Hello, everyone, welcome to the presentation of ASSA ABLOY's second interim report in 2023. My name is Björn Tibell. I'm Heading Investor Relations, and joining me here in the studio are ASSA ABLOY CEO, Nico Delvaux, and our CFO, Erik Pieder. We have set aside about one hour for this call, as usual, and we will now start with a summary of the report before we open up for your questions. With that, over to you, Nico Delvaux.
Thank you, Björn, and also good morning from my side. We can report good results for Q2. I would say despite a more challenging residential market environment and despite a difficult comparison with a year ago and the fact that we have 1 working day less this quarter, we nevertheless were able to show an organic growth of 3% in the quarter, with very strong sales growth in Global Technologies and a continued good sales growth in Americas.
We complemented that organic growth of 3% with a strong growth through acquisitions of 6% above our ambition level. That contribution of growth through acquisitions will now also continue at least for the next four quarters, because we were also able now to finally close the HHI acquisition in the quarter. Very strong operational execution with a strong EBIT margin of 16.7% if we exclude HHI. A record EBIT of 5.5 billion SEK. Also, a record operating cash flow of 6.7 billion SEK, 76% up. Really strong performance on all three items.
As we mentioned earlier, we booked one-off costs in Global Technologies related to impairment of goodwill and intangible assets in our Citizen ID business. If we look at the numbers, sales of SEK 34.5 billion, 17% up. Like mentioned, 3% organic growth, 6% growth through acquisitions, and then held by currency of 8%. I will comment on profit margins excluding HHI, and then Erik, in his part, will then comment on the margins, including HHI. An EBITDA margin of 17.3%, and like I mentioned, an EBIT margin of 16.7%, and then EBIT, 29% up, and EPS, 18% up.
If you look a little bit at the different regions in the world, starting with North America, a continued strong performance, an organic growth of 5%, where we continue to see good momentum on the commercial side, where our spec business is still up high single digits compared to a tough comparison a year ago. Where we have obviously seen a decline on the residential side in general and on new build in particular, affecting in the first place, our garage door business, our residential garage door business, our Perimeter Security business, the part that is residential related, and then also our window hardware business that is an export business from Australia to North America.
We must say that we are a bit more optimistic, perhaps, on the residential business in the US than in other parts of the world, where we believe that we might have had the worst behind us, and that we, you know, should see a bottoming out of the residential decline and still should start to see already improvement now, in the second half of this year, and then definitely going into next year. Continued strong South America. Also here, 5% organic growth with, I would say, all countries contributing in a good way. Africa, plus 13. Australia and New Zealand, plus 11. A continued strong core business in Australia and New Zealand on the commercial side.
Very similar picture on the residential side, where also in Australia and New Zealand, residential business suffers and new build suffers even more, continued good momentum on the commercial side. Asia +9%, with a very strong Middle East, a very strong India, and a better Greater China, where our external negative growth in Greater China was only very small single digit negative. It was more down on the intercompany side because our sales towards Australia, New Zealand, EMEIA, and Americas went more down. Greater China together had a higher single digit negative growth still in the quarter.
We come to Europe, the more challenging part in the world, I would say, with a -2 organic growth, especially for EMEA, our residential part of the business, saw a important decline as well on the R&R side as especially on the new build side. I would say for all regions, in particular, also for our Nordic region and Sweden, in particular, where our OEM business saw a higher double-digit negative growth in the quarter. As residential is a bigger part of our EMEA business, that affected the EMEA division result in an important way. The commercial side in Europe, very similar to the US, still good momentum with our spec business up higher single digit.
I would say in general, on the commercial side, it's not the market that is our biggest concern, it's more the high comparison with a year ago. You look at some market highlights also this quarter, some nice project wins a service contract for more than 5,000 pedestrian doors for a retailer in North America. Good to see also that our Mobile Credential strategy continues to pay off in different verticals. We have a leading cruise line company that now invested in mobile key capabilities.
We have also a significant order for Physical Access Control in a major global bank that is also calling in for our call this morning, and where we also will implement then Mobile Credentials into the Apple Wallet. Our R&D efforts continue to pay off. DoorBird got a design award for their IP video solution. We launched also several new products in this quarter. Just to name a couple of them, we launched the first facial recognition lock in India for Yale, and we launched also a comprehensive range of IoT-enabled dock levelers that will increase operational efficiency and safety for the logistic vertical.
Now, 10 consecutive quarters with positive organic growth, in recent quarters, that organic growth also complemented with very strong growth through acquisitions. An improved operating margin, like I mentioned, if we exclude HHI in the quarter at 16.7%, if we exclude HHI on a 12-month moving trend at 16.2%, so well within the bandwidth of 16%-70% we aim for. Even if we include HHI at 15.8%, 12-month run rates are very close to that bandwidth. A stronger top line and improved margin, therefore an accelerated operating profit, like I mentioned earlier, a record quarter. On the acquisitions, also, an active quarter, with 4 acquisitions signed in Q2, 8 acquisitions signed in the first half of the year.
We announced a ninth one this morning for Secure Issuance in HID Global Technologies. Those eight acquisitions that we signed in the first half represent an annualized sales of SEK 17 billion. Second, of course, the highlight is that we were finally able to close now the HHI acquisition. We celebrated that on day one globally in all the HHI entities. I was myself with HHI management last week. I must say, a fantastic team. We speak the same language, we have the same chemistry, or good chemistry between us, you know, they were really happy to become now part of the ASSA ABLOY family, and I'm absolutely convinced we will do very nice things together.
If I then go a bit into the different divisions, starting perhaps with the more challenging division, EMEA, organic sales decline of 5%, with a higher single digit negative volume growth, and only strong growth in Middle East, India and Africa. Sales decline in all other regions in EMEA. Like I mentioned, still good momentum on the commercial side, but then a strong decline on the residential side, with especially on new build, a higher double digit negative market development. As in EMEA, we have 45% of our business which is residential. Obviously, it affected the overall result in an important way. We saw the biggest decline in the Nordics and in Sweden in particular.
That's important from a top-line perspective. It's also important from a bottom-line perspective, because Nordics and Sweden in particular are higher margin regions for EMEIA. Therefore, also an operating margin of 12.5% versus 14.4% a year ago. I would say, despite the bigger top line drop, they have done a good job in reducing cost. They showed a good operating leverage on that negative growth of around 35%. Obviously all the cost measures were not good enough to keep the margin up. They were also not helped by FX. Weaker SEK gave us a dilution of 50 basis points. M&A gave us a dilution of 20 basis points.
We are taking extra cost measures in this division, and Erik will come back on the details. If you look at Americas, another, I would say, star performance in the quarter, an organic sales growth of 4% on top of a very high growth a year ago, with very strong sales growth in general for all countries and all business areas, and then a very strong execution with very strong operating leverage, giving us EBIT in the quarter of 24.1%. If we exclude HHI and HHI related costs, that's a record quarter for the Americas. We also announced a new organizational setup for the Americas. We will go to a similar setup as we have in Entrance Systems with segments.
We will have a LATAM segment, we will have a North America commercial segment, and we have a North America residential segment. We have appointed the three leaders for those segments, and those leaders are now building their management teams. Still, yeah, very good results in Americas. APAC, organic sales of -2%. We have very strong sales growth in Southeast Asia. Stable sales in South Korea, where we see also market conditions further declining, and then a sales decline in Pacific and in China. In Pacific, like I mentioned earlier, if you look at the core business in Australia and New Zealand, we saw nice positive growth.
The sales decline is related to the window hardware business, which is an export business from Australia into U.S., and obviously, also local business in New Zealand and Australia, and a bit in Japan. That window hardware business, that goes mainly to residential, new build, therefore, the bigger decline. In China, like I mentioned, if you, if you look at final customer sales, China was almost flat, very small, single-digit negative growth. The sales decline mainly comes from intercompany sales to Australia, New Zealand, and to Europe, and the Americas. A very strong operational execution in this division, leading to an operating margin of 7.8% versus 1.9% a year ago.
They were held by FX 100 basis points and were also held by M&A 70 basis points. That is the D&D Technologies acquisition in Australia. Global Technologies, I would say, the star performer of the quarter, an organic sales growth of 20%, with very strong organic sales in all business areas, as well for HID as for Global Solutions, with the exception of Secure Issuance, where we had a big order for big printers a year ago, and therefore the comparison was more challenging. Those big printers, there's of course, project business that goes up and down quarter by quarter. Overall, very strong performance. Also, very strong execution with an operating margin of 18.4% versus 15.3% a year ago.
Strong operating leverage, held by FX 70 basis points and M&A dilutive, 60 basis points. As we mentioned earlier, we also did an impairment of goodwill intangible assets related to Citizen ID in HID in the quarter. Last but not least, Entrance Systems. A stable organic sales on top of, I think 20% organic growth last year, so difficult comparison. Strong sales growth in pedestrian and in industrial, compensating for the sales decline we see in Perimeter Security related to the residential part of Perimeter Security in the U.S., and then a significant sales decline in residential. Also here, the vast majority of our residential business is in the U.S., and an important part of that is going to residential new build.
Strong growth in service, delivering on our ambition to have high single-digit service growth quarter after quarter. Very strong operational execution with an operating margin of 16.2%. Also on a 12-month moving trend, Entrance Systems is now well nicely within the bandwidth of 16%-17%, much earlier than our initial plans. Very happy with the execution in this division. Very strong operating leverage, FX and M&A dilutive with 20 basis points and 10 basis points respective. With that, I give the word to Eric for some more details on the financial numbers.
Thank you, Nico, and also a very good morning from my side. As mentioned before, the numbers that you see here is including HHI. Nico talked before about the sales that was up with 17%. If you look on the operating income, it's up with 25%, and we have an EBIT margin for the second quarter, as well as for the full year on 16%, which is 1 point better if you compare to previous year, and it's the best first half year that we've ever had. If you look on income before taxes, it's up with 20%. There we have a higher financial net.
In the quarter, it was, yeah, roughly at SEK 247, if you want to have the exact number, higher than last year, and that's related to, of course, higher interest rate, as well as higher, yeah, cost for the HHI acquisitions than on the original. For the full year, we expect the financial net to be around SEK 2.5 billion. Net income is up with 18%. There we have... Of course, we have the tax impact from the divestment of Emtek, Yale and August. If you look on the underlying tax rate, it still remains on the 25%. Cashflow, continuously very strong.
I'm very happy to see that we almost generated SEK 6.7 billion, which is up with 76% versus a year ago, and we have a 12-month rolling return on capital employed above the 17%, and it's 1.2 points better than the same period last year. If we dissect a bit and look into the bridge on the organic piece, we have 4% price, which then means that we have a negative 1% in volume. The flow through ended up at 75%, 1.6 points helping on the result. This is related to price realization, lower cost for direct material, logistics, as well as operational efficiencies.
If you look in the operational efficiencies, we had a saving from the Manufacturing Footprint Program of roughly SEK 200 million, and then Nico alluded to it before, but we've also implemented other short-term cost measures, which in this quarter contributed with SEK 150 million. I'll come back more to the details a little bit later on. The currency, of course, a big help on the top line due to the weakening of the SEK, but also due to the stronger dollar. It also helped us with 20 basis points on the bottom line. The acquisitions, excluding HHI, was at the same level almost as the group, so it had no impact there. We see strong performance. Nico mentioned previously the D&D Technologies.
I would also like to highlight within Americas, the Control iD acquisition in Brazil. As you're all aware, we finally closed the HHI acquisition and the divestment also of Emtek, Yale and August , 20th of June. I would agree with what Nico said. I was also there together with the team last week, there is a very strong team in HHI, and I think this will be a very good acquisition. If we look on the sales, it's sort of the net effect was roughly SEK 500 million. Of course, a dilutive impact of 70 basis points on the result. We took in this month acquisition cost of roughly SEK 200 million. A little bit more highlight on HHI.
If we look on the performance for the first six months, the sales was roughly SEK 750 million, with an EBITDA margin of 12%. The financial impacts, as we foresee now from the start, dilutive impact from HHI of roughly 70 basis points, we need to add also the dilutive impact on the divestments of roughly 20 basis points. It will have a negative impact on EPS for 2023. Of course, it's related to the interest rates. We will also have integration costs, we expect it to be slightly accretive then for 2024. That is related to that we will have lower integration costs. The synergies will start to kick in. We also expect to have higher interest rates costs due to the cash that we're able to generate.
I would also like to highlight, I know this quarter is a bit messy with things that we have, let's say, below the line. That will continue for the next quarters. One is that we are following the IFRS rules when it comes to valuating the inventory at distributor level, at the time of acquisition, and then we will, let's say, take that during the turn of the of the of the inventory. That we will consider to be a non-recurring item, as well as we still have roughly another 400 million SEK to go of exit cost from the divestment, that we will also book on below the line as a non-recurring item for Q3 and Q4. As I mentioned before, that we expect to have a good cash generation.
One of the benefits that we have from this acquisition is roughly $50 million-$60 million tax benefit that we will have each year for the coming five years, which will, of course, as I said, help on the cash flow. You look on the exposure then from the group, we have previously said that we are roughly 70%-75% commercial and 25% residential. With the acquisition of HHI, that would roughly go to 1/3 residential and 2/3 acquisitions. Sorry, 2/3 commercial.
We reconfirmed the synergies and the $100 million bottom line synergies that we will realize in the first five years after the acquisition. It's a lot of initiatives, a lot of projects, several of which we already started. If we group them a little bit in the main four pockets, it's one on innovation and expanding our mechanical offer, I would say, in the core of what HHI does today, and then also innovate and expand our electromechanical digital offering, and being in a driver's seat in that shift from mechanical to electromechanical and digital at the front door and also in the house. We will continue to leverage the strong brands and further lift the brand equity of those brands in the US and definitely also internationally.
They have a fantastic, cost-efficient manufacturing footprint on one site in Mexico that we can leverage to do more nearshoring for our North American business. They also have a nice manufacturing footprint in the Philippines, in Taiwan, and China that we can leverage for, I would say, our global business. The last but not least, we see good procurement and logistic efficiencies.
If we go back to the normal slides that we normally show, if you look on the cost breakdown, direct material has helped us with 2.6 points. Roughly, 160 base points is related to the mix, where we have a stronger Americas, we have a stronger Global Technologies, we have also on the other side, I would say, a weaker EMEA, as well as a weaker APAC. You boil down to that 1 point or 100 base points is related to that. We see lower material as well as we see lower logistic cost. Conversion cost is up with 40 base points. We have lower volumes.
Of course, we're impacted by the general inflation as well as salary increases, but we have been partly been able to offset that with the help of operating efficiencies. See the same in the SG&A, which is, I would say, diluting then on 50 basis points. The same there, of course, with the inflation, with the salaries, but we are also continuing our investments in R&D, but we have been partly been able to offset that as well, with efficiencies within SG&A. Going more into the cost actions, We have increased our efforts on prioritizing Manufacturing Footprint project with a faster payback.
It's not so that we are increasing the provision. It's so that we are doing a prioritization of the projects, which means that now we go from a full year saving, which previously indicated on SEK 700 million. We have now added another SEK 100 million, so it will end up on SEK 800 million for the full year. Roughly half of that has already, let's say, been done, it has already contributed in the first half of the year. On top of that, we have also implemented a number of short-term cost measures. Expect the impact for the full year to be roughly SEK 900 million. Out of that, one third has already, let's say, happened in the first half of the year. Let's say we would have another SEK 600 million cost savings then for the second half of the year.
This impact, I mean, this is sort of, I would say, the classical things like with travel, marketing, reducing the external services, reducing overtime, as well as personal redundancies. This is mainly implemented within EMEIA, as well as Entrance Systems within Europe. Operating cash flow, as said before, it's a record SEK 6.7 billion. We have a cash conversion in the quarter of 132%. If you look on a 12-month rolling, we're at 113%. Here, I would say the star here is Entrance, which have done a really good job on creating profit, but especially then on their working capital performance.
Of course, if you sort of if you look for the full, of course, we have a good earning, as well as we've been able to reduce our working capital in a good way, which sort of is shown then in operating cash flow. The gearing, yeah, it looks, I would say, of course, slightly different than what we have seen in previous quarters. Of course, naturally, with the acquisition of HHI, we have increased our debt quite substantially. Still, the net debt with the A is below the 3 that we previously indicated. It ended at 2.8.
We're very happy also to see that Standard & Poor's has lifted the negative outlook, and now sort of has put us on a neutral outlook, because they also see that we will be able to generate cash in order to reduce our debt. We sort of still have a strong enough balance sheet to continue our acquisition strategy, and as you have seen this morning, we have just an acquisition, as mentioned by Nico then, of Evolis, then within HID, which also sort of just shows that we will continue our acquisition strategy, and we have the balance sheet to support it. Last but not least, the earnings per share is up with 18%, for the quarter. With that, I hand back to Nico for some concluding comments.
Thanks, Erik. Conclusion is that it was a good quarter for us. We have an organic sales growth of 3%. Organic sales growth complemented with very good growth through acquisitions of 6%. A record EBIT margin of 16.7% if we exclude HHI. A record EBIT of SEK 5.5 billion. Record cash flow of SEK 6.7 billion. Very excited that we then finally could close the HHI acquisition and embrace the HHI people in the Assa Abloy family. We mentioned the impairment for Citizen ID and Global Technologies, and it is clear that we continue to operate in an uncertain economic climate. We still see good momentum on the commercial side.
We believe that the worst might be behind us on the residential side in North America, but definitely in Europe, we believe that the residential side will remain challenging now going forward into Q3. Therefore, we have taken extra short-term cost measures and brought some of the MFP programs forward, that in order to protect our bottom line and to protect our cash flow, and to continue to deliver strong financial results with a strong operational execution, as we have done in Q2. With that, I give the word back to Björn for Q&A.
Thank you, Nico. It's time to open up for questions now. I know that there are more than 10 people who have indicated they would like to ask questions, so please refrain yourself to ask one question with one follow-up, so we can get through as many as possible. Operator, this means we're ready to kick off the Q&A session. Please go ahead.
We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touch-tone telephone . You will hear a tone to confirm that you have entered the queue. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use only handsets while asking a question. Anyone who has a question may press star and one at this time. Our first question comes from Daniela Costa from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I'll ask one and a follow-up each at a time. Maybe starting with HHI, if you could come back with sort of like, what's the plan to get HHI margins back to historical levels? I think at least looking at the discontinued operations under Spectrum, it seems like the business deteriorated quite a bit while the process was ongoing. Maybe you can tell us how quickly you think you can get it back to where it was, and also maybe the net interest impact from the integration.
Yes, I can start with the part, the first part, and then Eric perhaps can comment on the cost of the net cost of the integration. Well, it is clear that indeed, the HHI result has deteriorated over the last 18 months. They are, of course, operating in a challenging residential market in North America. That has had an important negative effect on top line, where they have seen around 10% negative growth in the first 6 months. It had also an important negative effect on the bottom line, where their EBITDA level is today around 12%, where historically their EBITDA levels has been around 18%, sometimes even a little bit higher.
That has to do, of course, one, with the lower top line, and two, by the fact that they have seen a important cost inflation. They import a lot of goods from China. They also had higher material cost, a higher logistic cost, and then, you know, higher labor cost and general inflation, like we have seen also. It has been more challenging, apparently, for them to compensate that in a fast pace with better pricing. They are working on that today, and we are very confident that that result will already improve now in the coming quarters. We will see a good significant improvement already in the second half of the year.
Of course, a little bit with the actions we do, but I would say mainly with the actions they have taken prior to closing of the acquisition. We are confident as then the synergies will start to kick in, as you know, as of next year, that we then furthest will see gradual improvement. We don't see any reason why we cannot come back to those historical EBITDA levels. Historically, they have been at EBIT levels around that 16%. Of course, at the beginning, we will have a PPA dilutive effect, depending on a bit on where the calculation goes, but that will give us a dilution of 4%-5%.
At the beginning, it will be a bit lower. On the synergies, like I explained earlier, there is as well, top line synergies as bottom line synergies. Top line synergies are definitely through more product innovation on the mechanical side, further extending our customer share, and then being sure that we remain in the driver's seat when it comes in the shift from mechanical to electromechanical and digital. Not only at the front door, but also the digitalization in the house, where they have the installed base and where they also have the channel to market. We will work on their equity of their brands through innovation, through digital marketing, to further lift that brand equity.
We see very good opportunities in export business, growing the business in Central and South America, growing the business in some countries in Asia. On the cost side, they have a very cost-efficient factories and logistics in Mexico and in Asia, that we can, like I explained earlier, use to put more of our products in, produce them at a lower cost, and then get, you know, better cost and better margins on our traditional business. Next to that, we see common purchasing and logistic scale advantages. Many of them, of course, it will take some time to kick in, but most of them should come much earlier than the five years, I would say.
Most of them, if you can't realize them within the first 3 years, you will not be able to realize them in 5 years, neither. We are quite confident that, again, we will see good improvement already in the coming quarters.
And-
For that answer?
Yeah. If you look on the financial net, we as I mentioned before, the financial net for the full year, we now estimate to be roughly 2.5 billion SEK. With the present interest rate, it could sort of be slightly below 5%. That is what we calculate right now.
Thank you. Just in terms of the follow-up question, can you comment on the backlog you have left still, and do you still have a backlog left in Global Tech? I know you mentioned it reduced this quarter, which was a great help to growth. Is there still some extras left to help in Q3? Sorry if I missed that before.
No, you didn't miss it because I didn't comment on it yet. We worked away another north of SEK 200 million backlogging in this quarter on PACS, Physical Access Control Readers and Controllers. You could say that we are almost done now. There is almost nothing left. As of Q3, it will be back to normal business. That being said, even if you exclude that recovery of the backlog, we had good double-digit growth in Global Tech in the quarter. Of course, now in Q3, also there the comparison becomes more challenging.
We had an organic growth of 19% for Global Tech, last year. We will have 1 working day less again in Q3 this year, so the comparison will become more difficult. On top of that, we have, of course, the backlog, which is now, worked away.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Guillermo Eiben from UBS. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning, and thank you for taking my question. I guess, maybe a couple of questions on EMEIA organic growth and then on Americas. The same question, but regarding both the markets. I guess, comps are getting tougher for both, and I wanted to check what you saw during the quarter in EMEIA, in terms of the developments there, maybe in the regions you mentioned. Then in Americas, because you seem to be that the worst is behind us, so what you saw in Americas during the quarter that makes you think that that could well be the case? Thank you. I have a follow-up question after that.
If I start with the U.S., like I mentioned earlier, on the commercial side, we still see good momentum. We see our spec business still up, higher single digit. On the commercial side, our first concern is not necessarily the market conditions, it's more the difficult comparison with a year ago, because also in Q3 last year, we grew in the Americas 17% organically. This year, of course, we will have also in Americas, one working day less, which cost us around 2% organic growth. I mean, on commercial, it continues like before and the same comments as before. Similar activity levels as before.
If you look through the quarter, it has been a similar pattern now also going into the beginning of July, although if it's a short month and difficult to read, it's also a similar pattern. On the residential side, we have seen a deceleration of R&R, and we have seen a big drop in new build. I would say that it did not affect the Americas division too much. It affected much more the Entrance Systems division with their garage door business and with their fencing business. It affected APAC because of the export out of Australia of the window hardware business. As you know, we excluding HHI, definitely today, are very small on the residential side.
I commented on what happened with HHI, which is 100% on the residential side. The reason of optimism is that in recent weeks, we see in the market that people are definitely more optimistic with, you know, the new inflation figures that came out, with the expectations on interest rates and so on. The fact that there is still a significant deficit in new housing in the U.S. Therefore, we believe that perhaps, you know, things have bottomed out and that we should start to see an improvement, perhaps more towards the latter part of the second half of this year. The picture on the commercial side, I think, is very similar in Europe.
Their high single-digit growth of our spec business still good momentum. The picture is different on the residential side for two reasons, because we are, if you exclude HHI, much more exposed in Europe on the residential side, it's around 40%-45% of our business in Europe. There we believe we are not, you know, through yet. We continue to see challenging market conditions on the residential side, as well on R&R, as on new build. We see that a little bit everywhere in Western and East Europe. I would say the only bright spot for EMEIA is Middle East, Africa, India, where we have good double-digit strong growth.
All other regions are suffering from that slowdown on the residential market. The most decline we have seen in the Nordics, especially in Sweden, where we have a relative important part of our business that goes to OEM, and OEM is, of course, new build and residential. New build residential in Sweden has, you could say, fallen off the cliff. Normally, there is around 100,000 new houses that are residential houses, that are built in a yearly basis in Sweden. We are today at a run rate of 20,000, so it's 5 times less than the historical run rate. Of course, that has an effect on our OEM business. It has an effect on top line.
It has an important effect on bottom line, because Nordics is our, by far, our most profitable region. In the mix, that also puts challenges on the bottom line. As we don't believe that it is over yet, we have decided to implement further cost measures. As Erik explained, we have brought forward some of the MFP programs, and we'll realize another extra SEK 100 million of MFP savings this year already by bringing forward those projects. Then we have the SEK 900 million extra savings that we will do, of which one third is already realized, SEK 600 million still to go, and it is mainly for EMEIA, given the residential market conditions.
Thank you, and, very clear detail. Thank you. I wanted to actually ask about EMEIA, given the tougher comps as we come into next year or, sorry, into the second half. You did report a good operating leverage in this quarter, despite the drop in activity. I just wonder how sustainable that is, excluding, obviously all these actions that you're putting in place there. Thank you.
Well, it's clear that despite all the actions we do and the good operating leverage, we believe that our margin in EMEIA is too low, and therefore, also the extra measures we will take now in the second half of the year. We expect, you know, with what we know today, an improvement of the margins for EMEIA in the second half of the year, thanks to this extra cost measures that we will do.
Thank you.
The next question comes from the line of Vivek Midha from Citi. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much, everyone, and good morning. I had a question about the construction market in Europe. You called out the OEM channel, particularly difficult. On the other side, you know, within the distribution channel, how do you view the channel inventory, at this stage? Have you seen any movements in that? Thank you.
Yeah, of course, if I talk about the Nordics, you also have some destocking. We have also definitely the destocking with the OEMs that gives us that double dip for the OEMs in the Nordics, like we have seen in France a couple of quarters ago. I would say that is not a significant argument that explains the results in EMEIA. The explanation for the result is really that residential market is down in general, and that the new build residential market is down in a very significant way in Europe.
Thank you very much. Then my other question was just on pricing developments. Any update on how you see that developing? You've done 4% in Q2, the same as Q1. Do you expect that to be accelerating for the second half, or how do you see that developing? Thank you.
Yeah, of course, we have had a price carryover of around 2% from last year, then we further continue to increase prices in Q1 and even in Q2. I would say for everything that is not steel-related, for steel-related products, we were able to keep the price. Where steel indexes stay, where steel indexes are today, we are happy that we can keep the prices up to the level where they are today, because it gives us good occasion. For all the rest, we will continue to increase prices. Of course, when you have a market slowdown, it becomes more challenging to further increase prices.
As one and two, of course, the comparison with last year becomes more challenging. Therefore, you should expect a lower price effect going into the second half of the year now.
Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Lars Brorson, from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Good morning, Nico and Erik. First one for Erik, perhaps just coming back to HHI. Can you clarify, Erik, that the EPS accretion in 2024 is post synergies and post PPA? I wonder whether just on those two items, you might be able to help us a little bit with what would be good numbers to assume. Maybe higher level on HHI, can you remind us of the split between revenue and cost synergies? I guess the $100 million was with the original $100 million was with your U.S. residential business, still in the group. I've been assuming that you've been baking in some more cost synergies as the market deteriorate. I wonder whether the expected recovery in the U.S. residential market changes that view on cost synergies.
If I can squeeze a quick comment in, just on the non-core of HHI, plumbing and hardware, any update there, Nico, would be helpful. Thank you.
Perhaps I can start, and perhaps I start with the plumbing business. Like we said earlier, we were not in plumbing business before we acquired HHI. We started to study a little bit the plumbing business from outside, and we had 18 months time to do so. It's only now, you know, two weeks, three weeks, that we are the proud owner of HHI, so it's a little bit too early. We are still in the learning phase. I got my personal lesson last week when I was there. So too early to give more updates on the plumbing business details.
When it comes to the synergies, let's say that they are significant on the cost side and on the sales side. We don't want to give the exact number, but it's not so that it's very skewed towards cost of sales. Both are rather equal important. I don't know if Erik wants to.
No.
comment on the EPS accretion.
No, one thing when we talk about the synergies, the SEK 100 million, as we've said before, it's not a hockey stick, which means that it's a gradual implementation of the synergies. If you then look more on the PPA, and we of course, are now doing the valuation to sort of come with a final number. Today, we are using roughly 20%, but we have to see what comes out of, let's say, when we do the whole valuation of the marketing, of the brand technology and so forth like that. As mentioned before that we foresee to have a slight positive EPS accretion from HHI during 2024.
Thank you.
The next question comes from the Andrew Wilson from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my call, question rather. On the Q3, you made some helpful comments in terms of EMEIA and Americas. I think previously you've helped us a little bit on any changes you've kind of noted in the start of the quarter compared to the trends that on the course you've just reported on. I was just wondering if you could maybe talk a little bit more broadly or anything you'd point out in terms of a change sequentially in the early Q3 versus the Q2 trends.
If you look at run rate, run rate in the quarter, if you correct for working days, has been very similar throughout the quarter. July is a short month, and we are short into the month, but the starting run rate in July has been very similar to the run rate we experienced in Q2.
Perhaps just add, we know, as you mentioned before, on Q3, that there is one working day less in Q3 this year versus the same period last year.
One working day less, we will see a little bit less price. Of course, we have eaten up, like we mentioned, the backlog in HID, in Global Technologies. It will be a, you know, a difficult comparison versus last year. I think, Entrance Systems had 20% organic growth last year, was record quarter. Global Technologies had 19% organic growth last year, also a record. I think Americas had 17% organic growth last year in Q3. It is definitely a challenging comparison with a year ago.
Thank you. Then just on a follow-up, and it's... Apologies, another one on the HHI synergies. I guess I kind of take your comments around being able to deliver most of these within 3 years or you can't deliver them, and then the comment on it not being a hockey stick. If we assume, I guess, the full $100 million over the next 3 years, is that a decent starting point for our models?
Sorry, I didn't get the last point.
I mean, first of all, I think that we have said the synergies is not on 3 years.
Mm-hmm.
It's a longer period.
Can you repeat the last part? Because you put a value, I think.
Yeah, sorry. I was talking to the SEK 100 million more generally in terms of obviously the synergies. I think you made a comment earlier of saying you would expect to be able to deliver the majority of that within 3 years, otherwise it was challenging to believe you would deliver them. I was wondering in terms of, can we assume that, I guess, the majority or the vast majority of those synergies would come in the first 3 years rather than over the 5 years?
Yes, I think it's a reasonable assumption. Of course, when we talk about, raising brand equity and through that, you know, then getting, you know, better top line and better top line, bottom line, that's an ongoing process. You cannot increase brand equity from one day to the other. That might take a little bit longer. Of course, some of the new product development, depending on what product range we talk about and how innovative and how new this is, it might also take a little bit longer. If you look in the mechanical core, if you look at the electromechanical, digital core, you're definitely right, that from a sales perspective, that should be the case.
The same is true from an operational perspective. If we want to fill the factories, we should be able to do that within the first three years. Yes.
Thank you. Very helpful.
The next question comes from the line of Aurelio Calderon from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning, Nico and Erik. Thanks for taking my questions. The first one is around Entrance Systems, I realize that you had a very strong operating leverage, we've been above the 16% mark. I just wonder what's been driving that very good operating leverage development, and if you can comment on expectations going forward, given obviously the elevated levels relative to history? I'll take the second one after this one.
Yeah, we said for the system that mid, term, our ambition was to come to close to 16%. We are now short-term, above 16%, so very happy with that performance. I must say that we have seen a margin improvement in all 4 segments. Very good operational execution, and the fact that we created of those 4 segments, also made us more focused within the segments, and it was easier to realize those synergies within the segments. That's, that's one aspect. The second aspect, definitely also now in the quarter, is that we grow faster in service than in equipment, and we make better margins in service than in equipment. In the mix, that's positive.
Third one is that they have done, in general, a very good job in pricing price increases. They have a very good occasion from price versus cost in general. For our residential business, especially in North America in particular, as you know, steel went up in a very significant way 18 months ago in North America, they were able to compensate that through very good price increases. The biggest margin improvement from the four segments we have seen in the residential segment.
That's great. Thank you. The second one, probably more for Erik. It's just touching on the cash flow generation, and I think obviously he called out Entrance as being very strong, but I think Global Tech was also strong, and there wasn't really any obvious weakness. What's been driving business's better ability to deliver more confidence that you can secure supply chains, so you don't need to have that excess inventory? Or, if you can comment on what's been the main driver of that very good working capital development.
I think you already have mentioned a few of them. As you said, it's today it's a much securer supply situation as what we've seen before, and that, of course, also generates that we can sort of look into our inventory from that point of view, that we need to have less safety stock. I would also say on top of that, I think all divisions have also been very good in also working very actively in reducing their inventory. I would also say that if you look also on our receivables, I think also we have done a good job in making sure that we collect the money.
I mean, Entrance, I would say, is the star, but you also see in a number of the other divisions that they're also doing a very good job with generating cash.
I would add two points. Obviously, we had very strong bottom line, which is the first reason why you generate cash flow. Then I think in the inventory, we have, of course, also now inventory coming in at lower inflation figures. Material prices have gone down. Where we had a lot of inflation built in a year ago, with the new stock that is lower, that, of course, helps also on the inventory side.
That's great. Thank you.
I think we have time for one more question, operator.
The last question is from the line of Gaël de Bray from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Deutsche Bank is muted.
We might be-
Like we dropped the line.
Okay, move over to the next one then, please.
The next one is from Alexander Virgo from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much. Morning. A quick clarification, I guess, and a follow-up then. On, clarification, just trying to reconcile your comments on strong U.S. residential in Americas division and then weak U.S. residential.
We seem to have lost the operator. I mean, I guess that means we have to round up this meeting.
Perhaps I can answer the question because I think the question was strong residential in U.S. and weak residential in Europe. Just to correct, I don't think I said strong residential in the U.S. I said, we definitely also in Q2 had challenging market conditions on the residential side in the U.S. What I said is that we are more optimistic going forward in the U.S., that the residential decline might have bottomed out, and that we should start to see improvement towards the latter part of the second half of the year and going into next year.
Whereas in EMEIA, we don't see, that improvement coming yet, and we believe that also in Q3, we will still have a challenging market condition on the residential side, therefore, all the extra cost measures we do in EMEIA.
I think that means we have to round up this conference. Alex, if you had yet another question, please feel welcome to reach out to me at Investor Relations. If there are any other questions, please feel welcome also to reach out to us. That means that we'll round up now. We would like to wish you a happy summer now. We look forward to speaking to you again after the summer. Thank you for now.
Thank you.
Thank you.