Afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. I am Francie, your Chorus Call Operator. Thank you. Welcome and thank you for joining the Group Q4 and Full Year 2022 Earnings Conference Call of Schaeffler AG. Throughout today's recorded presentation, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. The presentation will be followed by a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, you may press star followed by one. Press the star key followed by zero for operator assistance. It's my pleasure. I would now like to turn the conference over to Renata Casaro, Head of IR. Please go ahead, ma'am.
Thank you very much, Francie. Dear investors, dear analysts, thank you for joining the Schaeffler Group 2022 earnings call. As usual, our call will be conducted under the disclaimer. Without further ado, I will pass the floor on to Mr. Klaus Rosenfeld, CEO of the Schaeffler Group, and Mr. Claus Bauer, CFO. Klaus, the floor is yours.
Thank you, Renata. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to our call to everyone on the call and also in the web. You have the presentation in front of you. We will quickly guide you through the main topics and then leave as much room as possible for questions and answers. Let me start on page 4 with the key messages. The Schaeffler full year 2022 performance is definitely solid in a challenging year. 9.4% growth, driven by volume and price. Significant positive work on price to make that also sustainable. The margin, which is 6.6%, is in the upper quartile of what we guided for, 5%-7%, so also in line with expectations.
I can say that free cash flow with EUR 280 is also more or less on the spot what the consensus indicated. Consensus was EUR 287. Here we can say that if you look into the fourth quarter, there was more CapEx than we expected because we see future growth in the year that we are in. We decided for a dividend proposal of EUR 0.45. That's slightly below last year, but definitely at the upper end of the range, was 48%. I think that's a sign of strength. It reflects the balance sheet, but also our positive expectations going forward. The expectations going forward, I think, are backed off the business development, in particular towards the end of the year.
Record order intake in E-Mobility, with EUR 5 billion speaks for itself. Robust demand in the after-market. I think you will see also in the first quarter a continuously positive trend in after-market, driven by the increasing demand for after-market parts. Also in industrial, I think we have met expectations for the full year. Certainly the fourth quarter, there were some issues that Claus are gonna explain that are one-off issues. That all together then forms our judgment for 2022, solid, and delivered what we promised. In terms of guidance, we have decided to be cautious, or let me use another word. This is a rock-solid guidance that protects the downside. We have now gone through three years of unexpected challenges and a very uncertain environment.
That's why we have decided to be transparent with our assumptions. You have them on page 30. These assumptions are conservative. If the assumptions that one of our biggest customers has laid out yesterday come into place with 10%-15% growth, we will definitely benefit from that as well. You know, read this not in the line of we are shy, and we don't know what to do. We know very well what to do, and we wanna protect the downside, but we will definitely benefit from the upside if there is growth, in particular in the automotive area. Let me also say upfront, our transformation approach with a more balanced view on how powertrain solutions will develop over time, I think is absolutely the right approach. We have never said we're not gonna only bet on e-mobility.
We have always said the world is a global market. There are different trends in the markets. The idea of doing battery electric, where we made significant progress, plus hybrid, and also be available for the certainly decreasing demand in the combustion engine world, is definitely the right strategy. Let me go to number 5. That's the full year guidance. I think you can do that more or less on your own. We met the guidance. It is, if I may remind you of what we said in January, definitely in line with our first indications. If I judge the year on page 6, what is on the positive side, on the positive side is the top line, 9.4% growth, predominantly volume and price driven.
I think I can say, Claus, you can explain that in more detail. Our price recovery measures have been successfully implemented. We have more or less closed all the negotiations with our big customers, and we have refrained as much as possible from one-time payments. This should be something that also helps us going forward, certainly also in the markets with different implications. The structural measures. You saw one of the other big competitors here in Germany announcing something this morning. We have been more proactive on this. We have decided, as all of you know, in November 22 to do more right size and further streamline our overlap in Europe. That was exactly right, and the package is under negotiation.
We're expecting a closure in the next months of the negotiations, then the normal speedy implementation according to the experience of the last years. Balance sheet and free cashflow is strong and we met clearly what we wanted to achieve on free cashflow conversion. If you look at the numbers, I just wanna stress here again, the EUR 280 includes around EUR 300 million restructuring payout. If you add that back, if you look at one of the tables, you see a adjusted free cashflow without these one-offs of more than EUR 500. Maybe that helps you to also analyze and understand the free cashflow generation promise that we are making. M&A again, you know all the things that we have done there, partnerships, collaboration, you know, things like Innoplate and SPT up to Catena-X.
We are, I think we were successful in the last year here. Strong execution and exactly what we promised. No big elephant hunting, rather the small things that make a difference. Just wanna highlight here and mention the little acquisition we have done in France. You will see that that will strengthen the industrial business in the area of condition monitoring significantly. On the negative side, clearly, earnings quality, we're not happy with the 6.6%. This is not where we wanna be for the year 2022 with war, China lockdown, and significant inflation. That's acceptable, but long term, that's not what we wanna see. You all know our midterm targets and this is what we strive for.
Performance management in the company is clearly one of the key things to look for going forward. On the negative side as well is the operational performance in particular of plants. In such a year, you have to absorb certain costs that we call the stop-and-go cost. It starts from replacing steel from other sources than Russia. It goes into the fluctuations we had. It's related to absenteeism, sickness rates, so all sorts of things. If I have to say the second thing where I'm, where I'm unhappy, is that these, all these things have led to temporary inefficiencies that we could not compensate for, but that should go away as soon as the environment becomes a little bit more predictable. Let me quickly run through the divisions.
I'm not going to do this long, so that Claus can spend most of the time. You see Automotive on page 8, a growth of 7.7%. Outperformance was strong in Q4. It was weak, as you know, before, so the full year is slightly below the 200 basis points that we promised for this year. The positive price effects have come through. On the negative side, I would like to just mention China, that what you all know, and clearly also the continuous volatility in our market and material cost inflation. Fourth quarter was in line with expectations with 3.1%, and the overall EBIT for the year is more or less on the same level. I already talked about the order intake.
I think you have seen that. Automotive aftermarket is one of the interesting plays going forward, because in this environment with inflation being more persistent, it's obvious that people rethink their or think about their buying power. Many people, that's what we know from history, will rather repair cars than buy cars. That is good for us. Jens is very well positioned now with this new strategy in regarding electrification and digitalization to make use of that trend. You see when you compare the numbers, there was a little bit of a setback in Q4. That is extraordinary, and that Claus will explain. The overall logic with 7% growth and 12.5% margin throughout the year was definitely pointing in the right direction.
If you compare this to 2021, you know, just remember there was a significant one-off in there. If we take this out, the profitability of the year is more or less in line with 2021. Page 11 is more for illustration purposes. I just wanna highlight again that aftermarket is not just selling some clutches that we have. It is a separate business that we make future-ready with more focus on customers and in particular on electrification and digitalization. Industrial, page number 12. Growth, significant growth in the full year, 14.7%. This is predominantly organic growth, little contribution from Melior Motion. Ewellix, as you all know, was consolidated beginning of this year. It shows the underlying growth strength that the business has.
We made, at the end of the year, 11.7%. Yes, that is slightly below expectations, and that was a, as I said before, a one-off in Q4. 9.1% was disappointing, but it has to do with something that is not going to come back in the year 2023. That's also here in the point with the red dot showing downwards, non-operating one-offs and some temporary inefficiencies in some of the sites. Don't forget, we had a massive footprint consolidation initiated in 2020 for the industrial business, and that was in execution 2022. That sometimes leads to such temporary inefficiencies.
Industrial sales trend is moving a little bit sideways at the moment, but we think positive also for this year in terms of underlying growth, in particular as the macroeconomic environment becomes more resilient. 14 is capital allocation. I think no surprises here. CapEx a little bit higher than what we guided for or we indicated. You remember the EUR 750. EUR 750 have become EUR 790. That still is a reinvestment rate below 1, so in line with what we said. You also see that we have the regional split here that says we're investing significant money in Greater China and also America, and that will continue to grow in the future.
My last page is then on, or my 2 last pages are on M&A, on sustainability. I think I already mentioned the points. 15 has the names. Significant activity here. All of these acquisitions well thought through, strategically very rational and, as far as we know already, in particular Melior Motion, very well integrated and already contributing to future success. 16 is a page on sustainability. You have the new sustainability report out there. It's a newly designed report, where we have changed the format from 4 action fields into 10 action fields. They are organized along the 3 dimensions of ESG. There's a lot of thought behind this. You may also know that I've decided during the year, together with my board colleagues, that sustainability should, in future, fall under my responsibility.
It shows you that we are clearly committed to make our goals, and that is still a way to go. If you read the report, you see details on CO2 emissions by the different scopes. I can only recommend this. We are demonstrating here also our sustainability strategy. What we do is validated by the Science Based Targets Initiative, and I'm proud to say that for 2022, we get the top scores for climate and water. With that, I would hand over to Claus for more detail on the financial results. Thank you very much.
Thank you very much, Klaus. Let's just start with page 18, sales. Klaus already mentioned EUR 15.8 billion for the total year, which is an foreign exchange-adjusted growth rate of 9.4%. On the left side, in the top bar chart, you see the Q4 development. All three divisions and all four regions grew with double digits except Greater China, which we will talk about. In total, the growth for the fourth quarter was 11.8%. You see the regional split in the pie chart, as I already mentioned, Greater China is the only region that lacked a little bit flat.
As you might remember, there was the big COVID infection wave in December happening in China, and that definitely impacted us. Will also or has also impacted us into 2023, including the Chinese New Year, as you all can imagine. Now things are completely normalized also in China, and we expect a good growth environment there. On the next slide, you see the gross profit development, and on the bottom on the left side, you see the gross margin development from 24.1% to 22.2% year-over-year. What I think is even more interesting than this percentage development is the gross profit in absolute terms.
Of course, I explained it in the past, in this environment where we have to recover cost increases with sales price recoveries, the margin deteriorates, obviously because your denominator sales is increasing. You see, with the absolute development of gross profit from EUR 846 to EUR 893, that is a significant growth year-over-year by 6%. In the waterfall columns, you also see between the price and production cost developments, one positive, one negative, the sequential improvement of our price recovery initiatives that Klaus already alluded to. We can report and confirm that we have achieved our targets in all three divisions.
We said it in the past that definitely in the automotive OEM environment, this is more challenging than in, let's say, more distribution-oriented businesses like automotive aftermarket, but an overall satisfactory result. Maybe, if you go to the bottom left, bottom right side of this chart, what jumps into the eye on a group level is the 2 percentage points that we lost quarter-over-quarter and also for the full year. To some extent, or the biggest impact I already explained, is the base effect of the higher sales that are driven by higher costs.
If you now, if you assume, for example, a 5% cost increase, and also then a full recovery in sales, with a 30% or with a 25% gross profit, that would then be in the range of 1 percentage point that you lose in margin without losing any absolute gross profit. I think that's very important to understand also for the divisions, which I will comment in a minute. Then as we already indicated in our Q3 call in November, we had to account for the collective bargaining agreement in Germany, where you had this very complicated mechanism with one-time payments.
This accounting actually accounted for a loss of 0.4 percentage points in margin in Q4. On the next slide, on the overhead side, you see with in the fourth quarter with 16.1% in the range. Also here, obviously due to the wage development in Germany, what I just explained, with the collective bargaining agreement, you lose another 0.2 percentage points here in the overhead expenses. I think with a total year ratio of 15.8%, we are on the right track. You see it compared to last year, that is an improvement of 0.6 percentage points.
The number that is obviously to be commented here is the selling expenses which significantly increased over last year with EUR 296 million. That is due to higher volume. Remember, especially in our two divisions with significant sales growth, Automotive Aftermarket and Industrial, we are carrying most of the shipping and logistics outbound cost, and these would be reflected here in the selling expense category. There's a huge volume impact on the one side, and obviously also due to higher logistics costs, especially freight, also some price impact as well. On the next slide, we will look at EBIT.
Klaus already mentioned it, 6.6% for the total year, a little bit weaker in Q4. Remember, around 0.6 percentage points here, 0.4 percentage points coming from gross profit and 0.2 percentage points coming from the overhead expenses are related to the collective bargaining agreement in Germany and the accounting of it. That would almost proportionally impact all three divisions. Therefore, if you look at the margin development for the entire group on the bottom right side, would be a significant portion of the year-over-year -1.6 percentage points development.
The rest, again, I'm repeating myself, is then the base impact based on cost inflation on the one side and price recovery with sales on the other side. I will not comment now on the division C on that slide, but obviously go into a detail, on the following slides. First, Automotive Technologies. You see on the right side, the development that Klaus already commented on a high level. There is some margin deterioration, but nothing out of the unexpected. It was all expected and also indicated in our last call already.
The big drivers for the 1.6 percentage point difference here is again the base price impact, and then 0.6 percentage points for the collective bargaining agreement impact that I also already explained. Interesting on that slide, on the left side is the outperformance. Klaus already mentioned the 1.5 percentage points that we achieved for this year. You see also at the bottom of that segment, the 4.3 percentage points that we achieved last year. We always said that this indicator is a little bit statistically volatile, especially if the base data is volatile.
As you understand that obviously production volumes have been volatile, especially with the China lockdowns during the year. Therefore, we always guided that our outperformance of 2-5 percentage points is not necessary to be delivered every quarter and not even every year, but on average over a longer term. If you take full year 2021 and 2022 together, you are safely in the range that we think is realistic.
If you look a little bit still on the 2022 development though, you see that in two of our most important regions, Europe, and Americas in that regard, we outperformed significantly the production volumes, and the issue, as has been already last quarter, that we face here is the underperformance in China. We explained it last time already that obviously with the product mix shift in China, very strongly towards battery electric vehicles, of the first generation and then mainly the domestic brands, we have been a little bit underrepresented in this market segment.
We think that will normalize itself once we go into the second generation E-Mobility in China, even with the domestic producers, where we are then much stronger represented than in the first wave. On the next slide, we will look a little bit deeper on automotive aftermarket. I'll start again with the EBIT development on the right side. You see here year-over-year, the EBIT for the fourth quarter, it didn't change much.
That obviously doesn't look strange, but you also have seen, and Klaus already mentioned it, that our Q4 was definitely weaker from a from a bottom line margin standpoint as the prior quarters would have indicated. That is mainly due to a one-time reorganization effect. We moved some real estate property in Germany from one legal entity to another just to clean up the setup internally, and that impacted mainly automotive aftermarket legal entities. Therefore, we had to absorb around EUR 6 million in real estate transfer tax, German real estate transfer tax.
You can easily calculate that amounts to around 1.2 percentage points that this singular one time impact had on the margin for the fourth quarter for Automotive Aftermarket. Intrinsically, everything is going strong, and I think Klaus, we can report that the first few weeks in 2023 would confirm a very strong Automotive Aftermarket performance. Industrial is the third division here. If you look at the EBIT development with 9.1% for Q4, definitely lower than the underlying performance.
Y ou got the hint that I tried to make already in our Q3 Earnings Call where we had an outstanding EBIT, if you remember, of over 14% for industrial. And I explicitly said, "Don't carry that forward." There's some product and customer mix shift between Q3 and Q4. W e had a very strong regional mix for the stronger margin areas and also for the customers, very strong distribution sales in Q3 much more than normally for Q3. You would see an, a much bigger impact with heavy stocking orders from distribution customers in Q4. And there was some mix shift and margin shift between the two quarters.
If you take, both quarters, together, then, you will be, in the range of 11.5%-12%.
Definitely something more in line with what the real performance level of this division is. If you then take on top of that, this base effect with the price recovery that obviously was very strong in industrial, if you take that into consideration, which would be another - 1.5 percentage points, and then on top of that, the collective bargaining agreement accounting in Germany, which impacted our industrial division in the single quarter by another 0.7 percentage points, then you are in a range which we think will be indicative of what is achievable going forward. With that, I'm coming to the dividend proposal.
I think, Klaus already mentioned it, EUR 0.45 is our proposal to the general shareholder meeting, which is in line with prior years, except 2020. The high point of the COVID impact, and with a payout ratio of 48%, we are in the target corridor at the upper end, and I think a very attractive dividend that we propose to be offered. You see, maybe on the bottom right side, also the payouts in euros, not just as a payout per share.
I think over the last five years, with EUR 1.4 billion in dividend payouts, a pretty convincing argument for our cash generation power. I think Klaus also mentioned it, 2021 and 2022 were challenging years, so we have proven also in challenging years to be an attractive dividend payer. On the next slide, I think I don't need to comment very much. This is all following what I already said. It's pure math with the earnings per share and then also the ROCE. Let's go to the next slide which is free cashflow.
The free cash flow was, as I think we also clearly indicated in our Q3 call already, strongly positive. You see, Q4 was the best quarter of the year in regard to cash flow generation. That had to do also with the timing of working capital. We told you in the first half of the year of 2022, we tactically increased inventory partly to also offset the volatility of our customer call-offs, but also, of course, to manage pricing impacts.
I promised you at the half-year time that will now reverse and lead to a strong cash flow conversion in the second half of the year, and I think the chart on the left side is testimony to that delivery. As Klaus already said, on the bottom right, you see the, what we call underlying free cash flow. You see it for I think most interesting is the full year here on the prior to last column.
If you take back the restructuring payouts with EUR 287 million, which were almost at the same level as 2021, if you would take that out, then we have a free cash flow before M&A and these special items of EUR 525 million. Take into consideration that we also invested around EUR 120 million more than last year, and we also invested in working capital still. I told you, we managed inventory down, but nevertheless, sales increases, nominally, our sales increased by 14%.
That also means higher receivables and still also from a at least value, evaluation standpoint, higher inventory values, and that's another EUR 250 million there. If you add that back, then you're definitely in a range that should make us very confident for the future. My final slide then also talks a little bit about our balance sheet and the strength of our balance sheet. You see that and we already reported that in our Q3 call, we refinanced our revolving credit line, increased it a little bit to EUR 2 billion, secured a EUR 500 million 5-year Term Loan for the Ewellix acquisition.
Last but not least, we have no maturities coming up this year. The earliest maturity is March 2024. Obviously, we have to take care about the refinancing program for that this year. This should be doable. The leverage ratio with 1.1 is speaking for itself, a very strong position. You see then calculated down at the right side that together with the cash and the unused committed credit lines, we have, and that's now excluding the Term Loan for the Ewellix acquisition.
The term loan is not drawn by the end of the year, obviously, because the closing was early in January, so will be drawn, but we already excluded it here in that calculation. With that, we have 18% of the last 12 months of net sales in liquidity at our hand. Clearly a sign that we will be on the path of looking out for interesting acquisitions as Klaus already said in his M&A monitor and radar. This page here indicates that we have the financial strength to execute on this. With that, Klaus, back to you.
Thank you. Let me finish with the very quickly with what I said before. You have on 30 the market assumptions. Again, these are conservative assumptions. We have discounted the number from S&P, EUR 85 million a little bit. When you think back what happened in the years before, our discounting logic always proved to be a good indicator. Last year we said EUR 81.8 million. At the upper end, it was EUR 82 million at the end of the day. Again, we started the year with conservative assumptions. Let's see how the year unfolds. After market here is the key indicator, the global car park growth, also rather conservative.
You will see that that is something that we can definitely beat in industrial, given the fact that there is still a mild recession to be expected and the Fed is still working on their how to get the inflation out of the system. Also here, a little bit more cautiousness. You have that on 31 with the numbers. I think you saw this. I don't think I have to comment on this more. 32 is then the summary. I do this very briefly. Solid delivery, I think we explained this. The usage of cash is exactly in line with what we always indicated. We are focusing on executing what we have promised in terms of portfolio structural measures, footprint, and also head count.
Sustainability is a super important topic for us. I don't have to repeat that our guidance for 2023 is on the conservative or let's say, rock solid side. That's it for the presentation. Next page is the financial calendar. Roadshows start tomorrow, extend into London, and we follow up in March with a roadshow in Frankfurt and also a virtual one in the Americas. With that, thank you very much for listening. I hand back to Renata and the operator for questions.
Ladies and gentlemen, at this time, we will begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star followed by one. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star followed by two. Anyone who has a question may press star followed by one at this time. One moment for the first question, please. We have the first question from Christoph Laskawi from Deutsche Bank. Your question please.
Hey. It's Christoph Laskawi from Deutsche. Thank you for taking this. The first one will be on the message of one customer that you already touched on briefly. Considering that customer might be right, could you comment on if you are able to quickly upscale the capacity? I mean, the install capacity is there, but managing up the volumes that quickly, and do you think that the supply chains overall for the industry would actually be able to cope with the sudden upswing of that magnitude? The second question would be just on the Automotive Technologies guidance for the margin. Could you give us a bit more detail around what kind of cost headwinds that you're factoring there on energy and wages and if there's a certain possible assumption that you've worked into the margin outlook?
Lastly, on industrial, the growth outlook, when we look at the order book, it points to around 5% end of Q4. Could you comment on the order intake momentum at the start of the year and how you expect that to build up? Thank you.
Okay. Let me Christoph, if I understand this correctly, this was the line was a little bit blurred. Your first question was on if there is a more positive market development, can you scale up? The answer is yes. We are, you know, invested for definitely more than 85 million cars. If this would go even higher, that should not be a problem. It certainly depends on where the growth is coming from, and which area, because if this is a big reversal in, you know, transmission or classical combustion engine versus E-Mobility, that's a different situation if this is significant E-Mobility growth. Let's see what that means.
There's a certain buffer here definitely built in that would help us to grow with the market if it's more buy-in. Supply chain, I don't see a problem there. The supply chain has more and more normalized. We're not so much dependent on chips and other critical materials. On the steel side, I don't see any shortage that we should not be able to overcome. Yes, if there's upside, we'll definitely benefit from that. In terms of the cost end with maybe Claus can do this, industrial growth, you said 5%. You saw the guidance that we laid out for industrial with some 9-11. I think that tells you that we are positive on industrial. It's slightly less than the 14%.
That also includes, to some extent, the acquisitions. We should not forget this, because Ewellix is coming on board. That only explains a certain part of the 9-11. The underlying growth coming from the key sectors that are growing, in particular industrial automation, is definitely intact. Let's see where the first quarter ends. 9-11 is what we, what we promise. Also maybe, Claus, you wanna talk about the cost part?
In regard to the price pressure, I mean, the mix is definitely different this year than it was last year. It's more focused on wage inflation and indirect materials, especially energy costs, as you already mentioned. We are going about these cost inflation topics exactly the same way as we did for the mainly steel driven impact of 2022. It's also, Klaus mentioned it in the very beginning, it's also important to understand that our 2022 pricing initiatives have been in the manner that it's sustainable price increases.
It's not, one time, payments, that we asked for and then, have, now to start, from a new, for this year. These main portion of these price increases will impact 2023 going forward. Now your next point might be about what does it mean when steel prices are going down, which they seem to have done over the last quarter or so. Then, as we explained in the past, especially with our automotive customers, we always go there with a complete evidence book and cost driver evidence book, if you will.
Therefore, it's not so much what the spot price for steel does. It's where we have locked in our prices year-over-year. There's not much difference in our in our price for 2023 versus 2022. Everything that we achieved in 2022 is sustainable and carried over into 2023. We will fight with exactly the same approach then for the further cost increases in mainly wage and energy cost.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Akshat Kacker from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Thank you for taking my question. Akshat from JP Morgan. Three from my side as well, please. The first one on the autotech guidance. I think we all completely get the reasoning behind the cautious guidance that you have laid out, given the uncertain macro. However, what has raised a few concerns this morning is the 2% floor in that guidance range. Can you please explain what needs to happen for the division to make 2% margins? Is it based on your current set of assumptions on the market outperformance, inflation, et cetera? Or is it based on completely different bearish assumptions? That's the first question. The second one on total cost inflation. Just to get some numbers around the element and following up on Christoph's question.
Across all key elements, raw materials, labor, energy, et cetera, you talked about a 450 - 550 basis point gross inflation impact in 2022. Where did the year end up finally, and what do you expect that gross cost inflation headwind to be in 2023 year-over-year, please? The last one on free cash flow guidance and the cash conversion. In 2023, you are again guiding for the 30% conversion on EBIT. Can you just talk about your working capital assumption in that forecast and also the measures that you're taking to improve that conversion ratio going forward, please? Thank you.
Maybe I take the first one on the guidance for auto, and Claus takes the two other ones. You know, it's a very fair question, and I can tell you we have tested the ranges, and the last point you made with even more conservative or bearish assumption is what led to the 2%. Let's think about a scenario where volume is even below 2022. That's where we said we get into such territory. The plan internally doesn't point for 2%. It's the even more cautious side on the margin. Again, don't forget, there is yes, a little bit clearing up.
We don't know yet how the environment is going to react to this inflation that is coming up. The car business is a consumer business, and we need to see what's happening here. That's what explains your 2%. Definitely not what we're shooting for. We're shooting for more, but we decided to give you ranges, as we did in the previous years before COVID, and that's what we put out, 2%-4%, for the time being. Claus, you wanna do the other one?
S ure. I start maybe with the free cash flow, and its assumptions. You might have seen back in the appendix that we want to further increase our CapEx this year to a level around EUR 900 million. That's another EUR 100 million to EUR 120 million more than this year. Why is that? We understand that especially if our cautious assumptions will come true, it will be another more challenging year. We also decided intentionally in our budgeting that despite the challenges, we will not sacrifice our future opportunities.
2023 will be a year with significant investments in E-Mobility launches, and we will continue our digitalization and sustainability efforts as well. Therefore, the EUR 900 million that takes away a little bit maybe of what you in your consensus also thought possible from a cash flow generation standpoint. I think the underlying cash flow generation is exactly as you all projected and forecasted. It's really the investments that we will and plan to do this year. The underlying assumptions for working capital are from a structural standpoint to stay in line with what we have achieved in 2022.
That, of course, means with a significant top-line growth also and proportionate growth of our accounts receivables balance. Inventory, we think we are in a place that is sustainable. Now let's see how volatile customer call offs will develop in 2023. There might be also some tactical inventory plays again, but the general assumptions is that inventory will increase not as much as our top line will increase. A little bit relaxation from that standpoint. I think your other question was in regard of price pressure or inflationary pressure.
We obviously, if you would have asked me that question two months ago, then I would have had a different mathematics than today. The most prominent reason for that is the volatile energy market. Said it in the past that energy was at some point before all the inflation was around two percentage points of sales, and now you can apply whatever factor you want. I mean, at some point last year, we had price increases 3x that way, so that would have been 400 basis points of margin there. That's not our assumption today. It's more normal.
In total, together with wage inflation and stable steel prices, and again, remember what I said before, stable steel prices means what our locked-in price on average is. We think that the cost in-inflation impact will be lower. Will be significant, but lower than 2022.
Great. Thank you so much.
The next question comes from Sanjay Bhagwani from Citi. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you very much for taking my question also, and thanks again for such a comprehensive presentation. I've got a few follow-ups. First one is, I think you just mentioned about this inflation divergence that some of your peers have also talked about. Basically, as you mentioned, right, like the steel prices that you would be paying for 23, will be basically not a big change, although the LME price of the steel have gone down. If I understand this correctly, normally customers look at the LME prices, and they tend to apply these automatic price downs to the on the contract, because the LME or the exchange price of the steel is going down.
At the same time, as you mentioned, the price that you end up paying is not going down that much. Could you please provide some color on this? That are you working with your customers to basically, let's say, change the benchmark here to more like the invoiced price versus the LME price? That is my first question, and I'll just follow up with the next one, if that is okay.
Sure. I will try to answer this one first. I mean, there's different pricing negotiations that are involved. I think we said in the past, and obviously I know what I'm talking about because I was for a long time in the U.S., with U.S. customers, we have had since a long time index based material clauses. In that regard, you are absolutely right. That prices would be impacted by spot prices based on whatever index you agreed on. That then would have the effect that you described.
In our broader scheme though, it's as I explained, you go to your customer into a negotiation with an invoice price. It's, it's really invoice price based and not index based. Therefore, obviously, the customer was happy in 2022 that you didn't pay the high prices on the spot market, but were locked in for a better price. Now, the reversal comes in 2023, when you still pay the same price and not get then the price reduction from a higher spot price of the last year. That doesn't mean that we are paying with our locked in prices this year higher than spot prices. Don't.
It's just we pay a lower rate with locked in prices for 2023 than the highest point of the spot price in 2022 would be. There, I don't see any impact of a price reduction pressure. It's the same negotiation strategy. Actually, we are already, I mean, we are already in agreement with the biggest customer in that regard. It's the invoice price that is relevant. Now I forgot your other question. What was that?
Thank you very much. That is very helpful. No, I didn't ask the second question. S econd question is basically, so if I understand it correctly, now, this year again, you have started the negotiations where you basically produce the invoice for the steel prices and also the wages and energy. Maybe just as a follow-up to Akshat's and Christoph's questions, could you please broadly communicate what was, let's say, the gross inflation and net inflation last year? Can we expect somewhere in terms of the pass-throughs? Can we expect somewhat similar level of pass-throughs this year as well?
It could be probably lower this year because now the inflation is coming from wages and energy, which are not a part of the contracts, if my understanding is correct.
I think we explained to you last year, almost every call that we would not publish what our recovery targets were, and we would stand by that principle. We think clearly that if we would publish anything that that would reduce our negotiation leverage. Therefore, please understand that we would also now not be exact in that regard. We always said that it's a continuum, if you will, between the highest price recoveries in the markets where you have distribution business based on catalog products, because also from a mechanism, it's very effective.
You increase your catalog prices and if you're still within the market, your product is needed for, and then you implement the higher price. That's on the one end of the continuum. On the other end, obviously is the automotive OEM, where you have to come with a big evidence book, tell the customer what is your cost impact, and then negotiate based on that evidence. It's a high recovery rate also with automotive OEM customers. B ut I think I can say it's not 100%.
The same approach, or we are already in the middle of the same approach, with the other cost drivers that are, as you said correctly, not normally a basis for negotiations. The general assumption is that your indirect material, process material like energy, and especially wage increases are offset with productivity gains. I think that the last 10 years with a low inflation environment was a reasonable assumption. However, I think it is clear along the supply chain that with the cost increases in these areas, that cannot be maintained
Remember also that in your normal automotive OEM contract, you have a price reduction, contractual price reduction, and that price reduction obviously is also based on the idea of productivity gains. I think that is exactly the approach that will be successful in saying to offset the indirect material and productivity and wage inflation. Plus now price reductions that are contractually agreed in a normal environment that we have experienced the last 15 years. That is not the way that we can execute in 2023. I think there's always also with the OEMs, easier to avoid price reductions than really go for a positive price increase.
In general, I think we will have the same price effectivity as we have seen in 2022.
Maybe Sanjay to add one thing. In the year 2022 we had to cope with volatile steel prices. The only positive thing about increasing labor costs is that you can calculate this in a much more accurate manner because you know when, at least in Germany, you know when the contracts fall due. Don't forget that is something that rolls in. Parts of the one-off we have already taken. That's one of the reasons why Q4 was slightly lower than you expected, and we'll see what we can do there. Don't forget this is predominantly a German or the European issue. It's not a global issue ? You have different labor markets in China, you have different labor markets in the U.S.
That effect is something that we also need to understand from its regional implications.
Thank you, gentlemen. That is very, very helpful. I just have one final question on China, if I may.
I think you mentioned that the part of the reason for the underperformance in China is because you are underexposed to, let's say, the domestic producers, who basically are rising quite a lot on the EV side. You mentioned that it normalizes in the next generation of products. Is this next generation more we are talking about, let's say, during the course of 2023, or this is more of, let's say, H2 2023 or after that?
I can this because I made the observation. I mean, it's phasing in. I mean, it's not that you switch off the BYD models that are on offer in the market right now, and you switch them off at June, and then the next generation comes in. It will be a phase in. It will be not a matter as I said already in the last quarterly call, it will not be a matter of now going from underperformance to overperformance in a matter from one quarter to the next. It will be a phase in over the next four to six quarters.
Thank you. That is very, very helpful.
The next question comes from Horst Schneider from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Yes, good afternoon. Thanks for taking also my questions. Let's get just a few left. When we talk about outperformance, for autotech you just outlined for China. I would be interested what's the impact for you specifically in the U.S. from the IRA scheme? Potentially, the electrification rate goes up there significantly this year. Is it a benefit or burden for you? Since you mentioned in the beginning also, if the Volkswagen guidance comes through, you certainly do a lot better business. Can you maybe give some indication what the business share with Volkswagen is in autotech? M aybe first that question, and then I go on also with some others.
Well, Horst, thanks for asking the questions. You know the IRA, I said this publicly, is an opportunity. If there's more electrification and more e-mobility in the U.S., we will definitely benefit from that. In terms of outperformance, what that means in terms of long-term growth, we need to see, but we are positive on the IRA. One of the reasons why Mr. Schaeffler and myself were traveling there at the beginning of the year and looked at the situation was exactly this. We see even cars like the F-150, the F-250 are electrified and we are very well-positioned here for that trend with the big U.S. OEMs. VW is our biggest customer. It has not changed over the years.
You can read this in the annual report. It's even a customer where we have more than 10% share. I don't have the actual number. It's somewhere 12 or 13. It's a significant customer. If that comes through, that's not factored in our numbers. We'll definitely benefit from that as well because we have a very broad product offering with them also globally. But that I think were the two questions, the first two beginning questions, right?
Yes, that's correct. Thanks for that. The other question that I have is, when you gave your trading update in January, you talked about a weak start into Q1. When I look now at German production in Q2, that was actually pretty strong. I think also, France was a pretty strong month in January and also in February. I don't know any update on that comment. Is Q1 really got off to a weak start or Q1 unexpectedly turns out to be a very strong quarter for you?
Well, between a weak start and a very strong quarter, there's something in the middle, I would say. Again, this environment, ladies and gentlemen, is volatile, and we're steering a tanker through a still, choppy environment. When we talked to you in January, we had our mindset from the year-end and what was happening there. Yes, you rightfully said it's clearing up a little bit. Things have, also the macroeconomic outlook is a little bit more resilient, but I would not Just say it's time to go on autopilot and just harvest what the year's gonna bring. We need to manage this very carefully, and therefore, again, we started okay into the year. We have seen our top lines for January and February.
We still need to wait for margins, so top line looks okay. Let's see what counts as margin and free cash flow. There we still have only one month, and that is not really representative for the full year.
In terms of margin then as well, I mean, it's more backend loaded probably because you first need to get it in pricing.
Look, what I can tell you, Horst, is that we see a, you know, very positive development in automotive aftermarket. That is exactly telling us that people are buying repairs what that means for the overall situation remains to be seen, but the aftermarket is one of our best performing businesses. It can outgrow significantly the market. Jens is super well positioned after the things he has done, so let's wait and see what that brings. Industrial is also, I think, well-positioned with the things we have done, also some external growth. Let's wait and see for the main numbers. It's premature to say something more than what I just said.
Okay, that's clear, and I got it. The last one that I have is when you made the statement that in the beginning, that your guidance is rock solid, and you have taken very prudent assumptions. It's clear to me that you assume basically, that you are cautious basically on the market view. Besides that, is there any item you would highlight where you have taken a more prudent view, let it be on costs or on price or whatsoever?
I don't know what the others have taken in terms of their performance parameters, but we have laid out our market assumptions. They are, as I said, conservative, and you can read them.
They are not Schaeffler specific. There's no Schaeffler specific item. I think you know from the last years we have done our homework. We are, you know, very well experienced now in putting the right cost measures in place. That's happening at the moment. We know how to run larger restructuring programs. I don't see anything that is a Schaeffler specific item. It's more to be on the safe side when this 2023, where I still see volatility and risk should not turn out as we all hope. Don't forget, don't get this wrong. I'm optimistic in a sense that we are through the trouble.
From a macroeconomic and hopefully also geopolitical side. When you read the news, I think there's, it's not the time to be overly optimistic and promise something that is not rock solid. That's why we put it out like we put it out.
Okay, that's great. Thanks for that clarification. All the best for 2023.
Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Himanshu Agarwal from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. Himanshu from Jefferies. Sorry to come back to the cost inflation. Just wanted to ask, you have been negotiating energy and wage cost inflation with your customers for some time. So far, have you concluded any negotiation where you have confidence that you'll receive that compensation? If not, then can you just give us a timeframe, like, when these negotiations are expected to be concluded in Q2, Q3 . Does it also mean that the margin guidance or the margins, improvement is going to be back-ended loaded? That's my first question.
I mean, a very fair question based on the timing of the recovery in 2022, where it indeed was back loaded. However, I mean, we are not starting where we started 2022. We are well into the process, and we're, we'll be a much more continuous effort and recovery. There's depending on how volatile it also becomes, especially in regard to energy, wage, Klaus already alluded to, is definitely stably forecastable. Energy more complicated. I mean, there might be also some fluctuation in impact and recovery, but not not even close to the extent of 2022.
You will not see a margin drop and then recover in the second half of the year based on that impact.
Okay. Just confirm, have you concluded any contract so far with any customers?
Of course.
Okay.
We are actually tracking every single customer, every single contract, based on where it stands, and looking at that every 2 weeks.
Okay, thank you. My second question, your order intake in E-Mobility obviously was strong in 2022, but I see that Q4 we saw some deceleration. Was it just a one-off, or are you seeing any slowdown from your customers there?
I think Look, these orders don't come in every week, same level. These are big orders that we are competing with others. They are not evenly spread. That's also the experience from the last years over quarters or weeks or months. Don't extrapolate on Q4. We were very glad with the order intake. EUR 5 billion speaks for itself. Let's see where we end up the year 2023. We have more to do than on E-Mobility than what we expected some years ago. It's a significant achievement of the team around Matthias Zink to bring the company this direction, and I feel very good about our pipeline and also about the customers behind that.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
The next question comes from Stephanie Vincent from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you so much for taking my question. Just a couple on the credit. You did mention during the call that you are looking at potentially refinancing the 2024s this year, I'm assuming opportunistically. Just wanted to ask, I guess, because you have financed your latest acquisition with Term Loan, you've done some Schuldschein. Is there a bit of a differential with the way that you're thinking about funding yourself? My next question is just on the Automotive Technologies side, like just doing some very simple exercises about stripping out E-Mobility from these revenues and seeing that your business, despite the fact it has trended towards electrification, just the general industry, of course, over the past few years, has seemed to grow in terms of like either content per vehicle or share.
Just wanted to know if you had any comments there about whether or not you're taking up business from guys that are leaving or growing in content per vehicle or pricing? Just some details about that would be helpful.
The first one or?
Well, whatever you like.
From a financing standpoint, as I also mentioned, there's no pressure. We are looking at the markets opportunistically. As you said, we are monitoring all opportunities in that regard. I think when we refinanced and also financed our Ewellix acquisition in the fourth quarter of last year, the capital markets, especially the bond market, was not attractive. That to some extent normalized over the last few weeks. Definitely we are looking at all the opportunities and will some point then start making our decisions.
On Automotive Technologies and E-Mobility, again, we have chosen not to report on content per vehicle. That in our situation is, from our point of view, not really a good guidepost to see how we're developing. I think the best indicator to look at is in fact, all the intake that we talked about. The market is still a growing new market to some extent. We are seeing at the moment several technological advances, new technology coming in. What really counts for us is the quality of our order intake and of order book. Again, as I said before, we see that we are normally ending up in the last round of projects and order decisions by our big customers.
That is a testimony of the quality of what we're offering. I feel strongly that we are very well positioned meanwhile, and that's maybe the more qualitative answer I can give you. This is a long-term transformation part of our business, and it will excel in the next years.
Thank you.
You're welcome. Okay, if there are no more questions, ladies and gentlemen, thanks for listening. We acknowledge that this was certainly not the easiest call, but I once again would like to assure you that we are on track with also our midterm targets. We are committed to deliver what we promised and take this guidance as something that is rock solid to protect the bottom, the downside. If things turn out to be better, we'll be part of that. Thanks a lot. All the best, and bye-bye.
Ladies and gentlemen, the conference is now concluded and you may disconnect your telephone. Thank you very much.