUR 100 million, but in the end, net debt is still beyond EUR 300 million. Are you really pleased with the cash flow? It's at the same level like eight years ago.
At the end, we have to see that at the end of the year, we came out of two months with very low automotive volume. The months is October and November were lowest ever in automotive business due to supply shortages. Which means we went there out of these phases, and these months were transferred to sales at the end by the end of the year. We were, at the end, burdened by this lower EBITDA out of these months.
Mm-hmm.
We have a growing working capital, that's clear.
Please keep in mind, we are generating EUR 100 million net operating cash flow, out of which we finance additional interest, taxes, dividends after such a crisis year, 2021. So far, looking into the financial structure and taking EUR 100 million of net operating cash flow, of course, it can be better. You see that we came from a level of roughly EUR 150 million in the high season years, 2016, 2017.
Mm-hmm.
After a crisis year of 2021, EUR 100 million of net operating cash flow, after such a crisis year, from our point of view, it's not too bad.
Okay, thanks for the explanation.
Welcome.
There are no further questions, and so I hand back to you.
Yes, thank you very much to all participants. We wish you all personal health. Stay healthy, stay protected in these COVID times still. Please keep in mind, NORMA Group is very well prepared for the future. 2022 will be a growth year for us if there is no mega impact coming from economic and geopolitical crisis, like additional wars. Stay healthy. NORMA Group is prepared. Let's go for growth. Thank you so much.