Welcome to the HEXPOL Q1 presentation. During the questions and answers session, participants are able to ask questions by dialing pound key five on their telephone keypad. Now, I will hand the conference over to the Acting CEO and CFO, Peter Rosén. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Welcome to the presentation of the first quarter of 2024. I'll first give you a general business update, then go through the financials, summarize the quarter, and then, of course, we'll go into the Q&A session after the presentation. So if I can ask you to turn to page four of the presentation. We deliver a stable first quarter with strong margins. First quarter showed demand and sales demand and sales prices sequentially in line with what we saw during the last six months of 2023. We delivered sales of SEK 5.3 billion and EBIT of SEK 905 million, and a strong margin of 17% in the quarter.
The sales are below first quarter of last year, and this is mainly explained by higher demand in the beginning of last year, as well as higher sales prices that were driven by the higher raw material prices that we had at that time. There are also fewer days of sales here in Q1 2024 compared to last year, which has some negative impact in the quarter, in the quarter as such. EBIT is somewhat below Q1 last year, following on the lower sales, but the margin is up from 15.8% last year to 17% in this quarter, driven by a better product and price mix that we deliver.
And when looking a little bit more at demand and sales during the quarter, we see a very similar picture compared to what we saw during the last six months of 2023, with stable development in this quarter across most end customer segments. Compared to Q1 last year, demand is down for mainly the same end customer segments that we saw during the second half of 2023, where automotive is down some, not much, but building and construction and consumer-related products are down substantially. Sales prices are lower than the first quarter last year, driven by lower prices, currently lower prices on raw materials. However, sequentially, sales prices are basically flat in local currency.
During last quarter of 2023, we announced the decision to consolidate our operations in California and close one out of two factories and move over the volume to the remaining factory, since we can service all customers from the remaining site. We took the cost for that move in 2023, since the work started then, and it is expected to be completed according to plan by the end of this summer coming up here. In the same quarter, the acquisition of Star Thermoplastics was announced, and the integration is ongoing, and it follows plan as well. The work on sustainability continues, with development of products and discussions with our customers.
And also in line with our focus on sustainability, we've invested in a devulcanization line here in Europe, which is expected to be up and running by the end of 2024. Basically, what we will do is that we'll transform cured rubber parts into uncured state again through a mechanical process. And previously, rubber waste has been used mainly as a filler in low-quality applications, but with this process, we can keep it in circulation and reduce the demand for virgin materials, also in more advanced compounds. If I can ask you to turn to page five, looking at M&A, we have a pipeline that we continue to work on, and we certainly have the financial resources to do more acquisitions. So this is something that we'll... where we will maintain a very high focus.
If we then move over to HEXPOL Compounding, as mentioned, demand and sales are sequentially very similar to what we saw during the second half of 2023, and that is the same picture across most end customer segments. But compared to Q1 2023, demand and sales are down somewhat for automotive, but more so for building and construction, as well as for consumer-related products. Prices for compounding are sequential flat in local currency, but they are down compared to Q1 2023. And as you may recall, when it comes to prices, we peaked in Q4 2022 or Q1 2023, and then prices started to come down during the second quarter of 2023. So we meet the highest level when it comes to pricing.
Stable supply of raw materials and supply chains work well, no disturbances. And overall for Compounding, we deliver good EBIT and further improve margins for that segment. Engineered Products delivered sales in line with last year. Just keep in mind, last year was a very strong year, so we're very satisfied with these numbers, and EBIT basically in line with last year levels as well. If I can then ask you to turn to page seven, to the business model. I know we mentioned it before, but I will continue to do highlight, the key aspect of price management in our business model. It is key for us, not only when raw material prices move upwards, but also when they decrease, as we saw during the last year.
We also look at our cost structure to see if and where we can improve, and one part of that is to continuously review our manufacturing footprint. That's why we took the decision at the end of last year to consolidate our operations in California from two sites to one site. If I can then ask you to turn to page eight, looking at the sales development. We delivered the sales of SEK 5.3 billion, which is down some 11% compared to the same period last year. Organic sales are down 12% in the quarter, while the acquisition of Star added 1% in sales. Basically, there are no effects in the quarter, as the SEK is quite stable compared to where we were one year ago.
Sales to automotive-related customers in total are down, some driven by a little bit lower production of light vehicles in the quarter. Fully on lower demand, sales to building construction as well as consumer products are down compared to last year. And as I mentioned, the lower sales here in the quarter are also affected by fewer days of sales in the first quarter of 2024. And this is important because since we don't produce to an order book, but to direct confirmed orders, number of days in a period is very important for us. Because if orders are not placed, we do not produce, and we do not sell. We do not have an order book that we can produce to.
In this quarter, sales prices are down compared to last year, and this lowers our sales amount, but has no impact on the EBIT in absolute terms, everything else being equal. If we look at the organic sales, the lower sales are basically equally driven by lower volume and lower sales price. Roughly half and half is volume and sales price when it comes to the organic sales development. If I can ask you to turn to page 10 for the financial overview. We delivered an EBIT of SEK 905 million during the quarter, with a margin of 17%, which is 120 basis points above last year, and that's primarily driven by better product and price mix.
And it's also in line with what we did during the second half of 2023, so no change there. Equity asset ratio remains high at 66%, and return on capital is also at high 18.8%. Cash flow was weak in the quarter. This is normal for us, and it's driven by high accounts receivables at the end of the quarter compared to where we started. It's not driven by any changes in the underlying terms and conditions, but rather that we open up the year with a very low level of accounts receivables. You may remember that Q4 2023, we delivered SEK 1.4 billion in cash flow, and one part of that was low accounts receivables. So that's where we start this year.
So this is quite normal for us in the first quarter. If I may ask you to turn to page 11, just look at numbers a little bit different. Sales are down 11% to SEK 5.3 billion, and majority of this is organic sales. EBIT is down a little bit, 4% to SEK 905 million. At the same time, we see an increase of 8% when it comes to operating margin from 15.8%- 17%. And if I can ask you to turn to page 12, looking at the development of the operating profit, we see that the negative impact from lower sales is basically offset by the higher gross margin and the lower OpEx in the quarter.
The lower OpEx is down compared to last year, driven by very strict cost control. If I can ask you to turn to page 13, looking at HEXPOL Compounding. HEXPOL Compounding delivered sales of SEK 4.9 billion in the quarter, which is 12% below first quarter last year. And as mentioned before, the lower sales are driven by lower demand from building, construction, and consumer-related products, and also somewhat lower automotive combined with fewer days of sales and lower sales prices here in the first quarter of this year. Operating profit came in at SEK 837 million, with a strong margin improvement, moving up 9% to 16.9% in this quarter. If I can ask you to turn to page 14, I'm looking at Engineered Products.
Sales for the segment came in in line with last year at 373 million SEK. Operating profit at 68 million SEK, which is somewhat below last year, basically in line. And the same thing goes for the margin, which is down a little bit, not driven by anything changes, it's just smaller items affecting the segment in this quarter. And if I can then ask you to turn to page 15, looking at the working capital development. We can see that working capital is in line with Q1 2023 numbers, while it's up versus Q4 of last year. And as I mentioned before, this is primarily driven by development of accounts receivables, and it's a normal pattern for us here in the first quarter. There is no change to underlying payment terms when it comes to receivables and payables.
Also, in the quarter, inventories is basically stable and flat. If I can then ask you to turn to page 16, looking at the cash flow. We delivered a cash flow of 100 million SEK, where EBIT is offset by the growth in working capital, or more precisely, the accounts receivables. And that's normally what we see in a first quarter of a year. Then, if I can ask you to turn to page 17, looking at net debt. Net debt decreased further, and at the end of Q1, stands at 1.5 billion SEK, with a net debt to EBITDA ratio of low 0.36. So we closed the first quarter with a very strong financial position.
Then, on page 18, just to summarize the quarter, it's a stable beginning of the year, with an EBIT of SEK 905 million, and an improved EBIT margin of 17% compared to last year. Sequentially stable demand seen across most end customer segments. Compared to Q1 2023, we see lower demand from building construction and consumer-related products. That has negative impact on organic sales development. Furthermore, also, fewer days of sales had negative impact on sales in this quarter, as did the lower sales prices, driven by lower raw material prices. Our work on sustainability continues, both in product development, our own footprint, and looking at the M&A agenda. So all in all, a stable first quarter, with good EBIT at SEK 905 million and a high EBIT margin of 17%.
With that, I conclude the presentation in itself. I hand over to Q&A.
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 Julia Utbult from SEB. Please go ahead.
Thank you very much, Julia Utbult with SEB. I have two questions to start with, and the first one is that we saw continued strong EBIT margin in the quarter from positive mix. So could we have more color on whether this was something we could expect to persist or just normal volatility in the quarter?
To be clear, I don't give any, or we don't give any guidance on future margins. But if we look at the margin that we have here of 17%, sequentially, if we compare to Q3 and Q4 last year, we have a similar product and price mix. So there is no real development or change compared to the second half of last year. There is, however, a positive product mix movement when it comes to comparison to first quarter last year. One is that we see lower raw material prices, and that also has impact on lower sales prices, and that also brings up the margin. And also, when it comes to the lower volume, some of the lower volume that we see is with products with the lower margin for us.
So sequentially, no change, but compared to Q1 last year, somewhat lower volume on lower, little bit lower margin products, and then the price impacts.
... Thank you very much for the clarification. And then my second question is whether we could have more information on the product line, please, the update there. So, both the potential cost, but also, potential productivity impact.
Sorry, just to understand you, what do you mean with the production line?
You mentioned an update of the production line that could facilitate a higher share of non-virgin materials.
Oh, sorry, you mean the devulcanization line?
Yes.
This is a new line that we took the decision to invest in. It will be based in Leština, Czech Republic, and what we'll do is we will set up this production line. It will be completed by the end of this year, and what we will do is we will pick up post-industrial rubber waste, and through mechanical force, like shear and compression, and also temperature too, we'll break down that material and take it from cured rubber into uncured state again. And that means that we will be able to use that in new rubber compound instead of using virgin material. So we haven't had this one before. This is new.
Did you also mention the cost of this new line?
No, we didn't. But it's already been to large extent already in the CapEx.
Okay, thank you very much. That's all for me for now.
The next question comes from Douglas Lindahl from DNB Markets. Please go ahead.
Hi, Peter, Douglas here. A few questions from my side. On the OpEx side, very strong cost control here in the quarter. Is that a fair run rate, would you say, throughout the year? Or, and also, is this a result of the consolidation that you mentioned running up there?
It's not related to, if you refer to consolidation in California, no, it's not related to that. We will start to see positive impact from that consolidation, I would say, beginning of next year. It takes us time to move the recipes from one site to another, and that's why the savings will come later. It basically just takes calendar time to do it. The lower OpEx is the result of very, very strict cost control. Over time, I think it might come up a little bit, but it's too early to say.
Okay. But it's fair to say—at least it's gonna be seemingly operating below last year's levels then, throughout the year?
No, I'm not giving guidance on the full- year number, but I can just conclude, I mean, we delivered this quarter, and we'll continue to be strict, but I think-
Yeah.
-over time, it'll probably come back up a little bit. Yes.
Okay, fine. Moving on then to M&A, you clearly state that that's on top of your agenda continually.
Yeah.
Any sort of commentary around valuation, what sort of targets you're looking at, what your pipeline is, and so on? We obviously hear that you're highly motivated, but, what's going on?
Yeah. Yeah, we're highly motivated, and we do have a very solid pipeline when it comes to M&A.
Yeah.
And we are in a number of discussions, but it's just, it just takes time to conclude some of these acquisitions.
I mean, do you think that valuation is now aligned with expectations from a seller standpoint? So you, is that the-
Yeah, yeah, our view is that the valuations are getting closer between buyer and seller.
Okay. Thank you so much, Peter. That's it from me.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Johan Dahl from Danske Bank. Please go ahead.
Yes, good afternoon, everyone. Just on the demand, sort of how you describe demand, Peter, we talked a lot about construction and consumer being weak in the last 12 months. But currently, are you seeing sort of any growth pockets in terms of customer segments that are actually seeing some positive numbers there?
Johan, do you mean within building construction, or do you mean in general end customer segments?
I think in general, across all your segments, you know-
Yeah.
You've reported flat on automotive, significantly down consumer construction. I'm just trying to see if there is anything that's showing some underlying growth for you guys.
If we look at the sequentially and we look at the last. Again, I'm using the last six months of 2023 as a sort of reference point. We see a little bit ups and downs, but there are no major movements at the moment. So we don't have any end customer segments that stand out, if we look at the second half of last year. Then, of course, the differences are bigger compared to Q1, because that's sort of when, you know, after Q1, volumes started to come down or demand started to come down. So no, I would say no big movements.
Got you.
Not yet.
Uh, there's-
... Just to hear your view on, I mean, there's a lot of talk right now about Chinese cities taking sort of global, global shares. To what extent is that a topic for you guys that you look at? How does it impact you, unless it's something that you can sort of shed some light on, how it may impact you looking forward?
Yeah, it both impacts and it doesn't. It depends very much on where the cars will be produced. If we look at it in general, as long as we can supply to the Tier Ones that in turn supply to the OEMs that produce the cars, then for us it doesn't matter whether it's a Chinese manufacturer or German or American manufacturer. So as long as there's access to the Tier Ones that supply to those OEMs, the origin of the OEM has limited impact on us. So but if Chinese produced cars would only export out of China and not produce in Mexico, U.S., or Europe, and they take a bigger market share, then that could, in the long run, impact.
Has it been a headwind for you guys so far in your judgment or?
I wouldn't say so, no.
All right. On the raw mats, I think you're fairly clear on, you know, the stability you're describing there. At what time do we reach an inflection point there, i.e., going from sort of headwind to tailwind on organic growth? If you see my question, is it,
You mean compare... Yeah, you mean compared to, to last year or?
Compared to last year, assuming stable prices from now.
Yeah. I mean, if we look at 2023, we peaked in Q1 with prices. They started to come down at the end of Q1 last year and also through Q2, and in Q3 and Q4, they were stable. So we peaked in Q1, and they started to come down in second quarter, and then they were stable the second half.
Very clear. Thank you.
The next question comes from Andrés Castaños from Berenberg. Please go ahead. As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please dial pound key five on your telephone keypad. The next question comes from Johan Dahl from Danske Bank. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you for taking this. Just to follow up on the test facility here for devulcanization. Is that a part of a sort of a bigger project within HEXPOL? Or, and are sort of plans in the long term starting to take shape, how you will sort of improve the supply of recycled material, and how the sort of the whole business case looks as you migrate towards recycling? I'm just trying to understand the relevance of this small project you're doing now in the Czech Republic.
Yeah, I didn't really hear the beginning of the question, but I think the gist of the question is how does this investment fit into the sustainability work for HEXPOL? And if that is the question, I mean, we've taken the decision. Rubber is the most complex part to recycle materials. It's easier within PP and TPE, and we also have companies that do that, for example, Almaak. But we've decided to invest in this to see what we can do to get also recycled materials within rubber. And this is a first step, and we need to take this first and then evaluate how it works. But I mean, our ambition is to be able to recycle more of the rubber compounds as well.
But we will need to do this first and then assess the effect of it, once we're up and running towards the end of this year.
I understand. And at what sort of time frame are we talking about until you're able to sort of specify how you will commercialize this and the sort of the whole business case around it? Is it 5 years out or 2 years out there?
No, I mean, the line will be up and running end of the year, and for us, that means that we will be able to generate recyclable rubber that we can use in our product and in our compounds. So at the end of the year, we will use those recycled rubber materials.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Andrés Castaños from Berenberg. Please go ahead. There are no more questions at this time, so I hand the conference back to the speakers for any closing comments.
Thank you, everyone, for listening in and also posing questions. I wish you a very nice Friday and weekend when you get that far. Thank you. Take care.