Welcome to the HMS Networks Q1 presentation for 2025. During the Q&A session, participants are able to ask questions by dialing #5 on their telephone keypad. Now, I will hand the conference over to CEO Staffan Dahlström and CFO Joakim Nideborn. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everybody. Welcome to HMS Networks, our Q1 2025 presentation. Today, as always, it's our dynamic duo of myself, Staffan Dahlström, and Joakim Nideborn presenting. We have an agenda that is pretty much standard. I will show a few slides about the business, and then Joakim will make a deep dive into the numbers, and we finish up with a Q&A at the end. Some of you have already seen the report. We think it's pretty good, but also some important things to highlight. For example, when we look at our net sales, it's kind of confusing that we have -17% on the organic, but still +44% on t otal. Joakim will explain this in more detail. I will not go into this.
If you look on the order intake, we are very happy to see that the organic order intake is finally on a double-digit positive thing again. Our M&As from last year are fully kicking now, and 97% of order intake is driven by M&A, of course. Adjusted EBIT developed well, SEK 218 million, and we are close to our profit margin of 25%. Adjusted EBIT, we are 24.5%. Maybe we can even that up to almost 25%. Strong cash flow. We are very happy to see that. We have some debt since our acquisitions, so strong cash flow is really important for us. We have an adjusted EPS of SEK 3.17. Rolling 12 months, we see also that we are getting effect from the acquisitions, a little bit similar that we have negative organic and positive by the M&As.
You've seen this number before, so I think I move over to the next slide. As we informed from 1 January, we have changed our organization from a matrix organization since we had since 2017 into three divisions where each division has full accountability of R&D, sales, marketing. The first, IDS, is representing year-to-date 47%. The second one, INT, 29%, and New Industries, 24%. New Industries is this combination with today building automation and vehicle communication. The organization actually is working well. It's up and running. There have been some startup challenges in different systems, in ERP systems, but we see that this is working really well. Actually, I think part of the good development of our gross profit, our gross margin, is also an indication that the organization in supply chain and sales is working well. A few highlights. We talked about organic growth.
It doubled digits in Q1. Very good. We talked for the last three years about inventory corrections. First, customers start with a lot of overorder, then having a lot of inventory. We feel more or less that this has come into balance, and we see that large customers in this INT division are starting to place orders again. As we said before, we haven't lost customers, but the customers have a massive overinventory of our components. Now we're seeing that they are placing orders again. Also, sequential improvement of net sales. Joakim will go more into how to explain this negative organic growth, but we see that business goes better. Strong market in America. We see that both Germany and Continental Europe remain hesitant, a bit soft. As we said, new division is fully implemented.
Also, acquisition, the large acquisition of Red Lion we did a year ago performed well. We are happy with the integration. We're happy with how they perform. Also, PEAK-System, where we have the full first quarter in our books, is also continuing to perform really well. I know that several of you have been questioning the operations in automotive, where PEAK-System is strong, but this goes actually quite well. They have a unique product offer and a very strong relationship with their sales channel. What everybody talks about today is, of course, the tariffs. We've been working a lot with this and done certain analyses, and we are now taking actions both in logistics and pricing, and we can talk more about this in the Q&A session.
We think, however, that mid-term, that U.S. and reshoring manufacturing and doing more investments in becoming a manufacturing company again, we think that this is a midterm opportunity for HMS. Tariffs are complex, and I just want to show one picture that illustrates how we see this. Sorry for the bit crowded picture, but let's focus on the circle one here. Made in Europe, sold to North America. This is around 15% of our group sales of finished goods. Right now, we see that there's a tariff of 10%. Some of our products are under these exempt rules as well, but it's still unclear with these customs codes and things like this. That's one part. Second part, and the bullet with the two here, made in Europe that is sold, shipped to the U.S., but it's for customers in Canada and Mexico.
This is less than 5% of our revenue. Same here, 10% tariffs, but here we also have other opportunities to do direct shipment to Canada or Mexico. All in all, you can see that made in Europe and for the U.S. market is some 10% of our revenue. Number three here, Asia and China to U.S. This is mainly components that we use in our Red Lion or our North American manufacturing. Very high tariffs from China, and then 10% from the rest of Asia. Here we have some impact on the cost of material. Number four here, this is what we sell from U.S., mainly Red Lion, to China, and this is less than 0.5% of our group sales. That part of the business is really, really small.
Our strategy right now, short- term, is to make sure that we, whatever will be the cost increase of tariffs, we will pass that through customers to price increases to cover that cost. We also do some logistic flow adjustments to make sure that we navigate well in this. Also, midterm, we think that we have a great opportunity with our own manufacturing in the U.S., and we can also move some, especially late configuration of some products from Europe to the U.S. The fact that we are now investing in our manufacturing in the North American plant in York will also give us a great opportunity to have much more flexibility between our European manufacturing and North American manufacturing. We feel that we have been analyzing this well, and we are prepared for this uncertainty.
With that, I would like to leave over to Joakim to talk about our financials for quarter one.
All right, thank you, Staffan. Let's dive into the numbers. If we look at the order intake, I think first of all, we're quite happy to see that we managed to beat the Q4 order intake with the SEK 930 million that we delivered in the quarter. You see, if you look on the upper left graph, you see that we have a tick up between Q3 and Q4 last year in order intake. Of course, part of that is explained that we had a PEAK acquisition that came in and added some orders to this as well. Also, we saw this big improvement in Red Lion with the project business that we had been missing a little bit in the first two quarters with Red Lion into the group.
We thought that that would be difficult to match going into Q1 since we had a substantial part of project orders in Q4. We actually see that it is developing really well, and we continue to have now not as big project orders, but various project orders also for different brands. We talk a bit more on that when we come to the IDS division. I think all in all, with the organic growth being back to the 12%, which is really good to see, and this project business developing well, we have these pretty good numbers in orders. We have seen a strong development both in Americas and in APEC, where we face also difficult comparable in APEC. That is good to see that the Japanese market is showing recovery and that this destocking is wearing off also in Japan.
Where we still see a bit of weakness is in Europe, where we definitely think that the market has more to give. We will talk about this more when we talk about the outlook for the coming quarters as well. All in all, I think good performance from Red Lion and from PEAK, the new acquisitions, the organic development is solid, and we see a bit of a headwind from FX with the Swedish krona strengthening towards the end of the quarter. Not a huge impact in Q1. We think there will be a slightly larger impact from the stronger SEK in the coming quarters. Going over to sales, here we have SEK 890 million in reported, which has done an organic decline by 17%. It is maybe not super intuitive to see the 12% growth in orders and the 17% decline in sales.
The main reason for this is that we had the Anybus embedded business, so the majority of this INT division, where we were looking into a pretty good backlog going into 2024. Especially in Q1, we had some really strong deliveries of embedded, which is not there now, of course, and that's why you see the decline. If I take that away, the rest of the business is developing quite solid and in a similar way as we see with the order intake. It's also good to note that we have a book to bill of 109 in Q1. We're continuing actually now for, I think it's the second straight quarter to build some order book, which is going to be very helpful facing a somewhat uncertain future with the tariffs and all that. Also here, we can see that Red Lion and PEAK are developing well.
That is nice to see that the acquisitions we have made are doing good the first couple of quarters here. We have some new slides that we did not have before. Since we now are into segment reporting and we report our three different segments, our three different divisions separately. Let us start then with Industrial Data Solutions, IDS, where we have an increase of 11% in order intake. Let me just explain what you are looking at here. Here we have proformed the numbers from 2024 as well. Everything here is comparable. There are no M&A effects in these numbers. Here you see also the growth that we are talking about in Red Lion with both the N-Tron business and the Red Lion brand is doing well in terms of project business.
Before, we've seen a lot of projects within the N-Tron brand for the switch business, and now we see it more widely over the full offering, which we of course like. We can also note that Ewon is improving both in terms of sales and orders. That's also good to see that that is continuing on a nice track. If we talk about the result, this is the first time then that we showed the results on the division level. We do SEK 93 million in adjusted EBIT in Q1, which is a margin of 22.2%. If you think about that, the majority of this division is the Red Lion acquisition, which is about two-thirds of the division. When we acquired Red Lion, we were looking into some 19%, 20% EBIT. We're pretty pleased that we managed to take this division to 22% already now.
I also wanted to make you aware that this is a pretty Americas-heavy division. You see that two-thirds of the sales goes into the Americas. This is a bit different compared, you'll see, to the other divisions. All in all, a good start in IDS and quite happy with, sorry, with the margin development. Going over to INT, a little bit of a different story. Here you see the point I was trying to make with the difference in sales and orders from the embedded business. If we stay on the graphs first to the left, look in the bottom left, you see the net sales of SEK 345 million in Q1 2024, and then a pretty big decline from there just into Q2 that year and then further on. We're happy to see that the trend is kind of broken.
We see a sequential growth in sales. If you look on the upper left, you can see the similar trend in orders starting even in Q3 2024 and then slowly ticking up. Also here we can see that Americas are doing okay, and APEC is doing good with Japan coming back. Still softness in Europe. Here you see that the EMEA region represents 58% of sales. Here we still think that there is some improvement to have from when the European region is coming back as well. Timing of that is, of course, difficult to say, but I think we are carefully optimistic for the future for INT with more and more customers coming back and placing orders. Even if the underlying market is not doing great, we think that in comparison with 2024, we have a good chance of performing better in INT.
Just talking about the profitability for a second, we do SEK 72 million in adjusted EBIT, which represents a margin of 27.9%. Obviously, that's a very strong number. The reason for this good performance is the really big customer base, the legacy we have in this division with a lot of, yeah, a lot of design wins that is generating very good sales. This is a division that we will be a cash cow in terms of profitability. Going over to new industries where we have the building automation and the vehicle communication business, I think all in all, a solid quarter. We also have the pro forma numbers with PEAK in here, so you can compare everything. A little bit of a tick up in orders and a small increase in sales.
We should also say that I think Q1 in 2024 was pretty good, pretty good comparable. It was a strong quarter in itself. I think we're okay with this development in terms of profitability. We are pretty much in line with the group average. We've been seeing good development for vehicle communication in Americas, maybe a bit of early orders to try to offset the potential tariff situation from some of our distributors around SEK 10 million- SEK 15 million in those orders that were placed a bit early, we believe. The building automation business has been doing also a solid start to the year. Very strong development in the Middle East, which is a fairly new business for us. We've been there for four or five years, and it's developing really good and actually turning into the biggest region for the building automation business.
Also here, you can see that we have the majority of the business in the EMEA region with two-thirds of the business going into EMEA, and then Americas and APEC with a bit smaller parts. Now looking at the sales per region, you see we have now 41% in Americas, 45% in Europe, and 14% in the APEC region. I think this is fairly what we expect from the future as well. Talking about the profitability for the group, we do an adjusted EBIT of SEK 218 million, 24.5% adjusted EBIT margin, which we are quite happy with. The volumes are improving. They're still not great. To manage to be this close to the target with some more potential on the sales, we think that's pretty good.
One of the main drivers, and maybe one of the best from our perspective, the best points in this report is the gross margin, where we managed to improve the gross margin from 62.6% to 63%. Also with the Red Lion and PEAK businesses diluting the margin a little bit. It is actually better than what it looks like, the comparison, because Q1 2024 was without the acquisitions. The reason for this margin is, first of all, a pretty favorable product mix from the fact that we have less embedded than what we had a year ago. That is helping a little bit. Most gross margins are fairly similar within the divisions. We are probably going to get the question. We are not going to answer it exactly what it is on the different divisions.
What we can say is that the embedded business tends to be a bit lower in gross margin. That's one item. We have been seeing good improvements in Red Lion and also some improvements in PEAK in the recent quarters, and that continues now in Q1. Here we have been working with some selective price increases. We have been doing some investments in the Red Lion manufacturing space and trying to shape up on basically the operational excellence here and there. We are happy to see the results of this. The other thing that builds to the strong margin on the EBIT margin is the cost control and the OpEx, where we managed to do what we said in Q4, get the costs out in relation to the reorganization and get all that to work. We are looking at an organic saving of 6% in OpEx.
We also have, of course, salary inflation is already included when we look at that number. All in all, it is good to see that the plans have played out the way we wanted to, and it builds to the 24.5% margin. Earnings per share, it is improving again, 3.17 adjusted for the amortization of overvalues. We still keep a fair amount of debt. You will see when we get to that slide. Interest cost comes down to SEK 34 million and net financials of SEK 30 million negative. That is something we are going to live with for some quarters, of course. Looking at the cash flow, solid cash flow with SEK 187 million, and we continue to release some inventory and working capital overall. We have a SEK 45 million help from working capital release in Q1. The majority of that is related to inventory.
We think that we can continue a couple of quarters to reduce a bit more of inventory. That will help the cash flow throughout the year as well. That is quite positive. This comes down to a cash conversion of 73%, which we think is pretty fair. Of course, the cash flow is supporting us to delever the company. As you can see here, we have reduced some SEK 300 million in debt and a bit more interest-bearing debt, actually. The net debt through EBITDA, if we look on a pre-IFRS 16 basis and also with pro forma for the acquisitions, which we think is the most relevant comparison, is 3.05. Here we come from Q4 from 3.37. It is a 32 basis point reduction in net debt through EBITDA, which of course we are quite happy with.
Now we have, as you probably know, the Swedish krona strengthened quite a bit towards the end of March, and we have all the debt in euros and dollars. So we get some currency help here as well to delever. And this reduction of SEK 320 million that we have in interest-bearing debt is about two-thirds related to currency and 1/3 related to the cash flow. My point here is that we will not be able to manage to continue this pace of 30 + basis points in reduction of net debt EBITDA since we do not expect to see the same currency effects every quarter, of course. We are going to continue to come down in leverage, and we expect that we should be able to come down below 2.5x towards the end of the year in net debt EBITDA.
For this year, I think we continue to have full focus on trimming the new organization, getting focus on new wins, integrate acquisitions, and reduce the leverage to come back to a level where we can be a bit more offensive. Just to summarize the first quarter, three main takeaways that we would like you to take with you. First, the order intake improvement. We have a recovery from our big customers. We see a 12% organic increase. We see solid product business in the U.S. The book to bill is 109, excluding currency effects. Moving in the right direction. We have solid profitability and good cash flows with adjusted EBIT margin over 24.5%, almost back to the target. Despite some diluting acquisitions, we're improving gross margins and we're maintaining good cost control for the future here.
Cash flow SEK 187 million reduces leverage to 3.05x, and we will continue that trend throughout the year. The third one, we have to mention the tariffs. Even if we believe that this is a business opportunity for us in the medium term and that we're well positioned against competition in the U.S. with our own manufacturing and with investments coming into automation in the U.S., in the short- term, this is causing uncertainty in the market and decisions are being put on hold or postponed, which is, of course, not great. It's super difficult to say exactly how this is going to impact the year. I'm sure we're going to get questions on this. We continue to follow it closely. If we exclude the tariffs, we are quite positive to the development.
We know that there is more to have in Europe, but this will be a very interesting thing to follow in the near future. Our strategy will be to protect the bottom line. That means that you can expect slightly higher sales and slightly lower gross margin as an effect of that. Now we've been talking a lot, so I'm going to hand over to operator and open up for questions.
If you wish to ask a question, please dial pound key five on your telephone keypad to enter the queue. If you wish to withdraw your question, please dial pound key six on your telephone keypad. The next question comes from Joachim Gunell from DNB Markets. Please go ahead.
Thank you and good morning, the Dynamic Duo here.
When we think about the linearity or the strength of new orders throughout the quarter, I'm just curious to how that shapes out because there are some companies reliant upon discrete automation CapEx who have said essentially that it was lights out for the last two weeks of March. Can you say anything with regards to the linearity throughout the quarter and perhaps also how April looks to be tracking for you?
I guess I can take that one. Maybe surprisingly for you, Joakim, but I think we've had a pretty solid pace throughout the full quarter. The third week of March was actually really strong for us. We haven't seen that trend really. April also started pretty much on the same pace as we've been seeing in Q1.
I think what we are thinking about is also the fact that we mentioned the PEAK business that some distributors were actually placing orders in case there were tariffs. That might be offsetting, of course. We also think we had a few of those orders in the beginning of April, companies that would like to, or distributors that would like to build a bit of inventory in case the tariff situation were to become worse. It's difficult to see exactly what is what in this. I'm not sure if you want to add maybe to that, Staffan.
I think for distributors who place pre-orders, we have also distributors who are a little bit burned by high inventory in the past. There's also reluctance at the distributor to place a lot of orders just in case there comes this tariff. I think that effect has been a little bit balanced by the history we've had the last two years with too high inventory levels.
That's very helpful. Thank you. No material immediate impact here on orders so far. When you're talking about this with customers about the pipeline for the remainder of the years, do you think that you are increasingly seeing customers worried about the environment, putting a pause on investment decisions? Are there any industries that you would call out as incrementally weak?
I think we have talked about automotive in the past, especially in Europe, to be weak. However, we got some data that indicates a bit of strength in Germany and some others indicate weakness. I think when we talk to customers, I was in the U.S. two weeks ago, and people are everything from upset to shocked about these tariffs.
Our exposure to China is quite low, but companies who have exposure to China for a lot of manufacturing are quite concerned. It takes time to change these things and the flows. We think that, and we see this ourselves as well, that some decision we are taking and doing investments in the U.S., when we buy these machines, multi-million machines from Germany, now we have more tariffs on them. That delays the process. Even if we make the decisions already, it still reroutes certain things and delays. I think everything is a little bit delayed, I think. Short term, mid- term, maybe it would be good.
That sounds encouraging. Just finally, if we look at the tariff and the effect situation today and then basically the broader implications for you, margins were stellar here in Q1 for you. Is it fair to consider that these Q1 margins, both from a gross and EBIT perspective, could be PEAK for this year and that we could see a gradual deterioration throughout the remainder of the year, but safeguarded absolute levels?
Maybe I try to take that one. I think we do not want to speculate and guide exactly what the margins could be. I think maybe we will conclude this by saying that with everything else not moving, the fact that we will push these tariff effects, pretty much isolated tariff effects to the customers, means that we will see a slightly higher top line. Mathematically, that will dilute the gross and EBIT margin a little bit. I think you need to make your own analysis, Joachim, on the EBIT margins for the rest of the year.
Will do. Thank you very much and have a great day.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Simon Granath from ABG. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning, Staffan and Joakim. Initially, I had a question on Red Lion, which performed well here in this quarter. And last quarter, you acknowledged some one-off orders. Are you seeing similar effects here or what is behind the strong orders? I note your comment of the advantage versus competitors on manufacturing. I am also wondering if that is helping orders. Thank you.
Yeah, I think what we have been seeing in the quarter is we have been seeing more product orders, but average size has been a bit smaller. I think that is probably preferred for us to see that we are winning more, but even if the parties are not as big. We have been seeing it across the wider offering. It has been more or less across the whole Red Lion offering, which has been very good to see. I kind of lost your last question, what that was. Can you repeat that again? Sorry.
Yes, of course. Yes. It was whether you have seen any tailwinds to orders due to the competitive advantage versus competitors on the supply chain.
Right. I cannot say that we have seen that, but we have heard when we were over in the U.S. two weeks ago that more and more companies are starting to think Buy American for the American players. That is why we say that we believe that we could have a competitive advantage going forward since some of the key competitors in some of the niches we are in are from Europe and Asia. Nothing that we have seen, but it is more an observation for the future.
That makes a lot of sense. Just a clarification on the pre-buying, and sorry if I did not pay enough attention to your previous answer, but the $15 million that you highlighted in the quarterly results, is that related to PEAK-System's American distributors? Is your assessment here that it was only that business that saw tailwinds, or did you see similar trends in other parts of your business?
No, I think you described it perfectly. That is what we have seen for sure. There might be some other effects, but there might also be some other effects for people not placing orders because of uncertainty. I think what Staffan was trying to cover before, it' s difficult to see exactly what is what, but that we know for a fact because we had discussions.
Very good. Thank you. I know that it's still early stage, but you do highlight some potential price increases due to the tariffs. Could you elaborate to an extent on the potential magnitude on this? Are we talking about similar price hikes during the high inflation, or should it be more moderate than that?
Should I take it, Staffan?
Yeah, go ahead. Good question. Difficult to answer.
Good question. I'm not sure if you're going to be happy with the answer, though. I think we're in the middle of communicating this to customers, so we don't want to out exactly what we're doing. Maybe what we were trying to explain with this slide that Staffan presented with the different flows that we had is that some of the tariff impact will come on components.
Obviously, in terms of protecting the gross profit on those orders, we do not have to push as big price increases. Some of the flows, especially finished goods from Europe, the old HMS, so to say, before the acquisitions of Red Lion and Peak, here we have finished goods going from Europe into the U.S. Obviously, the increase or the impact from the tariffs will be higher in comparison to the sales price of the product. We have to do a bit more. All in all, as we said before, we are going to protect the gross profit as such. That will leave us, it will not be double-digit increases. It will be single-digit increases. We need to have the communication to customers before we can air everything in calls here.
I can only highlight what I meant when I showed this tariff slide earlier, that midterm we are planning to move some production over to the U.S. for popular U.S. products, at least the late configuration of those. When we do that, we do that to generate more resilience towards customers. The cost of doing this manufacturing is actually higher in the U.S. than where we're manufacturing today. The reason why we have not manufactured in the U.S. in the past was higher cost. The math is changing a bit now. We also see that we are doing some of these moves of logistic flow and manufacturing will be based also on other things than just the lowest possible cost and the highest possible quality. In the U.S., we have high quality, but a slightly higher cost. Therefore, we need to adjust some of the pricing as well.
Perfect. Appreciate that. As a final question from me, you have announced a Capital Markets Day after the summer. Any first clips into what we can expect for you to present during that day?
Not really at the moment. We are working with the strategy towards 2030, and that's what we will present. We are sure it will be an exciting day, but we are not ready to talk about it at the moment. Look forward to see you then, and we'll make the presentation then.
Absolutely. See you there and looking forward to it. Thank you for having my questions.
Thanks, Simon.
The next question comes from Erik Larsson from SEB. Please go ahead.
Thank you and good morning. Hope you're doing good. I actually had a question on the manufacturing side that you just talked about, just kind of on the process of moving production, I guess partly to the U.S. What's the timeline on that? And if it's roughly 15% of sales going from Europe to the U.S. today or North America, to what extent do you think you can move that if that's possible to answer?
Yeah, I think what we're looking at right now is some products that are high revenue in the U.S. and low number of different part numbers. With this kind of not the product, but we have a quite long tail. What we see in step one is probably doing what we call the late configuration, which means that maybe packaging or programming and labeling and these kinds of things. That is easy to change.
This is what we're doing manufacturing right now in North America is to implement our common ERP system. We are investing in new machines in this York facility to upgrade that to the same level we have in our factory in Sweden to make this become a sister factory. We need to finish up these activities first before we do this kind of move of products. Best case, I would say late this year and probably more focus on 2026.
Okay, perfect. Just a general question on costs. OpEx that you've been saving quite well here over the past year. How do you think about the return of costs? What costs are you seeing coming back here, assuming that demand should improve?
I think we have a couple of things that we know that we're going to have to invest in on the product development side. If we see that the demand is stabilizing a bit now, we're probably going to take the opportunity to make those investments. I think you can expect a slightly higher cost increase throughout the year than what we see now. We're going to be pretty careful with this, but these are some important things to safeguard future growth to get the right products out. That we're probably going to see.
Okay. Finally, on this new organization that has been going on for a few months now, what is the internal response or how is the process evolving? Is everything going smooth so far, or is there more to be done, so to say?
I think keep in mind that we are both doing a new organization at the same time as we integrate two new acquisitions that we did last year. I think we are positively surprised that most things have been developing better than expected. Of course, we have some challenges when we used to have this other organization where especially sales and support was one geographical organization. These teams are now split up into three different divisions. This always creates some challenges, especially on small markets where it's not easy to divide the teams into other segments and stuff like that. We have had a little bit of, I wouldn't say challenges, but we had to work with these things to make it perfect and done some changes. When sometimes you discover that you made something wrong, let's fix it. Everything has not been perfect, but we are getting there.
Okay, sounds good. That's all from me. Thank you.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Gustav Berneblad from Nordea. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thank you. It's Gustav here from Nordea. Just to start off, I mean, very helpful with the tariff slide there, but can you just clarify, I mean, regarding if we sort of look at the flows that is going from China and Asia to the U.S., you comment it's mainly related to Red Lion. Can you just elaborate a little bit more about this? And is it a majority of what you're selling that is shipped that way, so to say?
Here we need to be a little bit careful because, of course, we know what we have as direct exposure, but we saw this a couple of years ago in the shortage of components that there were links to China that we were not aware of. We need to investigate this further because we see a risk that there are certain suppliers that are not in China, but we think have an indirect relationship to China. We expect there could be inflation through this. We are not ready with that analysis, and we cannot really give you any more data on that at the moment.
Yeah, okay, that is fair. Thank you. Just regarding Red Lion, I mean, when we look at the profitability, if we take a sort of run rate margin on adjusted EBIT, is the sort of 22.8% that we saw in 2024, is that sort of a good level to look at it, or should we think sort of a notch up from that level?
If I start, Joakim, you can provide more facts, but I think it's important that we going forward, we don't really look on this as Red Lion. Red Lion is one part of IDS, and there will be certain costs within IDS that are not really distributed on the legacy business or Red Lion. I think going forward, we will look on this as the division, and they are accountable for their revenue and their profits. Joakim, would you like to add anything more on the Red Lion part?
No, I fully agree. I think over time, we have an ambition to get to the 25% for the group, and we would like our divisions to sort of move towards that direction. Some will always be a bit lower, some will be a bit higher because of the dynamics. I think in the short term, we're going to try to trim and improve as much as possible and see if we can push that a little bit. I think, as we said, we're pretty happy with the performance. We already managed to improve the margin in that business a bit. Yeah, I think that means that I do not have a lot to add, Staffan.
Okay.
Okay, perfect. Just the last one here regarding sort of the project-related orders to Red Lion. But I mean, is this something new to that business, or is this something that they have always had, or has it increased just while you comment a bit more on it, or?
Yeah, the reason we comment a bit more on it is because we saw less of it in Q2 and Q3. I think we did get some questions in Q2 and Q3 why we were not delivering as we thought we would be doing in Red Lion. We said this was the reason. Now we are back and seeing this as we expected when we acquired the company. We are acknowledging that that is in place and that things are developing as they should.
Okay, perfect. Perfect. All right, that was all for me. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please dial pound key five on your telephone keypad. There are no more questions at this time, so I hand the conference back to the speakers for any closing comments.
Thank you. Thanks everybody for attending this quarter one update. We live in an interesting world. A lot of things are happening, but as you hear from both me and Joakim, midterm, we are quite optimistic about that things are moving in the right direction. Short- term, we will work hard to make sure we understand what's going on and act on it. Let's keep on working on it and look forward to seeing you in the Q2 report. After that, please note that we have our Capital Markets Day coming up a bit later. Have a nice spring. Thank you. Goodbye.