Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Clariant First Quarter Figures 2026 conference call and live webcast. I am Valentina, the chorus call operator. I would like to remind you that all participants will be in listen-only mode, and the conference is being recorded. The presentation will be followed by a Q&A session. You can register for questions at any time by pressing star and one on your telephone. For operator assistance, please press star and zero. The conference must not be recorded for publication or broadcast. At this time, it's my pleasure to hand over to Andreas Schwarzwälder, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Thank you, Valentina. Ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon. It's Andreas Schwarzwälder, and it's my pleasure to welcome you to our Q1 conference call. Joining me today are Conrad Keijzer, Clariant CEO, and Oliver Rittgen, Clariant CFO. Conrad will start today's call by providing a summary of the first quarter developments and the Middle East situation, followed by Oliver, who will guide us through the business unit's results. Conrad will conclude with the outlook for the full year 2026. There will be a Q&A session following our presentation. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. I would like to remind all participants that the presentation includes forward-looking statements which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Listeners and readers are therefore encouraged to refer to the disclaimer on slide two of today's presentation. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded.
A replay and transcript of this call will be available in the Investor Relations sections of the Clariant website. Let me now hand over to Conrad to begin the presentation.
Thank you, Andreas. In the first quarter of 2026, we delivered sales of CHF 918 million, representing a 2% decrease in local currencies, and almost flat when excluding our portfolio pruning actions in a challenging macroeconomic environment. Our EBITDA margin, before exceptional items, decreased by 130 basis points year-on-year against a strong comparison base, reflecting the impact of the Middle East conflict and a dilutive one-off precious metal sale in our Catalysts business. We increased our cash conversion rate by 12 percentage points on a last 12 months basis to 54% due to effective net working capital management and disciplined capital expenditure. Our overall expectations for the group remain unchanged. We continue to expect sales in local currency to be around flat as pricing offsets lower volumes.
We expect an EBITDA margin before exceptional items of around 18% in 2026, supported by value-based pricing, savings from our performance improvement program, and continued active cost management. We also expect free cash flow conversion of over 40% for the year. Before turning to our first quarter developments in more detail, I would like to provide an assessment of the situation in the Middle East and what we're doing to mitigate its effects. Our first priority is the safety of our people. I'm pleased to confirm that all of our around 150 employees across our Middle East sites are safe. There has been no damage to any of our facilities, and all sites are back in operation. The Middle East and Africa region represents approximately 10% of group sales, with the directly affected areas accounting for around 5% of group sales.
Of our total raw materials, around 37% are fossil-based. We're carefully managing our own raw material supply in Asia, especially in China and India, across our Catalysts and Care Chemicals business. On direct business impact, our Catalysts business is most affected. Of 88 force majeure declarations or shutdowns globally, driven by feed, feedstock shortages, logistics constraints, and infrastructure damages, 44 involve Clariant customers, predominantly in the Middle East and Asia. Turning to the effects we're managing and the actions we are taking. The situation remains volatile, and supply security is the primary concern for our customers. We are responding by leveraging our global production footprint and proactive logistics management to ensure continuity of supply. On costs, we are seeing material inflationary pressure across the board for 2026.
Raw material and energy costs are both expected to increase at a mid to high single-digit percentage rate, while logistics costs are expected to increase at a low double-digit percentage rate. We're executing value-based price management to counter these effects, consistent with our approach in prior cycles. On volumes, we're seeing refill phasing impacts in Catalysts across the Middle East and Asia, some pre-buying in Care Chemicals, and softer industrial and consumer demand across Adsorbents & Additives and Care Chemicals. We're proactively managing our cost base across our businesses in a lower demand environment.
With that, let me now turn to our first quarter financial performance in more detail. In the first quarter, we delivered sales of CHF 980 million, representing a decrease of 2% in local currency versus the prior year period and almost flat underlying sales, excluding the effects of our proactive portfolio pruning measures. Pricing decreased by 1.5%, mainly driven by formula-based pricing, adjusting to lower raw material prices recorded until the start of the conflict in the Middle East. We expect the deflationary environment for raw materials in the first quarter to turn inflationary from Q2 onwards. Volumes decreased by 0.5%, impacted by the Middle East conflict, our portfolio pruning measures, and a softer start of the Adsorbents business. The reported figure was affected by a 7.4% currency headwind.
Turning to profitability, EBITDA, before exceptional items, decreased by 16% to CHF 160 million, corresponding to a 17.5% EBITDA margin. The 130 basis points decrease was the result of a significant impact from the Middle East conflict on Catalysts volume, reducing operating leverage and a dilutive one-off precious metal sale. Unfavorable mix in Catalysts and Care Chemicals, as well as an inventory revaluation effect in Care Chemicals weighed on profitability, despite continued contribution from our performance improvement programs. Looking at the savings program in more detail, we now expect to achieve the full run rate savings of CHF 80 million already by the end of 2026. This is one year ahead of our original commitment. In Q1, we achieved savings of CHF 9 million, which brings the total to CHF 59 million.
The execution of the program resulted in total restructuring charges of CHF 64 million. The key measures in 2026 include a headcount reduction of approximately 60 FTE, increasing the total FTE reduction to around 530 positions. In the current weakening demand environment, we maintain our focus on active cost initiatives. With that, I now hand over to Oliver for further details on our business performance in the first quarter.
Thank you, Conrad, and good afternoon, everyone. Let us now dive into the first quarter development by business unit, starting with Care Chemicals. Sales decreased by 1.9% in local currency and grew by 4.8% when excluding our portfolio pruning measures. Pricing was down 2.6% due to formula-based price adjustments as raw material costs had declined until the start of the conflict in the Middle East. We expect this to reverse from Q2 as the inflationary effects of the current geopolitical situation feed through. Volumes grew by 0.7%, including the impact of the portfolio pruning measures. Excluding these measures, volumes grew by 3.5%. The reported figure was negatively affected by a 6.8% currency headwind. Growth was strongest in Mining Solutions as volumes more than offset lower formula-based pricing.
This was followed by a growth in Personal and Home Care, driven by volumes, especially in the healthcare business. Sales declined in industrial applications with soft demand environment and coatings. While the seasonal aviation business drove volume growth in base chemicals, this did not offset formula-based price adjustments. Sales and Oil Services declined due to lower volumes being impacted by the Middle East conflict and portfolio pruning measures. Sales in Crop Solutions declined against a high comparison base in the prior year when a restocking effect led to strong growth. We recorded an EBITDA before exceptional items of CHF 114.6 million, representing an 11% decrease compared to the prior year. This translated into an EBITDA margin of 21%. A 60 basis points decline that reflects less favorable mix and an inventory revaluation effect, reversing a positive impact in the prior year.
These effects were partially offset by contributions from our performance improvement programs. In Catalysts, sales declined by 1.6% in local currency and by 12.2% in CHF. While pricing was up 0.4%, volumes declined by 2% versus the prior year period due to a significant impact from the conflict in the Middle East, with orders pushed out due to force majeures and shutdowns, as well as supply chain and logistics disruptions in the region. Sales in ethylene catalyst increased due to a positive one-time effect from a precious metal sale, while being particularly impacted by the Middle East conflict and delayed orders. Sales in specialties increased at a mid-single-digit percentage rate with strong custom orders.
Sales in syngas and fuels declined at a mid-single-digit percentage rate driven by mix and sales in propylene at mid-teens percentage rate, also impacted by the Middle East. EBITDA before exceptional items decreased by 51.5% to CHF 12.8 million, representing a margin of 9% compared to 16.2% in the prior year. This was driven by a significant impact from the conflict in the Middle East, with high-margin orders being pushed out and lower operating leverage. The one-off sales of precious metals that came with no EBITDA contribution was also dilutive to the margin, as were a less favorable mix and higher raw material cost. As Conrad mentioned earlier, chemical plants around the world continue to be affected by feedstock shortages, leading to lower utilization rates and force majeure declarations or shutdowns.
Therefore, refill order timelines may continue to be pushed out going forward. Moving to Adsorbents & Additives. Sales decreased by 2.7% in local currency and by 9.1% in CHF, with pricing down slightly by 0.2%, while volume decreased by 2.5%. In the Adsorbents segments, sales decreased at a mid-single digit percentage rate as growth in renewable fuel applications in the U.S. that started towards the end of the quarter did not offset declines in other segments. In the additive segments, sales increased at a low single-digit percentage rate, especially driven by growth in flame retardant in our Polymer Solutions segment. While we recorded a soft start versus a high comparison base in Coatings & Adhesives.
EBITDA before exceptional items decreased by 9.2% to CHF 42.6 million, representing a flat year-on-year margin of 18.6%. This was the result of active margin management and performance improvement programs offsetting the lower volumes. With this, I close my remarks and hand it back to Conrad.
Thank you, Oliver. Let me conclude with our guidance for 2026. For the full year 2026, we expect challenging market conditions with increased macroeconomic challenges, uncertainties, and risks. The Oxford Economics chemicals industry forecast now predicts a reduction of chemical output growth from 1.9% at the beginning of this year to 0.4% in April 2026, mainly as a result of the Middle East conflict. This estimate is volatile and dependent on the duration of the conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Prolonged war scenarios would increase the negative impact on the industry. The conflict in the Middle East continues to negatively impact customer demand in the Catalysts and Oil Services business. Furthermore, the conflict results in an inflationary raw material, energy, and logistics cost environment.
To mitigate these costs increases, we activated our proven value-based price management, further supported by a continued focus on active cost initiatives in a low demand environment. By leveraging our global production network and proactive logistics, we provide continued supply for our customers. Our guidance for 2026 remains unchanged, with sales expected to be around 2025 levels in local currency and an EBITDA margin of around 18% before exceptional items. We expect the Middle East conflict to impact demand in our Catalysts business, cause increased input costs, and elevate overall uncertainty and volatility. We expect to offset these negative effects through increased pricing and continued overall focus on cost actions. We also expect free cash flow conversion of over 40% for the year. With that, I turn the call back over to Andreas.
Thank you, Conrad and Oliver. Ladies and gentlemen, we are now opening the floor for questions. To ensure everyone has a chance to participate, please ask no more than two questions per person. Thank you for your cooperation. Valentina, please go ahead.
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their telephone. You will hear a tone to confirm that you have entered the queue. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Questioners on the phone are requested to disable the loudspeaker mode and eventually turn off the volume from the webcast while asking a question. Anyone who has a question or a comment may press star and one at this time. The first question comes from Kate Stewart from Barclays. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning or good afternoon your time. A question firstly on Catalysts, please. It would just be useful to get some color, I think, on the order book visibility you have for this division in Q2 and beyond. I think the sort of takeaway from this set of results is despite having good visibility on the new order projects coming in ahead of time, maybe for refill catalysts, it looks like people can pull orders away quite fast. I guess there are two parts here. Do you think the order pull that we observed in March was reflexive of the worst of this, or has there been an accelerated pullback in orders in the month of April?
It would also be quite useful to get a sense of how you think the Q2 Catalysts could swing intra-quarter with the ceasefire headlines emerging. Do you think the refill orders would come back immediately if the ceasefire is final? Just sort of at group level, for my second question, looking at the historic trends, Q2 is typically down versus Q1. Do you think that would be a fair assumption for the quarter ahead, maybe towards CHF 150?
Okay. That's a lot of questions, Kate. Good afternoon. I'll leave the question on overall Q2 to Oliver Rittgen, but I'll try to give some color as you ask for on the Catalysts demands and what we're seeing in basically the first quarter versus second quarter and moving forward. I think, first of all, a comment. Our Catalysts business is mostly affected when it's about demand. What you see right now in Catalysts is of our customer base, a total of 88 globally customers are actually in either shutdown or force majeure mode. Out of these 88, 44 are actually active customers.
The other sort of half of it is supplied at the moment by the rest of our competitors, but it is our entire client base, so potential client base. If you look at these 88 force majeurs and shutdowns, interesting enough, more than half of them sit outside the Middle East. If you put things in perspective, the Middle East, and let's say the Strait of Hormuz represents one fifth of the global exports for crude oil and liquid gas. It also represents roughly 15% of the world's production for base chemicals and petrochemicals. When I say base chemicals, I mean items like ammonia, methanol. When I say petrochemicals, I mean items like propylene, ethylene, et cetera.
If you look at our Catalysts business, what happened in the quarter is that after the breakout of the war, in the month of March, we started to see the immediate effects already because what happened was that customers basically start to delay their orders in the Middle East. What you see is that customers are not able to get their finished product out, and actually their storage tank are all filled, and they need to shut down operations. Sometimes customers in the Middle East cannot get feedstock because of infrastructure damages. The effect of this was actually a total of 5% of our sales in Catalysts in Q1 was due to delays from the Middle East, but also from customers in Asia that were facing feedstock shortages, because this is the other effect that we're seeing.
Keep in mind, of the naphtha production in Asia, roughly 40% came from the Middle East, these ships are not arriving right now. What we see is that more than half of the force majeure and shutdowns sits actually in the middle in Asia. China primarily affected, also South Korea, Japan, Taiwan and even India. What you see here is the feedstock is not available. Now coming to your question, how is it gonna further develop? Well, we're obviously very relieved for our people on the ground with the ceasefire. But I also like to note that for business to resume, we need an opening of the Strait of Hormuz. In our scenario, we expect that by the end of June.
We expect an opening of the Strait of Hormuz in the second half of this year. What we have for the second half of the year is a recovery scenario whereby clients in the Middle East can start up their production again. Obviously, there is bits and bits of delays because first they need to empty their storage tanks. Ships need to get back into the Strait of Hormuz. Likewise, in Asia, there will be bits of delays because we need shipping back to basically make sure that also facilities in Asia can start up running. That's sort of high level what we expect. We saw a 5% impact in Q1. We see a bigger impact in Q2 because we have three months of impact here. We will see a recovery in the second half of the year.
Oliver, back to you for the overall projection.
I comment on the remaining businesses of Q2. Catalysts, Conrad mentioned already, I think that's covered. On Care Chemicals and A&A, Kate , I think it's important to look a bit on the underlying drivers that we also have seen in Q1 that you will see also in Q2. We had a very strong volume growth in Mining Solutions in Q1. We had an underlying volume growth in the Oil Services. Yes, there were some negative effects in the Middle East, overall, we have seen underlying volume growth also in the Oil Services if you exclude Middle East and the pruning effects. We have seen underlying volume growth in the Personal and Home Care segment.
That seasonality phasing and some of the effects that we saw in Q1, we would expect the underlying growth that we have seen to continue into Q2 and then especially also the pricing measures that we're taking right now to kick in in Q2 already. For A&A, also here we had some underlying.
Growth drivers in Q1. We had a very strong flame retardant business in the first quarter. That we expect to continue also in Q2. The renewable fuel in the U.S. that picked up towards the end of the first quarter. With the new legislation now in place in the U.S., we expect there also a recovery in the second quarter. Actually here, we will see some positive momentum on those areas. Catalyst assets Conrad commented already on it. Q2 will also see some of the effects that we saw towards the end of Q1.
That's clear. Thank you.
The next question comes from Christian Faitz from Kepler Cheuvreux. Please go ahead.
Yes, thanks. I have two questions please. I mean, first of all, again, on the Middle East and your Catalysts business. I mean, let's assume that all these 44 plants where so far you are in, are coming back on stream at the same time, or want to come back on stream at the same time. Would you actually be able to service them and deliver them at the same time? How does it work? The second, on Lucas Meyer, how has the business developed within Care Chemicals? Are we still seeing EBITDA margins north of 40%, or is that business also a bit impacted by consumers trading down? Thanks very much.
Okay, thank you, Christian. Let me first quickly comment on Lucas Meyer. It's now fully integrated into our Personal and Home Care segment. We actually are not so much commenting on it in granularity as we did before. I will say if you look at margins, if you look at the growth in that business, that's holding up very well. In general, what you see is a downtrading, and luxury brands are suffering from it. If you look at this premium segment for basically anti-age creams and haircare, demand for that is holding up very well, and there's a very loyal customer base for that.
To your question on the Middle East and the 44 plants that are in force majeure shutdown, let me once again say more than half of them is actually sitting outside the Middle East, and that's primarily in Asia because of feedstock shortages. What we expect in terms of the ramp is that as the Strait of Hormuz opens, feedstock becomes available for customers that are now shut down in Asia. Finished product can move out for customers that are shut down right now in the Middle East. I will say only one out of these 44 plants has physical damage. That is actually, we're very fortunate that the physical damages to plants have been very limited.
We think that in the Middle East also, we will see a ramp-up, which very much depends on logistics availability. Q3 will still be a challenge, primarily because of ships not being there yet in the Middle East. And ships still need to sail to Asia to supply them with feedstock. I think the full recovery we'll see in Q4. We have actually visibility on the orders, and we actually have a quite a significant part of the orders already produced. We're not expecting ramp-up issues in the sense that we cannot supply. I think logistics gonna be more challenging. No, I think the big, the key message here, Christian, is that this is not a structural setback for our Catalysts business.
It's a delay of orders primarily that will actually see a recovery in the second half. There's one other element which I do need to mention, and that is that actually the business that's now shut down in the Middle East and partly in Asia is to a large extent substituted through increased run rates with customers in Europe, with customers in the U.S. What we see is a lot of requests from customers to delay, for example, their shutdowns. They want an extra year or so out of their catalyst because the demand is so high. Their margins are so good at this moment that obviously at some point will also lead and result into better refill activity.
That's why overall we're confident that this is a one-year effect and that we should see a full recovery, into next year.
Okay, great. Thanks very much, Conrad. Yeah, good luck managing your business in these challenging times.
Thank you, Christian.
The next question comes from Thea Badaro from BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.
Hi both. Thanks for taking my questions. Two from me, please. The first one is on Care Chemicals. You mentioned an underlying volume growth of 3.5% in the quarter. What areas of your portfolio exactly did you see volume momentum in? How likely it is to have been impacted by pre-buying in your view? The second one is maybe a longer term question on the A&A division. Your EBITDA margins have been quite volatile from 1 quarter to another. Considering the work you've done on margin management, what would be a normalized level of margin for this division? Thank you.
Yeah, thank you Thea, for these questions. I think in terms of the precise volume breakdown in Care Chemicals, Oliver, if you can take that.
Sure
You know, the question on pre-buying. I'll provide some comments on A&A. Yeah, so what you see is in terms of the EBITDA percentage, historically it has been actually indeed quite volatile. I will say that what we've done is a lot of improvements, particularly also on the cost base of that business. What you see is for the quarter, our ability to actually continue profitability at 18.6% EBITDA margin from last year, even though the revenues were down 3%, I think is a big, a big compliment to the business and the management. What they do is they've been very diligent, I think, in the recent periods on their cost management, and they've also been very diligent on margin management.
There was a bit of a negative pricing in Q1, but the raws basically came down a lot, a lot more. Maybe one final comment on A&A, because we did see overall revenues down actually, rounded by 3% in local currency. The outlook for the year is actually very positive. What you see is, at the moment, a big pickup, particularly for biodiesel, diesel based on renewable feedstock. You see a big pickup for sustainable aviation fuel. Basically, the margins obviously are very significant for that industry right now because they haven't seen the same amount of feedstock price increase that normal diesel and kerosene have.
We see also that right now the increased renewable targets by the EPA in the U.S. have been formalized. We saw a pickup of the business in Adsorbents already towards the end of the quarter. We are actually quite positive on the Adsorbents business moving forward. Final comment on flame retardants, we also saw strong growth. Interesting to learn that actually bromine is in short supply at the moment. 60%-70% of the world's bromine comes from Israel and Jordan. You see that the brominated flame retardants were short in supply. We obviously benefit from that. Luckily we're not in brominated products. We have one of the only alternatives available in the market for it, not only a much better sustainability profile, but also not dependent on this bromine supply.
Oliver, perhaps you can comment on the volume breakdowns in Care Chemicals?
Sure. Hi, Thea. Volumes in Q1, we actually grew in volumes in almost all segments underlying in Care Chemicals with that 3.5% underlying volume growth that we were also mentioning in the speech and the presentation. Except for crop, where we were trading over a very strong previous year, all segments underlying were growing in volumes. In personal home care it was especially as I mentioned before, in the healthcare environment. And in mining we have been growing significantly with customer expansions and also due to the fact that we have very specialized products there that where we have seen significant volume growth actually in the first quarter.
It's really across all segments that we have seen that volume growth in Q1. Going forward, of course, what we're gonna see is with the price increases that we are taking now across the board, there will be a dynamics in terms of pricing going up and volumes being affected by that, no doubt. Q1 has been extremely strong on underlying volume growth.
The pre-buying, Oliver?
Yeah, sorry.
Yeah.
Pre-buying, that was more limited for us in Care Chemicals. We have seen a little bit of pre-buying in Personal and Home Care and also in industrial applications, but that was not a significant contributor in the first quarter.
That's helpful. Thank you.
You're welcome.
The next question comes from James Hooper from Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you very much for taking my questions. I have two, please. First one is about going back to Catalysts, about some of the long-term effects. You know, some are in the market saying that not all the capacity that's declared force majeure will come back, and that you're expecting, you know, less ramp up of new capacity in the future, which could affect your kind of total business and then future license growth. Do you have a view on this, about the long-term attractiveness of Catalysts? The second question is around ethylene. As you've mentioned, a lot of it is in the Strait, and that's one of your largest raw materials. Have you had any issues with procurement?
While we're on this topic, is there an update on the lawsuits? Thank you.
James, that's basically three questions. The last one I can be very short because there is no news on the lawsuits. On Ethylene, we've been impacted by shortages. We, I think as many other companies have been impacted. I think it's very good that we have a global footprint. Particularly at one of our facilities in China. We were facing allocation, we were facing short supply of Ethylene and Ethylene oxide. This is a direct result of Naphtha shortages in China because of the crude feedstock not arriving from the Middle East. The answer is what you see is Ethylene runs flat out in Europe, flat out in the U.S. right now.
The companies in that sector are seeing strong volumes right now, high capacity utilization rates. The reason for that being that the part of the ethylene production in the Middle East is shut down, and part of it in Asia is capacity constraint. Now, to your first question, what are the long-term effects of this, and is there now a structural change in the industry? Well, what we can say is that the plants in the Middle East actually are very competitive plants. They will start up the moment that they can start shipping their finished products out of the Strait of Hormuz, the minute that their feedstock runs smoothly.
Only 1 out of 44 customers on force majeure has structural damages, so I think you will see a recovery here. You also, I think, will see the recovery in Asia. I think there is temporary relief for some of the European players because they see less imports coming out of China. The moment that feedstock supply is back up and running into Asia, we are back to the prior situation. I will say. This is really a long-term effect in terms of energy security and energy supply, particularly for Europe, particularly for China. This reinforces actually for both regions the need for an energy transition. As you are aware, we are very well positioned for that as a company.
Thank you.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Angelina Glazova from J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon. Thank you for taking my question. I just have one question regarding the price increase action that you mentioned that you would aim to do to offset raw material cost inflation. If you could just remind us how that process is structured, and to what extent you could do it through the clauses that are already in your contracts with customers for raw material cost indexation, and to what extent you might have to go out directly to customers with price increases. For the latter, could you confirm if this is something that you have already initiated, and how you expect that process to develop? Secondly, do you think you will be able to offset this inflation pretty much in real time?
There is a possibility that there is some lag in how price increases might come through versus the inflation? Thank you.
Sure. No, it's an extremely important question in the current environment. I will say this process within Clariant is extremely well structured. We literally have visibility, pricing visibility at an SKU sales rep client combination. We are reviewing this. Actually, there are daily reviews right now of pricing. This value-based pricing, what we have with our customers, and passing on the complete extent of raw materials, freights, and energy costs is actually in process. We see it. We have begun it already. We see it already if we look at the April numbers where we see positive pricing in all of the business units. Maybe just a broader comment as far as phasing and timing. Where we have our value-based pricing, we start this immediately.
You will see the results in Q2, as I mentioned. Where we have formula-based pricing, there is typically a delay. These are contracts that, for example, can refer to the monthly contract price for ethylene. Typically there's a one month delay, sometimes up to a quarter delay. Fortunately, the formula-based pricing is isolated to only smaller part of the business. It's roughly 40% of the Care Chemicals business, primarily in Oil Services and in Mining Solutions. Here you see a delay in the pricing going up. The rest of the business, we go up right away. Overall, we think that despite some of the delays that we can fully offset, and that's also based on the fact that we have still obviously lower priced inventory in our plans.
That compensates for some of the delays on the inflation compensation.
Thank you very much.
Next question comes from Jaideep Pandya from On Field Investment Research. Please go ahead.
Thanks a lot. First question, sorry to ask again, on Catalysts. Just curious, you know, your growth in Q1, you indicate ethylene growing sort of low double digit and propylene actually not growing low double digit. What, sort of, was the dynamic between ethylene and propylene, you know, in your opinion? Then sort of a related question to what has been asked in the sense that, you know, with all these force majeure, you know, when there is a restart, how is typically the ordering pattern, you know? Do you typically get the same level of volume for the refill, or generally is the volume a bit higher or so, curious on that.
The second question is around the crop business in Care Chemicals. You know, you guys are generally a good lead indicator of how the market is doing. What have you seen in the market given all the disruptions, you know, in the value chain and the fertilizer cost inflation, in terms of volume, and sort of what is the outlook with regards to that? Conrad, just a last question. I think this was a topic discussed a bit earlier as well, but like, you know, when you think about industry consolidation, you know, what pockets of your portfolio is where you feel that, you know, bulking up in a material size would make sense for Clariant strategically?
Okay. Sure. Clear. Three questions. The one on crop, I think Oliver can make a deeper dive on crop. I'll take the one then on Catalysts and your specific question on what we see specifically with ethylene, propylene and refill levels. I think if you look at ethylene, propylene, propane to propylene as well, we're dealing with large orders, so I think it's important to state that a result in 1 quarter doesn't mean that then actually there's certainly a different trend. If you say you see actually that our ethylene business was up low double digits in Q1, but that is basically a few big orders, in particularly one large one on precious metals that moved that.
In general, what you see right now, and I think that's the bigger picture, if you look at refill and what will be the order pattern after startup again, when these companies go out of force majeure. What you see right now for our refill business is that Europe has actually capacity util rates of 85%, 80%, 85% overall. The U.S. is even as high as 95%. If you look at the refill, clearly the consumption at the moment is higher in North America, higher in Europe, and factories are shut down right now in the Middle East and parts of China.
What you will see in a situation after the Strait of Hormuz is opening and after all the feedstock shortages are resolved and plants are up and running in the Middle East again, is we will be back to the prior situation. There is no structural change here. We will continue to see the U.S. being energy advantaged, particularly on ethylene. You will see continued some challenges in Europe, primarily because of the high cost of energy. In terms of refill business, we expect a full recovery into next year. Over time these will then actually smoothen out. Yeah, in terms of industry consolidation, your question, Jaideep, which part of our business is sort of most exposed to that?
I think it's important to note that we have typically number one, number two, sometimes number three positions, very strong market positions already. It's also fair to say that Catalysts is consolidated already quite a bit. You see the same at a segment level in the additive business where we see more fragmentation is in Care Chemicals. If there's industry consolidation ahead, I think certainly we would like to participate in Care Chemicals, and that's what you've seen in recent years with the Lucas Meyer Cosmetics acquisition. Nice bolt-on coming in, strengthening our cosmetics business. The bio-based surfactants out of India Glycols, the Beraca cosmetic ingredients business in Brazil. We did three bolt-ons already in this sector, and if there's any opportunity moving ahead, we definitely like to participate.
Oliver, if you can provide your insights also on crop?
Yeah, Jaideep, let me start maybe a bigger picture on the crop market. I mean, what we're seeing this year overall, of course, is tightens P&Ls of the farmers with the commodity prices that we see on the one hand on their sales side, so to say, and then the input cost inflation on energy and other input costs that they have. P&Ls are quite tight on a farmer basis. The second bigger thing that we're seeing, of course, is different flows of chemicals than in the past. When you think about China, U.S., China, Brazil, that's also influencing the market and crop at the moment.
For us, that means, I mean, we are a supplier of all the big crop chemical companies in the world. We are working with them on innovative products, and that's where we create the value and where we need to drive all our volumes, being in these innovative products, providing our solutions, pricing for it in the current environment, and with that drive volume and pricing going forward in crop. That is where our opportunity lies and this is where we are obviously have the teams working on. Maybe that gives you a little bit of context around the crop market and our positioning in it.
Thanks a lot.
The last question comes from Tristan Lamotte from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for taking my two questions. The first one is, I'm just wondering if we come back a bit on phasing in Q2. I was wondering if there are any items you think we should consider in particular in Q2 versus Q1 and link to that, given your guiding for around CHF 680 million for the full year. Is it fair to say that if the war continues and there isn't an H2 recovery versus H1, then there might be some risk to guidance? Just wondering how you'd frame that. Second, I'm just wondering, you mentioned some feedstock shortages. I'm just wondering if the war continues again, is there a risk of further feedstock shortages, and how large do you think the kind of exposure is there? Thanks.
Okay. Thank you, Tristan. Yeah, two important questions. Oliver, if you could comment on the guide and the phasing.
Yes
by quarter. I will make some comments on feedstock and further sort of potential developments. I think it's important, Tristan, to note that the basis for our guidance is actually a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz by the end of June. If that were not to happen, actually you have a much more challenging scenario on feedstock because what you see is now there is shortages in Asia. If actually the Strait of Hormuz would not open by midyear, you will see actually shortages in Europe as well, that would obviously result in also higher oil prices and another wave of inflation. This is not what we have as our base scenario.
This is, if you look at peers in the chemical industry, I think we're all aligned on the scenario that we should see a reopening by the end of June. In a sort of a, yeah, sort of a dark scenario, the Strait of Hormuz remains closed and that would result in higher oil prices, higher raw material prices, but also feedstock shortages. That's obviously a different scenario, but it would be a different scenario for many companies then.
Hello, Tristan. On Q2 and half year one, half year two dynamics. It goes a little bit in line with what I said before, that in Care Chemicals, we see some underlying strengths in some of the segments, and the phasing that we usually see in Q1 and Q2 also of the seasonal business. I mean, we are positive on growth for Care in the second quarter with these drivers. Pricing kicking in, obviously more than what we thought at the beginning of the year with the dynamics that we're seeing in input cost inflation and now the strong pricing activity that Conrad was mentioning before.
For A&A, we see in the second quarter Adsorbents North America picking up, the continuation of the flame retardants growth where we have seen strong momentum in the first quarter. Also here, growth in A&A in the second quarter. With Catalyst, that indeed, with the effects that we saw in March, we see a weakening second quarter in the Catalyst business. Overall, the recovery in Catalyst in the second half, a continuation of Care and A&A in the second half, that should bring us into the outlook of flat growth and around 18% margin. That's sort of the dynamic that you're gonna see.
A stronger second half, obviously, on the margin and the growth sides, given by the Catalysts effects.
Helpful color. Thank you.
Thank you.
This is Andreas speaking. No further questions. This concludes then today's conference call. A transcript of the call will be available on the Clariant website in due course. The investor relations team is available for any further questions you might have. Once again, thank you for joining the call today, and goodbye.
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