Well, good morning, and welcome. Thank you, all of you in this room for joining us this morning and thank you for everybody else who's online. We are here, as you will know, to discuss the first half results for RS Group. Before we start the results presentation, I just wanted to take a moment to address the announcement that we made this morning about our CEO, Lindsley. Lindsley is not here today because the board has agreed for him to take a leave of absence from the business due to personal reasons. This is a personal situation, and out of respect for that, I am not going to get into the details, as those are personal matters for Lindsley. However, it is necessary that he takes a leave of absence from the business, and he is being well supported during that time.
As you all know, under Lindsley's leadership, we have built a truly great business. You'll be hearing more about that today, and we are incredibly grateful to David Egan and our entire senior management team, many of whom are here today, for stepping up to make sure that we just keep that momentum going because the momentum we have is extraordinary. Of course, the board and I stand fully ready to support them in any possible way we can. On behalf of everyone at RS, we wish Lindsley well, and we send him our thoughts and best wishes. Now I will respectfully ask that we focus the rest of the discussion on the results. In that regard, I am delighted that RS is in a really fantastic place. Our strategy is clear.
It is really resonating with our customers and our suppliers, and it is delivering consistent share gains across every region. We have really a fantastic depth in people. We have a top-class senior management team, and that goes all the way through the company. Serious talent throughout the company. Under the leadership of David during this period and the executive team, the board is extremely confident that we just won't miss a beat. I won't steal the team's thunder and will now hand over to David and to Jane Titchener to take you through our first half results. I thank you for your understanding and your support.
Thank you, Rona. Good morning. I'm David Egan, the Acting CFO of RS Group. I'm joined here today by Jane Titchener, a very senior member of the finance team within RS Group, the Vice President of Corporate Development and Strategy. This is Jane's first time, so please take it easy on her. Welcome, Jane. May I start by saying something about Lindsley. Lindsley is both a boss, but he's also a very personal and close friend of mine. I wish him well through this leave of absence. Lindsley, what I would say to you is that we will continue the momentum, and we will be focusing on customers, our people, the culture, and the purpose that you have established. We have every intention of doing you proud upon your return, and the team that you have assembled in the delivery of that.
Now let's shift gears, and let's focus on our first half results. Presentation for the six months ended the September 30th, 2022. We have delivered strong revenue and profit performance in the first half. Slide four shows our ongoing market share outperformance versus our peers, as our differentiated proposition continues to resonate in the market and with our customers. We continue to invest in our future while delivering increased margins and, more importantly, of equal importance, returns. This has been supported by a very strong balance sheet within our Group. Moving on to slide five. As Lindsley has said many times, our people are the most powerful driver of our business. We've invested in and supported high performance, purpose-led culture throughout the world.
We never underestimate the value that our people bring to our stakeholders, our customers, our suppliers, our communities, and our shareholders. We've launched a share-based award under our Journey to Greatness plan for all employees to participate globally. We've recently conducted our employee engagement survey, and our score improved three points to 78, which is, it places us very close to upper quartile of top performing companies throughout the world. Our U.S. business ranked 33rd on the list of the top 50 Inspiring Workplaces in North America in 2022, with a special mention for our inclusivity. Turning to slide six. We've had an exciting six months rebranding our company to RS Group. IESA and Synovos has become RS Integrated Supply. Needlers and Liscombe, the acquisitions that we did a little while ago, now operate under the brand of RS Safety Solutions.
In February 2023, we plan to rebrand Allied in the Americas to RS. Operating as RS brings recognition to our global proposition. It strengthens our product and solutions offer, and it delivers greater collaboration and efficiencies across the Group. It allows us to have one team, one purpose, one brand, and one culture. Now let me pass you over to Jane. As I said, please be easy on her. This is her first time. She's gonna cover our first half results, and then I will come back and talk to you about the outlook and also some of the areas that we are focusing on to drive superior outperformance. Over to you, Jane.
Yeah. Thank you, David, and good morning, everybody. Let's go through our results for the six months ended the September 30th, 2022. Slide eight summarizes our strong profitability, returns, cash, and shareholder value over the last three years. We have outperformed in the first half, leveraging our operating base to deliver an adjusted operating profit margin of 13.4%, nearly 30% adjusted operating profit conversion, over 31% return on capital employed, and we generated over GBP 110 million of adjusted free cash flow. We have eight non-financial KPIs, and they're detailed in the appendix. On slide nine, we've highlighted three metrics which are linked to our sustainability-linked loan and our progress on delivering our 2030 ESG Action Plans. They're carbon emissions, packaging intensity, and the percentage of women leaders in our business.
On to our income statement on slide 10, which shows that our revenue increased by 21% to GBP 1.5 billion, and our adjusted PBT grew by 35% to GBP 192 million. If we look at revenue in a bit more detail, as shown on slide 11, we delivered 16% like-for-like growth with 5 percentage points from volume and mix and 11 percentage points from price inflation. In the total revenue growth of 21%, there was 5 percentage point benefit from favorable foreign exchange. On slide 12, we detail the drivers of the 1.4 percentage point improvement in our adjusted operating profit margin, which has increased to 13.4%. Our revenue growth has provided strong operational leverage on our cost base.
Our gross margin grew by 1.8 percentage points to 45.5%, and this is driven by margin optimization work, especially within our own brand, a tighter discounting policy, and more focused buying commitments. We had limited transaction currency impact. Total operating costs have grown by 22%. Approximately a third of that relates to inflation, mainly in labor, one third is volume driven and t he balance relates to strategic investments, which we're continuing to make. We continue to invest in digital, our Journey to Greatness, rebranding to RS, as David referred to earlier, and in our people, including paying a total of GBP 5 million in additional one-off payments to all of our employees to help them through what's a very difficult economic time. Our Group energy bill is around GBP 5 million and is largely hedged for the next nine months.
Slide 13 shows all three regions delivering material improvements in revenue and operating profit through a greater focus on higher value B2B customers, price optimization, improved digital capability, and strong operational leverage on our cost base. This was all achieved while managing constrained supply of single board computing, particularly Raspberry Pi, which is sold through our consumer brand, OKdo, and the cost pressures and investment identified earlier. Regionally, we've seen EMEA drive profit improvement despite ongoing investment in our operating model. In the Americas, we've benefited from strong operational investment on the underlying cost base and from inventory investment into the expanded DC. In Asia Pacific, we've delivered greater scale with tighter commercial focus. If we move on to slide 14, which shows our cash performance, we remain very cash generative with an adjusted operating cash flow conversion of 82%.
Our inventory investment, which has supported customer demand in the first half, led to a decline in inventory turns to 2.4x . We expect our inventory turns to improve slightly in the second half as we tighten inventory commitments, restricting our investments to the higher inventory turn products which we know will sell through quickly, and the products which are searched most online by our customers. If we move to slide 15, our balance sheet remains strong. We have a small net cash position at the half year, and this will move towards pro forma net debt to adjusted EBITDA of 0.6x after the acquisition of Risoul. Last week, we completed the refinancing of a sustainability-linked loan, which increasing the value to GBP 400 million, extending maturity to five years plus one, plus one extension option, and all at similar terms.
This eliminates any financing risk over the medium term. Our fixed to floating interest rate swaps on our U.S. private placement loans will all mature before the year-end. There is no change to our capital allocation as shown in slide 16. Our three focus areas for growth are unchanged. Our number one priority remains organic growth. Given our high ROCE of over 31%, we're able to profitably leverage our asset base. Our balance sheet is strong, and that provides inorganic opportunities too, and there are some exciting opportunities in our M&A pipeline. We do continue to be super disciplined financially, strategically, and culturally. On to slide 17. We're really proud to welcome two new businesses to RS Group. First is Domnick Hunter, a leading distributor and service provider of major air compression, purification, and filtration products based in Thailand.
Second, Risoul, a major distributor of industrial and automation products and service solutions in Mexico, and this acquisition remains on track to complete by the end of this calendar year. Both businesses expand our products and service solutions offer geographically and are expected to exceed our Group cost of capital by the third year, and we welcome everyone from Domnick Hunter and Risoul to the RS Group. Now I'll hand you back to David to update you on current trading.
Thank you, Jane. Great job. Well done. Current trading, slide 19. Trading over the first four weeks of the second half has been in line with our expectations. Despite the more difficult economic backdrop, our performance in the EMEA region is broadly in line with the second quarter, and this is driven by our strong industrial offer, greater proportion of service solutions revenue, and an improving service levels. The Americas continues to deliver strong revenue against tougher comparatives as we maintain our investment in our operational capabilities after a period of exceptional growth. Trading in Asia Pacific continues to be affected by lower electronics market demand, reduced availability of single-board computing, and also a more challenging geopolitical backdrop in China. Despite the tougher global economic environment, trading remains in line with our and consensus expectations for the full year.
As previously guided, given our strong performance in the first half of this year, we expect there to be a greater first half weighting than what has historically been delivered by RS Group. We continue to deliver market outperformance. Slide 21 shows our outperformance versus global industrial production data, which has accelerated throughout COVID-19. This is driven by our breadth of offer, strength of availability, and ease of ordering, which has increased the average order value within our Group. While our dynamic pricing tool has enabled improved pass-through of product cost inflation. The Group is run according to a strategic scorecard, which we outline on slide 22. Fundamentally, everything links back to our people, our purpose, and our culture. We believe that we can operate more efficiently. A reminder that distribution is all about excellent execution, and we want to be world-class with our growth accelerators unchanged.
Focusing on these areas is the reason for our outperformance, as we demonstrated in the first half. We've seen a change in culture and mindset. On slide 23, as it starts with being more strategically focused, having a stronger balance sheet, being more commercial and returns-focused, and prioritizing investments. We are more agile. We believe we're more dynamic. We have a Group strategy that's implemented regionally with end-to-end accountability when we use our data to change prices, inventory, and costs quicker to demonstrate that resilience but agility. We have a more customer-centric model as we focus on delivering our growth drivers and becoming more integrated with our customers on an end-to-end journey and becoming ultimately their first choice. Today, I want to talk to you about how we are improving our operating efficiencies further on, and this is on slide 24.
I wanna focus on three areas: our pricing model, our inventory management, and having greater commerciality throughout our model to drive superior returns. On side 25, we operate a dynamic pricing model. First, let me start by saying that our customers' decisions are not primarily down to price in the first instance. We supply products that help our customers' businesses continue to run by having specialist products in stock available, delivering to them quickly and providing them with end-to-end support along that journey. For the most part, this is more important to them than price when the transaction value is just under GBP 250. In addition, we are becoming more integrated into our customers' business model with our products and services solutions revenue, and providing that double revenue opportunity for us as a Group.
We have a dynamic pricing tool which is fed data, including but not limited to transactional information and digital search, price elasticity, foreign exchange, inventory turns, and we use the tool to calculate the best pricing and discounts available in the markets in which we operate for us to maximize margins and returns, but ultimately to demonstrate value to our customers. Our teams all work together to maximize those margins, and you will have seen the gross margin improvement during the first half of the year. In part, down to the tools, the processes, and the people, but the value that we deliver to our customers. Due to our digital catalog, we have immediate dynamic pricing with over 70 million price changes being delivered in the last year alone. Moving on to slide 26.
We've benefited from our strong inventory management, delivering good availability where many other competitors have not. Key is ensuring this advantage doesn't disappear when the demand supply balance changes. We have a very sophisticated model. We have great people with specialist experience and knowledge of supply chain. Using our vast database to predict, plan, and analyze trends with deep-rooted supplier relationships, helping us develop and deliver a superior performance. What drops out is real-time insight of our customer demand. We take learnings across the Group, and we apply it locally, making many iterative changes. We've made changes to our second half commitments on inventory, investing mainly in high inventory turn products that we know will sell through faster. Key is working closely with our suppliers, being more restrained now, having a strong balance sheet, but equally using that balance sheet when life becomes a bit tougher.
Enabling us to step in when demand softens. We are becoming more commercial in the decisions and choices that we continue to make. For example, focusing on our more valuable customers, as shown in slide 27. We're using our extensive customer transactional and search data much better. Overlaying it with our industry knowledge and deep-rooted experience within our teams, and our strong customer and supplier relationships to focus on higher value, longer-lasting, valuable customers, resulting in, if you look at the top right-hand chart, our total customer numbers have declined 5% during the year, but there has been a focus on more valuable customers, and we've seen a decline in the B2C one-time customers, and a particular emphasis on greater strength within our B2B customers.
Our average order value, as I said before, has grown to just below GBP 250, which is a 23% improvement. We're focusing our sales and marketing efforts on our higher and highest spending customers, but not necessarily ignoring the smaller ones that we can then move up that curve over time. These are our key and corporate customers. We're promoting our digital self-serve, lower spending standard customers, which come through at a lower cost to serve. We've increased customization within our salespeople and our digital offer, including personalization, depending upon each customer's personas. There is much more that we can do, and we know that, and we are definitely on a journey here in terms of operational excellence. It is very exciting, and we look forward to continuing this momentum as we go forward.
All of this means that we are continuing to improve our operational efficiencies, as you will see on slide 28. We're doing that through increased use of automation and data, enabling us to redeploy our labor into more value-added areas, utilizing our data, specialist experience, and knowledge across the Group, with the regions adopting it for their best purpose as they manage according to the local customer needs. Our Group strategy is being deployed locally, leading to, for example, reduced freight miles and costs, decreased CO2 emissions, and quicker responses to our customers. Our model is now more relevant, agile, and returns-focused than it has ever been before. Our levers of growth delivered on slide 29 remain unchanged.
Through expanding our product choice by widening our breadth and depth, for example, in the Americas, developing our solutions offer for both product and services, for example, across the world, and improving our customer experience and services offer, delighting our customers, doing it more consistently and delivering more value to them is the name of the game. We truly believe that investing in our people and planet drives profit. We continue to develop our 2030 ESG Action Plan for a better world, and this is detailed on slide 30. This is to deliver value to all of our stakeholders, including our people, customers, suppliers, communities, and our owners. We are being recognized externally within the ESG rankings, including platinum status with EcoVadis, putting us in the top 1% of 100,000 businesses globally. Our business has changed.
RS Group is a very different company from the Electrocomponents of old. We are less cyclical, significantly less exposure to electronics. We are easier to do business with greater digital and solutions revenue. We are more agile in our pricing, cost base, and operating model. We are more returns focused, and we've built the foundations for a much stronger business. We've proven our ability to be resilient during Brexit, COVID, global supply chain shortages. Keep going. The list is long. Delivering strong growth while still investing in our business. We have great people and a great team to be able to do that consistently as we go forward. We outlined in our Journey to Greatness plan that we know we can deliver strong, more profitable growth through improving our culture, the customer experience, data usage, solving our customers' problems, and executing exceptionally.
We're mindful of a slowing economic backdrop, but we remain confident in the strength of our people and our differentiated proposition in delivering ongoing market share outperformance as we make progress on our Journey to Greatness. With that, I'd be delighted to invite questions in the first instance in the room. I will remind you that we do have a number of our leaders within the room, and so I will, where appropriate, and if I don't know the answer, I will certainly be handing it over to members of our senior leadership team here in the room.
Morning, it's Sanjay Vidyarthi over here from Liberum. Just a question in terms of the operating leverage within the business. I can see that the gross margin up 180 bps and the operating margin up 140 bps . The investment that you've made in growth has more than offset the underlying operating leverage. How do you think about that? Obviously, the gross margin improvement in pricing has allowed you to make that investment and still grow the margin. Those decisions in terms of longer-term investment clearly are not gonna be just about which direction the gross margin is going. How should we think about that both for H2 and longer- term as to when you decide to pull the lever on more investment in the business?
Sure. Thank you. We will continue to invest in the business. We recognize that there may be some economic headwinds in the short term. We are certainly not looking to short term the business. What I would say is if the world does turn horrible, we know what we will do. We would like to try and look through that in terms of the investments that we will continue to make. As we have said in the past, our objective is to continue to improve the operating margin of our Group. Gross margin is an important element, but also cost to serve is also a very important element. In order to do that, we need to ensure that we continue to invest in this business.
Some of the areas that are really important to us is customer experience and service, digital, inventory management, delighting that customer, supplier relationships, data. We will continue to invest progressively. It's not going to be a massive step change for us, but we will continue to invest in the business progressively. If we have to pull some levers because of some short-term headwinds, we will do it, but we're not looking to short-term the business materially.
Hi. I think I've got the mic spot over there. Hello, it's David Brockton from Numis. Can I ask three questions, please? Firstly, revenues are clearly benefiting at present from a big price element. I'm just wondering if you could just touch on to what extent that can continue in the short term as the sort of the base effect starting to annualize. Given your dynamic pricing, are you still pushing on prices materially? That's the first question. The second question just relates to the divisional margins. EMEA has gone from being the sort of the strongest relative to, I guess below Group average, despite not underperforming. I just wonder if you can touch on whether there's any specific investment that's going into the EMEA region. That's the second question.
The final question, just in relation to the acquisition pipeline. You note that it's strong. I just wondered if you could touch on the types of opportunities that you're pursuing and whether you're changing how you look at the deals in the sort of perspective of changing market conditions. Thanks.
Thank you, David. I'm going to let Jane talk about acquisitions. We'll start there, given that she's in corporate development.
Yeah, as we said in the presentation, we do have a strong pipeline of M&A opportunities, and we're working really hard to, you know, bring those forwards. We are maintaining our discipline, and clearly, you know, in the environment, the bar maybe goes up a little bit in terms of what we're looking for and what we'd want those opportunities to deliver for us. But we're certainly not, you know, slowing down our efforts to identify good quality M&A opportunities for us to bring into the business. You know, and actually, you know, this is a good time for us to do that. You know, the market is inevitably unpredictable, changing, but there are still, you know, targets out there that come forward. Pricing expectations probably still a little bit high.
We're still not seeing that come off perhaps as we would expect it to, which is, you know, I think flowing through into some of the transaction volumes that we're seeing. We're certainly very, you know, positive about the opportunity, but the key message is we will retain our discipline, in terms of pricing and the opportunities we're looking for.
Just one little build. Our objective is to keep this team really busy.
Yeah.
through this process, 'cause we wanna be looking at lots of opportunities.
Yeah.
It's a question of are they fit and right for us, you know, strategically, financial returns and culturally, and we will maintain that discipline. In terms of the EMEA, I will make one comment, and then I'm going to hand over to Pete Malpas, who is the President of EMEA. The regional returns we would say are all very strong. I think for EMEA, we've always said the focus for EMEA has been on reducing the cost to serve. It's very pleasing that EMEA has a strong top-line growth. It is across multiple markets, and that does create some complexity and a higher cost to serve. That's just one thing to bear in mind, but I'll now hand over to Pete, who will provide a specific response.
Thank you, David. Good morning, everybody. As David says, I'm Pete Malpas, the President for the EMEA region. As I think the question mentioned, you know, the growth performance, the top-line performance for EMEA remains strong, and we're happy with that, obviously. The margins are strong. You talk about particularly the operating margin dilution, let's say, at the moment. As David said, it is a complex region. It is a complex organization, given the complexity of the markets, and overall, it is strong. What I would say, specifically around the dilution, we mentioned earlier the acquisitions of IESA and Synovos, now RS Integrated Supply. A great business, a great proposition that really resonates well with the markets across EMEA.
We've made a lot of strategic investments at this moment in time to scale up the integrated supply model across EMEA, which we haven't yet seen the benefits coming through. They're a little bit slower than we would have hoped. But it's-- that's circumstantial, if you like, environmental, and that's improving and accelerating. Secondly, we've got the Bad Hersfeld expansion. Bad Hersfeld is going well. The service levels are now starting to improve and get back to the levels, but the investments we've made in Bad Hersfeld have yet to fully realize the efficiency benefits that we expect from them. Thirdly, David mentioned the service level. Service is critical for our people, so we've made some really solid investments in technology that will ultimately help improve the customer service level and then reduce the cost to serve and drive further efficiency.
Okay. Thank you, Pete. Then the last question was on revenue and price. I think sort of just a very simple answer here is that we will continue to focus on our price. I'll let Jerry answer it in a moment, but we'll continue to focus on price and optimizing the margin as much as we possibly can. We have not necessarily seen any material change in terms of the cost of the products at this point in time. In some instances, there are still inflationary pressures running through the cost prices of our products. I'll just hand over to Jerry, who'll provide a little bit more detail.
Good morning, everyone. I'm Jerry. I'm the President of RS PRO and Margin Optimization. In terms of one of our biggest strengths is the breadth of our categories. Because we have breadth of categories across industrial and electronics, there are certain deflationary challenges we do see in semis and passives within the electronic categories, which is less than 10% of our overall revenue. When we look at the industrial side, which is less cyclical, we're not seeing that deflationary challenge. Secondly, we got a high proportion of our revenue through RS PRO, which also protects us from a margin perspective. Finally, I think David already mentioned is that we got a new pricing tool which enables us to do a lot more price changes.
Therefore, we have a good understanding of the price elasticity of a product across categories as well as, across regions as well.
Hi, it's Henry Carver from Peel Hunt. Just one from me around the sort of competitive landscape. Obviously a lot has changed in the business over the last few years and, you know, as you've described and the deals that you've done, and you're taking share. I just wondered if you could give us a sort of snapshot or a bit of an update of who you're taking share from, who you're up against now, you know, and just any sort of thoughts on that would be really useful. Thanks.
Sure. Good morning, Henry. Look, we operate in many markets. Those markets are very fragmented, and there isn't really a real peer from a global perspective, that we come up against. The vast majority of the competitors for us in the local markets are local players. They can be larger, they can be regional, or they can be very small one-stop shop type competitors. There isn't any one single competitor that I could easily point to. I think for us it's about our proposition to the customer, the breadth of our range, our digital capabilities, and we would say certainly our people demonstrates and really resonates with our customers and that's what they're looking for and we can deliver them value.
Yes. Good morning. It's Oscar from JP Morgan. I have three questions. The first one is on Asia Pacific. Very strong margin in H1 , but you've talked about that, region struggling a bit more in the second half. How do we think about the margin there? Because that division clearly was unprofitable for a long time in the past.
The second question is on inventory. You put in. Sorry, there's been a GBP 50 million working capital outflow in the first half. Are we still putting inventory into the business in the second half into the new warehouses? The third question on just freight costs. If we see sea freight and air freight coming down, do we expect to benefit in the future from that?
Great. I'm going to get off quite lightly. I'm going to hand it over to Jane. She's gonna talk about APAC first.
Yeah. I mean, we've said about APAC. It has been affected by the slowing down, particularly in the electronics market and also the reduced availability of single-board computing products. That has, you know, we've seen that come through definitely. We definitely see a softening, particularly on electronics in the region. The impact of China. You know, China is about 15% of the APAC region. It's just on the 2% of Group sales base. It's not, you know, significant from a Group point of view, but it is, you know, a big chunk of the region. We are seeing the geopolitical situation in China becoming more uncertain. That is flowing through. The focus in APAC is on profitability.
The leadership team there are very focused on maintaining and, you know, and growing the operating margin. Even in the environment where we see the top line start to soften, there's lots of opportunity for us to continue to grow and profitably, particularly in industrial. There are a number of markets where our industrial base is still incredibly strong, and we've got a lot of market share to go after still within the region, and that's really where we're placing our focus. We continue to invest, so we're starting to grow out some of our operational capability, particularly across Southeast Asia and ANZ, in order to allow us to take advantage of those opportunities as we go through into the second half and certainly into next year. That would be my comments on APAC.
I think with APAC, just one little build. I think, you know, look, while China is a little bit more challenging, whether it be, you know, the CHIPS Act or whether it be COVID lockdowns, I think, you know, the rest of the Asia Pacific region, Southeast Asia, Australia, New Zealand, you know, they are very strong markets and good markets for us, and we'll continue to drive, you know, growth and also profitability improvements there. With regards to inventory, just one comment then I'll hand over to Christian. With regards to inventory in terms of the working capital build, we've seen quite a lot of FX running through our balance sheet in the first half.
Approximately GBP 40+ million on the inventory side and a similar GBP 40+ million on the receivable side, which is certainly, you know, that's just FX related. Specifically on inventory in the second half, Christian.
Yes. Thanks, David. Christian Horn, Chief Product and Supply Chain Officer. If you deconstruct the inventory increase to David's point, there's quite a significant FX element in there. There is also a significant volume element, probably accounts for half, and the balance is really investing in depth and breadth in the Americas and in service in EMEA. To answer your question, you know, we are putting an inventory into the business all the time, because that's part of our business, and we will continue to put more products into Bad Hersfeld. At the same time, we believe we have a very robust capability to sense demand. As David said, we expect inventory turns to slightly improve over the second half. When it comes to transport, now, we do see freight and air freight rates coming down.
We don't see them coming down to pre-COVID levels. Also the majority of our freight expense is outbound freight, which a lot of that is driven by fuel charges. We're gonna see some blend of impact between reduced A&C freight inbound and some continued pressures on outbound. You know, so probably not a dramatic change from what we've seen previously.
Just on the inventory for the full year, we would anticipate inventory year -on -year, probably up around GBP 40 million, GBP 50 million for the year. I think we're going to be sensible with regards to inventory and make sure that we don't which is gonna be dynamic depending upon demand patterns. At the end of the day, you know, availability of inventory drives our model, and so we've got to make sure that we don't sort of short-term the business for the sake of improving the balance sheet. We will look at it on a balanced basis, looking at the return on capital employed, but also looking at what our customers need to ensure that we can serve both needs.
Sorry. Oh.
Thank you. Tom Frame from Shore Capital. I was hoping to get your thoughts on the potential risk of customers destocking, whether that might be gradual or quite sharp as supply chain issues alleviate, and they get a bit more cautious about the macro environment. Yes, any thoughts generally on that basis, on the impact it would have on your sales will be much appreciated.
Sure. I'll just remind everyone that you know, we tend to serve the indirect spend. We're not supplying into the direct manufacturing process. It tends to be more of a just-in-time purchase. You can see that in the average order value being just around GBP 250. For us, you know, stock of our products tends to be very limited, and so the potential risk around destocking is very low. I won't say zero, but it's certainly very low for us.
Hi there. James Bayliss from Berenberg here. I think in your half-year report, you talk about churn being slightly elevated at about 12%, for the last 12 months versus 10%, which is what you've seen in the past. Just wondered if you could give any further comments on how that breaks out by seniority. If there's kind of any overarching reason as to, you know, where that additional churn is coming from. Is that due to pricing pressure, or is that just kind of natural attrition?
I'll make a comment, and then I'll hand over to Jordan. I think, look, as we've called out in the past, we certainly have some hotspot areas in terms of, you know, people or a higher labor turnover. Some of those areas include distribution centers. One of those areas was in Fort Worth. We also have some, you know, the fight for talent in some of our technology related digital or technology resources. Certainly, our focus has been on making sure that we give our people the best environment in which to excel and enjoy coming to work.
At the end of the day, it's also a very competitive and hot market, and there are certain things that we just cannot necessarily meet, in terms of, you know, their expectations or whatever they've been offered in terms of an alternative with regards to salary and opportunity. For us, it's more focused on purpose and culture, ensuring that we reward appropriately. Jordan, you may wish to add a bit more color.
Sure. Good morning, everybody. I'm Jordan Barry. I'm the Chief People and Culture Officer. We've had some, and some in different regions. As David pointed out, the biggest turnover and some of the spike that we're seeing is driven by some of our distribution centers and people, particularly in the U.S., walking up the road for an extra couple of dollars an hour. We're facing into that and looking at all the reward, the total reward in those areas. I think David's absolutely right. I think one of the things that we're absolutely focused on is the quality of leadership that we're providing because we know, and we can see in our engagement scores, that that's had a material impact on how our engagement scores have risen.
Then obviously on the back of that, the idea being that performance improves in association with that. I'm not expecting turnover in the current market to continue to increase. I would say that will probably stabilize, as we'll see in most businesses, but that's kind of where we are. Obviously, as David said, and all of us are very kind of focused on, you know, our strap line of people and culture being our greatest differentiator, and that's something that we're very focused on as a business. Thank you.
Any more in the room? Can we go to the phone lines somehow? Do we have any questions online?
We do. They're giving you a good time. In fact, they're going straight to Jerry. Jerry, on the pricing contribution to revenue, are you able to give a rough split between how much of this is general inflation in the market and how much can be attributed to your new pricing initiatives and tools which are extracting higher pricing?
We generally, when we do pricing, we look at the price elasticity of product depending on different regions. Inflationary impacts varies from region to region, so I can't give an overarching position because we have a huge mix of products. At the same time, we have a very large diversity in terms of the regions we cater to. One thing that we have seen is that inflationary impact is across majority of the categories, and we tend to see somewhere in the region of 6%-7% depending on the region we are in. Europe seem to be higher impacted on inflation compared to the likes of Asia, which is a bit lower as well.
Follow-up on it was, how much of your pricing tools or how expansive is it across the entire business line?
Our pricing capability tool is for all regions. Now, Pricefx is the tool that we use. We use across Americas, across Asia as well as across EMEA. In the Americas, we're building the same tool, so in the next 18 months, we're hoping to have the capability across all regions. The main thing is that the approach we take in terms of pricing is the same even though the tools are not available in the Americas. It's very much around how do we make sure that we look at customer data? How do we look at external data? At the same time, look at macroeconomic trends to make the decision on what's the right price for our customers, and that's the approach we take.
That's it.
I don't believe there are any more questions. I'd just like to conclude, firstly, thank you, Jane, and thank you for everyone attending, either in the room or on the phone. We look forward to updating you further in terms of the progress that we believe that we as a Group are going to continue to make. Thank you and good morning.