Good morning. My name is Rob, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the H.B. Fuller third quarter 2022 earnings conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, Press Star one. Thank you. Steven Brazones, Vice President, Investor Relations, you may begin your conference.
Thank you, operator. Welcome to H.B. Fuller's third quarter 2022 investor conference call. Presenting today are Jim Owens, President and Chief Executive Officer, and John Corkrean, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. After our prepared remarks, we will have a question-and-answer session. Before we begin, let me remind everyone that our comments today will include references to certain non-GAAP financial measures. These measures are supplemental to the results determined in accordance with GAAP. We believe that these measures are useful to investors in understanding our operating performance and to compare our performance with other companies. Reconciliation of non-GAAP measures to the nearest GAAP measure are included in our earnings release. Unless otherwise noted, comments about revenue refer to our organic revenue, and comments about EPS, EBITDA, and profit margins refer to adjusted non-GAAP measures. We will also be making forward-looking statements during this call.
These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from these expectations due to factors covered in our earnings release, comments made during this call, and the risk factors detailed in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, all of which are available on our website at investors.hbfuller.com. I will now turn the call over to Jim Owens. Jim.
Thank you, Steven, and welcome everyone. In the third quarter, we delivered 18% organic growth, 24% EBITDA growth, and 34% EPS growth despite a challenging external environment. We are extremely pleased with our strong third quarter financial performance and the results achieved by our teams around the world. We continued to execute our strategy to drive organic growth and expand EBITDA margin. We nimbly adjusted to short-term challenges from continued raw material inflation, slowing global economic demand conditions, and currency headwinds. Our strategic mix shift to a more highly specified product portfolio through innovation, market share gains, and customer collaboration, together with our responsible pricing actions, are delivering impressive results this year and position us very well for margin expansion in the year ahead and continued long-term profitable growth.
In the third quarter, organic revenues increased 18% year-on-year with all three of our global business units generating exceptional growth. As we expected, growth in volume is slowing as we progress throughout the year. The declining trend in volume growth is largely being driven by slowing demand in Europe and in construction markets. Our market share gains continue, and we continue to outperform the competition in volume and organic growth. We expect these gains to not only endure but to continue to advance as we execute our strategy. Now let me move on to review the performance in each of our segments in the third quarter. In Hygiene, Health and Consumable Adhesives, organic revenue is up 23% with strong organic growth across all end markets and particular strength in the packaging, hygiene, tissue and towel, and health and beauty markets.
Adjusted EBITDA for Hygiene, Health and Consumable Adhesives increased $17.3 million or 39% year-on-year. Adjusted EBITDA margin increased 250 basis points year-on-year to 14.5%. Hygiene, Health and Consumable Adhesives led the group in margin expansion in the third quarter, a result of exceptional pricing execution and operational efficiencies. In Engineering Adhesives, the strong organic growth trend continued with organic revenue growth of 17.5% and nearly every end market contributing to the impressive results. Automotive, new energy, and aerospace were particularly strong. Automobile production is increasing with improved microchip availability. This, coupled with the continued share gains in the electric vehicle market, are greatly benefiting engineering adhesives.
Adjusted EBITDA increased 8% in Engineering Adhesives, and adjusted EBITDA margin increased 10 basis points from the prior quarter to 14.8% despite significantly higher raw material costs. In Construction Adhesives, the effects of the slowing global economic environment were the most pronounced, particularly in the roofing and flooring end markets. Despite this, organic revenue grew 7% year-on-year on strong pricing actions and strength in the utilities and infrastructure market. Adjusted EBITDA for Construction Adhesives was up 38% year-on-year, and adjusted EBITDA margin increased 180 basis points year-on-year to 14.2%. Pricing actions and the strategic acquisitions of Apollo and Fourny at the beginning of the year drove the improvements. Geographically, America's organic growth remained very strong, up 22% year-on-year. Customer demand remained strong and stable throughout the quarter.
In the EMEA, the continuing uncertainty about both the war in Ukraine and natural gas supply resulted in a slowdown in demand. With that said, organic revenue still grew double-digit, up 16% versus the third quarter of last year. In Asia Pacific, we began to see a rebound in demand during the third quarter. Easing lockdown restrictions in China and pent-up local demand led to organic revenue growth of 11.5%. From a profitability perspective, the strength of our strategy and strong execution drove significant improvement in the third quarter. On a consolidated basis, adjusted EBITDA increased 24.4% year-over-year to $137.7 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin increased 120 basis points year-over-year and 60 basis points sequentially to 14.6%.
Responsible pricing actions, which have more than offset raw material cost inflation, are increasing our margin and will result in further margin expansion in the quarter and the year ahead. Combined with our strategic shift to a more highly specified product portfolio, we are on track to further expand margins and achieve our long-term profitability targets. Management of the pricing raw material dynamic is a core competency of the company and a competitive advantage in the adhesive market. During the third quarter, raw material cost inflation continued, but at a decelerating rate. Our price increases in the third quarter exceeded the $175 million level which we committed to, and we are expecting an additional $40 million-$50 million of annualized price increase in the fourth quarter. We are beginning to see signs that raw material cost inflation may be leveling off in the fourth quarter.
From a planning perspective, we are expecting stabilization of supply and pricing of raw materials. However, we are prepared to adjust pricing in the event raw material increases continue. It is important to note the unique capabilities we can leverage in a stabilizing raw material cost environment and a more competitive pricing landscape. In addition to our inherent price discipline, we also have breadth of technology and the capability to substitute adhesive technologies for customers to provide them with lower cost options while maintaining or improving our margins. With improved supply chain conditions, the opportunity to use these substitution capabilities greatly improves. This will be very beneficial for us and our customers. Now, let me turn the call over to John Corkrean to review our third quarter results in more detail and our updated outlook for the year.
Thank you, Jim. I'll start with some comments on the financial results for the third quarter. Net revenue was up 13.8% versus the same period last year. Currency had a negative impact of 6.6%, and acquisitions had a positive impact of 2%. The strengthening of the U.S. dollar since the beginning of the year has been historic and unforeseen, and it strengthened again throughout this last quarter. Since the beginning of the year, the euro is down approximately 15% and the Chinese renminbi 8%. Needless to say, this has been a significant headwind for us this year, but we are still delivering impressive growth. Adjusting for currency and acquisitions, organic revenue was up 18.4%, with volumes relatively flat and pricing up 18.7%.
All three GBUs had strong organic growth versus 2021, with HHC up 23%, engineering adhesives up 17.5%, and construction adhesives up 7% year-on-year. Adjusted gross profit was up 27.3% year-on-year, reflecting strong pricing actions and operational efficiencies. An adjusted gross profit margin of 26.5% was up 280 basis points compared to the third quarter of last year. Adjusted selling, general, and administrative expense was up year-on-year at 16.6% of revenue. Growth in SG&A outpaced revenue growth due to higher variable compensation expense and higher travel-related expenses following the pandemic-driven slowdown in travel. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter of $138 million was up 24% versus the same period last year.
Adjusted earnings per share of $1.06 increased 34%, driven by pricing gains and operational efficiencies, which more than offset raw material cost increases, unfavorable currency, and higher interest rates. Cash flow from operations was $58 million, up $49 million sequentially versus the second quarter, reflecting strong revenue growth and improving margins, but down versus last year due to temporarily higher year-on-year working capital requirements. Based on the normal seasonality of our business, we are planning for working capital to return to more normal levels by the end of the year and to be in the range of 16%-17% of annualized net revenue, resulting in full year cash flow from operations similar to last year.
Regarding our outlook for the rest of this year, we continue to remain on track to deliver results in line with or at the upper end of the full year guidance ranges we provided in the first quarter of the year with respect to organic revenue growth, adjusted EBITDA, and adjusted EPS. I'd like to remind everybody that in both the fourth quarter and full fiscal year, we have an extra week of results. For fiscal 2022, we expect organic revenue growth to be in the range of 17%-18%, excluding the impact of the extra week. This is at the upper end of the range provided at the end of the second quarter.
The extra week is estimated to positively impact full year revenue growth by approximately two percentage points. We now expect currency to have a negative impact on year-on-year revenue growth of 5%-6%, and acquisitions to have a positive impact of approximately 2%. Additionally, we expect full year adjusted EBITDA in the range of $540 million-$550 million. This is above the range provided at the beginning of the year and at the upper end of the range provided after the first quarter, and is particularly impressive given the significant currency headwinds we are experiencing this year, which impacted both the top and bottom line. The extra week is estimated to positively impact full year adjusted EBITDA growth by approximately two percentage points, consistent with the impact to revenue growth.
Lastly, we expect fourth quarter adjusted EPS in the range of $1.15-$1.30, resulting in a full year increase in adjusted EPS of between 19%-23% versus fiscal 2021, reflecting strong underlying operating profit growth offset by unfavorable currency and significantly higher interest rates. Regarding the latter, due to the significant increases in short-term interest rates, we are now expecting net interest expense of between $80 million-$85 million in fiscal year 2022 versus the previously provided guidance of between $75 million-$80 million. This range includes the expectation of some opportunistic debt refinancing before the end of the fiscal year. With that, I will turn the call back to Jim Owens for some closing comments.
Thank you, John. 2022 will be a record year with EBITDA near $550 million, revenue of approximately $3.8 billion, and EPS near $4.20. All of these numbers will be up 15%-20% versus 2021, and are a result of H.B. Fuller's strategy and the ability of our team to perform in challenging external environments. We are outperforming our competition, and we will continue to do this because of our ability to innovate and win market share across a broad range of end markets and geographies. We are well positioned for significant margin expansion and cash flow generation as we exit this year and enter 2023 as supply chains stabilize and raw material prices moderate. Despite external challenges, we are executing our strategy and we are building momentum.
We are delivering innovative value-added solutions to customers faster than our competition to drive market share gains, and we are retaining our market share gains. We have effectively managed through unprecedented raw material inflation, regional disruptions, and slowing economic demand, and have a plan in place to expand EBITDA margins and cash flow generations as raw material prices stabilize and eventually begin to decrease. I could not be prouder of our team members for their dedication to our customers and their strength in executing in a challenging environment. We are tremendously well positioned. We are delivering impressive results in the short term, and we are solidly on track to deliver a strong finish to this year, a strong start to 2023, and to meet our long-term financial targets, which will drive significant returns for our shareholders. That concludes our prepared remarks today. Operator, please open the line for questions.
At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. Your first question comes from the line of Vincent Anderson from Stifel. Your line is open.
Yeah, good morning, everyone. Thanks.
Good morning, Vincent.
If you don't mind holding my hand for a minute here. From a modeling perspective, what has been the year-to-date dollar contribution from price? And then how much does that leave that's really already booked for 2023 just based on what has already been announced versus what you've realized year to date?
Yeah. John's better at holding people's hands than I am, Vincent, so I'll let him take you through. You know, in broad terms, including what we have lined up for this next quarter, it's about $500 million. I would say the impact to next year would be about 6% of revenue. You know, that's the broad way to look at it. John can take you through quarter by quarter.
Sure. Yeah, Vincent, I think on a year to date basis, we've seen approximately, you know, approximately $400 million of price impact from the top line standpoint. We would expect, you know, the Q4 number to be similar, not as high year-over-year. Then from a carryover standpoint, I'd say, you know, we expect, you know, approximately 6% impact in 2023 from pricing carryover.
Okay, perfect. Then
I think the-
So what-
I think the.
Yeah, go ahead.
The annualized number, if you look at it, Vincent, is about $550 million-$560 million. The impact on next year is about $220-$230, so.
Okay, perfect. That was pretty close then. What market share gains are you most confident in? And maybe just more specifically, as you look at how you've positioned yourself to serve Europe, you know, from a reliability perspective, do you expect there to be some additional opportunities to take share there this winter if this energy crisis deepens?
Okay. Yeah, the market share gains are innovation driven, right? They're very broad-based. You know, you were here during the Investor Day. The work we're doing on EVs, battery encapsulants, and other EV wins is very impressive and broadening. Our work in China in the automotive business is really impressive in terms of there's a lot of EV there, but there's also other opportunities that are moving forward. We are winning in the packaging area around beverage labeling because it's you know, the Ukraine crisis has made a reduction in a raw material called casein that's exported around the world. That's enabled us to gain share with some synthetic products globally. That's really been impressive. You saw the 4SG wins, so I got a whole long list, right?
There's wins in every one of our segments, and it's all driven by this innovation approach to understanding the trends in markets and then innovating first. You know, hopefully, that came out in Investor Day, but that's what's driving the market share wins. Specifically around Europe, you know, I don't think there's necessarily a market share gain there that's sitting there for us. By being a great service provider, by being an effective team, we'll do a great job serving customers. Will there be some wins? Probably, but I would say, mostly it's an innovation-driven strategy more than opportunistic around gas shortages.
Okay. Excellent. If I could just sneak in one quick one. If you could just add maybe a little additional detail on what you saw in roofing, this quarter.
Yeah. Roofing was, you know. It's been so strong for us. If you look at the year-on-year numbers in CA, you know, I think we only had 7% organic growth, which is pretty good organic growth. We're up against a quarter last year where we were up almost 20% organically. You know, there's a little bit of up and down in roofing, and the biggest challenge for our customers is getting other materials. We see some pent-up demand in our roofing customers. Certain materials they're not able to supply, but for us, it resulted in a slowdown because they had the adhesive they needed but didn't have some of the other materials. Again, ours is mostly commercial roofing.
Perfect. All right. Thanks again.
Thank you, Vincent.
Your next question comes from the line of David Begleiter from Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. Good morning. This is Anthony Mercandetti on for Dave.
Hi, Anthony.
A couple questions from me here. Maybe first on demand. Is there any additional color that you can provide on slowing demand by region and market, and maybe how your visibility on demand looks into the last two months of the year here?
Yeah. So as I mentioned in the prepared comments, you know, we definitely saw a market change in Europe in the quarter. So I would say broadly, you know, Europe slowed down in the third quarter, and we expect that to continue in the fourth quarter. Then in North America, it was mostly construction downturn. Outside of that, we saw significant uptick in Asia.
I think we had our first double-digit organic growth quarter in a long time, especially if you exclude the impacts of the you know pandemic one quarter. I think we had a good quarter 'cause of pandemic issues in China. But double digit in organic growth in Asia is great to see. That was a nice uptick in the quarter.
Most of the slowdown sizable in Europe and then U.S. construction. As far as visibility into the next quarter, we don't see dramatic changes. I would say, little more slowdown as we enter this quarter into, North America. Europe, sort of the same. We're anticipating it to get worse, but it's not like it's fallen off of, off the table.
Got it. Very helpful. Maybe just one more from me on maybe price versus raws here. I know we said there are signs of deflation. Would you say that raw material costs, they have peaked? If so, are you still confident that the majority of your pricing will be sustained going forward?
Yeah. Raw materials have definitely peaked. Doesn't mean they can't come back. Q2 was the peak, and I think we expected a slight decline in Q3. We saw a slight decline in the amount of inflation, right? It was a much lower level of inflation in Q3 than Q2. Q2 was the peak. As I said in the commentary, you know, we're expecting raws in Q4 net-net, some will be up, some will be down, to be relatively flat to Q3. The second part of your question was? Oh, holding on to our price.
Are you still confident in your pricing? Yes.
We're very confident in our pricing retention, right? As I mentioned before, a portion of our HHC business is indexed, so that will move a little bit with a lag. It's, you know, part of our increases in Q4 are what happened to raw materials in Q3 in HHC. But outside of that, you know, there'll be very strong stability in our pricing certainly over the next 12 months, you know, 18 months. Eventually, some of that works its way into the numbers, but we'd expect really no giveback in the short term.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from a line of Mike Harrison from Seaport Research Partners. Your line is open.
Hi. Good morning. Congrats on the nice quarter.
Thanks, Mike.
I was wondering if you can give us the volume and price breakdown by segment for Q3 and then maybe talk a little bit about your expectations for volume and pricing by segment as you look at the fourth quarter?
Yeah. As you know, we don't go through the specific details on volume and price. As we showed overall, this was mostly price-driven. CA had volume declines, EA and HHC were pretty solid. John, do you wanna comment further on that?
Yeah, I think the pricing was up double digits in all three GBUs. You know, volume up mid-single digits in EA. Volume was flattish in HHC, and then down mid-single digits in Construction Adhesives.
Yeah. If you looked at those numbers in HHC and EA ex-Europe, they'd be a lot more positive, Mike. You know, Europe is the drag.
Yeah. I guess in terms of Q4, maybe on a consolidated basis compared to the you know, flattish or slight decline that you saw in volume in Q3, is that expected to worsen or still kind of a flattish number?
Yeah. We're planning for it to get worse. You know, I don't think we see signs of it, but you know, given the economic news out there, we definitely see some improvements in Asia. We definitely have more market share gains that are coming through in our numbers.
You know, I think if you think about what we've guided to, it's based on an expectation that volumes overall would be a little worse, right? Again, it's not like we see signs of that. We just know from what's out there economically in the news that it's a potential. We're planning for it and hoping for an upside.
Definitely some uptick in Asia and definitely some market share wins that are mitigating anything that's happening economically out there.
Okay. In the construction business, I'm comparing this quarter, Q3 to what you saw in Q1. The revenue number was about $25 million higher, but the margin was pretty similar, even though, I would've assumed that we would see some operating leverage, and maybe some price cost improvement. Can you talk about what you're seeing in terms of price cost, operating leverage, and mix, in that construction business that has maybe dragged on the margin performance compared to what we might have anticipated?
Yeah. Well, again, margins are way up versus this time last year, and Q1 is a little bit of an odd quarter, Mike, in terms of, you know, the construction market. We're talking about December, January, and February. You know, comparing Q1 to Q3 is not. I like comparing Q3- Q3 and Q1 to Q1 and year over year. It's up dramatically here versus a year ago. John, would you say it's mostly mix? Is that the answer?
I would say, yeah, it's mostly mix. I mean, the roofing business had a lot of pent-up demand coming into this year and really came out of the gate strong, which drove very nice margin improvement. Overall, the fundamentals in terms of pricing and other elements that impact margins haven't changed.
All right. Thanks very much.
Thank you, Mike.
Your next question comes from the line of Ghansham Panjabi from Baird. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning, everybody.
Hi, Ghansham.
Hey. Good morning, Jim. Hey, I just wanted to go back to your confidence on, you know, pricing retention. You know, here we are with an unprecedented raw material inflation cycle. The numbers are, you know, significant in terms of pricing that you've instituted, your customers have instituted. Raw materials have gone up significantly, and there's, you know, just based on your comments, it seems like we're sort of hitting that plateauing point and perhaps even some deceleration going into next year, just given the macro backdrop. I'm just trying to understand your confidence on being able to retain pricing in that scenario, which would be very different than what the industry has done historically. Why is that? Why would that be different?
Well, I mean, historically, the industry has retained pricing. You know, I think adhesives are a small part of someone's overall costs. The retention of pricing, certainly, you know, over the first 18 months is normally a part of what we would see. Remember, our portfolio has shifted a lot more to highly specified applications. Where competitive dynamics come into play is when people introduce new products, when there's alternatives for substitution, and that's what I was trying to get across in my prepared comments. One of the things you'll see us do as smaller competitors, you know, aggressively go after opportunities, is to substitute new raw materials or new adhesive technologies. You can only do that in an environment where there's supply availability.
We'll work with suppliers around the globe to introduce new products, introduce new technology, lower cost raw materials that will manage our margins as that happens. Yeah, there's never been a give back of price. Now, as I mentioned, I do have some customers that are on indexes, so they'll move up with a lag. They'll still have a couple quarters of increases, and you'll see those in numbers. If raws come down, those will start to be a pushback on price that'll be built into the contracts. That's only a portion of our HHC business.
Okay. Great. Thanks for clarifying. Then on the EA segment, which has, you know, I mean, it has some cyclical end markets that it's exposed to as well, how should we think about that as we cycle into fiscal year 2023? I know there's a lot going on with auto OEM and big backlogs, et cetera, but what about the other end markets there?
Yeah. I think as you think about the business broadly, right, you gotta worry about cyclicality. I think one of the things when you dig into the details. You know, we got a sizable auto business, we got a solar business, we got an aerospace business. We have some of the products that are tied to commercial construction, others that are durable goods that consumers use.
They all cycle a little differently. I would say there's not some broad cycle that this business will hit. Now, right now we've got the benefit of automotive in that business that's helping. Then you also have this geographic dynamic that's going on, right? What's happening now in Europe eventually will work its way out.
At the same time, we have you know a decent sized Asia business that is showing good positive signs of life and following the Chinese Communist Party Congress, you would expect it to continue to move on in 2023. I guess the point is, it's very diverse business, 30 different market segments, and they'll cycle differently across Asia. We look at each one of those separately, and we feel like right now with what's going on in the world, they're all out of phase a bit.
Perfect. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from a line of Eric Petrie from Citi. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning, Jim and John.
Good morning, Eric.
I think the largest adhesives competitor, you know, released organic sales growth target of 10%-12%. You're at 17%-18%. You know, how sustainable is that, you know, this year, next year? How much of your portfolio would you say is backed and specified versus more substitutable on a pricing basis?
Yeah. Thanks for pointing that out. In fact, our two largest competitors showed organic growth of, you know, 12% and 11% for the first half of the year versus our 18%-19%. You know, the biggest driver in the delta, some of that is pricing. We do have a higher price impact, but there's a big volume difference, and it's all tied to this market segment innovation strategy that we have. That's very sustainable. That's built into the business model of our approach to segmented by these 30 segments and finding those market segment trends.
Those market segment trends, whether that's, you know, new ways in which e-commerce is gonna be packaged, paper straws, new ways in which windows are produced, being on the front end of EV, understanding the new trends in electronics and making certain that we're doing the work there, is all built into our business model.
You know, I think you saw that when you were here in Willow Lake. That very intense focus segment by segment on being on the front end of change is really what's driving things. You know, Celeste and the team are very focused on that innovation growth strategy, and they're delivering on it quarter after quarter. You know, it's not just the first half of this year. You see it in the organic numbers over the last few years. Is it sustainable?
I think it is. I think it's a sustainable competitive advantage that's gonna continue. You know, I can't affect the market, but that delta that you talked about in our organic growth versus competition, that's what we look to achieve. Celeste and the team are doing a great job of delivering it.
Okay, thanks. Question maybe for John. You know, how do you see debt paydown going forward in reaching that target of 2-3 times?
I think, you know, Eric, as we said in our opening comments, we expect our full year operating cash flow for this year to be similar to last year. I think that type of cash flow delivery would be expected next year. I think you can sort of bake that into our expectations around debt paydown. You know, we obviously won't get to our target this year, but we think, you know, getting there toward the end of next year is in range. Of course, we'll also, you know, potentially have some bolt-on M&A.
I think that's our plan is continue the strong cash flow that we expect to deliver in the fourth quarter and have a similar cash flow next year to get us closer to our target by the end of next year.
Even better cash flow next year, right? Depending on what happens with raws, right? If this people mentioned earlier in this call, if that happens, that helps us liberate cash from working capital. But certainly we're committed, Eric, in a very strong way to get to that 2-3, and we'll be in the low 3s by the end of this year. We saw a big downtick this quarter, and you'll see another one next quarter.
Great. Thank you.
Your next question comes from a line of Rosemarie Morbelli from Gabelli Funds. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and congratulations on the great quarter.
Thanks, Rosemarie.
Jim, I was wondering if you could talk about the supply chain, whether it is really improving. Linked to the supply chain, what are you seeing in terms of your customers' inventories? Do you feel that they are building inventory or because of the looming recession, maybe they are not? Can you give us a better feel for what you see out there?
Yeah. Supply chains are definitely improving, but they're still fragile, right? I would say, you know, versus where we were the last three, four quarters, we're much better, but versus normal, we're not there yet. I think there is, you know, some destocking that's going on in some markets, but it's not some great destocking. I think generally speaking, customers are gonna be very cautious here for a little bit while on especially input materials like adhesives, right? I don't think, you know, saving inventory on adhesives is gonna be a big drive now. Are there end products that are gonna come out of the supply chain? Certainly, autos that are half built will get fully built, right? There's
There's also a lot of the supply chain that's not filled beyond our customers. While there's some contraction that'll happen in our supply chain. Dealerships and downstream inventories are very low. I think they're gonna balance out as we look to the next few quarters, Rosemarie.
All right. Thanks. You talked about, well, two questions really in one. You talked about a small part of HHC being indexed, so if you could give us a feel for the size of that indexed piece of business. If you could talk about the position of Fuller in a recession versus the way you were in the last one.
I'm sorry, I missed the last question, Rosemarie. Could you say that?
Regarding your position, you know, should a recession come along in 2023, how much better are you positioned than you were in 2008, for example?
Yeah, that's great. Yeah. I would say it's overall, this index piece is maybe less than 15% of our total company, 20%-30% of HHC. You know, yeah, I mean, we are extremely well-positioned, right? I've been in this industry 36 years, and the work that Celeste and the team have done to manage our margins to have this kind of gross margin expansion when inflation's going the way it is and currency's going the way it is. You know, if you run the math, currency was a big drag on our EBITDA this quarter, and it will be this year. Our EBITDA is gonna be up 17%-18%, and it would have been up a lot more if it wasn't for this just this translational currency impact.
The work the team has done and the position we're in is extremely solid. As you point out, our margins will expand as recessionary impacts hit. We're very well positioned for a significant margin expansion. We also, as I think Vincent pointed out early on in the call, we also have this benefit of carryover price as we go into 2023. Yeah, extremely well-positioned, and you know, I try to make that point in the prepared comments. As we look at Q4, we're well positioned to weather whatever will come at us, right?
You know, we're all preparing for the worst and hoping for the best, but I think we're in a really good position as we get there. Better than we've ever been. Yeah.
Thanks. Good luck.
Thanks, Rosemarie.
Your next question comes from the line of Vincent Anderson from Stifel. Your line is open.
Yeah, thanks. I just had one last follow-up here. I mean, your margins in HHC this quarter were pretty exceptional. Later in the call, you mentioned a lot of the price increase planned for 4Q is some of the raw materials that are passed through in that segment, if I heard correctly. You know, given the lag, I guess, I'm even more surprised by the margins this quarter. Could you speak to that performance and if it reverts a little bit in 4Q just on that price versus raws lag?
There's not, like, something that happened all of a sudden in Q3. This has been an ongoing process of the team. They're doing a great job. We didn't have an uptick in Q3. I'd expect things to be solid again in Q4, but not some big uptick in Q4. You know, I think we expect a little bit of margin expansion in the EA business. Well, across all our businesses, we expect margin expansion into Q4 because the dynamics are very positive. I wouldn't say that's gonna be overweighted in Q4 to HHC.
Okay. All right. That's helpful. Thank you.
Thanks, Vincent.
There are no further questions at this time. Mr. Jim Owens, I turn the call back over to you for some final closing remarks.
Great. Well, thanks, everybody, for your questions, your interest, and for your support of H.B. Fuller. Thanks to Celeste and our teams around the world for the great results. Thanks, everyone.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.