Welcome to KONE's third quarter earnings call. My name is Natalia Valtasaari. I'm Head of Investor Relations here at KONE. I'm joined here today by Henrik Ehrnrooth, our President and CEO, and Ilkka Hara, our CFO. As usual, Henrik will start by talking about the third quarter highlights, both business and financial. Ilkka will then dive deeply or a bit more deeply into the financials, and Henrik will follow that up with the business outlook and market outlook. Then we'll be ready to take your questions. With that, I will let Henrik take over.
Thank you, Natalia, and a warm welcome also from my side to our Q3 webcast. We all know that the external environment has many aspects right now. What I'm very happy about is that in this environment, we've been able to find good growth opportunities and actually performed very well in this environment. Some of the highlights really of the quarter were we had a really strong growth in orders received and also our maintenance business developed very nicely. Sales was now more or less stable. We all know that the global supply chain environment is very challenging, and our focus in this has been really to focus on customer deliveries to ensure that we meet our promises to our customers.
I'm actually very proud to say that we have been able to meet our customers' needs throughout the quarter in a tough environment, and that is really the priority that we have had. We all know that it's big focus for us to deliver more value to our customers, to focus on value-added solutions. In the quarter, we had a very important milestone, which was that, our 24/7 Connected Services is now installed in 10% of our maintenance base, and those are customers who are, commercially paying for the service. Continued very strong momentum there and actually momentum has constantly improved. We can see that we are really going in a nice direction here. Now let me start with some of our, key figures. As I mentioned already, our growth was very good in the quarter that I'm happy about.
Although our EBIT was impacted by increasing costs throughout the supply chain. Orders received about EUR 2.2 billion, almost 11% growth in comparable currencies. This is a very good growth in this environment. Our order book at a very solid level of EUR 8.4 billion and 3% growth. That of course gives a good situation going forward. Our sales was now EUR 2.6 billion, 1% growth reported and in comparable 1.3%-. Big differences here between new equipment and services. New equipment declined somewhat, whereas very good growth, particularly in maintenance.
Operating income down 2% to EUR 326.5 million, and adjusted EBIT, and actually EBIT and adjusted EBIT is exactly the same this quarter, declined from EUR 340 million to EUR 326.5, and a margin decline from 13.1% to 12.5%. Actually, given the headwinds we have, this is a very strong result. Cash flow was very solid at EUR 365 million. Yes, it's a decline from the exceptionally high level we had of EUR 600 million last year, but this 365 continues to be a good cash conversion. EUR 0.50 per share in EPS in the quarter.
As we always say, one quarter is a very short period of time, and now we have, of course, three quarters behind us, so a little bit longer perspective. We have had a very robust performance in the first nine months, of course, because of very strong performance in the first half, particularly second quarter. Orders received for the first nine months of about EUR 6.7 billion and about 10% growth year-over-year. Sales of EUR 7.7 billion, which is 6.6% growth year-over-year, so good growth here as well. Operating income grown from EUR 845 or EUR 846 to EUR 943 million, and adjusted EBIT from EUR 870 million to EUR 950 million.
Also here an EBIT improvement or EBIT margin improvement from 11.9% to 12.3%, if you look at the first nine months. Of course, mainly due to good margin expansion in Q2. Very good cash flow for first nine months, a little bit lower than the exceptionally high last year, but EUR 1.3 million, very good cash conversion. Earnings per share up 12.5% to EUR 1.43. Now, as I mentioned already, we know that the global supply chain situation remains challenging. As I mentioned, our focus has been to deliver on our customer promises. I'm very proud of the work our team has done. Exceptionally good work to ensure that we have constantly met our customers' needs and being able to fulfill their demand.
That has been a good achievement, and I'm very happy about. Our team has again done an outstanding job in a very challenging environment. Again, very, very happy with what everyone at KONE has done, and a huge, huge thank you to them. Talking about the global supply situation, we know that there are three main aspects happening. We have material prices, we have semiconductors, and we have logistics. We can say the material prices such as steel, that's kind of happening all the time. They're sometimes going up, sometimes down, but that's kind of normal business. However, what I would say is what is different now is that all input costs are increasing, steel, plastics, timber, everything. That is just causing a big, big headwind, and the magnitude of the increase are very significant.
What are perhaps a bit more unusual, something we haven't seen before, are shortages of semiconductors and then of course, logistics cost because of capacity in the global logistics chain. We have been able to secure enough components to meet our customer demand, but of course, securing those components in the, in the market, in the spot market, means that, costs have increased. As I said, focus has been on customer deliveries, and that has worked very well. Same thing with logistics. We have been able to manage our logistics, but the costs have of course been high. The additional costs from net, in net basis just from component, semiconductors and logistics in the quarter is about EUR 30 million, and from all of these three aspects, materials, components, and logistics, about EUR 75 million on a net basis in the quarter.
We have had a very good progress in reducing product cost, for example, so we have been able to compensate about half of the steel and other material headwinds that we have faced, but of course still a lot more needs to be done. Progress has clearly been better than usual years, but of course much more needs to be done. What are we focused on? Clearly, how can we constantly reduce the product cost, and improve our productivity? We have some actually very good progress here, and I'm actually optimistic that by the end of next year we will have a lot of progress here. Pricing actions throughout our business.
What I'm happy to see is that actually we see good momentum in price increases in many parts of the world, not all parts, but in many parts of the world and many businesses. It's clear that this needs to continue and we are just at the start of it, but the direction is definitely the right one. Perhaps what has been a little bit more challenging we had expected is China, but the rest of the world has been better. Of course, as we talked a lot about, a big focus area for us is our value-added solutions because that really improves the value to our customers and also improves our growth rate, both in our new equipment, but particularly our services business, which is doing very much so right now.
Therefore, we wanted to dive a little bit deeper again into our 24/7 Connected Services because our momentum has constantly improved in sales in this throughout the year. When I talk about sales, we talk about both we sell it in connection with new equipment and service. Now when we talk about this penetration, we talk about how many units we actually have installed and customers paying for the service. That now reached 10% in the quarter at good pricing. Then the question is, of course, why are customers willing to pay a good price for this service? Well, because they have good value from it. It is an improved transparency for them, and we can also see a much better quality and productivity from our customer's perspective.
What we can show now with the large set of data we have, that we are reducing call-outs by more than 40%. That's very significant. We are also seeing that 70% of all faults we can identify proactively, and we have reduced entrapments in connected units by 50%. We can see that these are not small numbers. These actually very meaningful numbers. That is something that's very much appreciated by our customers. 24/7 has a good sustainability aspect. When we can plan better, we have less unplanned visits, i.e. simply we are driving less, which is a good thing. Secondly, these services enables us to improve the life cycle of products.
When we add our 24/7 Planner to our customers, we can, with the data that we have collected and we're seeing how their equipment is performing, and of course, with all the data we have about similar equipment, we can provide our customers now with long-term asset management plans based on very clear data. That has been usually a pain point for customers, the very short-term plans that they have got for many parts of how they maintain a building. Now we can help them plan several years ahead with this planner service, and that is something that also has good momentum because of the value and how it helps our customers manage their business much better than in the past.
Overall, we know that this is our flagship digital service, and what I'm happy to say is that momentum continues to be strong, and it's really contributing to our growth right now. That is about KONE's development. Let's talk a little bit more about market development. The good thing is that markets are recovering. That we can first see from just the number of starts in elevators, how much people are using elevators around the world. We show this data now for several quarters for over a year. We started this during the pandemic. On the left-hand side, these are the same five countries we've tracked, and we can see that in each country, we're getting closer to a normalized level.
We're not quite there, but it's getting in that direction, and we can therefore also see that overall trends in the maintenance business are getting more normalized. What is new data on the right-hand side is then when we look at it by segment. What is interesting to see is that when people are more at home, they're also moving more in and out of their home, so actually residential elevators are used even more than pre-pandemic. We can see that what is lagging is still offices, but still coming up. What is also interesting to see that in the Northern Hemisphere, during the summer holiday period, actually hotel usage increased a lot. It is not at the same level where it's usually during that holiday period, but because of domestic tourism, it really came nicely up, and we could see that in our business as well.
Why we say that this data is indicative, there's actually quite a lot of data behind it. When we look at by country, there's about 100,000 connected elevators behind that data. When we look at this by segment, that's more global, the data, and there's over 200,000 units from which we have collected this data. It should show quite meaningful trends. I think why this is important is that it shows that the maintenance business is more or less back, and when we look at our growth, we are actually also more or less back to a trend growth in that. Ilkka will talk more about it a bit later. What about the new equipment markets? Well, perhaps the most positive development in the quarter was the North American market.
That grew actually stronger than we had expected, so very strong recovery in North America, United States in particular. Europe, Middle East, and Africa a bit more mixed. Continued recovery in Central and North Europe, although actually throughout the pandemic, Central and North Europe was strong. Actually it's just continued growth. Whereas more stable development in South Europe and a bit more challenging in Middle East markets, so overall pretty stable. Asia-Pacific clearly two different situations. Asia-Pacific outside of China very strong recovery. India, Australia really leading that growth, and we can also see that Southeast Asia is coming back. China now in the quarter was more stable, but perhaps it's all the time important to put it in perspective, the China market. The China market is at a high level.
Remember the growth in the China market in Q3 and Q4 last year. We had an incredibly strong growth going in Q3 last year, so it's not that the market is low. The market is actually strong, and from here, little bit tempering now as I will talk about a bit later. Overall, at the high level. Service markets, broad-based growth in both maintenance and modernization. Maintenance continued good growth in Asia-Pacific and slight growth in Europe, Middle East, and Africa. North America, I would say as in accordance with long-term trends. Perhaps the most positive market again here also was North America, with significant growth in modernization and also Asia-Pacific, both China and outside, very nice growth. Good opportunities in services overall. That's of course the good aspect with the current markets.
A little bit more in detail about the Chinese property market. I know it's top of mind for a lot of people, of course for us as well. Very important market to us. As I mentioned, the market was pretty stable year-over-year, with signs of tempering activity, although, again, the market is at the high level. We are much higher than we were, for example, 2019, because of the recovery already last year. Pricing environment continues to be in a tough, very intense competition, lot of growth ambitions by many players. Overall we've done pretty well here. We've been able to have stable pricing in China. If you look at the construction sector overall, we of course can see that the overall macro momentum in China is slowing, so it's having an impact.
We know that there's very strict regulation around the property sector and also both for supply and for demand. All is really around liquidity. Very tight liquidity for developers. We all know about the three red lines policy, which is important, but also general more focus on that sector right now. Also for consumers, liquidity constraints for mortgages. What we've seen is that immediately if any province has a little bit or any city has a little bit eased these restrictions, growth has come up quickly. We can see that the underlying demand is definitely there. Some of the statistics now in Q3, we can see real estate investment slightly down from a good level. The same thing with residential sales and new starts did come down now in the quarter. Pricing slightly up.
We also put here to the right. You can see if you look at year-to-date numbers, recovery has continued and actually quite strong. Now in Q3, clearly there's been more focus and we had a bit of a slowdown overall in the market from a high level. That's a bit more detail about China. Now I'll hand over to Ilkka to talk more about our financial development in Q3.
Very good, and thank you, Henrik. Also warm welcome on my behalf to this third quarter results webcast. As normally, I'll go through the financials a bit more in detail, and I have also very good progress in number of areas to share today. I'll start first with orders received. Orders received for the third quarter were EUR 2.211 billion. On a reported basis, that's 14.5% growth, and our comparable currency is 10.9% growth. Very good growth across all businesses, both new equipment as well as the modernization business.
What I'm especially pleased about that we saw also geographically broad-based growth in our orders received. Particularly, I would mention both Asia Pacific as well as North America, both growing well above 30% their orders in the quarter. Very good progress there. In China, our orders in monetary value grew slightly and in units clearly. As Henrik already mentioned, pricing was stable in the quarter in China, whereas mix had a slight negative impact to our orders received, and therefore the difference between the value and volume. I talked about the growth in orders received, but also not only have we been able to grow, we've also seen positive development in our pricing. Very pleased to see that pricing has continued to develop positively, especially in North America. In Europe, especially in Central and North Europe, we've seen good progress.
As already said, China was more stable, and the competition was quite tense there. We continue to see the development that we start to mention already in second quarter to continue when it comes to pricing. Despite the pricing improvements, also the costs have increased, as Henrik already mentioned, and therefore the margin of our orders received declined in the quarter due to the increasing costs, input costs, raw materials, logistics, as well as semiconductors, as we already mentioned. To sales. Sales for the quarter were EUR 2.61 billion. Roughly stable on a reported basis, an increase of 0.9%, and on a comparable basis, a decline of 1.3%. Geographically similar development, so Europe, Middle East, Africa declining by 1.2%.
Asia Pacific, including China declining 1.7% and Americas a slight decline of 0.4%. New equipment contributed to these declines. Modernization grew by 1%. What I would say that from a revenue perspective, clearly a highlight of the results was the very strong performance in maintenance. We saw maintenance growing now 7.5% revenues. There, this discretionary part of the revenue actually grew faster than that, having a positive contribution. Overall, we are now broadly on the line of our normal growth, if I look at the growth from 2019 for the maintenance business. Adjusted EBIT for the quarter was EUR 327 million, a slight decline from last year's EUR 340 million, and the margin was 12.5%, down from 13.1% of last year.
On a similar level than we had 2019 at 12.6%. On a positive side, adjusted EBIT had a positive impact from favorable mix as well as a good development in services. Decline in volumes contributed to negatively both overall, but also having a less fixed cost absorption there. As Henrik already mentioned, we had a EUR 75 million impact from increasing component and logistics costs having a negative impact to the results. We're partly able to counter that with actions, but not fully, as visible in the results. To cash flow. The cash flow for the quarter was EUR 365 million. As I always say, one quarter is a very short time to measure cash flow. For the first nine months of the year, our cash flow was EUR 1.3 billion.
It was a solid number, and we continue to see a positive net working capital of EUR 178 million for the nine months contributing positive cash flow, and we continue to have a good cash generation for the business, so very pleased on that. Next, I'll hand back over to Henrik to talk about market and business outlook. Henrik.
Thank you, Ilkka. Let's go into how we see rest of the year and start with markets. New equipment markets in China, we expect new equipment markets to grow clearly from a high level, and that's of course because of the very strong activity in the first half of the year. Now, Q3 was stable. Q4 probably slight decline. Rest of the world, we can see a recovery in the markets from a lower comparison period, so that of course continues to provide good opportunities. Maintenance, we see a normalization in maintenance activity around the world and therefore, you know, clear growth in Asia Pacific and growth also in rest of the world according to trends we've seen also pre-pandemic. Modernization expected to grow across all regions.
I would say overall, a quite positive market backdrop for the end of the year. For KONE business outlook, we have specified a little bit as we have now just a quarter left of the year, and we expect our sales to be in the range of 4%-6% in comparable currencies, and we expect our adjusted EBIT margin to be in the range of 12.4%-12.8%. We previously said 12.4%-13%. Of course assumes exchange rates don't change much from current level. There are many things that are driving good performance. We have very solid order book, and as you've seen our maintenance business, our maintenance base performing very nicely.
What's been very good in the past couple of years has been our development in quality and productivity, so continuous improvements from there. There are, of course, things that are burdening the result. We talked a lot about it. The main thing, really, the headwinds from materials, steels and such, logistics and electronic components, about EUR 200 million for the full year. So a little bit more than what we expected in connection with Q2 results. We continue to invest in our capability to sell and deliver value-added and digital services. And as we can see, that is really paying off nicely. Also, as we are now entering the last quarter, we thought we're gonna provide a glimpse into 2022. Of course, we'll come with much more clear guidance than in January next year.
A little bit, what is it looking like going into next year? So many positives. We have a very solid order book, as you saw, at EUR 8.4 billion. That is at a very good level. Our service business has very good momentum, both in maintenance and modernizations. We're doing very well there, and that's of course providing nice boost and good growth and profitability to us. Then we can also see that with the visibility we have already now, that the effects of product cost actions, but also pricing actions, that they will start to have an impact in the second half of last year. Not yet in the first half.
It takes a bit of time to have all of this in the market and pricing starting in the second half to have an impact. That is gonna drive performance then as well. Clearly there are things that are burdening the result that I think is pretty clear to everyone. The material price, raw material prices, steel and such. As you remember, the impact was quite small in the first half of the year, so clearly there will be a carryover effect of the high prices going into next year. The same thing for logistics costs and costs for securing electronic component availability. The China market, as I mentioned, we expect the China market to be solid next year, although we expect it to decline somewhat from this year's high level.
We expect still good demand in the market, although slightly lower. That's what we mean with slightly lower visibility in the China market for next year. There are both pluses and minuses, and clearly bigger impact of many of these negative things in H1 than H2. Then, to wrap up, what is good is that market recovery is continuing despite the challenges in global supply chains. Demand is there, and we could see it across all of our businesses. We had very good growth in orders received and continuous market-leading growth in maintenance in particular. But of course, supply chain challenges will continue in this quarter and also into next year. We are addressing this from a position of strength.
We have a lot of capabilities and ability to address this, and we are doing it. Of course, we have a rock solid situation to do it from. We continue to drive differentiation with our value-added service and solutions that we see are starting to have a good impact on our growth, in our business overall. With that, now happy to open up the lines for questions.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speaker phone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Again, press star one to ask a question. We will take our first question from Andrew Wilson with JP Morgan. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Hi, good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for taking the time and for taking the question. I guess probably predictably, I'd like to start on China, if possible. Apologies for that, I'm sure. If we take just your comment on China in 2022, Henrik, is that a comment talking about being slightly down year on year? Is that a comment on new equipment or on the whole China franchise, so including the service components as well?
Thanks. Andrew, no reason to apologize to ask about China. Clearly, it's a high focus area for us as well. When we talk about, then I talk about the total market. What is the demand in the total market for elevators and escalators? We expect that to be down somewhat next year, but still a solid market overall. Of course, our performance is then a different question. Of course, we aim to perform as well as we can in that environment.
Also, to add to your comment, so we will see good opportunities in modernization market.
Mm-hmm
... to continue to grow, as well as in the maintenance side of it. If it's the whole market, but we're now talking about new equipment only.
Yeah. Good addition. Thanks.
Yeah. Okay. I guess you can take that as the new equipment comment. I guess it sort of links quite nicely to my second question. It seems that the outperformance from KONE versus the market in China was pretty evident in the Q3. Can you just talk about sort of what drove that outperformance, if there's anything you'd particularly flag, and I guess whether you think it can continue?
You know, one quarter is always a short period of time. I think, as you probably remember, we don't usually measure market share on a quarterly basis because it can fluctuate. You know, we have a strong franchise in China. I think what is relevant is to see, you know, our longer term progress in that market continues to be strong. That is what is important. Of course, you need to perform every quarter, but we don't still think it makes sense to measure market share on a quarterly basis. You know, yeah, we did well overall.
Okay. Maybe if I can just slide one final one in. Just on the comments around the cost headwinds sort of flowing into 2022. I don't know if you could kind of give us a preliminary idea or maybe on what that 2022 headwind might look like, obviously realizing it's more concentrated on the first half than the second half.
Yes, you're right. Obviously there's many moving parts still before we get to 2022, and we'll comment in more detail as we get to fourth quarter results. Just to give you an idea, now the run rate of the headwind is around about EUR 300 million. Two hundred of that is now visible in this year and therefore we're talking about something in order of magnitude of EUR 100 million next year, mostly in the first half due to the lower comparison point.
That's perfect. Thanks very much for the detail, guys.
Thank you.
We will now take our next question from Klas Bergelind with Citi. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Thank you. Hi, Henrik and Ilkka, Klas at Citi. First on pricing. The market is obviously competitive in China, and activity is now showing signs of leveling off. I guess it's tricky to get positive price growth, but it should be very solid in North America and parts of Europe. My question really is can those price increases be enough to offset the current cost headwinds in the beginning of next year? Obviously, you talk about EUR 100 million, Ilkka, first half weighted. Or do you need to announce another cost program to keep margins going? Because certainly looks like quite a lot of pricing in developed markets relative to China to compensate. Yeah, I will start there.
Thanks, Clas. I would say that it's clear that we are taking actions on many fronts. We're taking pricing actions. As I mentioned already that this year we've been able to compensate about half of the gross impact from steel and material costs and things like that. It's actually a very good performance there. And of course, we are driving that into next year. It's both pricing, it's product cost, it's productivity, all of the above. You know, we are confident that we will definitely claw back nicely next year, but impact will start to happen more in the second half of the year.
Okay, that's very clear. Second half of next year. Okay, thank you. The second one I have is on maintenance growth, which came in better than I thought. Very, very good stuff here. How much of that is volume relative to pricing to compensate for increased cost inflation, like inputs, wages? I'm trying to understand whether this is an underlying improvement in maintenance activity, and if you could split it in between discretionary coming back versus your digital efforts start to kick in.
Well, I would say that I wouldn't take the digital efforts as a separate item, but look at it more holistically. It's a way we do maintenance. We have a physical as well as a digital part of it. From a unit volume perspective, we had a bit less than 4% growth in units, and the rest is then pricing plus a bit of recovery. We talked about the discretionary part. Remember the 25% of the revenue. That grew around about 10%. That's the kind of moving parts. We see a positive impact from pricing through the 24/7, and also in this environment, we see good opportunities to continue increasing prices in maintenance. Inflation helps there.
It's net pricing rather than just pricing passing on cost inflation. It's value add pricing that is contributing. Yeah.
Yes, exactly. We see Henrik talked about the 10% penetration of the 24/7. Clearly to me, not only the volume has been the positive surprise, it actually has been that we are continuously see good pricing development. It's stable development pricing, and that adds to our maintenance revenue then nicely.
Good. The third and final one is on EMEA. Here you see a little bit slower growth, relative to how you commented on the market last time outside North America, North and Central Europe. Is this supply bottleneck driven construction projects being pushed out, lack of contractors and workers, or is there anything else? Is it demand driven in any way?
I would say that shortage of labor and materials and things like that can have a small impact, but not significant. I would say that those situations are still more anecdotal than broadly spread at the moment. I would say that it's perhaps more a demand-driven question. You know, some Southern European countries are doing okay, but it's a very mixed picture. Perhaps a more challenging situation is in the Middle East right now.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
We will now take the next question from James Moore with Redburn. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Yes, good afternoon, everyone. Hi, Henrik, Ilkka. Thanks for the opportunity. I have one on China and one on the supply chain, if I can. On China, I don't know if you saw the Ministry of Housing rules on tall buildings. I wondered if you could help me size how important this is to you, and maybe what percentage of buildings are over these new rules of 150 m, 250 m. I'm thinking about mix effects. Does less super high rise help you or hurt you given density?
That in itself doesn't have a huge impact. Of course, you know, there had been a rule in place already of super tall buildings not being favored, and that impact is actually not that big. You know, the vast majority of our business is they are buildings of 150 m, the standard residential you have there. At least at the moment, I don't think that this is a big issue for us in particular.
Thanks. On the supply chain, could you help us with some of the exposures to the new topics? I'm thinking about what is electronic components and annual freight as a percentage of sales. On freight, I guess the question at the moment is what is the split between land, air and sea given the very differing price inflations? Can you say what share of freight is contract versus spot mix? Because we're in a situation where spot prices are super elevated, probably come down. The contract prices probably have to go up a lot. I'm wondering if you're already wearing that or you have yet to wear that.
As much as I can say, of course, we try to do majority with contract prices. You know, they're usually one-year contracts, those rolling and we have actually quite recently renewed ours. Don't worry, we are feeling the pain. I can't say what is the split in our total logistics cost between land, sea and air, but the main impact is clearly on sea. We're starting to see now also that land freight cost because as you see in many countries, the lack of truck drivers is also driving up prices. Logistics overall is clearly a headwind and probably gonna continue for a while.
No. Maybe I could ask it a different way, Henrik, just as a follow-up. I mean, can you say what proportion of your global revenue goes on a boat?
No, I can't. You know, if you think about it, you know, what is our biggest supply unit is in China. There, you know, 90% is for the local Chinese market. On the other hand, you know, we are by far the largest exporter of elevators out of China. So, we also have a big impact and a big share going abroad. In the end, I would still put the context that we are quite regional. Yeah, I can't say-
Maybe, hey, one way to think about it is, we're talking about maybe EUR 150 million of costs on an annual basis in logistics.
Okay
It's not that huge of a number either way it goes.
This year it's become a bigger number.
Oh, I was gonna say-
It's a bigger number clearly now this year.
Yeah
because of that.
Is that the EUR 150 million that's going up EUR 75 million or is that a wider bucket? That's including the raw material, isn't it?
No, it's EUR 150 million, the annual spend on logistics, which is up EUR 40 million this year.
That's very helpful. Thank you very much.
We will now take the next question from Rizk Maidi with Jefferies. Please go ahead, your line is open.
Hi. Yes. Hi, Henrik, Ilkka, thanks for taking the question. I have two. The first one is on supply chain. Maybe perhaps can you help us quantify what was the effect on EBIT in Q3, perhaps just as a headwind there? And also how did it impact your different businesses? Did you have to prioritize maintenance or repair over new equipment or not in the quarter?
I don't think we had to prioritize any business, but you can probably talk about the EBIT impact of.
Yeah
of this.
Yeah. As Henrik said first on this prioritization, we've been actually able to deliver to our customers quite well. That I'm very pleased about. As said, it comes with a cost and for the quarter, this increase of raw materials, logistics and semiconductors was around about EUR 75 million. We've been able to counter some of that with actions in this quarter, but not all of it, clearly. Our EBIT is down. At the same time, we have the positives of growing business in services and particularly the good performance we had in maintenance, contributing positively.
For the quarter, we had a slight also one-off item in terms of land sales, which was a bit more than EUR 10 million, but contributing positively to our results.
Okay. Thank you. The other one is on the prolonged equipment lifetime on the connected services. Maybe can you give us a bit of data there, like how is that sort of improving in terms of sort of months, years or anything you can give us there? That'll be helpful. Thank you.
I think we are quite at the start of this to have really hard data on this. What we've been able to show is that the asset management plans that we can provide based on this data are actually quite accurate. Therefore you can have good planning of what you need to upgrade and how you're gonna maintain over the coming years. That's why we are confident it will increase the life cycle. That is something we need to wait a few years to have very specific data on to show that, you know, on a component level and total elevator level, what the impact will be.
Okay, thank you.
We will take our next question from Miguel Borrega with Exane BNP Paribas. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Hi, good afternoon, everyone. I've got two questions, please. The first one just on cost inflation. I just wanted to understand the moving parts across the different segments, new installations compared to maintenance services. I know you don't break down the margins for each business, but directionally, would you be able to comment on how the margin for maintenance has evolved on a year-on-year basis? Would it be fair to assume that margins are up?
Well, from a margin perspective, the headwind that we talked about in terms of increasing costs is mainly impacting our new equipment and in the modernization business from a manufacturing point of view. In maintenance, we continue to see good, stable performance and the margins are developing favorably, but clearly less variance there than in the equipment businesses.
Okay, great. Following up on that ballpark numbers, how much price increase do you need in new installations to stick and pass through those EUR 200 million extra from cost inflation? Because if pricing in China remains competitive, I would assume that pricing needs to be materially up elsewhere in North America and Europe.
We have to remember that we said we have three actions. It's about pricing, it's about product cost, and it's about productivity. Of course, it's a combination of all of these, where you get to. I think it's very simple. You can take EUR 200 million, and we have a new equipment business that is in excess of EUR 5 billion in total. You know, we have about this year a bit over EUR 10 billion in revenues and new equipment a bit over half of that.
That's great. Thank you. Maybe one last question on China. Given the situation around liquidity, are you restricting in any way orders to some of your more distressed clients? Is there a more challenging environment around payment terms with developers that could be impacting your order growth or maybe even delivery? Thank you.
Well, clearly, we have and continue to be very tight with following up the credit risk we have with our customers. I would have to say that if I look back a bit and put things in perspective, we've actually been able to maintain a pretty steady payment terms in China. Especially given the pressure that we've seen now for the last year and a half, I think that's a very good outcome. Naturally, then if we look at the results, one reason why revenue was down in China in the third quarter was that we've been very tight on not delivering unless we're comfortable that we get paid and had the payments done according to our normal policies.
I think we've been doing a quite good job managing that risk, in a right manner from my perspective.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
We will take the next question from Andre Kukhnin with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Good afternoon. Thanks so much for taking my questions. Can I start with the revenue question on the new equipment? Sequentially, I think there's like a EUR 200 million decline, which is very unusual from historical seasonality point of view. I guess some of it is China, but looking at your disclosure, that's less than half of it. Could you talk about why we're missing that kind of EUR 200 million of revenue in Q3 in new equipment?
Well, it's a bit less than that, but in any case, always have quarter-on-quarter fluctuations on the revenue. In this quarter, it was a bit down in new equipment. That obviously is a function of the orders we get. We've seen in some of the areas during the pandemic times, orders been down. At the same time then, for example, in China, we've actually been having a good orders growth, but then also the sales growth has been quite good. There's less of a backlog there. All in all, I would say that this is something which fluctuates on a quarterly basis on new equipment. China, you're right, is down from sales perspective slightly, as I already said.
There we've been quite tight with our payment terms, and that has impacted a bit the deliveries as well.
Andre Kukhnin also put it in perspective. Remember that, except for China, where we in Q3 last year had tremendous orders growth, we had decline in other places. Clearly, that is something that then is coming through in the order book right now. It's a very simple function of orders last year.
Got it. Should we take the Q3 then run rate as somewhat one-off, compared to kind of what you've been and then think more about maybe nine months run rate when we think about the rest of the year and going to 2022 also for new equipment?
Well, I think one way to think about it is that our order book is now up this quarter, and that provides us a good basis for growing our sales going forward as well.
Great. Thank you. Second question, and sorry for being quite mechanical on this. In terms of pricing feeding in as I think you mentioned that in China, my understanding is that you have raised prices as have done the industry from mid-year, but it's not really visible in Q3. As you said, your pricing is stable. Is it just a function of what you've been booking in Q3 was already bid for at old prices or kind of there's sort of a lag time from announcing price increase keep feeding in and hence, could you tell us what it is that lag?
Well, maybe I'll start then, and if you wanna comment thereafter. First, I don't believe in announcing price increases. Pricing is a function of the activity that we do with our customers in terms of selling, being able to be competitive case-by-case basis. Naturally now we put much more focus on making sure that we are doing that in the right manner, and then the outcome is pricing. What I said was that we saw already pricing improving quite nicely in North America, Central and North Europe, particularly. In China it's been more stable. That's the outcome of the activities that we've done. Naturally everywhere in this environment, we wanna make sure that we are maximizing the pricing, and on a customer by customer basis.
It's more the activity rather than an announcement that we do, impacting there.
Nothing to add.
Got it. Thank you. Last question, you mentioned or you talked about 24/7 now being 10% of your maintenance base, which I think implies about 150,000 units and a bit of acceleration versus the run rates that you were at, I think for the last couple of years. My notes suggest that you were about 100,000 units at the start of this year. Could you talk about the reasons behind that? Is that higher kind of attachment rates on new service contracts that you sign or is it you going into existing maintenance base and signing customers up to 24/7? Maybe just in relation to that, could I ask how many total connected units you have at this stage?
First, on 24/7 Connected Services, I mean, it's one of these things that, you know, that is how we do maintenance, and that is becoming more and more evident in our organization that, you know, what we sell to our customer is a combination of digital and physical. Clearly, the highest hit rates we have is when we convert new units from into the maintenance base. Also what we can, you know, change contracts for existing contracts. I think it's just something we built momentum constantly in the organization, building capabilities. To sell them commercially, you really need to build capability throughout the organization. That's what we've invested in. As I said before, why have we invested in? Because this is the first really big service we have, but it's gonna be more.
Now we built up that capability, which is strategically incredibly important. If you just hand away these services, you don't build up that capability. There I would say that we have something quite unique in our industry right now. It's just as simple, building up momentum, doing well, and also more and more evidence to our customers that there are some clear benefits from them. Those are perhaps the most important things. What do we have total connected units with kind of old style connectivity and this about-
500,000.
About 500,000. Yeah.
Great. Thank you very much for your time.
Thank you.
We will now take our next question from Guillermo Peigneux-Lojo with UBS. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thank you, Henri, and thank you, Ilkka, for your time today. I wanted to ask two questions. First, on your slightly lower China comments. When I go back to your performance and market share gains actually throughout the history in China, I think there is a period between 2015 and 2017 in which you do have more or less, you know, anything between low single-digit to mid-single-digit decline in the market. It took a number of years. Would you characterize the situation that we do have at this point in time as similar to that one? That is my first question.
You know, exactly how the market will develop over the coming years will be a lot policy driven. You know, we think urbanization is continuing and all of that. What is perhaps slightly different is that if we go back to the situation kind of 2015-2017, which was again a more difficult situation, you know, when we went into it, remember 2015 particularly, we had extraordinary high margins in China. Actually the whole industry was very profitable. Market came down then and actually created competition. So margins came down, but we, you know, ended up that with margins at very good level, but I would say from exceptional levels.
If I look at the profitability today of the players in China, both domestic and international, profitability is not that high for many players anymore. I think many of, particularly mid-size players, are struggling to make money. Therefore, I think the pricing situation is probably gonna be different now. 'Cause you had a double whammy then. You had both a market that came down and pricing that came down. Frankly, I don't see how people are gonna be able to survive if prices come down. As I said, few of us have good margins. I think we are probably one of the leaders there. I think that's perhaps the biggest situation difference. How is the market gonna develop over a three-year, five-year period?
That is, of course, too early to say. The only thing we can see is what the trends in China are. Clearly, a lot of rebuilding that is very important. That's a big part of the market already now. Rebuilding buildings that were not fit for purpose or of high enough quality, and then continued urbanization, particularly in the three mega cluster areas. I think that there are many good things, but of course, as we all know, it's gonna be very policy driven how the market will develop.
Thank you. The second question, I think you alluded to it from a market perspective, but I wanted to ask a question on your KONE's perspective as well, right? I think, coming into the 2015-2017 cycle, your margins, I think, were round about 20% in China from your equipment. Obviously, after the market did roll for a little bit, your margins also went down a little bit. Correct me if I'm wrong, of course. Obviously they have recovered.
I wanted to before, you know, going into 2022, I wanted to address a little bit the trajectory of the margins from a new equipment perspective of KONE in 2020 during the first half of 2021 just going into, I guess, basically 2022.
Well, the correct trajectory last year particularly was a good one. Of course, the first quarter was not good because everything was shut down. From second quarter onwards, we had actually very good trajectory. Costs started to come up significantly, you know, from kind of mid this year, and that started to have an impact, maybe, you know, sometime May or so was kind of the shift.
Exactly.
Can I ask maybe, are we in the mid-teens level as we speak, or is it somewhat below those levels in Q2?
What I would say is that we continue to have a good business in China that contributes positively to our EBIT margin, but we haven't been very particular on the exact margin.
Thank you. It's the last. Thank you.
Okay.
We'll take the next question from Lucie Carrier with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Good afternoon, gentlemen. Thanks for taking my question. I have a couple of follow-up. Ilkka, you have mentioned the backlog being quite strong. It's up 3% organically year-over-year. It sounds that when you talk about the market, particularly in China, where you've had very strong order intake the last 18 months, you sound a little bit more cautious. My question, I guess, is shouldn't the backlog be something that should nicely carry the activity in China, at least for the first half of 2022, you know, considering where we stand now? Or should we think anything differently, or you know, what are you concerned around maybe materializing this backlog?
I have from a order book rotation point of view less worries. We have good quality orders and we haven't seen cancellations in the order book. That gives us a good basis for next year. We'll come back to the sales guidance for next year closer to the fourth quarter.
Okay. You're not concerned by any delay or, you know, or kind of retaining some of the contract because of credit policy and so on that you may have internally?
Well, there's two separate questions to that. One, from a orders quality, we haven't seen any problems with that. Orders cancellations are very normal, so no change there. The order book rotation, we continue to work with our customers. In third quarter, we did have a impact from the liquidity situation. We saw some of the customers slowing down their progress. Let's see how that develops going forward with our customers.
Thank you very much. My second question is still on China. Some of your competitors have mentioned kind of an initiative to improve their reach of the Chinese market, you know, to lean into lower tier cities, adding some distributors, salespeople, and so on. My question was, how can you maybe help us understand how the business works with the distributors, particularly, which I think is still a large chunk of what you do in China? How are those distributors incentivized to work with you rather than maybe working with another manufacturer?
Who wouldn't want to work with KONE? Maybe that's my subjective point of view here. Now, of course, you need to have, you know, of course, a distributor will look at, okay, what makes them successful? Of course, you have long-term relationships you have developed with them. They understand your offering and all of that. It's all of those. You need to constantly be competitive and together with them win in the market. That makes both of you successful. That's, you know, as any business is the essence of business. I think we have a good situation here. I think we have a reach in China that is probably second to none, and you know, we have a very loyal set of, you know, sales channels for us in China.
I think that's a good situation that we have. Clearly, there are others who are trying to copy that and that, of course, is understandable.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
We will now take our next question from Joel Spungin with Berenberg. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Yeah. Hi, good afternoon. Just a couple of questions. Maybe if we can just start on modernization. Obviously, I'm just curious to know, obviously, you grew 1% constant currency in the third quarter in Modernization. Probably a little bit less than I was expecting, certainly. Is there any specific issues that you're encountering in terms of the modernization business, either in terms of delays to orders being executed or anything like that? Do you think that this is still a market that has space to recover as we move into 2022?
Yes, absolutely it has space to recover. As you saw in our outlook, we expect the market to continue to recover. I think this is mainly we talk about the order book rotation question of, you know, late last year, what orders we took in and so forth. I don't see that there would be any constraints of executing. We have to remember the modernization business very often is very much up to us and our customer when it's done, as an existing building. So I would say.
Maybe the only thing to add there would be that during last year, modernization was impacted by pandemic, and the decisions were slower. Now, this year, we have actually now, orders have grown quite nicely, so that gives us a good basis going forward.
Yeah.
Okay. It's predominantly a timing effect, rather than anything else at this stage?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I would say that.
Okay. Thank you. Then maybe just one more on China. I was wondering, maybe, I'm sure you're not gonna name names, but just in terms of your, the risk in the China business from specific developers, are you able to maybe put into context what your exposure, either directly or indirectly to developers who are, you know, in breach of the three red lines currently is? Is that something you have to hand?
Yeah. Maybe I'll take that. First, to put things to context, even though we talk a lot about how the market in China consolidates, it's still. This is an industry where customers are quite fragmented. Even the biggest customers that we have are a bit more than 1% in global turnover, so quite a fragmented customer base. Then when it comes to the exposure to these three red lines policy, the customers that are breaking more than two red lines, we're talking about maybe 4.5% in turnover. And that's China turnover.
Okay. Thank you very much.
Yeah.
Chinese turnover.
Yeah.
Okay. Thank you.
We will now take the next question from Daniel Gleim with Stifel. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Yes. Thank you very much for taking my questions. Actually, the first one would be the separation between you tightening payment terms in China and your customers from there, and slowing construction. Could you please scale for us which one was the more relevant part in the third quarter?
Like, I don't know if we tightened our payment terms. I think we held on to good payment terms.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah
We haven't changed them, but we've kept them on a good level as we've had in the past. In some cases that has meant that we haven't delivered to site unless we are comfortable with the payments that they have to make before we deliver to site.
If you contrast between yourself proactively affecting execution and on the other hand, your customer holding back execution, which one was the stronger driver in the third quarter?
That's hard to say. I think a bit of both, and sometimes it's hard to actually differentiate which one it is.
Mm.
When you think about large developer consolidation, what is your assessment how the changes in regulation are going to affect those?
You know, we can see that, you know, it's a mixed picture that some of the large developers have a very good situation. Some of them have a more challenging situation, but so is it also with the ones below them. You know, we expect still that in this market, it's the big developers, and when we talk about the big, then we talk about the top 50, even top 100 in China, that are probably the ones who have better ability to grow. We think it's gonna be important to have good relationship with those customers.
Maybe, hey, also another perspective, same topic is this three red lines policy was announced middle of last summer. Initially, it was targeted to this dozen companies and now broadened to cover 20. What we've seen as a result actually is that it's having an impact.
Mm-hmm
We see companies actually delevering and actually being in a healthier position when it comes to this red line. In that sense, it is actually helping the industry to going forward as well, have a healthy customer. That's a positive sign. In individual cases, clearly, we've seen a bit more difficulties as a result. Overall, I would say that it has had a positive impact to industry.
Thank you for that color. On the slides for the 24/7 Connected Services, you mentioned 70% of all potential faults have been identified. I assume you're moving along the learning curve with more analytics, more data, you could probably drive this number higher. Have you already thought about what the probable ceiling or the target will be for the 70%?
I must say that, I can't say that, but you're right that, you know, we have all the time more and more data, and I think that again shows why the big players have a big advantage here because we can all the time refine or what we call how we create the service needs. I think where we can get more and more better all the time is that which one do you actually react to and which one you don't have to react to, and all of that to even improve also productivity. I think 70% is already at the very good level, and frankly, I just don't know what the ceiling could be. I'm sure it can go somewhat higher, but clearly there's gonna be faults that you can't identify.
The good thing is that also in those situations, now we are connected, we can find out immediately. We actually even know usually before our customers notice it, so we can fix it quicker. I think it's a combination of those two. Of course, we learn every day.
Very clear. Thank you both.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We will now take the next question from Tomi Railo with DNB. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Hi, this is Tomi from DNB. On China, I was wondering if you could comment on monthly development in the Chinese elevator market. July, August, September, how did you see the markets developing during the quarter monthly? Maybe how has October started?
Well, we don't comment on orders within a quarter. Of course, we can see there is some impact on the market. At the same time, the market is there. There is some impact, but we don't comment on month-to-month orders. They can fluctuate a fair bit, of course.
In terms of the market, did you sort of, would it be fair to assume that July was maybe still strong, then you started to see weakening towards the end of the quarter in the marketplace?
I mean, if you look at even the holidays impact the market activity. I think it's going to that level of detail. It to me doesn't make sense. I think market continues to be there, as we said earlier in the market then maybe in fourth quarter then a more stable development there. Nothing particular to mention there in my mind.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
That concludes today's question and answer session. At this time, I would like to turn the conference back to our speakers for any additional or closing remarks.
All right. Well, thank you all for joining, and thank you for active questions. Just perhaps a few things to wrap up before I hand over to Natalia. What is important to keep in perspective is that the markets are currently good. Recovery is there, both in new equipment in many parts of the world and in services. You know, as you saw, we've been able to in all businesses capture those growth opportunities very nicely. It is on the other hand clear also that the global supply situation with materials, components, logistics will remain challenging going into next year. Of course, we're taking a lot of action. I think the visibility we have, we can see that both you know pricing product cost and so forth and productivity are having an impact.
It's clear that the impact is probably more going to be seen in the second half of next year, but the visibility is there. From that perspective, I remain optimistic that we can also overcome these challenges in the midterm. That's of course a good thing. You know, growth is there. With that, happy to hand over to Natalia to close the day.
Thanks, Henrik. Thanks, Ilkka. Thanks to everyone on the lines, both for tuning in and for the questions. If there are any follow-ups, please do reach out. We're here with the team to answer those. With that, have a great day.