Welcome to the Johnson Controls fourth quarter 2021 earnings call. Your lines have been placed on listen only until the question and answer session. To ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. This conference is being recorded. If you have any objections, please disconnect at this time. I will now turn the call over to Antonella Franzen, Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer.
Good morning, and thank you for joining our conference call to discuss Johnson Controls fourth quarter fiscal 2021 results. The press release and all related tables issued earlier this morning, as well as the conference call slide presentations, can be found on the investor relations portion of our website at johnsoncontrols.com. Joining me on the call today are Johnson Controls Chairman and Chief Executive Officer George Oliver, and our Chief Financial Officer Olivier Leonetti. Before we begin, I'd like to remind you that during the course of today's call, we will be providing certain forward-looking information. We ask that you review today's press release and read through the forward-looking cautionary informational statements that we've included there. In addition, we will use certain non-GAAP measures in our discussions, and we ask that you read through the sections of our press release that address the use of these items.
In discussing our results during the call, references to adjusted earnings per share, EBITA and EBIT exclude restructuring and integration costs, as well as other special items. These metrics, together with organic sales and free cash flow, are non-GAAP measures and are reconciled in the schedules attached to our press release and in the appendix to the presentation posted on our website. Additionally, all comparisons to the prior year are on a continuing ops basis. Now let me turn the call over to George.
Thanks, Antonella, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us on the call today. I'm going to start off with a quick look back at 2021 and update you on a few of our long-term strategic priorities. Olivier will provide a detailed review of our fourth quarter results and provide you with our fiscal 2022 guidance. As always, we will leave as much time as possible to take your questions. Let's get started on slide three. We rounded out fiscal 2021 with another quarter of solid financial results, having met or exceeded all of our original commitments for the year in what turned out to be a much more difficult environment than originally planned. The ability to deliver these results while navigating through unprecedented levels of inflation and supply chain disruptions is a testament to the operational discipline and agility demonstrated throughout the organization.
For that, I am incredibly grateful for the efforts of the entire Johnson Controls team. Despite the challenging external environment, our end market demand remains strong. Robust retrofit activity, coupled with a pickup in new non-residential construction we are starting to see, creates a strong future demand trend. This is evidenced by the continued momentum we are seeing in our order books and the record backlog we have built. We also remain focused on the big picture, moving ahead with bold new commitments, doubling down with ambitious new ESG goals set earlier this year, embarking on a substantial new productivity program designed to drive a step function change in profitability. Just recently, at our Investor Day in September, we committed to a new set of three-year financial commitments.
We made significant progress in advancing our growth strategy, scaling our OpenBlue digital platform, launching eight new major offerings and greatly expanding our partner ecosystem, investing in the refresh of our product portfolio, focusing on accelerating our service growth and improving our attachment rate. We are capitalizing on strong secular trends for healthy buildings, decarbonization, and smart connected equipment and buildings. As end markets continue to recover and the adoption of these trends continue to expand globally, I am confident we are uniquely positioned from a competitive standpoint to continue to outperform. Please turn to slide four. In addition to the strong financial results and advancement on our strategic initiatives, we have also continued to lead in ESG, including continued progress toward both our 2025 sustainability goals and our new ESG commitments.
This is not by any means an exhaustive list, but I am extremely pleased with what our teams have accomplished in the last year. We are committed to net zero, committed to reducing emissions within our own operations and that of our customers. Our science-based targets have been approved. Our leadership team is aligned from a governance perspective, and we are extending our leadership in sustainable financing as well. Tomorrow, I travel to COP26 in Glasgow. We've made great progress in driving home the understanding that buildings represent approximately 40% of global greenhouse gas emissions, and there is no tackling climate change without substantial investment in buildings. Governments are now acting on this and mobilizing billions to upgrade buildings, and Johnson Controls is perfectly positioned to deliver those solutions. At COP26, I will meet with government and business leaders to build momentum and ensure action.
Turning to slide five. I wanted to take a few minutes to highlight several new strategic developments in the quarter. Most recently, we signed an MoU with two significant technology leaders, Accenture and Alibaba, to address sustainable infrastructure needs. This collaboration will focus on an estimated multi-billion dollar market for digital solutions serving data centers in China. We also signed a foundational technology agreement with Tempered Networks, building upon our recent cybersecurity partnerships with Pelion and DigiCert. Each of these partnerships embeds a critical layer of trust, security, and operational capability into our OpenBlue platform and connected devices. These elements differentiate our products and services to help protect the integrity of our customers' operations and data. Tempered brings an industry-leading, zero trust secure network capability that helps us drive customer confidence and, in turn, accelerate the adoption of OpenBlue services.
Our partnerships with UL, SafeTraces, and with Phylagen are powerful examples of how we are innovating to extend our healthy buildings leadership, providing new indoor environmental quality solutions to address our customers' most pressing challenges. Our near-term focus is on the education vertical, as there is a clear and compelling need to help those customers optimize their investments. With an estimated $195 billion in government stimulus earmarked for K-12 spending, this provides a significant opportunity. Additionally, we entered into an exclusive joint development agreement and investment with Phylagen, a leading biotech company working on the identification of indoor bacteria and viruses that are all around us in buildings. Our work with Phylagen is a commitment to developing the cutting edge of capabilities to deliver and maintain healthy buildings. Please turn to slide six.
At our Investor Day, we shared with you our three pillars for delivering above-market growth over the next three years and beyond. One of those pillars related to gaining share through innovative product development, centered around digital and sustainability. As planned, we launched over 150 new products in fiscal 2021, spanning nearly all business units, resulting in continued share gains in both Q4 and the full year. In 2022, we are well positioned to gain share with another 175 new products across four main categories: sustainability, smart buildings, digital, and residential, with heat pumps central to our product development strategy. These are just a sample of what is expected to launch over the next 90 days with a steady pipeline behind this. Turning to slide seven. Service plays a central role in everything we do.
Over the last 18 months, we have strengthened our market-leading capabilities to best position ourselves for the shifting industry demographics and evolving digital technologies that are enabling outcome-based solution models. At the start of last year, we began articulating our intentions to accelerate service growth to a couple of points above market levels, part of which would be the result of increasing our attachment rate by leveraging our large installed base and the digital transformation of our business. In fiscal 2021, we saw the early benefits of our efforts shine through. We exited the year with service revenues up 8% in the fourth quarter, with high single-digit growth in all three regions in nearly all business domains.
For the full year, service revenue grew 4%, which is up two-three points over 2019 levels, despite a slow start to the year as we managed through lingering site access restrictions and abnormal customer budget pressures. Looking ahead, we see service accelerating through fiscal 2022 in line with our goal to outpace the market. The order strength we've seen in the second half of the year bolsters that view. Service orders were up 7% in Q4, and importantly, up low single digits organically versus 2019 levels. Additionally, we improved our attach rate to approximately 40%. Turning to slide eight, the third pillar is our vectors of growth, which we believe on a combined basis, represents an incremental market opportunity of $250 billion over the next decade.
Our unique portfolio is a competitive advantage across all three areas, and from a financial performance perspective, we have significantly increased both revenue and orders in fiscal 2021. This positions us very well for continued strong performance as we move forward. Next, on slide nine, I wanted to highlight a key customer win related to one of our key vectors of growth. In Q4, we were awarded a Buildings as a Service project by one of our long-standing customers, the University of North Dakota. This is the second long-term performance infrastructure contract we have been awarded with this university in the last two years. It leverages not only our expertise in performance contracting, but also the OpenBlue Enterprise Manager software. The total contract value is nearly $220 million over the life of the project, with a smaller portion of that booked during the quarter.
On a related note, our OpenBlue Healthy Buildings platform enabled nearly 900 colleges and universities to safely and efficiently welcome students, staff, and faculty back to their campuses this fall. Before I turn things over to Olivier, let me conclude with a few thoughts. I remain extremely encouraged by the demand patterns we are seeing across most of our end markets and the ability of our teams to capitalize on more than our fair share of that demand. We see this decade as being one of the most exciting for the smart building industry, which Johnson Controls is positioned to lead. Underlying momentum in our short cycle businesses continues to improve despite pressure from ongoing supply chain and component availability constraints.
Our longer cycle install business, driven by the new buildings market, also continues to recover, although extended lead times and inflation are delaying some investment decisions, particularly on larger projects. Retrofit activity remains an important driver of our business, and we see plenty of opportunity to capitalize on this activity going forward. All of that said, we are very mindful of the macro backdrop, and our outlook does not assume any significant near-term improvement in supply chain conditions or inflation over the next couple of quarters. On price cost, given the progressive rise in inflation for almost all input costs throughout the year, we took decisive steps on pricing and cost to stay ahead of the curve, and I am confident we will continue to manage through these challenges. Looking ahead to fiscal 2022, our focus turns to accelerating and demonstrating our growth capabilities.
Our proven product technology leadership, combined now with OpenBlue, truly differentiates the solutions we can bring to our customers. In fact, we believe we are best positioned to lead the revolution of smart buildings, and we are fully committed to creating healthier, safer, and more sustainable buildings. With that, let me turn it over to Olivier to go through the details of the quarter.
Thanks, George, and good morning, everyone. Let me start with a brief financial summary on slide ten. Sales in the quarter were up 5% organically, led by global products, which is truly a reflection of the team's strong execution. Underlying momentum in this business continued to improve as evidenced by mid-single digits growth on a two-year stack basis. Our longer cycle field business continued to recover, led by strong growth in services up 8% in the quarter. Segment EBITA increased 10% versus the prior year, margin expanding 30 basis points to 15.9%. Better leverage on higher volumes, favorable mix, and the incremental benefit of our SG&A actions more than offset the headwind from the reversal of temporary cost reductions and price cost, including significant supply chain disruptions.
EPS was at the high end of our guidance range and increased 16% year-over-year, benefiting from higher profitability as well as lower share count. Free cash flow in the quarter was approximately $200 million, reflecting the reversal of timing benefits experienced in the first three quarters of the year as expected. On a full-year basis, we achieved 105% free cash flow conversion. Please turn to slide 11. Orders for our field businesses increased 9%, led by low double-digit growth in install and strong double-digit growth in retrofit activity. We are also seeing continuous strength in our service business with orders up 7%, driven by strong growth in North America and EMEALA. Backlog grew 10% to more than $10 billion, with service backlog up 5% and install backlog up 11%.
The sequential improvement was led by strong retrofit activity as new construction continues to recover from depressed levels in fiscal 2020, particularly in North America. Turning to our EPS bridge on slide 12, let me touch on a few key items. Overall, operations contributed $0.09 versus the prior year, including a $0.04 benefit from our SG&A productivity program, achieving our targeted savings in fiscal 2021. We are well on track to achieve our SG&A and COGS savings in fiscal 2022 and beyond. Similar to last quarter, excluding the headwind from the prior temporary actions, underlying incrementals in Q4 were approximately 30%. Corporate was a $0.03 headwind year-over-year, and other items netted to a $0.06 tailwind, primarily related to lower share count, lower net financing charges, and FX. Let's discuss our segment results in more detail on slide 13.
My commentary was also referred to the segment and market performance included on slide 14. North America revenue grew 4% organically, led by strength in services, which was higher in all domain. Install revenue was up low single digits, primarily due to strong demand from shorter cycle retrofit and upgrade projects and positive growth in new construction. Both our internal and customer supply chain restrictions negatively impacted our North America install business. By domain, commercial applied HVAC revenue grew mid-single digits, while fire and security increased low single digits in the quarter. We had another strong quarter in performance infrastructure, which grew revenue low double digits, the fifth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth, a good reflection on our customers' demand for decarbonization solution.
Segment margin decreased 20 basis points year-over-year to 15.2%, primarily due to the reversal of temporary costs from the mitigation actions in the prior year. Orders in North America were up 11% versus the prior year, with high single-digit growth in both commercial HVAC and Fire and Security. Performance infrastructure orders were up nearly 40%. Applied HVAC orders increased 10% overall, driven by strong retrofit activity with another strong quarter of equipment orders up over 20% in Q4. Backlog of $6.5 billion increased 10% year-over-year. Revenue in EMEALA increased 3% organically, led by continued strength in our service business, particularly in our applied HVAC and industrial refrigeration businesses.
Fire and Security, which account for nearly 60% of segment revenues, grew at mid single digits rate in Q4, with strength across our enterprise accounts and residential security businesses, including a rebound in our retail platform. Industrial refrigeration also grew mid single digits, while commercial HVAC and controls declined low single digits. By geography, revenue growth was broad-based, with strength in Europe and Latin America partially offset by low double-digit decline in the Middle East. Segment EBITA margins declined 30 basis points, driven by a prior year gain on sales. Underlying margin performance improved as favorable mix, positive price cost, and the benefit of SG&A savings this year more than offset the temporary mitigation actions taken in the prior year. Orders in EMEALA continued to accelerate, increasing 7% in the quarter, with strong mid-teens growth in commercial HVAC and high single-digit growth in fire and security.
APAC revenue increased 7% organically, led by low double-digit growth in commercial HVAC and controls. EBITA margins expanded 80 basis points year over year to 15.5%, driven by a favorable reserve adjustment. APAC underlying margin declined year over year as volume leverage and net productivity was offset by unfavorable mix and negative price cost. APAC orders grew 4%, driven by continued strength in commercial HVAC. Global products revenue grew 7% on an organic basis in the quarter, with broad-based strength across the portfolio. Our global residential HVAC business was up 5% in the quarter. North America resi HVAC grew 4% in the quarter, benefiting from both higher volume and pricing.
Outside of North America, our residential HVAC business grew mid single digits, led by strong double-digit growth in Europe and driven in part by the launch of our new Hitachi air-to-water residential heat pump, which was well received by the market. In APAC, residential HVAC declined low single digits as a result of softer industry demand in Japan, given the COVID-related state of emergency in place for much of the quarter. We continue to gain shares in Japan, up more than 100 basis points in the quarter as we continue to launch new premium products with indoor air quality technologies. Although not reflected in our revenue growth, our Hisense JV revenue grew over 40% year-over-year in Q4, expanding our leading position in China.
Commercial HVAC product sales were up low double digits overall, led by mid-teens growth in our indirect applied business, including strong chiller demand within the data center end market. Light commercial grew high single digits overall, with North America unitary equipment down 2% and VRF up high single digits. Our light commercial business in Asia was up low double digits, including a significant win in Taiwan to supply high-efficiency ductless unit with indoor air quality technology to all schools across the country. Fire and security products grew high single digits in aggregate, led by our access and control and video solutions business and return to pre-pandemic levels for parts of our fire suppression business.
EBITA margin expanded 90 basis points year-over-year to 18.7% as volume leverage, higher equity income, and the benefit of SG&A actions more than offset the temporary cost action in the prior year and price cost, including the significant supply chain disruptions. Turning to slide 15. Corporate expense increased significantly year-over-year, off an abnormal low level to $83 million. For modeling purposes, we have included an outlook for some of our below-the-line items in fiscal year 2022. I will point out that amortization expense reflects the full year run rate impact of Silent-Aire, as well as additional software R&D. Net financing charges return to a more normal level as fiscal 2021 benefited from significant FX gain. Non-controlling interest reflects continued growth in our Hitachi JV. Turning to our balance sheet and cash flow on slide 16.
Our balance sheet remains in great shape. We ended the year with $1.3 billion in available cash and net debt at 1.8x , still below our targeted range of two-2.5x . On cash, we generated a little over $200 million in free cash flow in the quarter, bringing us to nearly $2 billion year to date and achieving our target of 105% conversion for the year. As you will recall from our guidance last quarter, we expected a reversal in some of the timing benefits we experienced earlier in the year. I am extremely pleased with our cash performance and remain confident that we will sustain 100% conversion over the next several years.
During the fourth quarter, we repurchased a little over four million shares for approximately $200 million, which, for the full year, brings us to around 23 million shares, or $1.3 billion. Let's turn to slide 17 for a look at our historical Q1 seasonality. As you can see, Q1 typically represents less than 15% of our full year EPS, given our normal seasonality. For Q1 of fiscal 2022, we expect to be above that level, with Q1 guidance representing about 16% of our full year at the midpoint. Additionally, we expect an improving first half, second half versus historical seasonality. As we look at fiscal 2022 overall on slide 18, we're entering the year with record backlog and underlying markets are continuing to improve.
With that said, we do expect supply chain constraints and the inflationary environment to continue at least over the next couple of quarter. On a full year basis, we expect high single digits organic revenue growth with 70-80 basis points of segment EBITDA margin expansion. Although we expect to remain price cost positive on an EPS basis, the inflated level of pricing will result in margin headwinds of approximately 40 basis points for the year. Underlying margins are expanding to 110-120 basis points. Additionally, we expect another year of strong earnings growth with adjusted EPS in the range of $3.22-$3.32, which represent year-over-year growth of 22%-25%.
Turning to slide 19, we can see that our expectations for fiscal 2022 are very much in line with the growth expectations we provided at our recent Investor Day, and we are accelerating growth in each area. Last, on slide 20, I want to reiterate that we are well on our way to our 2024 target. With that, operator, we can open up the lines for questions.
Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question at this time, please press star one on your phone's keypad. Please make sure your phone is unmuted when recording your name. If at any time your question has been answered, you may press star two to remove yourself from the question queue. In respect of time, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up question. Our first question will come from Nigel Coe of Wolfe Research. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning.
Good morning.
Good morning. Thanks for the details on the business performance. It seems that you're outperforming in a few key areas. North American residential would be one. Seems like the Applied performance is also better than some of the peers we've seen so far. Performance contracting stands out as five quarters now of double-digit growth. I'm just wondering if you can maybe touch on those three areas in a bit more depth. The resi, I think you're still more skewed towards independent distribution, so I'd be curious if you could just maybe break out the sell-in versus sellout performance there? Thanks.
Yeah, Nigel, just for clarification, what was the first comment you made?
Really it's about, I mean, if you could just maybe comment on North American residential performance versus the industry, applied high single-digit growth and then performance contracting. It feels like you're outperforming your competitors. I'm just wondering if you could maybe just comment on how you feel your market shares are performing. You know, and then just on residential, if you could just comment on sell-in versus sellout, in that channel? Thanks.
Sure. If you look at North America and let's focus on the commercial HVAC market, certainly this is a very attractive end market. It has long secular drivers that align very well with our core. As you know, Nigel, we've been investing, nicely reinvesting into our product, and I think overall we're taking share. For the year, we're gonna be up about almost 200 basis points. Big focus on energy efficiency and sustainability, and that's supported with not only our industry-leading chillers, but also now with the new rooftops that we're bringing into the market with low GWP refrigeration that's driving increased efficiency and driving service.
You know, we're investing more heavily now in the next gen air-cooled technologies, electrification with heat pumps and heat transfer units, as well as advanced VRF technology. As you said, we have had strong performance not only in North America, but across the globe, across the board. That's also enabling us to be able to create a very nice install base and get that connected, which drives to longer term services. All of this is being enhanced with our digital capabilities with OpenBlue. Specifically in Applied, when you look at the demand for retrofit opportunities driven by healthy buildings and return to work and school, you know, particularly in North America, that was very strong with our controls airside and filtration. A lot of that's been driven by K- 12.
We also see a strong demand globally for air-cooled chillers and data centers and rental markets, as well as industrial heat pumps in both chiller and air portfolios. When you look at our orders globally in Applied, it's up 11% globally. North America, when you look at purely equipment, it's up kind of mid-20s, which was very strong. That's sequentially to a very strong quarter that we had in the third quarter. Overall, we're gaining nice share, as I said, for the year, up almost 200 basis points. Now, as it relates to on the residential, when we talk about the residential space, we continue to perform very well. When you look at our residential business in ducted, you know, we have a nice backlog.
You know, we're up significantly in backlog, and we're continuing to perform well. We've been investing in new products there and ultimately gaining share, and we feel good about that. Now globally, when you look at the overall position that we have globally in residential, we had decent performance in our JCH business, which was up about 4%. I think as we look at that business, we've been gaining share and continuing to perform with the new products that we've been able to bring to market. You know, although Japan was down 11%, we outperformed in that market. You know that that's a big end market for us. We had strong growth in Europe, which was up about 35%.
As Olivier said that the China Hisense business, the HAPQ, is up over 40%. Overall, we feel good about our overall performance in residential.
Let me comment also on performance infrastructure, Nigel. This is a proxy for what is happening in the market for sustainability. As we put in our opening remarks, orders for this business for the year was growing at 42%, and we are very pleased about how this business is behaving across the globe. We have created a practice now at Johnson Controls fully dedicated to sustainability, and we're very excited by what we can do for our customers on this front, Nigel.
Okay, great. I'll leave it there. Thanks a lot.
Thank you. The next question will come from Gautam Khanna of Cowen. Excuse me. Your line is open.
Yes, thanks. Good morning, guys.
Good morning, Gautam.
Good morning.
Would love to hear your thoughts on service attach rates, you know, sort of this year and what you think the ultimate entitlement is. You know, 40% goes to 50%, does it go to 60%? If you could just talk through the economics, you know, how that bolsters the margins and the like. You know, it looks like you're above your plan, so just wondering if we have a new target out there. Thanks.
Yeah. Let me start. Service has become core to everything we do. We've got an incredible base of service, over $6 billion. We've got about 55% of that recurring, and we're making a lot of progress. You know, certainly not only expanding our market coverage, we've been enhancing our technology and now deploying a lot more digital content within the solutions that we provide to our customers. We've been going after the underserved installed base. With an incredible installed base, we have a material opportunity, and we believe a competitive advantage now with the technology that we're bringing to really create a lot of value. It's got a very attractive margin profile, as you know, 2x the company EBITDA margin.
That all being said, with the investments we've been making, you know, we've been certainly not only as we bring new projects to the field, we're getting a lot more connectivity and getting, you know, attached PSAs. We've been going after the installed base, which historically we had not served. This year, with the work that we did, we got that attach rate up to now 40%. We're continuing to make a lot of progress with that installed base. We're committing another 300-400 basis point improvement in 2022. That's all tied to when you look at, you know, the new services that we're bringing to the market. We're bringing 20 new service products and offerings in 2022 across our domains, leveraging technology and data insights.
That will enable our customers to not only reach their clean air, fire safety and security, as well as sustainability goals. That's gonna be a big focus for us. We believe as we laid out the guidance that we are on track in being able to outperform the market and be able to outperform by roughly 200-300 basis points on a go-forward basis.
Do you have a sense for the upper limit, though, in terms of what that attach rate could get to? You know, 40% goes to 50%, goes to 60%. What do you think the upper limit is? Thank you.
Yeah. We believe, you know, when you look at our technology and our capabilities to truly now differentiate how all of the equipment that's been installed really differentiating the performance. We have the opportunity to go after all of it. Now, that all being said, there's customers that do some of their own self-maintain and the like, but we believe there's gonna be an element of service that we can provide to that entire installed base. We're gonna be driving to, you know, we're attaching on new projects, we're getting a very high attachment.
Now going back after the installed base with these service offerings, which are huge value creators that we have an ability to be able to go after all of that, and we expect it to get to 70%-80% here over the next few years.
The attach rates on new products is indeed very high and very much representative of the quote that George has mentioned, you know, 70%-80% attach.
Thanks very much, guys.
Thank you. The next question will come from Josh Pokrzywinski of Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Good morning, guys.
Good morning.
Morning. So first question on supply chain. George, any revenue or orders for that matter, that got pushed out as a function of what's going on in the market? Then, on the kind of bottlenecks that you guys see, does field labor become an issue as we go through 2022?
Yeah, let me start with the first question there. You know, when you look at what we've done here in the last year, given all of the volatility, I would say that our team is operating at top quartile. That we have been able to navigate and be able to stay ahead of the disruption. We've been working closely with our suppliers, we're working closely with our customers, and ultimately, we've been able to deliver on our commitments. We're gonna stay proactive, we're gonna continue to work it.
With that all being said, we do believe that, you know, in the quarter, that there was probably an impact of about 1%-2% on top line as a result of the shortages that hindered our ability to be able to convert all that we could've. But the team overall has done a great job working with our suppliers to be able to mitigate the impact and ultimately secure the critical materials. Now, as it relates to labor, because of our growth rates and the like, you know, we have had a program management team globally to make sure that we're positioning ourselves to get all of the critical talent that's gonna be required to support the growth strategies that we laid out during the Investor Day, which we feel very good about.
We have been able to stay ahead of the curve in being able to bring on, you know, whether it be the skilled technicians, the technical capability that we need to support OpenBlue, you know, all of the different capabilities to be able to produce. Now, with some of the demand, we've talked a little bit about the accelerated demand in unitary residential as well as rooftops. We've been stretched with capacity. That being said, we have been, you know, bringing on new capacity. We just brought on some additional capacity here in the last month, which will help improve our abilities there.
Overall, I feel very good, given the volatility and our ability to be able to attract and retain the talent we need, and ultimately work with our suppliers and work with our customers in trying to mitigate the impact that we're seeing both in orders as well as our ability to fulfill because of shortages.
I appreciate that, George. Just quick follow-up for Olivier. Can you break out what price and costs are, individually in 2022?
In 2022, the inflation we are planning to have is about 3%-4%. For 2021 was about 2%. The exit rate in 2021 was a bit higher, 2%-3%. For the full year of 2022, 3%-4%. To answer your question on price cost equation, we have a great pricing practice at Johnson Controls. I can go into the details if you have another question on this. We have been in Q4 price cost positive, including excess logistic costs in the equation. We have been price cost positive in the second half, and we are planning to be price cost positive in 2022 as well, including in Q1, Josh.
Perfect. Appreciate the color. Good luck, guys.
Welcome.
Thank you. The next question comes from Scott Davis of Melius Research. Your line is open.
Oh, thank you, operator. Good morning, everybody.
Good morning, Scott.
George, do you mind talking a little bit about this Accenture and Alibaba deal? You know, what exactly are you doing for them? What's the scope, and can it widen out beyond China? Is this some sort of kinda, you know, experimental kinda test and if it goes well you move on or I'll just leave it at that and let you address it.
Yes, Scott. We talked a lot about this at our Investor Day. When you look at what we're doing with OpenBlue and the technology and the domain and expertise that we bring to buildings and infrastructure, how do we build out our ecosystem so that when you look at a holistic solution, we have the right technology partners, and we have the right go-to-market partners? As we've been doing that, we've been working closely with Accenture relative to their capabilities and how we go to market and ultimately driving a full holistic solution around sustainability. Working locally with Alibaba and working with Daniel Zhang relative to getting the technology required to be fully successful within the China market, and being able to serve those customers with our full holistic solution.
We believe the market opportunity, Scott, is multi-billions. With what we're going after, it really ties to our ability to drive decarbonization and obviously with that, more healthy buildings and ultimately connected buildings that drive different outcomes within the infrastructure that we build. We're very excited with the partnership. I think as we deploy our holistic solutions, critical partners in being able to execute.
Okay. Helpful. The labor availability issue, has that been much of an issue for you on the install side, George? Is that a risk in 2022 increasing, or is it decreasing risk?
Like I said on one of the previous questions, I think we've done really well, Scott, in our ability, I think with the continued performance of the company, with the exciting strategy that we have in going after these growth vectors, and then our ability to really attract the talent that we think is critical to being able to be successful. You know, we've had you know, typical challenges here or there, but overall I've been very impressed with the ability to attract. We also use in the install business, to your question on install, we do use you know, contractors or subcontract labor.
We made sure that every step of the way as contingency, we've got the right labor in place, whether it be our direct labor or through our contracted labor. I would tell you that obviously, you know, this was a, let's say, a risk factor that we saw early, and we've been managing it really well and positioning to be able to continue to deliver on the commitments we've made.
An additional point, Scott, our productivity program now, which is ramping and which would impact COGS this year, is also based upon increasing the productivity of our field operation, including the productivity of our engineers. That program is coming also handy at this point in time, and it's helping us also to manage those labor availability challenges you have mentioned.
Okay. Thank you, guys. I appreciate it. Good luck.
Thank you.
Thanks, Scott.
Thank you. The next question comes from Jeff Sprague of Vertical Research. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Two from me, if I might.
Good morning, Jeff.
Good morning. Hey, first, just back to service. I just wonder if you could talk a little bit about, I guess, the phrase I'll use is calorie count. You know, not only is the attachment going up, right? A clear focus here is to add additional services and the like. I just wonder to what degree that is, you know, showing up in what you're putting in your backlog and what that might portend as we look forward another year or two.
Yeah. When you look at, like I said, you know, this has become, you know, a central focus for the entire organization, recognizing that all of the investments we make in products as well as now with OpenBlue, the translation of that, Jeff, is into a solution, into a recurring revenue that ultimately creates more value for our customers, and certainly we get the return through our service margin rates. When you look, the traditional service business, obviously that's come back nicely post-pandemic. The accelerator now is what we're doing with digital, the new OpenBlue offerings. That all is helping us increase attach rates, and then not only attach rates but now additional services, taking the intelligence, applying AI, and ultimately now delivering these new service offerings. As I said through 2021, we delivered 15 new service offerings.
A lot of those were tied to healthy building, sustainability, all of our key growth vectors, and we've been able to build a tremendous pipeline of opportunity that we're now beginning to convert. When you look at service orders, we're up 7%, you know, above the 2019 levels, and we see that continuing with that momentum. Because not only is that we're getting the core businesses coming back, and we're gonna continue to maintain that with the traditional service business that we perform, more important now is the conversion of all of the new services on top of that that has become the accelerator. We believe that we're positioned here well to continue to build backlog, to get more of it recurring, and ultimately, with the value that we create, continued very strong margins on that service going forward.
I'll take Olivier up on his offer to just elaborate a little bit more on price. It does look like, on a price cost basis, you are doing a bit better than some of your peers. I just wonder if you could unpack a little bit, you know, kind of equipment price versus service price. You know, how you got ahead of the curve and, you know, is one side or other of that how service versus equipment really driving the equation. I'll leave it there. Thank you.
Jeff, I'm going to answer to both because really the model we have today covers both. You mentioned that we have executed very well in terms of price cost. Price cost is actually one of the, of course, foundation of our operating model. Let me mention a few levers we're using today. One, we have priced projects through last year, anticipating some level of inflation. That's point number one. Point number two, we had modified about two years ago our contract agreement to allow us to adjust pricing. Point number three, we have identified now because of our business intelligence, part of the market which are less sensitive to price.
Point number four, George mentioned that today, our offering now provide great value to our customers, decarb, sustainability, indoor air quality, and we offer great ROI for our customers and then price to value. Our backlog is now also shorter, so we can adjust pricing faster. On materials, for large part of our whole materials today, we have hedge program covering costs for about six months. Last but not least, across the enterprise at Johnson Controls, our workforce is incentivized to drive pricing rate. As a result all of this, you end up with the results we have been posting, Jeff.
Excellent. Thank you.
The next question comes from Steve Tusa of JP Morgan. Your line is open.
Good morning, everyone. This is Pat on for Steve. A quick question just on the organic growth path for the year. Starting off at mid-single digits in the first quarter and then accelerating to 7%-9% for the year. Can you talk about the levers there? Just trying to understand the visibility of that. Is it supply chain, you know, relief? Is it a ramp in pricing or something else? Just want some color on that. That'd be helpful.
Right. In the growth, we have mentioned high single digits organic growth. Pricing is about 3%-4% in that number. If I decompose the growth by vectors, services is expected to grow 6%-7%. We mentioned why that is at length through some of the questions we had earlier. In terms of install is a very strong business, particularly on the back of retrofit. This is a business we expect to see growing at about 6%-8%. In global products, we expect this business to grow in the low teens. It's a strong vector of growth for Johnson Controls. Our team is doing great work launching new products. The new products we're going to launch next year is accelerating. We mentioned more than 175.
We launched about 150 this year. A large proportion of those products use heat pump as our key technology. We believe that today we have many vectors to grow the enterprise, leveraging also the secular trends impacting this industry. Decarbonization, indoor air quality, digitalization of the building space. We are very excited about what we have in front of us and also what we're building at Johnson Controls, Steve.
I think I appreciate the color. What I guess what I was really asking is first quarter, you're guiding up mid-single digits%. The year, you're guiding up 7%-9%. What drives the ramp from mid-single digits% in the first quarter, specifically, to kind of that high single% for the year? You expect growth to ramp through the year.
Yes. We do. The vectors of growth are going to deliver more. Sustainability will drive more of the growth. Service will drive more of the growth. You see the acceleration of the various vectors being at play across the year.
Okay.
I would say there's still a little bit of pressure similar to what we saw in fourth quarter relative to our ability to convert. Again, it's minimal.
Understood. Then my follow-up is on the, there's been a lot going on in the portfolio the last couple of years, so hard to get a read on normal seasonality, but you mentioned it in the slide. You said first quarter is typically 15%. What do you consider to be normal seasonality for second quarter, third quarter, and fourth quarter? If we get some color on that would be helpful in modeling. I guess we should assume second quarter is above normal, just like first quarter is, given your first half, second half comments.
It's a very precise question. Typically, the first half as Johnson Controls has represented about 30% of the total year, we believe will be in the mid-30s in the first half. Considering, by the way, the supply chain constraints we are seeing today. It's factored in that statistic.
Very clear. Thanks so much for the details.
Welcome.
Thank you. The next question comes from Julian Mitchell of Barclays. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning. Just wanted to touch on more incremental margins and sort of operating leverage. It looks like you're dialing in maybe a mid-20s rate for the year, closer to 20% incrementals for the first quarter. Is the key headwind sort of for the year just all about price-cost? You know, anything else to call out, and maybe help us understand how you see that 40 basis points price-cost margin headwind sort of phasing through the year?
You're right. The incremental in the P&L are in the range of mid-20s or 25%. As you said, for price cost, it would be in the 35% range. Meaning we are aligned to what we had communicated to you. Our productivity program is intact. We expect to have a net saving of about $230 million this year, which will flow to the bottom line. In addition to that, we'll have a 30 basis points improvement in margin. If you look at the phasing, the 40 basis points impact in margin for the year is going to be a bit higher in Q1, slightly higher. I want to be precise again, this is important. Price cost positive in dollar, dilutive in rate, including also extra freight cost, for example. Julian.
Thanks very much. Just secondly, maybe switching to the revenue line, maybe just fill in a bit more detail the assumptions for organic growth this year. You know, what's underpinning the sort of Fire and Security assumptions versus, say, commercial HVAC in terms of applied and unitary. That would be helpful, just what you're dialing into that 7%-9% for those main pieces.
The commercial HVAC will grow slightly faster than fire and security. Fire and security is going to grow well as well. That's why we anticipate. The reason for this is that fire and security, this portfolio is totally part of our digital offering in the context of a smart building solution. Those two businesses are going to grow. And you know that as well, Julian, fire and security has a very attractive margin profile, and more and more of those devices are actually sensors in the building, allowing us to develop digital twins and the like.
Yeah, Julian, I think it's important to note that on the short cycle fire and security business, it's coming back very nicely. We saw our products business up 9%. We've got great backlogs there, so that's continuing. The field-based business has been a little bit slower on the recovery because they don't, you know, we don't have the focus on clean air and all of the work we did with our HVAC and a lot of the focus on short term on sustainability. We see some nice trends here, so through the course of the year, we'll continue to accelerate, but it'll be short of what we see commercial HVAC to be for the year.
Great. Thank you.
Welcome, Julian.
Thank you. The next question comes from Deane Dray of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone.
Morning.
Morning, Deane.
I'd just like to follow up on Julian's first question and just make sure I understood Olivier's answer. The question is the clarification on underlying margins, EBITDA being 70%-80% up in fiscal 2022. The cost takeout program, that net of 230, that should contribute 90 basis points, if I've got the math right. Does that imply the underlying margins are worse, or is this just, you know, an element of conservativeness at the beginning of the year?
You're right. If you factor the impact of the COGS and productivity program is close to a point, you will have to factor also Silent-Aire in the equation, which is dilutive in rate. We see today net of the price-cost. I've mentioned the 40 basis point. If you do the math, you end up with a margin expansion higher than 100 basis points, 110-120. As I indicated, our margin profile is improving because of the value we're offering and our productivity program is well on track.
All right. That's really helpful. I'm glad you pointed that out. Second question, George, can you talk about the outcome or performance-based contract growth assumption for 2022? We've seen this ramp pretty impressively from, I think it was 2% in 2020, 15% at one point in 2021. What's the assumption for 2022?
Yeah. As we look at this business, we have a lot of conversion coming from what would have been conventional business to now incorporating that business into solutions, differentiated solutions. As we look at, for instance, the partnership we have with Apollo, and this is the focus on decarbonization and sustainability, we've got a pipeline that we're working that's over $1 billion in how we're gonna convert. Now some of this depends on the timing of conversion of orders, but we're making tremendous progress. Right now, you know, working a number of these and working to convert a number of these.
It's hard to say exactly what's gonna ultimately come through performance contracting and then what we would still gain if it were not to be the full solution, what we would gain in our traditional HVAC businesses. Deane, this is gonna be, when you look at our vectors of growth, decarbonization and sustainability, healthy buildings, and then ultimately smart buildings, a lot of our go-to-market would be, you know, we actually deliver an outcome solution. A lot of that will be done long term with under performance contracting. We've got a leadership position today with our performance contracting business that ultimately has been focused on energy savings. We've expanded that, and now with our go-to-market, we have, I believe, tremendous potential here over the next few years to make this much more significant within the portfolio.
I feel really good about it, and it's gonna continue to grow.
Appreciate it. Thank you.
The pipeline statistic, Deane, we mentioned, this part of the pipeline at Johnson Controls is the one growing the fastest by a margin.
That's helpful. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from Noah Kaye of Oppenheimer. Your line is open.
Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Just a capital allocation question. Obviously, you provide a lot of color on the framework in Investor Day, but for 2022, can you first comment on the M&A pipeline strength, whether you're seeing some HVAC consolidation opportunities or other growth opportunities that are interesting? You know, excluding any potential M&As is sort of the default assumption and guidance that substantially all free cash flow is returned to shareholders.
If you look at the free cash flow, we said that in our prepared remarks, we are very convinced that we are 100% plus free cash flow conversion company. We had a great performance in 2021. Because of the strong free cash flow, we're going to do two things. One, grow dividend aligned with earnings. Two, deploy $1.4 billion of buyback in 2022, more or less equally distributed among the four quarters. On top of that, we believe, as we have said during Investor Days, we will add one-two points of revenue growth through M&A while staying into our leverage guide of two-2.5. M&A being focused on services, digital, decarbonization, mainly. The pipeline is growing nicely.
We have a new team today leading this particular part at Johnson Controls, and we're very pleased with the progress we're making in growing the pipeline.
Perfect, Olivier. Then just as a follow-up on that, you know, with the Silent-Aire acquisition, you know, clearly you signaled you're able to do more deals of that size. Can you just comment on whether or not that pipeline is accelerating in terms of, you know, the flow and inbound inquiries? You know, should that one-two points that you expect this year, do you view that as sustainable over a multi-year period?
Yeah. Let me take that. Certainly this was directly aligned with this acquisition with our overall capital allocation M&A strategies right down the middle, a nice bolt-on, and overall we're extremely pleased with the progress we're making. There's just a phenomenal opportunity here going forward. The data center market's a $16 billion market. You know, we have 5% share, and we have the opportunity to now leverage our entire footprint now to take advantage in a much bigger way of the global market. You know, we see that growth to be very strong going forward. We're continuing to build the pipeline. We're expanding the customer base that we're beginning engagements with and how we innovate and serve their data center needs going forward.
On a go-forward basis, it's gonna be one of the significant growth contributors to the company.
Great. Thanks very much.
Thank you.
At this time, I would like to turn the call back over to George Oliver for closing remarks.
Yeah, let me wrap up the call here today. I wanna thank everyone again for joining our call this morning. As we discussed here this morning, we had a very strong finish to the fiscal year. Certainly the underlying momentum that we're seeing in our businesses is extremely encouraging as we enter fiscal 2022. I think it's important to note that the growth accelerators are ramping and are well on our way to achieving our fiscal year 2024 targets that we laid out back in September. We all look forward to continuing our discussion, speaking with many of you soon during the conferences. On that, operator, that concludes our call.
Thank you all for your participation on today's conference call. At this time, all parties may disconnect.