Welcome everyone to our fourth quarter and full year 2022 earnings call. On this call, we have our President and CEO, Mikael Bratt, and our Chief Financial Officer, Fredrik Westin, and I am Anders Trapp, VP, Investor Relations. During today's earnings call, Mikael and Fredrik will, among other things, provide an overview of the strong sales and margin development in the fourth quarter, give an update on the price negotiations, outline the expected sequential margin improvement in 2023 and the journey towards our medium-term targets, as well as provide an update on our general business and market conditions. We will then remain available to respond to your questions, and as usual, the slides are available on autoliv.com. Turning to the next slide, we have the safe harbor statement, which is an integrated part of this presentation and includes the Q&A that follows.
During the presentation, we will reference some non-U.S. GAAP measures. The reconciliations of historical U.S. GAAP to non-U.S. GAAP measures are disclosed in our quarterly press release available on Autoliv.com and in the 10-K that will be filed with the SEC. Lastly, I should mention that this call is intended to conclude at 3:00 P.M. Central European Time, please follow a limit of two questions per person. I now hand over to our CEO, Mikael Bratt.
Thank you, Anders. Looking on the next slide. I'd like to recognize the entire team for delivering another strong quarter, which I believe reflects our strong execution culture. The fourth quarter and the full year 2022 were important steps towards our medium-term targets as we, through price adjustments, managed to gradually offset the highest raw material cost inflation that our industry has seen in a decade. In the fourth quarter, our organic sales growth outperformed light vehicle production significantly as a result of price increases, product launches, and higher safety content per vehicle. Our sales in the quarter were well over $2.3 billion, despite a 7% currency headwind.
We also achieved a strong profit recovery, increased the adjusted operating margin to 10% for the fourth quarter and to 6.8% for the full year, in line with our full year guidance. Our strong performance in the fourth quarter is especially encouraging considering that market conditions continued to be challenging with significant inflationary pressure and continued high level of customer call-off volatility. We generated a strong operating cash flow, meeting our full year indication. This combined with improved EBITDA, lowered our leverage ratio to 1.4x from 1.6x last quarter. In the quarter, we paid $0.66 per share in dividend, an increase of around 3% from third quarter, and repurchased and retired 650,000 shares. Additionally, we retired $10 million of our treasury shares from previous stock repurchase programs.
The second half year development in 2022 strengthens our confidence in our midterm targets. We expect that our balance sheet and positive cash flow trend will allow for higher shareholder returns. Looking now on an update of the 2022 margin progression on the next slide. During 2022, we reduced our cost base in a challenging market environment. We implemented hundreds of cost efficiency projects, especially in production and supply chain. As illustrated by this chart, we started the year at a very low adjusted operating margin level, mainly from severe inflation in raw material, also due to inflation in other cost categories such as labor and freight.
We managed to gradually improve the adjusted operating margin from 3.2% in the first quarter to 10% in the fourth quarter as a result of successful negotiations with our customers regarding cost compensation. This sequential improvement reflects our high volumes and our strong focus on continuous improvement throughout the organization and our strategic roadmap initiative. We managed to offset this raw material related cost shock successfully by year end, 2022. 2023, the main challenge is to tackle the inflation in the non-raw material cost base without neglecting the raw material cost risks. Looking on the next slide. To support a sustainable business model in an inflationary environment, we continue to work closely with our customers to secure price increases to compensate for inflation, volatile LVP, and supply chain disruptions.
During 2022, we reached agreements with almost all OEMs on raw material related price adjustments, as well as to a limited extent also for other cost categories such as labor and freight. At the end of the year, product pricing largely reflected the cost level for raw materials. We have initiated discussions with our customers on non-raw material cost inflation such as labor, logistics, and energy. We believe price adjustments will offset the non-raw material cost inflation with small positive effects in the first quarter of 2023, gradually larger positive effects as the year progresses. Looking now on the order intake on the next slide. Our order intake for the full year continued to develop well, supporting long-term growth in a rapidly changing technology environment with many new OEMs and fast-growing in the number of EV platforms.
The lifetime value of the 2022 order intake was in line with last year, despite currency headwinds and a more negative LVP outlook. The strong order intake over the past years is an evidence that our company is the leading company in the passive safety automotive industry. One of our key performance indicators, customer satisfaction, has continued to improve and is at a high level. However, this does not mean that we can relax. We always strive for improving products, services, processes, and costs. Our strong order intake and current customer satisfaction supports our confidence regarding our midterm sales targets. Looking on the order intake in more details on the next slide. In 2022, order win rates for new EV platforms were higher, both with new EV makers and traditional OEMs.
We estimate that around 45% of our order intake in 2022 was for future battery electric vehicles. We are proud that we were successful in winning many contracts with new automakers. New automakers, mainly in North America and China, accounted for over 30% of our order intake, up from 12% last year. We won multiple awards supporting new markets and industry trends like knee airbag, side airbags in India, integrated child seat belts specifically designed for electrical vehicles, as well as seat belts for zero-gravity style seats for self-driving vehicles. As a result of strong order intake over the past years, we expect an increase in overall product launches in 2023. This development contributes to building an even stronger platform for our long-term success. Looking now on the financial overview on the next slide.
Our consolidated net sales of $2.3 billion was 10% higher than a year earlier, despite seven percentage points currency headwind. Adjusted operating income, excluding costs for capacity alignment, increased from $177 million to $233 million. The adjusted operating margin was 10% in the quarter, 1.7 percentage points higher than the same period last year. The higher operating margin was mainly a result of higher prices, operational leverage on higher volumes, as well as cost saving activities. Operating cash flow was $462 million, which was $146 million higher than the same period last year, mainly due to improved working capital and higher net income. Looking now on sales growth in more detail on the next slide.
Despite the currency headwind, the fourth quarter consolidated net sales increased by more than $200 million- $2.3 billion. Organic sales grew by 18% in the fourth quarter compared to last year. Retroactive pricing contributed with approximately $8 million, and price volume mix contributed with almost $350 million in the quarter. Looking on the regional sales split, Asia accounted for 42%, North America for 32%, and Europe for 26%. We outline our organic sales growth compared to LVP on the next slide. I am very pleased that our organic sales growth outperformed global light vehicle production growth in the fourth quarter. This was achieved as we continued to execute on our strong order book. According to S&P Global, light vehicle production increased by around 2% year-over-year in the quarter.
This was slightly lower than expected in the beginning of the quarter as production in North America, Japan, and China were lower than expected. Based on the latest light vehicle production numbers, we outperformed global light vehicle production by around 15 percentage points in the quarter. By around 7 percentage points for the full year. In the quarter, we outperformed in Europe by 23 percentage points, by 14 percentage points in both China and Japan, and by nine percentage points in America. Supported by new launches, market share gains, and CPV growth, as well as further price increases, we expect sales to outperform light vehicle production by around 12 percentage points in 2023. On the next slide, we see some key model launches from the fourth quarter. In the quarter, we had a high number of launches, especially in China and Japan.
The models shown on this slide have an Autoliv content per vehicle from approximately $200 to close to $500. These models reflect the changes seen in the automotive industry in recent years. With several relatively new OEMs represented, and that four out of nine are available as pure electrical vehicles. In terms of Autoliv sales potential, the entirely redesigned Honda Pilot and Honda Accord launches are the most important. The long-term trend to higher content per vehicle is supported by front sensor airbags, knee airbags, more advanced seat belts, and active pedestrian protection systems. Looking to our sustainability approach on the next slide. Guided by our vision of saving more lives, our mission is to provide world-class life-saving solutions for mobility and society.
Sustainability is an integral part of our business strategy and fundamental driver for market differentiation and stakeholder value creation, helping to ensure that our business will continue to thrive and contribute to sustainable development in the long term. Our sustainability approach is based on four focus areas: saving more lives, safe and inclusive workplace, climate and responsible business, each consisting of broad ambitions and more specific short-term targets. Our sustainability approach is anchored in well-established international frameworks, such as the UN Global Compact, of which we have been a signatory for several years. We aim to be carbon neutral in our own operations by 2030, and furthermore, aim for net zero emissions across our supply chain for 2040. These commitments place Autoliv among the front runners in the broader group of automotive suppliers.
As a part of this commitment, our reduction targets were approved by the Science Based Targets initiative in February of 2022. We cooperate with international organizations, suppliers, and customers to ensure maximum positive impact. A few example of such partnerships includes the UN Road Safety Fund, the Green Steel collaboration with SSAB, and Piaggio and POC to push the boundaries of safety to include vulnerable road users. Looking at the sustainability progress in 2022 on the next slide. During 2022, we initiated and concluded a number of activities to ensure our commitment and contribution to the UN Sustainable Development Goals and our own sustainability targets. For example, we took steps to reach our ambition of saving 100,000 lives per year by expanding our activities in the vulnerable road user area.
We conducted sustainability audits and carried out climate surveys covering 98% of our direct material suppliers. We substantially increased our use of renewable electricity. We trained all senior management members in the main areas of our climate program, including decarbonization levers. Autoliv is committed to provide safe working conditions for our employees. As a result of our continuous improvement activities, the incident rate reduced by over 20 percentage points in 2022. We will provide more information on our progress in our coming annual sustainability report. I will now hand over to our CFO, Fredrik Westin, who will talk you through the financials on the next slides.
Thank you, Mikael. 2022 was again a turbulent year with both lower and more volatile light vehicle production than expected at the beginning of the year, mainly due to supply chain disruptions. Our net sales were $8.8 billion, with sales increasing organically by close to 14%, twice the increase in the underlying light vehicle production. The adjusted operating income decreased by 12% to $598 million. The adjusted operating margin was 6.8% compared to our latest guidance of reaching the upper range of between 6% and 7%. The operating cash flow was $713 million compared to the guidance of between $700 million and $750 million. Earnings per share was $4.85.
Dividends of $2.58 per share were paid, and we repurchased retired 1.44 million shares for $115 million. Looking now at the full year adjusted operating income bridge on the next slide. For the full year of 2022, our adjusted operating income was $598 million. This was $85 million lower than the previous year, which was a result of higher costs for raw materials and FX combined of approximately $460 million. Costs for call off volatility, such as premium freight and labor and material inefficiency, increased substantially as well. This was partly offset by positive effects from actions including price increases and cost saving activities, as well as higher volumes. SG&A and RD&E net combined was virtually unchanged despite 14% organic growth. Looking on the quarterly performance on the next slide.
This slide highlights our key figures for the fourth quarter of 2022 compared to the fourth quarter of 2021. Our net sales were $2.3 billion. This was 10% higher than Q4 2021. Gross profit increased by 8% to $399 million, while the gross margin declined slightly to 17.1%. The gross margin decrease was primarily driven by cost inflation and the volatile light vehicle production, and has largely been compensated by price increases and cost savings. In the quarter, we made $3 million in provisions for capacity alignment activities. The adjusted operating income increased from $177 million- $233 million. The adjusted operating margin increased from 8.3%- 10.0%.
The operating cash flow was $462 million, and I will provide further comments on our cash flow later in the presentation. Earnings per share diluted increased by $0.49, where the main drivers were $0.43 from higher adjusted operating income and $0.04 from lower tax costs. Our adjusted return on capital employed and return on equity both increased to 25%, up from 19% and 18% respectively. We paid a dividend of $0.66 per share in the quarter, an increase of $0.02 from last year, and repurchased and retired 650,000 shares for $55 million under our stock repurchase program. Looking now on the adjusted operating income bridge on the next slide.
In the fourth quarter of 2022, our adjusted operating income of $233 million was $56 million higher than the same quarter last year. The impact of raw material price changes was negative $83 million in the quarter. Foreign exchange impacted the operating profit positively by $9 million. This was mainly a result of positive revaluation effects, partly offset by negative translation effects. SG&A and RD&E net combined was $22 million lower, mainly due to timing of engineering income and positive currency translation effects. Our operations were positively impacted by improved pricing, higher volumes, as well as our strategic initiatives, partly offset by the significant headwinds from call off volatility and general cost inflation.
As a result, the leverage on the higher sales, excluding currency effects, was in the upper end of our typical 20%- 30% operational leverage range, despite the substantial headwinds from raw materials. Looking at our cash flow overview on the next slide. For the fourth quarter of 2022, operating cash flow increased by $146 million- $462 million, mainly due to stronger performance in working capital and higher net income. During the quarter, trade working capital decreased by $132 million as a result of improved payables, in part due to our capital efficiency program, partly offset by higher inventories. The continued inefficiencies in inventories is a result of the volatile light vehicle production and logistics challenges.
Our ambition is to eliminate these inefficiencies as soon as possible, which requires the stabilization of the supply chain and call off patterns from our customers. For the fourth quarter, capital expenditures net increased by 8% to $165 million. In relation to sales, it was 7.1%, virtually the same as a year ago. The high level is related to the ongoing footprint activities and capacity expansion for growth, especially in China. For the fourth quarter of 2022, free cash flow was $297 million, $133 million higher than a year earlier. For the full year of 2022, operating cash flow declined somewhat from the prior year to $713 million, mainly due to inventory inefficiencies. Cash flow free cash flow amounted to $228 million, down $72 million from 2021.
CapEx in relation to sales was 5.5%, in line with our full year indication. The cash conversion was around 54%. In 2023, we expect positive cash flow development from higher net income and a gradually more stable light vehicle production. Looking on our leverage ratio development on the next slide. The leverage ratio at the end of December 2022 was 1.4x. This was an improvement from the 1.6x in the previous quarter, as our 12 months trailing adjusted EBITDA increased by $49 million and our net debt decreased by $99 million. Looking at the liquidity position onto the next slide. At the end of the quarter, we had a significant liquidity cushion of approximately $1.7 billion in cash and unutilized committed credit facility.
To minimize refinancing risks, we have diversified our long-term funding sources, and we also have a maturity profile that is well spread over the coming years. None of the credit facilities are subject to financial covenants. With that, I'll hand it back to you, Mikael.
Thank you, Fredrik. Let's look at the financial and market environments we see for 2023 on the next few slides. Large part of the auto industry continues to operate at or near recessionary levels, mainly due to supply chain constraints. Despite concerns surrounding the ongoing volatility of the supply chain and recessionary fears, global production is projected to increase by 3.5% to 82 million vehicles in 2023, according to S&P Global, January 2023. For first quarter, global light vehicle production is expected to improve by 2.6% compared to last year, but decline by 6%, more than 1 million units compared to the fourth quarter. The decline versus fourth quarter is mainly an effect of supply chain issues from the recent wave of COVID-19 in China.
With the relaxing of the COVID policy in China, LVP, as well as short-term demand, have been negatively impacted. First quarter production in China has been lowered by close to 500,000 units, with volume losses expected to be recovered in subsequent quarters. In North America and Europe, the near-term production forecast continue to be limited by automakers' ability to produce not by demand. Looking on the next slide. We expect 2023 to be a challenging year as inflation impacts our non-raw material cost base, which is almost twice as large as our raw material cost base. In 2022, the main cost challenge was related to raw materials affecting our costs for purchased components. Many commodity indices are down since their peaks in 2022, we currently assume raw material costs unchanged in 2023.
The reason being that the prices of specific raw materials used in our products, such as automotive grade steel, has not declined as much as the generic steel indices would indicate. We see higher cost for some material, such as yarn and resin. For 2023, the main cost challenge is related to labor and energy inflation, which impacts us directly as well as through suppliers' value-added costs. Already during 2022, the tight labor market, mainly in North America, resulted in significantly higher than normal labor inflation. For 2023, we foresee further headwinds from wage increases, especially in Europe. We also predict cost increases from suppliers due to labor inflation and higher energy costs. We expect higher costs for logistics and utilities in our operations, mainly in Europe. We have initiated new discussions with our customers aimed at offsetting this broader inflation.
We believe it will be challenging, but nevertheless, we expect the price adjustments will gradually, throughout the year, offset non-raw material cost inflation. Looking at the 2023 business outlook on the next slide. We expect a significant improvement in adjusted operating margin in 2023 compared to 2022, supported mainly by 15% organic sales growth, cost control, and product price adjustments. We expect continued high sales outperformance versus light vehicle production in 2023, supported by launches, higher prices, content per vehicle increases, and regional mix. We expect the adjusted operating margin in the first quarter to be around 5% due to lower LVP. Cost inflation is expected to increase faster than our cost compensations in the beginning of the year.
We anticipate price adjustments will gradually, throughout the year, offset non-raw material costs inflation. The pattern will be similar to the quarterly pattern seen in 2022, with limited positive effects in the first quarter and gradually more as the year progresses. This trajectory will be further supported by improvements from strict cost control, footprint optimization, as well as expected gradual improvement of the supply chain and light vehicle production stability. Looking at our 2023 financial indications on the next slide. Our full year 2023 indications excludes costs and gains from capacity alignment, antitrust related matters, and other discrete items. Our full year indication is based on a light vehicle production growth assumption of around 3% in line with S&P Global outlook. We expect sales to increase organically by around 15%. Currency translation effects are assumed to be around negative 1%.
We expect an adjusted operating margin of around 8.5%-9%. Operating cash flow is expected to be around $900 million. Our positive cash flow trend should allow for increasing shareholder returns. Turning the slide to look at progress towards our midterm targets. In the medium term, we are expecting to continue to grow our core business, airbags, seat belts, and steering wheels through execution on the current strong order books. The other important growth driver is safety content per vehicle, driven by continuous updates of government regulations and crash test ratings. Based on our order book and expected CPV increases, our growth targets for the medium term is to grow organically by around four percentage points, more than light vehicle production growth per year on average. This excludes any price compensation for raw materials and other inflationary costs.
In 2022, our outperformance was seven percentage points, including price adjustments. For 2023, we expect to outperform light vehicle production by around 12 percentage points. This is substantially above our growth target. Even if we disregard the effects of the price increases on the outperformance, we are still on track to deliver on the growth target of four percentage points outperformance on average. To maintain the growth momentum beyond the market share driven growth, we are pursuing an ambitious innovation program. Looking on the multiple levers for margin improvements on the next slide. In the past two years, Autoliv has significantly reduced its cost base in a challenging market environment. We have implemented hundreds of cost efficiency projects, especially in production and supply chains. Our medium term adjusted operating margin target of around 12% is based on the previously communicated framework.
This relies on the continued implementation of our strategic initiatives, including optimization, digitalization, and footprint optimization, together with the following conditions. A business environment with a stable global light vehicle production of at least 85 million, and that headwinds from inflation do not have a greater net negative impact on our operating margin that it had in 2021, offset through price compensation or declining raw material prices. We remain confident that if these conditions are met for the full year 2024, which we see as possible if the political and macroeconomic situation improves, we should reach the 12% adjusted operating margin target in 2024. Looking on the next slide. I look forward to sharing more about our journey with you at our Investor Day on June 12, 2023, where the main focus will be on product, strategic roadmap, as well as optimization and operational efficiency.
The event will be held at our technology center in Auburn Hills, Michigan, USA. I'm looking forward to seeing many of you there. Turning to the next slide. In closing, to summarize our 2023 outlook, we expect continued strong sales outperformance versus light vehicle production. A challenging first quarter in terms of operating margin, which should gradually improves throughout the year. A significant full year adjusted operating margin improvement compared to 2022. We remain mindful of the risk of deteriorating economic conditions and supply chain disruptions. I am confident that our leading position, the work we have done to become more resilient, and our experience and agility will enable us to manage further challenging conditions, the future challenging conditions. I will now hand back to Anders.
Thank you, Mikael. Turning to the next slide. This concludes our formal comments for today's earnings call, and we would like to open the line for questions. I now turn it back to you, Raf.
Thank you, sir. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one and one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, you can please press star one and one again. Once again, it's star one and one to register for question. We are now going to proceed with our first question.
The question's come from the line of Rod Lache from Wolfe Research. Please ask your question. Your line is open.
Hi, everybody. Thanks for taking my questions. Just firstly, in 2021, you announced a digitization and automation program that should save about $160 million, I think, over two years, and it was $60 million from footprint changes, there was also an expectation that R&D would decline by 100 basis points. Can you just provide a little bit more color on what you've achieved so far on those and what you see as achievable in front of you in 2023?
Thank you, Rod. No, I think when it comes to those activities that we laid out there in 2021 and originally actually in 2019 as a part of our journey here, I would say it was a number of strategic roadmaps initiatives that should strongly support our journey here. I would say that we are performing well on those, and I think we have been consistent throughout the last couple of challenging years here to hold on to the majority of these initiatives to secure that the underlying improvements were still on track, despite that we have this challenging environment, of course, disturbing the overall net result here.
I would say thanks to those initiatives, we are feeling comfortable on the way forward here. Of course, they have also contributed for us to deliver results that we are delivering here in this quarter as well. Long story short, we I would say we are on track when it comes to strategic roadmap initiatives as you refer to.
Can you maybe provide some quantification of what is still in front of you from those? The reason I'm asking maybe just, I'm looking at the fourth quarter strong margin. I know that there's typically a seasonal lift of about 120 basis points from engineering recoveries, but it would look like you would even adjust it for that, you'd be in the mid to high 9% range off of that. Presumably there's some positive from these restructurings and digitization and automation. But your target margin for the full year, 2023 is only 8.5%-9%. Could you help me reconcile that maybe with a little bit of a bridge?
I think you let me start, and I will hand over to Fredrik here to take you through different steps there. Coming back to the strategic initiatives here, as I said, they are on track. With that said, we also see that we have still a lot of opportunities in that area. I mean, some of them have longer lead times, and we are in progress here of securing many of the footprint initiatives that we have launched, for example, as a part of strategic initiatives. Specifically when it comes to optimization here, it is of course a gradual journey as we are implementing it also when we have new program launches. That you have a sequential development that could take some calendar time.
Good progress, but still, great opportunities as we move forward here. Of course, the bridge from where we are in 20, expect, us to be here in relation to the midterm targets. There are a number of components as we just went through, but I'll let Fredrik take you through the details there.
2023, I mean, the main contributors will be, you know, the carryover effect and then the incremental additional pricing versus what you compare what the pricing point was going into last year. Then of course, the organic growth that we see excluding pricing. I mean, those are the two main components that are the positive drivers. But then don't neglect that we're also laying out here that we do see quite significant inflationary headwinds. And the largest part of that is actually on the value add components that we see from our supply base, and then followed by our labor costs inflation that we expect, and then to a smaller extent on logistics and utilities
If you then look at going beyond that, it is the continued volume growth that we expect and also delivering on the market share expansion. The, you know, the launch activities that will drive up the margin further. Further improvements from the strategic initiatives that you do see that are starting to bite and have effects. The variable component is of course, what is the incremental inflation effect that we then need to offset either through further cost reduction activities or through negotiations with our customers. Those are the main building blocks both for 23, but then also beyond.
Okay. Maybe just lastly, can you quantify the labor, energy, and logistics inflation that you need to offset? Are you saying that you will offset it for the full year or by the end of the year?
We would offset it by the end of the year, hence also the somewhat lower margin that we're indicating in the first quarter. That's also due to the, there's a calendar year effect of how some of these inflationary components come in, not the least on the labor cost side. What I can indicate is that, you know, as I said, the highest headwind we're facing or at what we're expecting is on the value add component of our suppliers, so of the components that we procure. Then followed by labor, and then the smallest component
Being, as I said, logistics and utilities. Overall, it is less than what we had in terms of raw material headwinds in 2022.
Okay. Thank you.
Thanks.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The questions come from the line of Mattias Holmberg from DNB Markets. Please ask your question.
Hello, and thank you. I wonder if you could break down the outperformance of 12% versus light vehicle production in 2023 a bit. Is the delta versus the 4% outperformance target all the price increases or are there any other moving parts that you can quantify? If you don't want to quantify, perhaps you could just rank the different drivers in order of importance that adds up to the 12%, please.
Sure. I mean, the largest component will be price. As I said, it's both the carryover effect from 2022, but then also the incremental pricing that we're expecting. That's the largest contributor. Then followed by pretty much on even levels, CPV growth and the underlying LVP growth. Then you also have market share gains that we expect to be larger in 2023 than they were in 2022. To be clear, not only LVP, but also then the third component is our the launches and that we have. Yeah.
Perfect. A second question from me on the buyback program. Could you just remind us on how much is left of the program? Given that you've been quite conservative in utilizing the mandate so far, do you believe that you're in a better position to become a bit more aggressive with the buyback now?
I mean, First of all, we are committed to our program. That is $1.5 billion program. We have two remaining years, 2023 and 2024, in that program. As we have said before, I mean, we let you know regularly here when we have made purchases here. Of course, what we have said here is also that the timing and the volumes et cetera, is of course judged from time to time. I feel confident on our way forward here with the trajectory we have laid out here that we will be able to provide good shareholder returns there over time through the buyback program as well as the dividend.
I can't give you more details on the breakdown there because that will come gradually here.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question's come from the line of Vijay Rakesh from Mizuho Group. Please ask your question. Your line is open.
Hi, Mikael and Fredrik. Just a quick question. First, good quarter and a great guide for 2023. On the 2023 guide, specifically on the 15% top line, I know you talked about market share and pricing and units. Is there a way to parse what would be the approximate magnitudes of all those in that 15% embedded in that 15%?
Well, as I said, in the order of magnitude is pricing first, then, say, launches market share number 2 and CPV number three. As CPV, we see around 3%, light vehicle production, of course, around 3two as well. That gives you the 15. I'll leave it to you how you distribute the rest in between pricing and market share gains.
Okay, sounds good. Then as you look at 2023 LVP, obviously we had two years of benefiting from a pretty nice mix shift to premium vehicles. How do you see 23? Do you see any mix, any mean reversion on that shift, mix moving back to mid-end? I also saw you kind of showed a much higher design design win rate into EVs, just trying to see how that changes as you look at 23. Thanks.
Thank you. No, we don't expect any dramatic shifts in the distribution there between premium and low end, as you said there. I think what we feel very positively about is how we continue to be a part of the transition over to electrical vehicles. I mean, we are, of course, working very closely with the few EV makers here and also, let's call it the traditional OEMs that are getting more and more electrical EV platforms. We are well positioned in our order book here for the transition over to EVs, and we see that as a very positive momentum. Also, as you know, content in electrical vehicles is positive and it requires also, in many cases, more sophisticated products, sophisticated products over time, so.
Thanks.
Good, good development there.
Thank you.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question's come from the line of Giulio Pescatore from Exane BNP Paribas. Please ask your question.
Hi, thanks for taking my question. I have a couple of ones on China first. The first one, can you just tell about a large number of model launches in China in the last few quarters with Chinese car makers, Geely, Great Wall, NIO, Changan? What % of your business in China at the moment is with local players as compared to international brands? The second question again on China, how do you expect to continue to outgrow the market there? Is it content per vehicle as China approaches Europe and North America or it's more market share gain? Yeah. Thank you.
I think, I mean, on the Chinese OEMs, as you define them, we are roughly 25%, I would say, of our sales in China is towards them. As you're correctly stating here, I mean, we work very closely with many of them and also many of the upcoming OEMs here also. We are, of course, providing the opportunity also for them to be a robust supplier outside China as they continue to grow outside. I think we have a lot of very interesting development agreements and programs with the Chinese OEMs for further growing that part of the portfolio.
I look very positively on our collaboration with our Chinese customers for the future here, both inside China but also outside China. Maybe to build on that, I mean, for 2023, we've actually seen the largest outperformance in terms of markets is in China and Asia.
Thank you. Very clear.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question's come from the line of Hampus Engellau from Handelsbanken. Please ask your question.
Thank you. Two questions from me. I'm not sure if you want to disclose this, but if labor negotiations are, then it would be interesting to hear what type of wage increases we're looking at. That's the first question. Second question is on these price increases that you've been compensated for contracts that have already been delivered, if you have any actual number for what type of contribution you have that on EBIT for fourth quarter, if there were any. Those are my two questions. Thanks.
Hi, Hampus. Sorry, but can you repeat your first question? You were breaking up a little bit there.
Uh-huh, okay. No, I was asking if you had a number on how much wage increases you have seen for the, for the year in the organization in average, if it's like 5% or 10%?
Labor increases in 2022. In 2022 or 2023? Yeah.
2023, of course.
Okay. Yeah, it's a single digit % number above what we would normally have.
Okay.
Mid-single digit % number increase versus what we would normally have. Yeah, above normal in wage inflation. Yeah.
Fair enough. Then did you have, like, any cost compensation for all the delivered contracts in the quarter?
Yeah, we don't disclose that level of detail. Sorry, Hampus.
Okay. Okay. No, fair enough.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question's come from the line of Colin Langan from Wells Fargo. Please ask your question.
Oh, great. Thanks for taking my questions. Just following up on the earlier question, looking at the second half rate, the margin that you're guiding to for 2023 is actually almost in line with the second half rate, yet sales, if you annualize the second half, are up a lot. Why the low conversion on those higher sales? What are the offsets there?
I don't think we're guiding for the second half. I mean, what we're indicating is a margin for the first quarter. We're not giving any guidance on top line or anything on a quarterly level. I'm not sure I understand the question.
I guess what I'm saying. Yes, sorry. If I average your margin in the H2 of 2022, it was around 8.8%, and your guidance at the midpoint for this year is around 8.8%. Yet, sales are supposed to be up into next year. What are the offsets relative to where we sit in the second half? I think a lot of investors are kind of using that as a jumping off point.
Okay. Well, the, then yeah, the major issue are, the headwinds that we're seeing on, yeah, inflation in general. Not raw material, cost, development. That we expect to be more or less flat, year-over-year. As we indicated here several times, it's the inflation we're expecting on the value add from our suppliers. That is mainly, energy and labor, also the labor cost inflation that I described before, and logistics costs, and to a very limited extent, utilities in our own operations. Those headwinds are significant, as I indicated, they're not as high as a headwind as we had from raw materials last year. That is the main challenge that we're facing in this year.
Got it. That's very helpful. Actually, I think it relates to my second question. The net impact in guidance of the expected increase in inflationary costs and what you're expecting in terms of price recoveries is still a net negative for the year. You're not expecting to get the full recovery within the full year. Maybe by the Q4 you get full recovery. Is that what's baked in there?
Yes, for the full year would be a net negative and then, but with a different phasing that we have not fully recovered it in the first quarter, and then you would see a gradual improvement like in 2022 throughout the year, and then we would be at compensated levels, you know, coming out of the year.
Great. That's very helpful. Thank you very much.
We are now going to proceed with our next question. The question comes from the line of Agnieszka Vilela from Nordea. Please ask your question.
Perfect. Thank you. If we can get back to outperformance and actually revisit what you expected for 2022. With your first guidance, you expected about 11%-12% even outperformance against car production, and the outcome in the end was seven percentage point outperformance. You also mentioned in the beginning that you will have product launches and so on. We obviously saw quite good price momentum in H2 2022. Can you just explain what went wrong when it comes to your actual outperformance in 2022?
The main difference when we compare to the beginning of last year was the regional mix. Europe was expected to be up 17%-18% on a year-over-year basis, and it actually ended up being down 1% or 2%. That's, as it is, one of our highest content per vehicle markets that created a very large negative regional mix, which is the main explanation of that difference.
Perfect. Thank you. The second question on your expected price trajectory for 2023. You mentioned somewhat lower price compensations in Q1 if I understood that correctly. If you could just tell us what you really expect, and also with the spot prices coming down for raw materials, if you could tell us if your customers will not expect price decreases in mid-2023?
I mean, we don't put out a specific price target here in all of this. What we're saying here is that we are working with our customer to get full compensation one way or another. Of course, we are in parallel to that, also working with our own cost base, especially now when we're talking about the other inflationary costs outside the raw material bucket, so to speak. That is what Fredrik have talked about here, the gradually compensation here for throughout the year. I mean, of course, as raw material potentially here is gradually coming down, as you have seen on the index side here, it is coming down.
In our case here, we have many product that is not really co-correlating with the in-indexes, so we don't see the same reduction. On a conceptual note, of course, when we see raw materials starting to come back eventually, there is a mechanism here and discussion with our customers to give back on that. At the same time, we are going to get compensation from our supplier base. It's, it's throughout the whole value chain, of course, that that needs to be regulated, as the way it was on the way up, it will be on the way down eventually there.
Perfect. Thank you.
Balance.
We're now going to proceed with our next question. The question comes from the line of Itay Michaeli from Citi. Please ask your question.
Great. Thanks, everybody. As you pursue the commercial re-recoveries for the labor and other inflation, hoping you could give us a bit of insight as to how the initial conversations are going. Is it pretty consistent across regions and various automakers? Just kind of how to think about when you think you'll be kinda largely complete or have real good line of sight into the targets that you provided today on those negotiations?
I think first of all, we have now been spending a better part of the last 12- 15 months here in discussions with our customer around the increased cost base, starting out with the raw material as we have said here. This is a new territory for our customers. It's a new territory for the supply base. Of course, it has been a lot of discussion. It's very detailed discussion. We have made good progress here as we can report here. Of course, when we now move into a territory where is outside the raw material that, at least has been to some extent, in the scope historically, of course, this is more challenging.
I think we all recognizing here as an industry that we need to find a way to work in a potentially higher inflationary environment, and that calls for more regular discussion around price adjustments. That is ongoing. It is constructive dialogues with our customers here. The nature of course, have a timeline because we are not discussing price adjustment, anything else than what has been already impacted us. The discussions is around already agreed agreements that needs to be updated. Therefore it's on a product and plant level, going through the cost impacts from these different cost drivers as we have mentioned here. It's far from one size fits all in the discussions here.
It is on a product and plant level. It's a lot of work and therefore some time delays in it.
Got that. That's very helpful, Carl. Thank you.
We have no further questions at this time. I would now like to hand the conference back to Mr. Mikael Bratt for closing remarks. Please go ahead.
Thank you very much, Raf. Before we end today's call, I would like to say that we are continuing to build resilience and strength in turbulent times, relying on our strong company culture. Our actions are creating both short-term and long-term initiatives improvements, and we believe these actions will enable us to build an even stronger position despite the challenging macro environment. We remain agile and prepared for a more adverse market development should that be necessary. Autoliv continues to focus on our vision of saving more lives, which is our most important direct contribution to a sustainable society. Our first quarter earnings call is scheduled for Friday, April the 21st, 2023. Thank you everyone for participating in today's call. We sincerely appreciate your continued interest in Autoliv. Until next time, stay safe.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect your lines.