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Earnings Call: Q2 2019

Jul 18, 2019

Speaker 1

Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Honeywell's Second Quarter 2019 Earnings Release Conference Call. At this time, all participants have been placed in a listen only mode and the floor will be open for questions following the presentation. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. Would now like to introduce your host for today's conference, Mark Mekaluso, Vice President of Investor Relations.

Speaker 2

Thanks, April. Good morning, and welcome to Honeywell's Q2 2019 earnings conference call. With me here today are Chairman and CEO, Darius Domczyk and Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Greg Lewis. This call and webcast, including any non GAAP reconciliations, are available on our website at www.honeywell.com /investor. Note that elements of this presentation contain forward looking statements that are based on our best view of the world and of our businesses as we see them today.

Those elements can change and we ask that you interpret them in that light. We identify the principal risks and uncertainties that may affect our performance in our annual report on Form 10 ks and other SEC filings. For this call, references to adjusted earnings per share, adjusted free cash flow and free cash flow conversion and effective tax rate exclude the impacts from separation costs related to the 2 spin offs of our Homes and Transportation Systems businesses in 2018, as well as 2018 pension mark to market adjustment and U. S. Tax legislation, except where otherwise noted.

References to 2019 adjusted free cash flow guidance and associated conversion exclude impacts from separation costs related to the 2018 spin offs. This morning, we will review our financial results for the Q2 of 2019, share our guidance for the Q3 and provide an update to our full year 2019 outlook and of course, we'll leave time for your questions at the end. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Chairman and CEO, Darius Adomtik.

Speaker 3

Thank you, Mark, and good morning, everyone. We're excited to be hosting our call this morning from Charlotte, North Carolina, which will officially become our corporate headquarters on August 1st. It is an exciting time to be part of the Honeywell team as we continue to transform our business into a premier technology company with Charlotte as our home base. Let's begin this morning on Slide 2. It was another very strong quarter for Honeywell.

We again delivered on our commitments, generating earnings per share of $2.10 at the high end of our 2nd quarter guidance, up 9% excluding the impact of spin offs in 2018. The strong earnings result was driven by organic sales growth of 5% and 170 basis points of segment margin expansion. Notably, our segment profit excluding the spins on a comparable basis to 2018 was up 9% this quarter and was the largest contributor of EPS growth. For the first half of twenty nineteen, organic sales growth reached 7%, which is a proof point to the investments we've made in our business, in our sales force and new technologies that are winning in the marketplace. We continue to see the benefits from our strong positions on key platforms in our long cycle business aviation and defense portfolios in aerospace, in our warehouse automation business, which is up over 20% organically year to date and now generates approximately $2,000,000,000 in annual sales.

In our Building Technologies business, which had another great quarter, Our Process Solutions and UOP businesses, which principally serve the oil and gas industry, also both grew 5% organically this quarter. As we continue to be encouraged by the progress we are making in the Honeywell Connected Enterprise, which drove double digit organic sales growth of our software in the quarter. In fact, this quarter we signed a framework agreement to deliver Honeywell Forge asset performance management and improve the reliability and performance of over 1,000 industrial assets for large Middle Eastern refinery. Segment margin exceeded 21% in the 2nd quarter, up 170 basis points, driven by smart portfolio enhancements we made in 2018, our investments in the commercial organization and the benefits of previously funded restructuring to improve our operations. Excluding the favorable margin impact from the spin offs, segment margins expanded 80 basis points, which was 30 basis points above the high end of our guidance.

Building on the progress we have seen for several quarters, we delivered 100% free cash flow conversion and we remain on path to approximately 100% for the 2nd year in a row. I am encouraged by our progress in this area and remain focused on continuing to drive improvements in working capital. We also continue to exit our capital deployment strategy, we're purchasing $1,900,000,000 shares and closing 4 new Honeywell Ventures investments in the quarter, bringing our total to 12 new investments in the 1st 2 years the fund. As a result of our first half performance, we are raising the low end of our full year organic sales guide by 1 point to a new range of 4% to 6%, and raising the low end of our full year earnings per share guidance to a new range of $7.95 to $8.15 We expect to generate approximately $6,000,000,000 in free cash flow for the year, and we have narrowed our free cash flow guidance to reflect this. While we are encouraged by our performance this quarter, we're continuing to plan cautiously for the second half of the year given the uncertain macro environment in which we operate.

We've seen some slowing in certain short cycle businesses that has been overcome by the strong performance in the rest of the portfolio. We think it is prudent to plan conservatively in the event of a broader slowdown given that nearly 60% of our business is short cycle nature. I'm very pleased with our performance in the first half. We still have substantial work to do to achieve our plan, but I'm confident that the team will continue to execute. I'll stop there and turn the call over to Greg, who will discuss our Q2 results and updated 2019 guidance in more detail.

Speaker 4

Thanks Darius and good morning everyone. I'd like to begin on Slide 3. As Darius highlighted, we delivered on our commitments again in the 2nd quarter, building on the strong start we had in Q1. Organic sales growth and margin expansion performance across the majority of the portfolio was very good. A few highlights to mention.

Defense and Space grew 20% organically and the commercial aftermarket and Aerospace grew 8% organically with strong demand across both Air Transport and Business Aviation. Building Technologies grew 5% organically after 9% in the first quarter and Process Solutions and UOP, which encompass our oil and gas portfolio, both grew 5%. The impact of the spin off of Garrett and Resideo, both lower margin businesses, contributed 90 basis points of segment margin expansion. The remaining 80 basis points was the result of our strong operational performance, primarily in Aerospace and Performance Materials and Technologies. We continue to effectively manage the impacts of tariffs through well executed mitigation efforts and are in the final stages of eliminating all spin related stranded costs before year end.

Notwithstanding our strong performance across most of the portfolio, as we message in April and again in May, we did experience challenges in safety and productivity solutions and more specifically in the productivity products business, which drove a sales and segment margin decline this quarter. I will address that in more detail in a minute. Consistent with last quarter, the majority of our earnings growth, $0.16 came through segment profit improvement. We realized a $0.06 benefit from our share repurchase program, which resulted in a weighted average share count of 733,000,000 shares this quarter. Our effective tax rate was 21.5%, largely consistent with the outlook we provided of 22%.

Importantly, we were also able to fund a substantial amount of fast payback repositioning in the quarter, more than $80,000,000 that will support our continued productivity focus, functional transformation and supply chain initiatives that we discussed at our Investor Day in May. These proactive measures will be helpful in the event of a slower economy in the coming quarters. Finally, adjusted free cash flow in the quarter was $1,500,000,000 with conversion of 100%. The strong cash generation was most notable in Aerospace and Building Technologies. We're very pleased with our results and are focused on continuing the strong performance in the second half.

Let's turn to Slide 4 now to briefly discuss the 2nd quarter EPS bridge. Slide 4 walks our earnings per share from the Q2 of 2018 to the Q2 of 2019. As Darius mentioned, segment profit growth was the main driver for the quarter. That acceleration was most prominent in Aerospace and PMT due to combination of higher organic sales volumes, commercial excellence and our continued focus on productivity. We also continue to utilize our balance sheet to lower our share count.

We deployed nearly $2,000,000,000 towards repurchase of Honeywell shares consistent with our plan to reduce the share count by at least 1% during the course of this year. Finally, we had a $0.05 headwind on an adjusted basis from below the line expenses, primarily due to the proactive restructuring actions I mentioned earlier and lower pension income year over year as a result of the derisking actions we took in 2018. That was partially offset by benefits from net interest expense and foreign exchange. Funding a strong pipeline of future repositioning continues to be a key lever for our productivity playbook and will serve us and our shareholders well as we go forward. The punch line here is we had another high quality quarter delivering EPS at the high end of our guidance range.

Now let's turn to Slide 5 and we can discuss our segment performance. Starting with Aerospace, sales were up 11% organically. This marked the 4th consecutive quarter of double digit organic growth and capped off an outstanding first half for 2019. Defense and Space grew 20% organically led by global demand for guidance and navigation systems as well as increased spares volumes on U. S.

DoD programs including the F-eighteen and F-twenty 2. The defense business is well positioned more than 50% of firm orders with delivery through 2020 are already booked. In commercial OE, sales were up 4% organically, driven by continued strength across the business jet platforms, which more than offset declines stemming from the timing of air transport shipments. Notably, we saw increased deliveries across all Gulfstream platforms and strong avionics deliveries on certain Dassault platforms. Regarding the Boeing 737 MAX situation, we remain aligned to Boeing's stated production schedule and we'll continue to monitor the situation closely.

But as we've stated previously, we do not anticipate a significant impact to Honeywell's operational results in 2019. Aftermarket sales were up 8% organically driven by demand across both air transport and business aviation and growth in retrofit, modifications and upgrades, including related to the ADS B safety mandates. We continue to see good adoption of our connected aircraft technologies, which drove strong software sales growth in aerospace and continued to gain traction for our JetWave solution across all Aerospace verticals as demonstrated by the C17 win we announced in May, our first in the Defense business. Aerospace segment margin expanded 3 30 basis points driven by commercial excellence, higher sales volumes and margin accretion from the spin of Transportation Systems. The spin contributed approximately 60 basis points to Arrow's total margin expansion.

The Arrow business continues to execute well, investing in future technologies, driving productivity and commercial excellence and has a healthy long cycle backlog heading into the Q3. In Honeywell Building Technologies, sales were up 5% organically driven by global demand for commercial fire products. As Vimal Kapoor and his team displayed at our investor conference in May, we are innovating and launching new products in this business at a much faster rate than we had in the past, and we continue to see good acceptance from our customers and strong growth as a result. We saw good growth across building management software platforms, including for Tridion, which as you may remember is our platform for integrating building management systems and data using open and proprietary communication protocols. In building solutions, we drove growth in global projects across the Americas and in the airport vertical in the Middle East.

HBT segment margins expanded 3.90 basis points in the Q2 driven by the favorable impact from the spin off of the Homes business. The team continues to make steady progress on our goal to eliminate the remaining stranded costs by year end stemming from the home spin. Segment margins excluding the favorable impact from the spin accretion were roughly flat this quarter, a big improvement from the Q1 and we continue to make progress on supply chain optimization post the spin. Overall, it was another great quarter for the HBT business with double digit projects backlog growth and building solutions positioned the business well for the second half of twenty nineteen. In Performance Materials and Technologies, sales were up 4% on an organic basis.

Process Solutions sales were up 5% organically, driven by continued strength in our short cycle businesses, primarily in software, maintenance and migration services and field instrumentation devices. We also saw growth in smart energy, primarily in North America. The short cycle backlog across process solutions is up over 20% giving us confidence that the growth in the automation portfolio should continue into the second half. UOP sales were up 5% organically, driven by growth in licensing and engineering as well as refining catalysts. We saw particular strength in North America with reinvestment in existing refining infrastructure and select new investments in petrochemicals and strong backlog conversion in the Middle East.

UOP orders and backlog were both up over 10% for UOP orders and backlog were both up over 10% for the quarter. Additionally, on

Speaker 5

a year to date basis,

Speaker 4

UOP orders in China were up double digits, primarily driven by growth in equipment, licensing and catalysts. Organic sales growth in Advanced Materials of 2% was driven by demand for our Solstice line of low global warming refrigerants and blowing agents. However, this was partially offset by lower pricing due to the impact of illegal HFC imports in Europe. Enforcement and monitoring of the EU F gas regulation has been an emerging challenge and we're working diligently in partnership with other producers, EU regulators and EU member countries to address the harmful illegal imports. Overall, PMT segment margins expanded by 1 140 basis points in the 2nd quarter, driven by commercial excellence across all lines of business, direct material productivity and further improvements in our supply chain.

Finally, in Safety and Productivity Solutions, sales were down 4% on an organic basis in the quarter and segment margins contracted 4 20 basis points. The weakness we saw this quarter was principally in our short cycle, high margin productivity products business. Similar to the Q1, we saw a combination of continued inter distributor inventory destocking, fewer large project rollouts in the mobility space and lower channel sell through. The 2nd quarter sales mix in SPS negatively impacted our margins as the volume declines we experienced were in more profitable parts of the business. We continue to see growth in our sensing and IoT business and robust demand for voice solutions and aftermarket maintenance and services in warehouse automation.

As Darius mentioned during last quarter's earnings release, Intelligrated is beginning to face tougher and tougher comps as we get deeper into the year following 5 quarters of approximately 20% plus growth. We are seeing timing of new major system rollouts push into the second half of the year. This effect coupled with tougher sales comps in the 2nd quarter drove flattish sales in Intelligrated in 2Q. The large project order push outs we saw in Q2 are consistent with our customers' latest planning and not an indication of project losses. Intelligrated's aftermarket business, which enhances customer outcomes through consultative engagements to improve productivity, was up strong double digits organically driven by demand for comprehensive life cycle support and service.

The business is benefiting from the large installed base growth in the core Intelligrated portfolio. The outlook for this business overall remains very strong and we delivered organic sales growth of over 20% for the first half of twenty nineteen and we continue to expect this to be a growth business long term. Within the Safety business, organic sales growth was 1%. We saw continued demand for gas detection products, which grew low single digits organically and retail footwear, which was up high digits high single digits organically. That was largely offset by decreased volumes of general safety and personal protective equipment.

In our key end markets for the safety business, we see solid demand for portable gas detection in the U. S, but slower activity in the industrial sector given distributor inventory levels. Let's now turn to Slide 6 and discuss our Q3 outlook. Our planning assumptions are largely consistent with the 2nd quarter dynamics with some further caution on short cycle. We expect our growth this quarter will be driven by a combination of continued long cycle strength in Aerospace and Defense, coupled with short cycle demand in Building Technologies and healthy backlog in UOP and Process Solutions.

The Aerospace business, as I mentioned, has grown 10% or more organically the past 4 quarters and we expect continued strong performance due to the order growth rates and backlog in Defense. We've established a significant backlog of new major system awards for Intelligrated over the past year that will drive growth into 2020 and allow for an expansion of our shorter cycle aftermarket and service businesses. We are taking a cautious view on the short cycle growth as many of the macro signals, the China GDP, U. S.-China trade tensions and Brexit, just to name a few, are still cloud in the economic outlook. We think it's prudent to plan conservatively given the uncertainties and our 3Q and second half guidance reflect that.

As it relates to this sale of weapons to Taiwan by the U. S. Government and potential sanctions from China, we see no reason why Honeywell would be potentially sanctioned by the Chinese government and we have received no official word from the Chinese government that Honeywell is on a sanctioned list of entities. Now let's discuss our segment outlook. In Aerospace, we continue to see robust demand in both Business Aviation and in U.

S. And International Defense, supported by robust orders growth and firm backlogs for orders with delivery into 2020. Air transport shipments should increase sequentially driven by demand for A350 and A320 aircraft and lower customer incentives. We will see tougher comparisons in Business Aviation given the significant organic sales growth in the Q3 of 2018. Consistent with last quarter, we expect the commercial aftermarket activity will be driven by flight hours, airline demand and further tailwinds from the adoption of safety and compliance mandates, principally in Business Aviation.

In Building Technologies, we expect good growth with strength primarily in commercial fire products in Americas and EMEA and growth in building management software in high growth regions and for Tridium. On the service side, we expect to see Building Solutions growth continue given the large order funnel and considerable backlog growth in projects and services. As a reminder, HBT does have significant short cycle exposure, particularly in the products vertical. And although we haven't seen order rates slow, we are planning cautiously here in the second half. In Performance Materials and Technologies, we expect to see short cycle demand for products and services and process solutions and growth in equipment, absorbance and refining catalyst in UOP.

We saw good bookings in equipment and catalyst in the 2nd quarter and growth in the Process Solutions Service Bank for new contracts and renewals, which we believe sets PMT up for another good quarter in the 3rd quarter. Finally, given the challenges we experienced in Productivity Products and our assumption that the inventory destocking continues for the balance of 2019, we are expecting to see continued headwinds in SPS from both a sales and segment margin perspective, but anticipate that will moderate in the 4th quarter. We expect Intelligrated's 3rd quarter performance to be similar to 2Q with 20 plus percent growth in the aftermarket business, but slower large project growth. We maintain a robust backlog of project awards from blue chip customers and see a very strong pipeline of potential awards in the 3rd and the 4th quarters. The net below the line impact, which is the difference between segment profit and income before tax will be minimal this quarter.

The difference year on year is driven primarily by lower pension income, the benefit from Spin's indemnification payments, partially offset by higher repositioning funding. Now let's move to Slide 7 to discuss our revised full year guidance. As Darius noted, we are raising the low end of our full year organic sales, earnings per share and free cash flow guidance. Our organic sales guidance moves 1 point on the low end to a new range of 4% to 6%, while our segment margin guidance is unchanged. The revised earnings per share guidance of 7.95 to 8.15 represents earnings growth of 8% to 10% adjusted, excluding the impact from the spins in 2018.

We remain on track to deliver approximately 100% free cash flow conversion. Our position on tariffs is unchanged. We expect no significant impact in 20 19 given the proactive measures we have taken to mitigate. We also continue to closely monitor the Brexit situation and are communicating regularly with our customers, partners and suppliers. As we stated last quarter, we're planning for various potential Brexit outcomes including a no deal Brexit scenario to ensure that as the terms of the UK's departure from the EU are finalized, we are well positioned to continue meeting our customers' needs.

Our guidance continues to reflect a weighted average share count of 731,000,000 shares and an effective tax rate of approximately 22%. Our net below the line expenses are now expected to be approximately $120,000,000 in 2019. This reflects slightly higher reposition expense charges partially offset by greater interest income. We continue to be confident in our ability to execute and in our outlook. We're sticking to the playbook around short cycle caution given the macro uncertainties that remain in the second half of the year.

With that, I'd like to turn the call back over to Darius, who will wrap it up on Slide 8.

Speaker 3

Thanks, Greg. We are encouraged by the performance from our businesses thus far in 2019. We continue to execute on our commitments to share owners, are generating strong organic growth in many end markets and have multiple levers to enable further margin expansion. Our operational performance is generating strong free cash flows and conversion, while investing in the business to ensure we are well positioned for the future. I'm also encouraged by our progress with the business transformation initiatives we've discussed at our Investor Day, particularly given the because of the significant opportunity I see in these areas in the future of Honeywell.

Let's be clear, we have a lot of work to do to execute these initiatives, but I continue to be excited by the energy enthusiasm I see across the employee population to move the ball forward and truly differentiate Honeywell from our competitors. With that, Mark, let's move to Q and A.

Speaker 2

Thanks, Darius. Darius and Greg are now available to answer your questions. April, if you could, please open the line for Q and A.

Speaker 1

Thank you. The floor is now open for Our first question is coming from Joe Ritchie from Goldman Sachs.

Speaker 6

Thanks. Good morning, everyone.

Speaker 5

Good morning,

Speaker 6

Joe. So look, nice quarter. I guess the obviously, there's going to be a lot of questions around the short cycle commentary. I heard you guys say cautious a few times during the prepared comments. I guess maybe as I think about your business today and the Safety and Productivity Solutions side, maybe talk a little bit more why you expect the destock to last and what's really driving that through the Q4?

And then secondarily in that business, the commentary around new major system rollouts being pushed out, I'm just curious whether you guys are seeing any saturation in that market?

Speaker 3

Yes. Well, let's maybe take that, kind of 2 segments. So number 1 is, we anticipated some level of destocking to occur. I mean, obviously, the distributor levels weren't supported by the level of business. So what we've projected for Q3 and Q4 is some level of moderation, but certainly a continuation of the trend in terms of softness in that end market as the destocking continues.

We're obviously, our plans are a bit better than that. But what I don't want to do is in the short cycle business, I don't want to be forecasting too aggressively and then end up disappointing. So that's kind of what we have baked in particularly into the Q3 outlook, which is still negative and moderating a bit more into the Q4 because one of the things we're trying to really assess and how much of this is market and how much of this is us. I mean, that's still unclear. So in the early indications we had that the market is getting softer, but again until we see all the data points and several competitors report and put all that piece that all that together, we're really not sure.

For now, we're going to assume it's us, because I think I don't want to just say, well, it's the market, so we don't need to do anything. We I can tell you, we have a very aggressive commercial program to address some of these challenges and to drive business at the end user level. The good news here on Productivity Products is this is not a technology issue. We actually have very good technologies. They've been successfully launched, most recently in Q2 around our warehouse business and our TLC, which is our strongest segment.

So I'm very encouraged by that. So that's really the story on SPS. I should say on Productivity Products. In terms of Intelligrated, it's a very different story. Intelligrated has been growing by strong double digits, like think well north of 20% on average for the last several quarters.

And what's happening there is simply some of the orders that we expected in Q2 got pushed out a little bit. They're still out there. We expect to book them in Q3, Q4. We didn't lose them. I know that for a fact.

And the business is going to continue to grow and we're very bullish on the business. So there isn't a greater or a different story here. The business is gaining share. It's performing extraordinarily well. We see a little bit of a blip in delay in terms of the order bookings and that's what we accounted for in our outlook.

Speaker 4

Yes. And I would also just add that the aftermarket business which as you know capturing the installed base and then going and mining the aftermarket is a big part of that whole thesis is doing terrific. We're up over 20% on the LSS business and have been for multi quarters. And as you know, that also carries a higher margin profile. So I think that part of the playbook is working nicely.

Speaker 6

That's helpful to hear. And obviously, we prefer for you guys to be prudent as your planning assumptions go for the second half of the year. I guess on that in that vein, right, like you started the year off with roughly 7% organic growth above where your organic guide is for the year, long cycle backlog still plus 10%. I guess what is then the embedded planning assumption for the short cycle businesses? It seems like you're planning for very, very low growth, if any growth in short cycle in the second half of the year.

And maybe what are some of the puts and takes you got there?

Speaker 4

Well, again, Joe, the productivity products one is a big aerospace aftermarket, we're planning for low single digits. And again, as we've seen that can turn very quickly. So we don't want to get too far out ahead of our skis there.

Speaker 3

Yes. I mean, I think you have it right, Joe. I mean, it's think LSD for short cycle, think MSD to maybe even a touch higher for the longer cycle. Depending upon the segments, but that's sort of the rough math. So the punch line is we are planning somewhat cautiously for the second half because the geopolitical and the economic movements are pretty volatile right now.

And what we try to do is we try to guide that somewhat cautiously based on what we're seeing today. And the short cycle is somewhat unpredictable and can turn very quickly.

Speaker 7

Got it. Thanks guys.

Speaker 6

I'll let others get on the call. Appreciate.

Speaker 2

Thanks, John. Thank you.

Speaker 1

And our next question is coming from John Inch with Gordon Haskett.

Speaker 8

Good morning, everybody. Good

Speaker 4

morning, John. Good morning.

Speaker 8

Hi, guys. I think, Greg, you had mentioned that you are taking proactive steps for Brexit. What exactly in case there's a hard Brexit, what exactly does that mean? Does it mean you're sort

Speaker 9

of Yes.

Speaker 4

It's really about certifications, John.

Speaker 3

Okay. Yes.

Speaker 4

It's really about certifications and making sure that certified bodies in the EU are going to allow the product flow to continue. So we've been basically recertifying our products with other EU bodies as opposed to the UK bodies that we have many of our certifications through. And that's been an ongoing effort and we're substantially complete at this stage, which is very good. And then we're just also setting up additional triage in terms of actual movement of goods in the event we need to do anything special or different in terms of air freight or premium freight in that sense to get product to flow. So those are really the 2 things that the teams have been working most closely on.

And you can imagine too when you think about that even from our own internal wiring, there is system changes and so on that need to allow those things to be true for us internally as well. So that's what the teams have been furiously preparing for, so that we're ready no matter which way this goes.

Speaker 8

And then how did Europe and China do its regions? I remember China was down a little bit last quarter, obviously given sort of some of the shorter cycle stuff going on there. I Europe was more resilient. Was any sort of real change and change in terms of China and the kind of regional impact like the Malaysia Middle East impact? Is there anything else that you would call out there?

Speaker 3

Yes. I'll take that one, John. I think overall, we're pleased. I mean, I'll highlight a couple of things. For example, our PMT bookings in China were around 20% in Q2.

So I mean, some real strengths. We had some tough comps, think flattish to slightly up for China for Q2, but that's driven by particularly some of the tough comps that we had in PMT. So overall, I mean, obviously, there's some level of concern for the China economy, but overall, given the bookings we saw in PMT, that was strong. Europe stayed strong, think low to mid single digit for us, sort of some spotty in places, Germany was strong, Italy not so much, but overall fairly good growth rate for us. Middle East was very, very strong.

We're very encouraged by that. India was up double digit, very strong growth there. LatAm doing well. So for the most part, we're still seeing pretty good growth around across the globe. Granite China maybe wasn't what it was last year, but also not a complete meltdown and move downwards.

So overall, we're still encouraged by what we're seeing out there.

Speaker 8

Darius, do you feel that the backlog of restructuring projects that you have would be more than sufficient if sort of cadence of the global economy continues to soften a little bit? Or would you actually be looking to do more projects? Obviously, you guys are pretty aggressive in terms of your playbook historically. Glenn, do

Speaker 3

you want to add anything? Yes. Well, I think, John, I think that's the highlight that's maybe one of the highlights of the quarter. I we really invested in our future this quarter. We had some very, very attractive restructuring projects and we wanted to make sure we fund them because we probably could have delivered even higher EPS result in Q2 if we didn't fund those.

But we thought it was prudent, particularly in this level of economic uncertainty to fund those restructuring projects now, particularly given the kind of paybacks we saw on those. But the real answer to your question is, I guess it all depends upon how much of economic hit we would take. We're kind of protected to the levels we're forecasting. If those economic cycles are deeper than that, then obviously we'd have to do more. So it's a bit of a wild ride as you can see right now, sort of new news items coming every day.

But we do what we do all the which is we plan cautiously, work productivity. And if the environment is worse than we anticipate, then we're going to take another round of cost actions to offset those.

Speaker 4

Yes. And I mean just so you know, the repositioning pipeline is a process just like a sales pipeline or an R and D pipeline. We're working that at all times, so that we are ready when the opportunities present themselves from a funding perspective and obviously as the economic environment moves. So that's absolutely part of our routine all times.

Speaker 8

Got it. Thanks very much guys. Appreciate it.

Speaker 2

Thanks, John.

Speaker 1

Our next question comes from Deane Dray with RBC Capital Markets.

Speaker 10

Thank you. Good morning everyone.

Speaker 6

Good morning, Anthony.

Speaker 10

Hey, maybe we can follow-up on some of Joe's beginning questions on the push outs that you're seeing. And so for Intelligrated, the push outs, are they attributed to anything in particular? Is that macro uncertainty? Do you just have any sense of what's driving the delay in capital commitment? And then similarly, one of your competitors in process has been talking about seeing big project pushouts out of the Q2 into the 3rd Q4, be interested if you're seeing some of those dynamics as well?

Speaker 3

Yes. I'm sort of been telegrated. I'm not sure there's a single cause for that. Some of these projects are fairly substantial from a capital perspective and there's timing around Board meetings and so on. But we have an indication from our customers that these projects will happen.

So I don't anticipate they'll result in cancellations. The timing is always unpredictable on large projects. We expect some of those to land in Q3. It wouldn't shock me if they land in Q4, but they're not disappearing and they're not being canceled. In terms of the large projects, I mean, PMT had a pretty good booking quarters overall.

It was stronger in UOP than it was in HPS. We're seeing something somewhat similar on the large projects per se. Those are getting sliding to the right a little bit, But we saw some other strong bookings, particularly on the shorter cycles, some of our services build it business, our advanced solutions, our software businesses. So been a bit of a mixed story when it comes to larger projects here, maybe perhaps those are sliding a little bit to the right. But our backlog grew, our bookings were good in PMT and we anticipate pretty strong second half of the year.

Speaker 10

And then across the shorter cycle portfolio and the softness that you're seeing, are you seeing any competitors beginning to use price as a weapon here to drive some volume and take us through the portfolio and where pricing may have seen some of that pressure?

Speaker 3

Well, I think all short cycle isn't the same. I mean, as we look at HBT, I think our short cycle has actually stayed fairly strong. I mean, I think the results for themselves have been really good first half for our HBT business and we actually are expecting that to continue into Q3 with the business is doing very, very well. In SPS, it's the productivity products issue that we talked about earlier. I can't really necessarily point to price.

I mean, as the market is softer, pricing becomes more of a challenge. Some of that is definitely true. But I don't want to point at competition that this is necessarily any kind of a pricing thing. I mean, yes, there's greater level of competition when markets get softer.

Speaker 4

We've had both I mean, we're getting price and we're getting growth still in the short cycle currently, again, with the exception of the productivity products story. And then as we mentioned in the prepared remarks, in the HFC business, that's one place where we're seeing a very specific competitive move going on with some of the illegal imports coming into Europe. So that's really the only place that I would highlight as something really visible that we can see competitively. Yes.

Speaker 6

Thank you.

Speaker 2

Thanks, Dean.

Speaker 1

And we'll take our next question from Scott Davis with Melius Research.

Speaker 5

Hi. Good morning, guys.

Speaker 3

Good morning, Scott.

Speaker 5

You guys are putting up pretty predictable numbers each quarter. And I just begs the question, you spent a good chunk of the Investor Day talking about forge and connectivity and all these interesting things you're working on and also the supply chain stuff. Is there any way to measure kind of your progress in these areas? Like for example, the big margin gains you had this quarter, could you ascribe any of that to supply chain or is that still kind of out there on the come?

Speaker 3

Yes. I think let me start taking this. I think in terms of a lot of our ISC transformation, I can't we are in the we're not even in the top of the first. We're just I mean, we're just kind of we're grabbing the bat at this juncture. So that's something that you're going to see a lot more pronounced really in 2020 beyond.

We're just getting started. So I'm not going to tell you there's a lot attributed to the IEC transformation. You probably shouldn't expect much until 2020 beyond. In terms of, forge and our software play, I think that really the best way to measure that business is growth. That's sort of the single biggest metric I use and is it profitable growth.

And I was very pleased with what we're seeing in double digit software growth margin that's accretive to Honeywell, margin that's very attractive. And we're gaining traction. We're winning jobs. We pointed to the large Middle East wind that we had, which is very large in scope. And our customers trust us.

So I'm very pleased with the strategic progress we're making. But our measures are typically financial in nature because you can make yourself feel good by looking at actions. You look at financials and especially for forge and connected enterprise, ultimately, we look at growth rates and they've been double digit, which is good, which is what I'm expecting.

Speaker 4

Yes. And the other thing I guess I would highlight is internally we're looking obviously at recurring revenue streams and trying to continue to enhance our recurring revenue streams. So that's something that as we measure the progress in the connected, that will be one that we watch as well pretty closely.

Speaker 5

Okay. Makes sense. And I just have kind of a question about Intelligrated and the sales cycle. I mean, when you install when you do the big project, presumably there's some sort of warranty period. I mean, when do you start getting aftermarket from those installs?

Speaker 3

It's after the completion and turning over the project over to the user because a lot of times we'll get the service contract as soon as the job is completed. And yes, and granted there are some things that are on warranty, but we're trying to have the same approach with the Intelligrated business as we do with our HPS business where we have these longer cycle, the Assurance 360 type of contracts. And we've had great traction in that, over 20% growth in Q2. And this by the way, this I'm not indicating any kind of a slowdown in this business. I don't think we can expect the 20% -plus growth rates that we've seen.

But we think that this is going to be a high single digit to double digit growth kind of business. But what we've seen that although the push outs of the orders are also disappointing, the good news and the strategic and the fact that our strategy is working is this, which is our services business was up over 20%. It enabled that business to have an accretive margin to what it had last year. And the strategy we're trying to execute is working. Unfortunately, we can't control the timing of when the orders land, but I can tell you that they're not due to losses.

Speaker 5

Yes. I mean just a quick follow-up on that. I mean, when at what point does aftermarket become a bigger piece than the install revenues? Is it

Speaker 11

3 years out by?

Speaker 3

To be honest, Scott, I hope not for a while, right, because that means that our project cycle is slowing. But it's a bit of a function, still the projects business is the predominant component in that business. So what would have to occur is the services business are already growing at over 20%. The projects business slowed a little bit this past quarter. I actually hope that we get more of the project.

And I think that will happen. I don't think that this is now the sign of, okay, the warehouse automation segment slowing. I think that this could be a blip for a quarter or 2 and this will resume. But that's really kind of how things will work is ultimately the projects business will slow down. I don't think that's necessarily now.

And the LSS is going to become a bigger growth component of the business. We kind of saw a little bit of a preview of that in Q2, but I don't think that's a long term trend yet.

Speaker 5

Okay. Okay. Good luck. Thank you, guys.

Speaker 2

Thanks, guys.

Speaker 1

Our next question is coming from Steve Tusa with JPMorgan.

Speaker 7

Hey guys, good morning.

Speaker 3

Hey, good morning.

Speaker 7

Just so we're all on the same page here on the SPS thing, How should we think about kind of absolute profits for the Q3? And then I know you guided to something like $1,100,000,000 or something like that for the year. Are we kind of just south of $1,000,000,000 for the year now when it comes to profitability? And then just as

Speaker 5

a follow-up,

Speaker 7

pretty big miss. You guys were out at EPG, not too late, but late May. Did something change significantly in June? Or was this something that you knew about, but there was enough offset in the rest of the portfolio that you didn't feel they need to call it out?

Speaker 3

Yes. Well, I think, Steve, let me kind of maybe start the second comment and I'll turn over to Greg. In terms of SPS and more specifically Productivity Products, I think we called it out both in our Q1 earnings report and John talked about it at our Investor Day. I think that we were pretty clear that this is going to be another quarter where we're going to see destocking and some challenges on sort of commercial. So I think that was this a little bit greater than we anticipated?

Yes. Did we signal it? I think we did. And we maybe specifically even talked about it at EPG, but we certainly did at our Q1 earnings call. And John talked about specifically at Investor Day.

So I'm not sure that we're shocked by what we saw. It's like I said, a little bit more pronounced than we anticipated, but not totally out of whack with our expectations.

Speaker 4

Yes. And then on the profitability front, Steve, I think given the mix of sales that we're seeing in the Q2, I think it's going to look fairly similar in Q3. So I would expect margin rates to be in that same range of 11%, 12% type margins in the Q3. 4th quarter should get a little bit better, but that's how we're thinking about it as we exit the second half.

Speaker 7

Okay. So like $225,000,000 to $250,000,000 in the 4th quarter, something to that extent on segment profit?

Speaker 4

Yes. The margin rates are going to be in that, again, similar range.

Speaker 7

Okay. One last quick one. Just when you guys talk about short cycle, I mean, to me, when I kind of look at the results and commercial aftermarket and some of the shorter cycle stuff in PMT, billing technology is perfectly fine. I mean you're really you're not necessarily talking about like all short cycle. It seems like it's a kind of an SPS type of dynamic.

And how bad was the kind of scanning and mobility side, the stuff that you compete with Zebra on? I mean, how negative kind of was that in the quarter? Yes.

Speaker 3

I mean, yes, I think that's right, Steve. This story is really about Productivity Products. That was the yes, that was what we signaled. A little bit worse than we thought. It wasn't a good outcome.

And it was down for the quarter. So it was a little bit down that more down than we thought. Some of that is my guess, although I want to emphasize I don't know yet, because I always assume it's our issue, not a market issue. I think there was obviously some issues in the market and market slowing. We've had some early data points, which would indicate that.

And some commercial execution things that we need to fix as well as really the destocking thing was the business levels and some of our distributors are taking actions to do that. So that's really kind of the negative story. It's not you're right, it's not widespread. It's predominantly limited to one business, which didn't have a great Q2.

Speaker 11

Yes.

Speaker 7

And that's why you guys planned conservatively for the second half. Thanks a lot. Appreciate it.

Speaker 3

Yes. Yes. Thanks, Steve.

Speaker 1

Our next question is coming from Gautam Khanna with Cowen and Company.

Speaker 11

$1,900,000,000 stock in the Q. I think that's a multiyear record or close to it. Are you still thinking $4,000,000,000 repo in the year? And then also another second question is, if you could please just like speak about the M and A pipeline and whether or not you're seeing anything attractive? Thank you.

Speaker 2

I'm sorry. This is Mark. Can you restate the question? We missed the first part of it.

Speaker 3

You got cut off in the beginning.

Speaker 11

I'm sorry about that. So my question was related to the stock repurchase. You bought $1,900,000,000 in the quarter. Are you still thinking around $4,000,000,000 for the year? And the second question was, if you could just kind of give some color about the M and A pipeline and whether you're seeing anything attractive?

Thank you.

Speaker 4

Sure. So you're right, dollars 1,900,000,000 was a fairly healthy amount of repo in the quarter. I think we're about $2,600,000,000 on a year to date basis. And all of that is still aiming at getting the 1% reduction from year to year. So $4,000,000,000 for the year is probably in the right neighborhood of where it will land.

Obviously, some of that depends on the share price performance for the remainder of the year. But I think that's a reasonable assessment of what the end of the year will look like. And then as it relates to the M and A pipeline, I mean, we continue to be active. I wouldn't say we had other quarters we've come in and talked about having things that were at the one yard line that didn't happen. I don't think we had anything that was quite that close in this particular quarter, but we continue to be very active across all four of the businesses.

And then as we've talked about, we're ramping up the activity, particularly in HBT given the fact that that business is now on much, much firmer footing.

Speaker 11

Okay, thanks. And if I can squeeze one more in here, what are your what are the demand trends and expectations for PMT in the second half? Kind of what sort of growth are you looking at for those for UOP, HBI, C and M and A materials?

Speaker 4

I think about those as mid single digits. Again, with the backlogs that we have entering the back half of the year, we think mid single digits is a very reasonable spot for PMT.

Speaker 11

Okay. Thanks guys.

Speaker 2

Thank you.

Speaker 1

And our next question is coming from Jeffrey Sprague with Vertical Research Partners.

Speaker 4

Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Good morning, Jeff. Good morning, Jeff.

Speaker 3

Good morning, Jeff.

Speaker 12

Good morning. We spent a lot of time on SPS for good reason, but let's talk Aero for a moment. The margins were extraordinarily strong there, stronger than I might have guessed given the mix. I know you've got some commercial like margins in part of your Defense and Space business. But can you give us a little bit more color on what really played out in the margins in the quarter and how you see the rest of the year playing out there?

Speaker 3

Yes. I mean, I think that margin growth is really a testament to the execution proudest of the aerospace team and a lot of our strategies are working. I think sometimes we forget that our software business isn't just in Honeywell Connected Enterprise. It's also in our avionics franchise and that group has done a tremendous job and really shifting its focus to RMUs and upgrades, enhancements. And we saw the benefits in that because it obviously has accretive margin rates.

They've done a great job of driving productivity in the business. So although this is that ultimate combination we also want to see, which is you drive productively while getting good growth and you really expand the margins. Obviously, focus on the Connected Enterprise and connected aircraft is helping margins as well. Good growth on spares. The BGA market is very, very strong right now, both in terms of OE and aftermarket.

It's a testament to a lot of the great wins we've had on the platforms, but also supporting our customers in flight. So overall, and then lastly, but really importantly, defense and space has just been on fire. And just about any segment you want to look within there, whether it's helos, whether it's the U. S, international defense, all those segments are doing well. And I think this is really an important fact, Jeff, that as we look from now through the end of 2020, we have more than 50% of the business already booked.

So we're really in a really nice shape as we look into the future.

Speaker 12

Great. Thanks for that. Just back to this China question, fully understand your position in the statement this week as it relates to this. I wonder if you have seen or how you would kind of keep an eye out for maybe more subtle pressures, not only on you, but obviously you would see your own business. But any indication that U.

S. Or Western companies are just kind of getting a little bit of a cold shoulder around the edges or any other kind of behavioral change in the business that you picked up?

Speaker 3

No, I mean, no, I don't. And I think as Greg pointed out in his I mean, I don't we received some interesting press on this subject, but we have seen no indication from China authorities that there are any sanctions coming our way. We have received no sanction. I think I'll point to a couple of things. Number 1 is we received our 1st JetWave order in China, which is very promising.

I mentioned the PMT bookings in China were very, very strong in Q2. China is an important market for us. We play it locally. We have a lot of manufacturing, a lot of R and D facilities in China. It's a market that we take great pride in serving local for local.

And we expect that to continue.

Speaker 12

Great. Thanks a lot.

Speaker 3

Thank you.

Speaker 1

Our next question is coming from Julian Mitchell with Barclays.

Speaker 13

Hi, good morning. Thank you.

Speaker 4

Good morning,

Speaker 6

Julian. Good morning, Julian. Good morning.

Speaker 13

Good morning. Maybe just a first question around overall cadence of demand in recent months. Your organic sales growth was 8% in Q1. It's guided at the midpoint at 3% in Q3. So a pretty severe slowdown with comps that are not that different.

Aside from what you've talked about in SPS, have you seen any changes in demand in recent months? Several companies talked about June being materially worse than the rest of Q2. Just wondered what you've seen recently in that respect?

Speaker 4

Julien, it's Greg. We haven't seen any really clear patterns like that across the portfolio that would cause us to say that June is the beginning of a huge slowdown. So just across the portfolio, I would say the answer is no. But as Darius mentioned earlier, the portfolio is not one thing. And so I expect and that we're going to see different dynamics across the different parts of the portfolio and across different parts of the globe.

Darius talked about the strength in Europe earlier. There's a lot of strength there because the aerospace business is doing particularly well. And as long as flight hours stay strong, we expect to see Europe continuing to do well there. The dynamics in China, as we mentioned, are strong on the long cycle side with UOP orders. So we've got very strong backlog in PMT and their short cycle businesses.

So far the answer, no real pattern down, but it's something we absolutely watch as you would expect.

Speaker 3

Yes. And just to maybe add to that, actually if you look at June, it's a year over year organic growth basis, it was our best month. Now granted, you saw some softness in SPS, which was pronounced and that's why we have a bit more of a cautious guide for Q3. That's really the reason is we're not expecting a miraculous turnaround in SPS in Q3. We some of the softness we saw in June, we actually anticipate may continue and that's why you see our guide.

But overall, if you look at total Honeywell organic, June on a year over year basis, we're actually our best month of the quarter.

Speaker 13

Great. Thank you for that detail. And maybe just picking up on your last point, Darius. Within SPS, the warehouse and workflow solutions piece, Revenue growth there was 7% in Q2 after sort of 50% growth in Q1. What should we expect in the second half in terms of warehouse and workflow solutions sales trends specifically?

Do you expect to pick up from Q2 as some of those orders get realized or you're leaving it as a sort of single digit growth assumption for now?

Speaker 3

Yes. I mean, if you're referring to Productivity Products, which I think there's kind of 2 different components, We don't expect a major turnaround here in Q3. Like I said, we still expect that to be negative for Q3 and some level of moderation in Q4. As it comes to Intelligrated, we're still expecting high single digit, double digit growth for the year. Q3 is a little bit dependent upon exactly when we land some of the orders.

But think about we're now getting into the tougher and tougher comps. So we're thinking about single digit kind of growth rate for the second half. But again, just to be clear, that's depending upon when those orders come because we're ready to execute those and we have every indication that they're land. Obviously, getting those sooner in Q3 would be better, getting them later or pushed out to QQ will be worse. And that's a little bit tough to predict, but I'm very bullish on our ability to secure those orders when they do lend that.

That I'm not that concerned about.

Speaker 8

Perfect. Thank you.

Speaker 2

Thanks, Julien.

Speaker 1

And the final question is from Josh Pokrzywinski from Morgan Stanley.

Speaker 9

Hi, good morning guys.

Speaker 4

Good morning, Josh.

Speaker 9

Just a couple of, I guess, more cleanups than anything else. I think we've beaten SPS to death. So hopefully, John can take the rest of the day off. On aerospace specifically, clearly commercial aero aftermarket doing very well. I want to make sure that there's nothing unsustainable there, particularly as it pertains to the MAX grounding, maybe with some of these other older aircraft filling the schedule that aftermarket gets a little bit of boost, and we shouldn't expect all of that to continue?

I know the trend line is good. I just didn't know if there was a little extra that you got out of the quarter.

Speaker 3

Yes. I would say this, there is probably a little bit of that where you had more sort of older aircraft flying visavis. So but that's not going to have the kind of dramatic impact on our results. So I wouldn't say that that's really the cause and effect. I think as long as the air miles stay strong, as long as the economy stays in reasonable shape and people continue to fly business aircraft and buy business aircraft.

Defense and Space Business, like I said, we've already more than half booked for the next 18 months. Things can always change, but overall, we're not this is not an area where we're concerned. We should have very good visibility to Q3 and Q4. Obviously, this is a long cycle business. Short cycle continues to look strong.

So overall, I don't think that this is some kind of a blip or unusual event here in Q2. I think this is evidence that our strategies are working and today our team is executing.

Speaker 9

Got it. That's helpful. And then just back on the topic of inventory, I know that that's clearly driving some of the activity in SPS. But as you look back on maybe the second half of twenty eighteen, are there any businesses that now with the benefit of hindsight, you can say, maybe we saw distributors take on more inventory than perhaps they were selling through. And it's something where we're watching a channel here and there that you can share with us or we should keep in mind as we go into the second half?

Speaker 3

Yes. Like you said, hindsight is always 2020. I mean, I think the distributors to some extent play the same role we do is they want to be prepared for good markets and they want to be prepared to sell our products. So could you say that they took on a bit more inventory than they should have? Well, yes, I mean hindsight that's sort of that's clearly the case.

And yes, and you're right, we are watching days of inventory. We are bringing that down. It came out in Q1. It came down in Q2. We're planning to have it again to come down in Q3 and get it to a much more lower level.

That's really kind of the if we want to kind of focus around the negative punch line of the quarter and overall, I think this was a very strong quarter for Honeywell. But if we want to focus on the negative, which is fair, that's really the punch line is we got to get those inventory levels moderated to levels that our distributors are comfortable with. And we planned that for the first half. We've got a little bit more to do in Q3 and we'll see around Q4. Obviously, the variable we don't know is sales out because if that goes up, then we have less of a problem.

If it goes down, well, we'll have more work to do. So that's sort of so short answer is, yes, we're monitoring it and we're going to have be very closely watching it here for well, forever, but certainly for the second half of this year.

Speaker 9

Great. Thanks. I'll leave it there.

Speaker 3

Thank you.

Speaker 1

That concludes today's question and answer session. At this time, I would like to turn the conference back to Mr. Darius Adamczyk for any additional closing remarks.

Speaker 3

I want to thank our share owners for their trust and support of Honeywell. We have made great strides in 2019, but we still have a long runway to continue our progress. We are focused on continuing to outperform for our share owners, our customers and our employees. This quarter marks the start of a new era for Honeywell in Charlotte, North Carolina and I could not be more excited about what lies ahead for this company. Thank you all for listening and have a wonderful relaxing and safe rest of the summer.

Take care. Thank you.

Speaker 1

Thank you. This does conclude today's teleconference. Please disconnect your lines at this time and have a wonderful day.

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