Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to this fourth quarter earnings presentation for Gränges. My name is Jörgen Rosengren. I'm Gränges' CEO and President, and I'm joined here today by our CFO and Deputy CEO, Oskar Hellström, and together, we will be taking you through our presentation of the fourth quarter result. We will also speak about the full year 2021 and the outlook for this year, 2022 and beyond. Speaking first about the fourth quarter, it has to be said that it was a challenging quarter, but it was also a quarter that concluded a year of recovery and of investment.
The market was generally quite good, driven by a generally quite good economy, and the only negative in all of that was the automotive market, whereas I'm sure all of you are aware, there have been significant slowdowns in the production of automobiles in the second half of 2021 after a very good first half, driven by general component shortages and other supply chain difficulties, but most of all by the shortage of semiconductors. That meant that we had a split development for Gränges where the total sales volume actually developed quite well. We had a 9% growth, of which 2% was organic growth, adjusted primarily for the acquisition of Gränges Konin.
But that was done despite a dramatic slowdown, in fact, in the automotive market, which then was more or less compensated for by growth in other segments. What was perhaps even more dramatic in the fourth quarter and something that we spent a lot of time on in our third quarter result update was the very sudden, actually, and dramatic cost increases that we experienced in various input costs, notably energy, alloying metals and other elements, freight, but also generally everything to do with manufacturing and transport in both the Americas and Europe and also in Asia. The total effect of these sudden and unexpected cost increases was something like minus SEK 100 million or so in the EBIT.
We partly compensated for that with price increases and with other factors, but not fully, and that's the main reason why the EBIT declined from last year's SEK 193 million for the fourth quarter to this year's SEK 139 million . The SEK 139 million is not a result that we can be proud of, and in fact, we're not even proud of the full year result either. It has to be said in this context that it was nevertheless a record year, 2021. We made the highest volume that we ever made and the highest operating profit that we ever made, also. That's why we say that this was a challenging fourth quarter, which concluded a year of recovery.
On the positive side, we had a very, very strong cash generation in the fourth quarter. The cash flow increased from just over SEK 200 million to close to SEK 500 million, which is quite good because in the beginning of the year, our cash flow was burdened mainly as a result of the increasing aluminum prices in the world during that period. It feels good to see that the cash is now coming in in such numbers. Finally, the board has reviewed the full year result and has resolved on a recommendation for a dividend, which obviously will be decided then by the annual general meeting later this year.
The proposal is an increase of the dividend to SEK 2.25 per share, which is a strong increase from last year's dividend of around SEK 1.10, I think, last year. We have at Gränges a very good starting point, and the starting point, for instance, is characterized by having a very strong position in what is now a very diversified set of markets. Automotive is and remains an important part of Gränges' share, the sales, but it now accounts for no more than 40% of our total sales.
In addition to that, we have over the past year built up a very, very strong position in the HVAC market, the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning market, which we are especially strong in the Americas, and that now accounts for over 20% of sales, and also a very profitable market it is, too. We have a perhaps even stronger position in specialty packaging, where we have both a position now in Europe since the acquisition of Gränges Konin, and that is a good market to be in because it is, of course, less volatile and less cyclical than some of the other markets on this page. In years such as this, it stands out in.
It is an asset really to compensate partly for the shortages in automotive that occurred in the last quarters. Then we also have a very strong position in various other niches, and that is also an area where we expect to generate growth going forward. For instance, in the segment of battery products that no doubt will come up also during this call. Like I said before, going through these segments one by one, we can say that we had a split situation where we had a very negative growth, in fact, in automotive. These are sales numbers, not market numbers, but they reflect, of course, also the underlying market's development, where Europe recorded a 13% drop in automotive, and so did the Americas.
In Asia, we had a slightly lower drop, but that also depends, of course, on the comparison with last year. By contrast, you can see an extremely strong growth in HVAC, and that has to be said then that that is a continuance of a trend that has been going on for quite some time. So, it's not only a recovery, it's actually a continued good growth after a long period of good growth. We believe also that the outlook in that segment is quite good also for the future. In specialty packaging too, we had very good growth. The number in Europe is of course very high, but there, of course, the absolute numbers are smaller, but nevertheless an important contribution and compensation for the negative area in automotive.
Finally, in other niches, we have also recorded good growth, right? The total of all of this represents a -6% growth in Europe and a steady healthy growth in both Asia and America, netting out to the 2% which we spoke about earlier. Generally, I think a good situation. Of course, under all of this, you also can no doubt imagine that this leads to quite a lot of work because all these swings up and down require a lot of work together with our customers, with our suppliers, and not the least in our manufacturing to meet the customer demands on time and on spec and so on.
Turning to the other challenge, which was especially pronounced in the fourth quarter, we have the various input costs that experienced a very dramatic development in the fourth quarter. That development in some cases slowed down a bit, but in other cases accelerated during the quarter. Most dramatic, of course, are the development for various alloying metals and other additives, where you see the very, very dramatic development of magnesium during the fourth quarter, which has abated and fallen back a bit, but still the absolute numbers are on a very, very high level compared to anything that we have seen before. Like I mentioned before, the total effect of all of this was about -SEK 100 million in the fourth quarter, part of which was compensated for by price increases.
Our focus, however, is to compensate, not partly but fully for these cost increases, and not partly but fully for volume deviations or volume fluctuations as well. That actually is probably what has taken the most energy and work in the fourth quarter out of the organization, and also, like I said, our customers and suppliers. We have focused on strongly on actions in three areas. We have focused a lot of sales and also manufacturing and R&D resources on quickly shifting volumes to markets other than automotive to make up for the loss in that market. Those efforts have been largely successful, but have required, like I said, also a lot of work. We are naturally in such a situation. We're also focusing very much on cost and productivity actions.
As examples of that, are the many technical and also commercial things we've had to do to see, to what extent we can also compensate the additives cost adders by, replacing those materials with other materials or replacing alloys that contain them with other alloys. Most of all, of course, we've had to focus on securing price increases. Gränges has a good position generally with a safe, customer portfolio with long customer contracts and long pricing agreements. Generally, that is a strength. In a situation like this, of course, it requires then, a lot of, discussions with our customers about what is the fair and the reasonable way to split these, very, very high cost increases that have occurred, for factors outside anybody's control. We think, like I said, that these actions more or less have been successful.
We expect to compensate the expected weakness, the expected continued weakness, I should say, in automotive in the first quarter, by growth in other markets. We will come back later, as to what that means in absolute volumes, but, it is nevertheless a result that we're very happy about. We expect to compensate a large part, if not every last cent, at least a large part of the cost increases we have taken for energy, for freight, for additives, and for other input costs by price increases, which are now largely negotiated and finalized with our customers already during Q1, leading then to recovery of the margin, which then we will be able to continue all the way into the second quarter as well.
Again, in summary, our position is that these changes and these swings have been rather dramatic. There is of course some time lag before you can react to such things. Our position and ambition certainly is that Gränges should compensate and should be able to compensate always for such fluctuations within a relatively short time span. With that concludes my introductory remarks. Then I would like to turn over to Oskar to talk about the full year of 2021 and also to take you through the fourth quarter financials. Oskar, please go ahead.
Thank you, Jörgen. Before drilling down in the fourth quarter there, I think we should spend a little bit of time on the full year and put this in perspective. As Jörgen said, we are certainly not satisfied with our performance in 2021, especially not in the second half. We should also not forget that 2021 is still a record year for Gränges. In fact, we've never sold more products, and we've never had a higher adjusted operating profit than the SEK 1,008,000,000 that we delivered in 2021. As you can see from this chart, we've managed to recover the profit drop we experienced in 2020 as a consequence of the COVID pandemic.
Excluding the acquired growth and acquired SEK 156 million of profits from Gränges Konin, the remaining Gränges business makes more or less the same operating profit in 2021 as in 2019, pre the pandemic. Still, this profit is generated on a higher volume level, and that means that the margins are not yet fully back to pre-COVID levels. If we leave the full year perspective and look at the fourth quarter, as Jörgen mentioned, we experienced a year-over-year growth of around 9%. A sequential decline of about 5% from the third to the fourth quarter. If we look at the margin, the operating profit per ton decreased from SEK 1.9 thousand in Q4 2020 to SEK 1.2 thousand in Q4 this year.
As you can see from this chart, there are, however, some clear differences between the business areas. This is to a large extent driven by the end customer markets that each business area are serving. For Gränges Americas, with a lower exposure to automotive customers, operating profit per ton decreased from SEK 2.0 thousand-SEK 1.3 thousand. For Gränges Eurasia, excluding Konin, that has a relatively larger share of the auto business, the corresponding decrease is from SEK 2.3 thousand-SEK 0.4 thousand. Part of this development then is driven by the lower capacity utilization following the lower sales to the auto side, and capacity utilization is just above 65% for Gränges Eurasia, excluding Konin in the quarter, compared to about 75% in Q4 2020.
For the group, the capacity utilization was about 80% in Q4. In addition to the lower capacity utilization, the most important driver behind the margin reduction is the increasing inflationary pressure on energy freight and alloy elements in particular that Jörgen mentioned. In total, external costs increased by about SEK 100 million in Q4 compared with last year, and only a part of this then could be offset with price increases in the quarter. From this perspective, I would say that Gränges Konin stands out positively in Q4. As you can see on this slide, the Konin operating profit per ton increased both compared with Q4 last year, but also compared with Q3. A relatively larger part of the Konin business is a spot and short-term contract business.
For this, the price lag for when price increases can have effect is typically shorter. In Konin, we see the effects from price increases already in Q4, whereas price increases for other part of the business is then expected as to largely come into effect as of Q1, as Jörgen mentioned earlier. If we look at the fourth quarter in more detail, we can see the sales volume increased by 9% to 112,000 tons, and the net sales increasing by 54% to SEK 4.9 billion. Excluding Gränges Konin, sales volume increased by 2% and net sales by 45%. You might think it's a large difference here between the volume increase and the sales increase.
The main reason for this is that the sales volume is also increasing with the higher aluminum price. The net impact of changes in foreign exchange rates and the positive impact here of SEK 171 million compared with fourth quarter last year. If we look at the earnings, the adjusted operating profit decreased to SEK 139 million in Q4, SEK 54 million lower than prior year. Of this, Konin contributes with an operating profit of SEK 31 million. As just mentioned, the significant inventory inflationary cost pressure is the primary driver here behind the lower profit in the quarter. In addition to that, changes in foreign exchange rates was -SEK 10 million in the quarter, and depreciation and amortization increased with in total SEK 13 million, and SEK 10 million of those are related to Konin.
The reported operating profit of -SEK 21 million in the quarter, it includes also items affecting comparability of -SEK 159 million . Of these, -SEK 158 refers to a write-down of intangible assets, mainly within IT, and - SEK 42 are restructuring costs for corporate and European organization, and both of these items are non-cash items. In addition to this, items affecting comparability also includes +SEK 40 million of insurance compensation for the fire in Newport earlier in the year. Due to items affecting comparability, the profit for the period then was -SEK 23 million , and earnings per share was -SEK 0.21 in the quarter. During the quarter, the net debt decreased by SEK 170 million- SEK 3.6 billion , and that's 2.2x EBITDA.
As you can see in this slide, the reduced net debt is primarily driven then by the very strong cash generation in the fourth quarter, with the cash flow before financing adjusted for expansion investments of SEK 463 million. This is partly driven by the sequential business activity, but it then is further supported by slightly lower aluminum price, but also I would say by very good working capital management throughout the Gränges organization. During the fourth quarter, we also continued to invest in total SEK 171 million in the expansion of Gränges to the ongoing strategic projects, primarily in Europe and Americas. For the full year, we had a total capital expenditure of SEK 836 million.
Of this, SEK 380 million is maintenance and upgrades of existing assets, and SEK 456 million refers then to the expansion programs. Before leaving this page, I would just briefly like to touch upon how we currently view the capital expenditure for 2022. At current FX rates, we expect the full-year CapEx to be about SEK 1 billion. It's also consistent with what we have communicated before. Of this, I would say then 60% is expected to be CapEx related to finalizing the ongoing expansion programs. Majority of that CapEx will be spent on the recycling and casting center in Huntington and the completion of the Konin expansion.
The remaining 40% then will be maintenance type investments to maintain and improve existing assets. Looking then at the business areas and starting with Americas, we continued to experience a strong market activity in the fourth quarter, as Jörgen mentioned. As we've also highlighted before, we did do some more extensive maintenance activities in the Huntington plant, the biggest one in Americas there, more so than what we would do in a normal year. As a consequence of this, we had to close that plant for a longer period of time in December, and this led to 8,000 tons less available production capacity in the fourth quarter. Despite this lower capacity, our Americas team still managed to increase the sales volume by 4% year-over-year to 57,000 tons.
All the Americas assets have now been restarted after the maintenance, and all of them have reached a normal level of available capacity by the end of January. The adjusted operating profit for the fourth quarter decreased to SEK 73 million. This is primarily an effect then of cost increases not being fully offset by price increases in the quarter. Finally, a short comment on the status of our Newport facility, where we had a fire earlier in 2021. The rebuild of the mill that was damaged by the fire is progressing well, and we currently expect this to be completed by the end of the first quarter, and thereafter, commercial orders can start to gradually be ramped up during that second quarter.
Also, Gränges Eurasia recorded a growth year-over-year, but a continued sequential slowdown compared with the third quarter, and then this is fully driven by the lower auto demand. The sales volume in the quarter reached 59,000 tons, 6% higher than last year, but excluding Gränges Konin, this actually represents a 9% decline. The adjusted operating profit decreased to SEK 47 million, corresponding to an adjusted operating profit per ton of SEK 0.8 thousand. This decline is driven really by the lower capacity utilization in combination with increasing costs. On the more positive note, I would say, Gränges Konin improved its performance in the quarter. This is twofold.
Gränges Konin has a broader product portfolio, and that's slightly less impacted by the slowdown in automotive, which means that Konin delivered a sales volume of 22,000 tons. As we talked about earlier, the ability to more rapidly compensate cost increase with price increases supported that the operating profit increased to SEK 31 million. This is also the last quarter where we will show the Konin business separately. Starting from 2022, this will be reported as an integrated part of the Gränges Eurasia business area. Summing up the fourth quarter, we can conclude that there has been a challenging market situation on the automotive side. At the same time, almost all other markets continued to show a strong growth in demand.
It's also to these markets that we are directing a lot of our sales efforts for the short term. We continued to experience a highly inflationary environment with increasing costs for primarily energy, freight, and alloying elements. This has been battled with strong focus on cost productivity and price increases. Price increases and surcharges have to a large extent been agreed with customers, but due to the price lag, we did only see a small effect of this in the fourth quarter. Cash generation was very strong, with an adjusted operating cash flow of close to S EK 500 million in Q4. Part of this, the Gränges board intends to distribute to our shareholders and has proposed an increased dividend of SEK 2.25 per share.
The strong focus we have on price and cost productivity is expected to have a large positive impact on the margins already from Q1, and then continue to drive a gradual margin recovery during the first half of 2022. With that, I will hand over back to Jörgen, who will provide some perspectives on full year 2021 and also a more detailed outlook for the first quarter. Thank you.
Thank you, Oskar. Yeah, 2021 then in summary, as we said already in the beginning of the call, it was a year of recovery after the large disruptions that we saw in 2020 from the COVID pandemic, but also during the beginning of 2021. It was also a year where we worked very, very hard on investments for the future. The COVID situation and everything it has led to, including the very large disruptions to the global supply chains and the consequent and following demand swings and also cost swings for various things that we spoke about earlier, we hope now are largely behind us, but we do see, of course, continued weakness in the automotive market going forward.
We are nevertheless quite proud of the work that we've done to meet all these things. It looks easy, but it is hard. It requires a lot of work from everybody, from the operators at the mills, to the salespeople, to the R&D people, to the management, in order to make sure that we are always able to deliver to these, generally speaking, quite demanding customers, while at the same time making sure that we have something to make when the customers don't want products. It has been a year of hard work in this area, and I think largely very successful work.
As a result of that, we have also recorded, as Oscar alluded to, a record, all-time high volume or all-time high sales by a fat margin, and also, by a small margin, our all-time high operating profit, which, of course, is also something to be proud of under such difficult circumstances. That being said, we're not really happy about the level of the profitability, especially in relation to the capital and especially in relation to the fact that we made a large acquisition last year. That is then the backdrop to the work that we're going to do now and going forward, to reach even higher numbers.
What was very good and very nice to see during 2021 was the very good cooperation between the Konin team and the other Gränges teams throughout the world, and the strong contribution that Konin was able to make to our volume, to our results, and also to developing our future. Part of that was the extremely hard work that has gone into Konin, Finspång, the Americas, and also in Shanghai, into various investments to increase our capacity and our productivity for the future. Most of that work goes unseen in the P&L because many of those new assets that we have acquired, new machinery, is not yet productive and is not yet contributing to our P&L.
It is certainly intended to do so during 2022 and fully from 2023 and on. That work has also gone very well, and it has been nice to see, like I said, the cooperation between the various teams helping each other out to make those programs a success. On top of that, we've worked commercially but also technically to develop new solutions for the very, very exciting things that are happening in the electric vehicle market and in the battery market. Those things, of course, fit together.
There Gränges has a very interesting position, we think, because our expertise in these materials, our expertise in these customers in these end markets, and our expertise in heat management, thermal management solutions for automotive, that expertise is smack in the middle of what's needed for making new solutions for electric vehicles, new solutions for battery makers. That has been a large focus area during the year, and we've recorded many secret successes, so to speak, in that field. It's also been nice to see that we have now made the first commercial deliveries, and I've also seen a very, very large interest from battery makers, automotive companies in our solution and our expertise and also secured some contracts.
However, this is a long-term project, and the biggest effects of these will be coming not this year, but later. But it is nevertheless very, very important to have this kind of activity going on to secure a long-term growth horizon for Gränges. Finally, sustainability. Sustainability is one of the areas that we're the most proud of in Gränges, and I can say that without boasting because I am new to the Gränges team. If it's one thing that made me interested in joining Gränges, but also one thing that has exceeded my expectations on Gränges, it's the work that we're doing on sustainability. It is not only ambitious and very quantitatively governed, but it's also very, very integrated into the fabric of what we do day to day.
I think that is important and one thing that really separates Gränges from the pack in our industry. We have various targets on this, and very important, of course, is our carbon emissions intensity. There Gränges is one of the very few companies in our industry that has had the courage to firstly measure, then set a target for, and finally communicate externally and even tie financing to the target for Scope 3 emissions. That sounds easy, but it's a very hard thing to do, and we are quite proud of our achievement in this area. Then it's of course, even more gratifying to see that the carbon emissions go down.
In fact, our Scope 1 and 2 emissions that, roughly speaking, are internally generated emissions went down by 8%. Our Scope 3 emissions, largely from the sourcing of aluminum from our upstream partners, went down 20% in the year, and that's quite dramatic. Most of that is because we have increased our activities in recycling, which we also believe will be a growth area for Gränges going forward. We have verified the product sustainability info for 35% of our products. You could ask, why not 100%?
You have to imagine that every single piece of aluminum that leaves our factories and that is in the 35%, we can say to the gram how much carbon emissions that has led to all the way from the upstream partners that we have, all the way through our factory and to the gates. That's not a small piece of work, but we have, of course, higher ambitions, and by 2025, we believe that we will reach 100% of this. We have, like I said before, increased our sourced recycled aluminum. We have also, in our own facilities, both invested in expanding our capacity for this and have also used that capacity to a much larger extent in 2021 than before to recycle aluminum.
We have also various certifications, and two that we want to lift up here is the ASI certification, which we have now gone through in both Finspång and in Shanghai. As a part of that, the chain of custody standard, which has to do indeed with finding out exactly what goes where in all of our products in a secure way that can be audited by a third party. There, too, we have secured two out of our sites. Target, of course, is to do this in all of our sites in due course. This is not something that we only talk about internally. It's also something that we use and also indeed invite external scrutiny of.
I mentioned before that this is an area that our auditors look into, but it's also an area where various external rating institutes rate Gränges quite highly. EcoVadis is maybe the latest example and something we're extremely proud of, that we are now in the platinum category among their companies, which relates to the top 1% of the companies in our industry that are using that platform. Those were many. We have also very favorable results from Sustainalytics, yes, it's correctly spelled even, MSCI and CDP. Turning to the financial performance, we had good growth, as Oskar said. We actually had a bit of an uptick in the ROCE as well, but from a low level.
Those who have followed us a longer time know that our target for the ROCE is a 15%-20% ROCE. We have had that performance for a long time quite consistently, and we aim to have that performance going forward for a long time quite consistently. That means that, of course, right now we're short between 5 and 10 percentage points. I'll get back to that in a moment. Our leverage right now is a trifle high, I guess, but this also contains, as you probably know, some debt, I'm sorry, that is associated with leasing and such things. Well, we still think it's a little high, and we hope to get it back in the target range, of course.
We have now also a recommendation from the board on the dividend, SEK 2.25, which is 40% of last year's net profit, so therefore squarely in the range of 30%-50% that we have set ourselves for that. Finally, a bit of outlook then. We have started to make a growth plan for Gränges. We call this project Project Navigate. For that project, Gränges has a very good starting point, I feel at least. We have strong customer relations. We have very strong technical knowledge. We have a footprint that encompasses all regions, the industrial regions here with the Americas, Europe and, Asia. We have a very interesting portfolio of growth options to look into. As said now a couple of times, the starting point for profitability is unsatisfactory.
Now, part of the reason for that and part of the reason for the low ROCE is that we've made very, very large investments over the past two, three years with the acquisition of Konin and the associated expansion programs both in Americas, in Europe, and also in Asia, both in capacity, in productivity, and also in preparing the ground for new growth areas. Like I said before, not all those assets are productive as yet, but we certainly intend to make them productive, and that is part of our good starting point as well, although it's not visible right now in our P&L. We believe that there are some positive factors that influence Gränges' position positively then, of course, going forward.
Those include the regionalization of the supply chain that has accelerated during the past two, three years and, not the least during the last year, where many of our customers in Europe, in Americas, and in Asia want a global partner like Gränges, but also want localized or at least regionalized supply of their components, like Gränges can supply. So that's good for us. Sustainability has grown, of course, as a much more important factor for our customers now than just a little while ago, not to speak about five years ago. We feel that we have a strong position there, too. In Europe, we can provide probably the industry's best carbon footprint for heat exchanger products, and we are not finished yet, like I said before, with our aims in that area.
Finally, we have the whole area of electric vehicles and battery technology where, like I already explained, we have very many strengths that we can bring to bear. Now, our short-term focus is, of course, to replace the lost auto volume with other volumes and generally to grow our volumes because we have all these investments coming online. Further, to get the price increases out that we haven't yet gotten and, of course, cost productivity. In parallel to this, we're also making longer-term plans in all of our regions as well as a group to get our ROCE back to the 15%-20% target range that we have set ourselves, but also to build a stronger and more sustainable company for the future with a very solid plan for profitable growth.
We hope to be able to communicate all of this sometime later this year. We'll see exactly when, either before the summer or after the summer or so, when we have finished our thinking activities on that. Now more near-term, the outlook for the first quarter is the following, that we expect the sales volume to actually increase sequentially quite significantly over the fourth quarter and to reach about the same level as we had in the first quarter of 2021, which was, as you saw before, a very good quarter. The main actions behind this is to offset the expected continued weakness in automotive with growth in other segments.
We do expect to cover a large part, if not exactly every last cent of the cost increases that we have seen with price increases during the first quarter, and we do expect the margin to recover therefore and also to continue to recover during the first half year of 2022. That concludes our prepared comments. Thank you for listening thus far. Now is a good time if you have a question to ask it. Please go ahead, anybody who has a question.
The first question we received is from Gustaf Schwerin, Handelsbanken. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Yes. Hi, Jörgen and Oskar. Gustaf Schwerin, Handelsbanken. I have a few questions. Perhaps we will start a bit on the inflationary environment and the cost increases. If we look at Q1 over Q4, as you see it right now, do you see cost inflation getting worse? Any way of sort of quantifying the quarter-over-quarter effect? That's my first one.
Yeah. Hi, Gustaf. Oskar, I can answer here. I think what we mentioned here already in the call is that year-over-year, the cost increases is about SEK 100 million on the P&L. I would say quarter-over-quarter, it's about half of that, so around SEK 50 million.
Yeah. I'm referring to forward-looking, so if you look Q1 over Q4, what you're feeling now. I think you said you had SEK 60 million effect in Q3, right? What's your sort of prediction on Q1 over Q4?
Yeah. Actually, the way we currently view Q1 is that the impact of the cost increases will be substantially higher, because we will have a lot of costs that are, for instance, impacting. Well, we had inventories, for instance, in Q4 that we have used up and so forth. On a sort of an overall level, we expect a much higher impact of the cost increases than in Q4, or say in Q1 than in Q4. As Jörgen mentioned earlier, the price lag, the lag for when price increases are coming through the P&L, is basically also having a positive impact here. The price increases are gonna be substantial in Q4 as well, or in Q1 as well.
The net impact of those two is gonna be slightly negative still, is what we expect. As Jörgen just mentioned here, not every cent will be covered, but we are certainly aiming as high as we can there. That said, I don't think I will provide you an exact number here at this point.
Okay. No, that's helpful. When you said that you raised [crosstalk].
Gustaf, if I can add to that.
Yeah.
One reason that we don't want to provide an exact number is that there isn't an exact number, because part of these price increases that we have negotiated take the form of various kinds of surcharges, and they then float partly with the cost increases, right? We don't know what the energy cost will be, for instance, in February or in March, and it would be silly to predict it, seeing how volatile it has been in the past. We now feel that we have a better tool set of mechanisms to make the price float with cost increases also, right?
Okay. Yeah, 'cause that was my follow-up. 'Cause you say you've been raising prices for a majority of clients, so basically, I mean, how are you going around longer contract structures? Is that the alloy surcharge part then? Well, put it this way. Can you say that you have a more flexible pricing structure in general going forward, or is this more of a temporary effect because we had this extreme inflationary pressure?
That's a good question. I mean, we have had talks, I guess you could say. Well, firstly, we've raised prices to thousands of customers, but we have had talks with hundreds of customers. In some of those cases it has been easy talks because there was more short-term arrangements in place and a flexibility. In some cases they have been very tough talks indeed. In the majority of the cases, the customers see and understand that this is an extraordinary situation, and also, it's our impression that their customers see and understand that it's an extraordinary situation. Of course, the situation is also mirrored in the general inflationary pressure that you see as an everyday consumer now, right? On almost everything.
There is some kind of understanding for this, but that doesn't mean, of course, that a customer is ever happy when you come to them with a price increase. Depending on the customer situation, sometimes, yes, we have made new contracts that are in fact long-term contracts, but at a higher level. In other cases, we've made various surcharge mechanisms which have more of a temporary character. In other cases, again, we have just agreed for a short term to have other prices, right? It varies quite a lot. I think, though, that we have still longer term contracts that mature and for re-negotiation in every quarter, right, in every year. Some of those we've now made for the next three years with mechanisms then usually in place for such things then.
Others will come up for renegotiation later this year. Of course, depending on what the situation is then, we have or do not have a stronger or weaker position, right? The short answer to your question is we regard the stability of our pricing and our customer pricing as a strength generally in Gränges, but we and the customers both have had to show flexibility in this regard now, and that is not only a positive, but generally speaking, a positive and we regard it as quite an achievement also of our teams.
Okay. That's helpful. I mean, looking forward, would you say that, I mean, generally you're less exposed to this extreme volatility in earnings because you have more flexibility in general?
I would say that this has been a great learning experience for everybody involved, and we hope to draw conclusions from that for the future. I also think that right now everybody in the industry, I think, generally is reeling a bit from this and drawing their own conclusions on exactly where that will land, I think, is a little bit too soon to say.
Okay.
Of course, it's our ambition to have flexibility when it comes to this, but it's also our ambition that we should not have too much flexibility because then we also have less protection, right? There is still some work to be done on all of that.
Okay. Very fair. Two questions on the autos business. I think I ask this every quarter, but you look to continue outperforming light vehicle production in Q4. When you're talking about a continued weak autos demand in Q1, do you expect that to reverse or are you sort of seeing similar growth to what IHS is forecasting for Q1?
This is the million-dollar question, right, Gustaf? I think we are not necessarily better than IHS and the likes of those to forecast this. If we were, we would sit somewhere else and make a lot more money maybe. I think we currently share the latest IHS indication. I think they expect a year-over-year -5% development or so in Q1, and then turn to a positive growth year-over-year in Q2. At this point in time, we don't have any other view than that, I would say.
Okay. That's clear. Also related to that, if I look at the full year forecast for autos now, I think the forecast is just below 9%. Let's see where that ends up. What are your thoughts on beating overall autos production this year due to mix change in the fleet of new cars?
Yeah. Again, it will depend very much on what the automotive demand will look like. As we know before also, I mean, when you talk about mix change, I suspect that you refer to the share of electric vehicles and hybrids and so forth. Or?
That's correct. Yeah.
Okay. Yeah. I mean, again, obviously, if there are more hybrids, for instance, there will be more heat exchangers. If there are more EVs, there will be necessarily not necessarily more heat exchangers, but heavier heat exchangers and so forth. It's very difficult, I mean, to forecast this year in relation to auto production. That said, I think that the general trend there, Gustaf, is that with the higher penetration of electric vehicles, there is more opportunities for Gränges to sell aluminum products to those. If the penetration is increasing more rapidly than we expected, there should be an upside for us and vice versa, obviously.
Okay. Thank you. That's it for me.
The next question is from Victor Hansen with Nordea. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Hi, hope you are well. Victor Hansen here. A follow-up on Gustaf 's question. You already discussed a bit about energy prices, which have been rising gradually and particularly at the end of Q4 all over Europe and the U.S. I guess that you've had quite a bit hedged now in Q4, actually, and that you didn't see the full effect from this now in Q4. How should we view this going forward? Will you pass it through the energy cost to customers? Or will you continue to suffer from this and take the short-term hit before prices hopefully normalize?
Yeah. I think I can start and comment on the hedging and then Jörgen can add if there is anything else there on pricing and so forth. I mean, we do hedge energy. It varies a little bit with the local market. In China, for instance, energy prices tend to be more stable because they are more state controlled, whereas in Europe, we know it's rather the opposite, right? In terms of hedging, going into Q4, we had around 75% hedged. If you look forward now, going into 2022 full year, the hedging ratio is about 60% and 25% for 2023. There will be some impact of this of course.
In general, I mean, as Jörgen mentioned, we try to basically make sure that we cover cost increases with price increases and productivity improvements, of course.
That's right. I mean, we don't regard the hedge as a margin protection. We regard it as some time lag protection. That goes for all hedges, by the way, aluminum and currencies as well. It's not possible to hedge your margin, but it is possible to gain the time that you need to move those costs onto the customers, right? This ties together with our contract structures and our pricing structure and so on, right? That's not to say that those things have not been under strain lately, because surely they have. Our ambition simply put is to make sure that if we have an energy cost increase, that eventually the customers pay for that, and the hedge is there to bridge that gap.
Great. On other niches, are there anything particular behind the strong volumes this quarter?
One of the reasons is that we have focused more on this, right? We have basically filled up lost volumes with such products also. That I think is the most driving factor there. It's also interesting to see how we can do that. There we have been traditionally, of course, stronger in Konin, which has a more diverse mix than we have had in Finspång and in Shanghai. Part of the good thing about last year is that we have learned also to be more flexible, more agile and so on in working on this.
Part of the reason that we're now fairly confident about the volumes for Q1 is exactly this, that we have worked so hard to benefit from such other niches as well. There it's also so that the market is very strong in Europe. It's very strong in the U.S. also, but a lot of this is in Europe. It's very strong in Europe because of the supply chain regionalization that I spoke about before, and that goes both for demand and for price. One of the things that has happened is that we're able to sell some products into some customer segments that we have not in the past been able to sell with profitability.
Now we're able to sell them with very good profitability, and there is also very good demand. As all of this, I think, creates a little bit more flexibility for us, at least in the year, or two ahead, which we hope to use to indeed, even out, any future volume, swings that we have not predicted. It's a good learning and a good skill, and we're also very happy to be able to show such numbers.
All right. A final one for me. You mentioned IHS forecasts, but do you see any risk that automotive suppliers are building inventories which could then hamper your volumes recovery in 2022?
That they are building inventories? How would that hamper our volume recovery? I don't follow.
If since you have outperformed IHS, there's a potential that [crosstalk].
Did they build inventories in Q4 you mean? Is that what you're asking?
Yeah, yeah.
No.
In Q3 and Q4.
No, our impression is rather that most of the tier ones at least have taken this just in time thing to a very, very high level. They are not shy to ask us to absorb any kind of swings up or down. It's not our impression that there are large inventories downstream from us. However, all of our customers have also struggled, of course, with these very dramatic demand swings. You spoke about mix earlier, and one of the mixes is of course between internal combustion engine cars and EVs and hybrids. There's also a lot of other mixed things going on, for instance, where the car makers are generally, of course, focusing their production capacity on models where they can make the most money.
Every kind of planning change in an OEM in automotive has ripple effects all through the supply chain. Our customers too are having to adjust very quickly to demand swings, not only on the total, but also on every single product, every single SKU. It's been a dramatic year, but we do not believe that as a tendency there has been a lot of inventory built up downstream.
Just to add to that, Jörgen, I think that again, if the inventory levels are high or not, I guess it depends very much on what the auto production will be going forward, and we don't know that for sure. But I can maybe just add some more flavor on development in Q4. If you look at the sequential development there, that would indicate that actually inventories came down a bit at our customers' level. So, we currently don't think that they are sitting with very high inventories going into 2022. But that said, it very much depends on which direction the auto production will take.
To the extent you talk to them, you can pass on our advice that we think it's always a good thing to build inventory.
Understood. That's all for me. Thank you.
The next question is from Oskar Lindström, Danske Bank. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning, both of you. A couple of questions from me, and the first one is touching on something that we've discussed already, so I'm sorry for that. You had a net negative impact of sort of cost price movements in Q4 versus Q3. You now seem to be guiding for a further net negative from those two factors in Q1 versus Q4. You know, could you say something about what the sort of accumulated size of this, you know, spread, net negative spread here will be at the end of Q1? When do you expect to have closed that spread through price increases?
Oskar, I can start, and then Jörgen can add to that. I think, Oskar, we were not fully clear there in the comments, because I think if you compare sequentially, we expect the spread between cost and price to look much better in Q1 than in Q4. What we said there, that comment I think was related to Q1 versus Q1 last year, where we say that we expect more or less the same volumes. We expect that price increases will offset a large part, if not every cent, of the cost increases. That is from a year-over-year perspective. Q1 is expected to look significantly better than Q4. I think is the main message there.
Great. I misunderstood you. I'm sorry, and that makes me much calmer. My second question is on the shift to other end markets, away from automotive to other end markets that you've been talking about. I was wondering if you could explain sort of practically how this is being done. I mean and to which end markets and how quickly can this be done? Is there a risk that the sort of price or the sales mix becomes less attractive in terms of profitability?
Yes, this is Jörgen speaking then, Oskar. I'll try to answer that, and then you can follow up if you don't find it's a good answer. I don't think we've said that we're trying to shift volumes out of automotive, and if we have, I would like to correct it now. That's not at all our strategy. Our strategy is to continue to grow with all our customers, including absolutely the automotive customers who are very important for us and very good customers generally. We've had them for a long time, decades often, and enjoy very, very good relations with them. They also seem to like us. I've had many customer meetings since I started, and generally speaking, the tone of voice is a very positive one.
We intend to grow with those customers, and part of the reason for growing with them is that we believe that, as Oskar said before, that there will be more use for aluminum products in every car going forward as there is a shift to hybrid and electric vehicles. It's also so that we've invested over the past years in a lot of new capacity and that means that we have growth opportunities in many other market segments as well. That has actually improved that situation quite a lot during 2021. Now we see a continued strong market in the U.S. for almost everything that we do there, and we see a strong market also in Europe for a variety of segments, right?
A strong market in terms of demand, but also in terms of pricing. That means that at least now, the pricing that we enjoy and the profitability that we enjoy in other segments than automotive is quite comparable with and very often higher than the profitability.
Mm.
That we have in automotive. We don't regard this as something that should drive down mix. That being said, some of those products are rather, exposed and are less, let's say, technically advanced and also less tied up in long-term contracts and long-term customer relations and so on. And therefore, we need to make the right choice there and provide the right mix, both for the short term, but also, of course, to build up relations with customers, technology, maybe leverage the sustainability footprint that we have, which is very good, in order to get a similar structure, a good structure, I should say, a good mix of short-term and long-term contracts, so that we have short-term flexibility for volume, but also have long-term security when it comes to utilization and price.
That puzzle, that game, laying that or drawing that picture is an important part of this Navigate project that I spoke about before. Now we have higher capacity. We intend to raise it further by smart investments in debottlenecking, by productivity, and so on. This new capacity, what is the best way to use it? That's part of the Navigate project to figure out.
Right. Thank you. I understand that it's not you trying to shift sort of a bit unutilized automotive capacity into new segments but rather the new capacity that you created through your investments.
Yes.
My final question, it should be a quicker one, is on has Omicron led to a lot of sick leave here in Q1, and has that caused any problems for you in production?
Yes. Omicron has led to a lot of sick leave in Q1, and yes, it's causing problems. We are, I guess after two years of this, heading into the third, we're kinda used to these problems. We believe that we'll be able to navigate that, and that is also a factor that's been weighed in our volume estimate.
Wonderful. Thank you very much. Those were all my questions.
The next question is from Mats Liss, Kepler Cheuvreux. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thank you. Can you hear me? Sorry.
Yes, Mats, we can hear you.
Thank you. Just coming back to the sales performance area in the first quarter of 2022, I guess the mix, I mean, the volumes will be back, but I guess we should expect a sales mix there with lower automotive to continue to well dilute earnings and the margin somewhat, even if you have these price increases coming through.
We, Oskar, here you have to correct me if I say something that's not correct, but we don't regard negative mix as a major factor in Q4. A factor for sure, but not a major factor. The main factor in Q4 was insufficient coverage of cost increases by price increases.
No, just to add to that, I think the key item to sort of keep track of here is capacity utilization also. Because even though automotive products are typically, you're absolutely right there, Mats, that automotive products are typically more technically advanced, higher technical content, and typically higher margin products therefore. But if we are running production of these type of products with a very low-capacity utilization, which we certainly did in the fourth quarter, the automotive products that we then run are not that profitable, basically. That's what we also saw that for the Eurasia business in Q4, that is a large part automotive products, but the margin suffered from low-capacity utilization.
I think from that respect, I think it's also fair to view this that the automotive products will be more profitable when we can add other products that can utilize the available capacity and increase our capacity utilization. If capacity utilization would be the same and you just change from an auto product to another product, yes, that will probably mean a slightly lower margin. If you can sort of adjust the capacity utilization and improve that, you'll probably have a better net effect if you understand what I mean.
I guess the first quarter this year, 2022, compared to first quarter 2021. I guess last year you had well, volumes are back, but so you don't expect any dilution there. I mean, there are pros and cons, but it sort of helps that you increase capacity utilization in a more efficient way.
That we expect sequential margin improvement, but not a year-on-year margin improvement. Q1, however, last year was a very good quarter, as you know.
Yeah. Okay. Then secondly, I mean, you mentioned the ramp up here of battery components. I guess this is a long-term situation, but just remind me how you see the ramp up there. Is it sort of a, well, following the ramp up of electric vehicles, of course, and so on. We see two, three years ahead, volumes coming up gradually, but the main sort of impact will be beyond 2025, I guess.
First, let's for clarity, let me separate two things. We have products that go into electric vehicles and battery-powered vehicles and also hybrid vehicles that are not associated directly with the battery, but are ancillary to it. For instance, heat thermal management products and so on, right? That's an area where we believe, as we have said before, that the need for aluminum products generally, and also Gränges' products specifically, will increase as the result of this shift. We have the battery products themselves, and that is quite a mix of different things, different new products that are associated with the battery, and there are a lot of aluminum products in there, and Gränges is playing in many of those fields, right?
As an example of some of those things, it's the thermal management including the battery cooling plate and other components for it. But you also have battery cell casings and also then battery cathode aluminum foil. And we're playing in and investing in all of these segments. We think, we regard this, we look at it as a from a macroscopic perspective as a very, very important growth opportunity for Gränges. But exactly like you said, we do not expect that will be the majority of our growth in 2022 or 2023.
We expect, however, to grow in 2022 and 2023, partly as a result of the capacity investments that we made in the past, and partly as a result of the other products that we hope going to be driven by the shift to EV. Maybe even more importantly, we hope to grow as a result of good general market conditions in the Americas and in Europe. This is an important factor for us, battery EV. It is going to drive growth in the near term, mainly in our more traditional products, and we believe it is going to be a good growth opportunity for us long term in more battery-centric products. The majority of the growth in 2022 and 2023 will come from other factors.
Thanks. Very good answer there. Just coming back to the auto segment once again. I mean, in the U.S., you have a lower market share in the auto segment, and I guess this change over to more electrified vehicles. I mean, previously, we've been talking about you need a hot roll capacity in the U.S. to increase market share further and to the same level as in Europe and in Asia. I mean, will this change when cars become more electrified or is it sort of a well, same situation?
Generally speaking, what we've been talking about is a shortage of casting capacity in the U.S., and that's also an area where we announced last year in May, I think, or at least during the spring, a major investment in that area. We're also looking into further investment in that. The production technology that we used, that we do use in the U.S., is something called continuous cast, and it does not involve the hot rolling step that we have in our production facilities in Finspång, Konin, and in Shanghai. We do not have at present any plans to invest in hot rolling capacity in the U.S.
Yeah, great. Thank you. Just a final one here on working capital. I mean, you've made quite a good contribution in the fourth quarter. Should we expect that to continue in the first half of this year, or have you sort of reached a balanced level?
Yeah. No, well, you're absolutely right there. I think, from my perspective, the cash flow and the working capital release there is really one of the Q4 highlights. Looking ahead now, what we have in front of us, as we've indicated, I mean, we are expecting a sequential volume growth now from the fourth to the first quarter, and that itself will tie more working capital, everything else the same, right? In addition to that, we've also seen now in the beginning of this year metal pricing coming up again, increasing. As we know, the aluminum price doesn't impact our profitability, but it impacts the fact that we have to carry more, the value of our inventory is more expensive, and it impacts our working capital.
If you combine those factors, I would say going from the fourth to the first quarter, I would expect that we will build working capital in Q1.
Okay. Thank you very much.
The next question is from [Julien Vatal of Cal Advisors]. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Hello, gentlemen. Just two quick questions or three maybe. The first one would be on if you could give us example of the customer new sales you talked about in the report. What can they be and how you can increase this customer focus around new solutions? Second question is would you the low ROCE is, I mean, you acknowledge it. Can you say whether it's related to some low yield assets? I mean, some units that would be really low, or is it general across the board in the group? The third question would be on the debt. It seems to me that free cash flow will be limited this year due to the high CapEx and maybe some more capital.
Can you remind if you have any sensitivity to higher interest rates, because the debt would remain broadly the same, I guess. Could you end up paying a bit more financial expenses this year compared to last year? Thank you.
Well, that's quite portfolio questions. I'm gonna try to answer the first two if I can, and then I will leave Oskar to you the question about the debt and the interest rate. When it comes to new customers and growth, the growth that we used to compensate for the lower demand in automotive in Q4 and also in Q1 comes from a variety of sources. It's so that we have some long-term things that are starting to grow on us. It's generally speaking so that we have a good market, for instance, in HVAC, in specialty packaging, in many of the other niches as well that create good growth. It's also so that we have actively gone out and found customers that of a more, let's say, transitory nature or more short-term nature, that had capacity needs, that we could fill with the existing equipment at short notice. It's a mix of things. Longer term, our growth plan is, of course, to find new growth segments, but we have already talked about those in this call, right? It has to do with the EV thing. It has to do with further penetrating the HVAC market. It has to do with battery and so on and so forth, right? It's a mix of short-term actions to meet the volume swings and long-term actions to develop to keep the existing customers we have and develop the relationship with them, but also, of course, to find new customer categories.
Second, just, my question was more, do you see customers where you basically do not get full share of wallet and that you could increase that?
Do you see customers where we don't have a full share of wallet? Yes, we have almost all customers. We don't have a full share of wallet. We are, it should be said, especially in brazed heat exchanger material, the world leader, right? That we don't have a full share of wallet is something that the customer is not, I mean, most of these customers they want dual sourcing, often triple sourcing, according to some scheme of their own, 50, 30, 20 or whatever they feel is the right mix to have, right? That we don't have a full share of wallet does not always mean that we can grow. It is, however, so that our global scope, our strong performance, technical skills, and so on, presents many growth opportunities also with existing customers.
Now, I'm sorry, you have to remind me, what was your second question?
Second question was on the low ROCE, and is it due to some assets in the group, or is it really general across the group?
The low ROCE in 2021 is due to two things, mainly. It's due to the fact that our profitability was not what it should be on the EBIT level for reasons that we have gone into now, for instance, with this cost price lag and such things, and also low utilization. That's one part of it, and the second part of it is that we have added quite some capital employed due to the expansion or the acquisition, of course, of Gränges Konin, but also the expansion program that we have now very ambitiously run in our various regions. Those assets indeed are not contributing to the EBIT, but they are in the denominator of the ROCE equation or the ROCE formula, and so they bring down the ROCE.
The solution to bringing up the ROCE very simply is to make sure that we have full utilization, that we have a better margin than we did on average in 2021, and of course, that these new assets start to contribute to the level where that they should contribute to, right? That will absolutely be our ambition to make happen during 2022 and 2023.
Can I just. Oh, there's a slide where you show the EBIT ton, and the lowest EBIT ton currently in the group is Gränges Eurasia, which is, correct me if I'm wrong, the oldest asset in the group. All the rest was added Konin, U.S. That's why I'm asking. I mean, the low profitability doesn't seem linked to new assets. It's more like the old asset base that is not performing as well as it should or as it used to be.
Yeah. Gränges Eurasia, generally speaking, is not performing as well as it should. You're absolutely right.
There is two things also there. I mean, that's where we have the largest automotive exposure.
Sure.
Is a very important factor there.
Great.
We are also in Eurasia, we're also running one major expansion project of the Finspång facility that is not yet generating any value, I would say. That's one of the reasons there. That also ties to your third question on the debt level, and I can try to answer that. Typically, we don't provide guidance on or forward-looking guidance on debt, but I think we can tie it together in a neat little package for you. I think what we've said here is that, I mean, typically, Gränges is a business with a strong underlying cash generation. We don't expect that to be significantly different, going forward. I mentioned earlier in the presentation that we expect to invest SEK 1 billion of CapEx in 2022 to finalize the ongoing expansion projects in Konin and Finspång, in the Americas. I think that's important to take into account and that a lot of the cash that we will generate will of course go into finalizing these expansion investments.
If you then take a shorter perspective and look at going into Q1, we've indicated that earnings is expected to be slightly lower year-over-year. We've also indicated that we have an increased metal price going into Q1. If you add that together, I think it's fair to say that net debt to EBITDA is probably, you can expect that to increase going into 2022 in the beginning of the year. If you take a full year perspective, I would say that it's fair to assume that it would remain on more or less the current level when we sit here and talk again in 12 months time, something like that. As for the interest rate and so forth, I don't foresee any dramatic changes for that.
I think our financial net guidance for 2022 is that we expect to have a financial net of around SEK 100 million for the full year, which is ballpark the same level that we had for 2021.
Yeah. Okay. Excellent. Thank you and congrats for the good quarter, I think.
Thank you.
We haven't received any further questions at this point.
Ladies and gentlemen, I would like to take the opportunity here to thank you very much for following Gränges and for spending time with us today, and wish you a nice day and a nice weekend when it comes, and take a lot of care. Thank you for today.