Good morning. This is Kasey Jenkins, Chief Strategy Officer and Senior Vice President, Investor Relations. Thank you for joining today's third quarter earnings call. To accompany this call, we've posted a set of slides at ir.mccormick.com. With me this morning are Lawrence Kurzius, Chairman and CEO, Brendan Foley, President and COO, and Mike Smith, Executive Vice President and CFO. During this call, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures. The nature of those non-GAAP financial measures and the related reconciliation to the GAAP results are included in this morning's press release and slides. In our comments, certain percentages are rounded. Please refer to our presentation for complete information. Today's presentation contains projections and other forward-looking statements. Actual results could differ materially from those projected. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statement, whether because of new information, future events, or other factors.
Please refer to our forward-looking statement on slide two for more information. I will now turn the discussion over to Lawrence.
Good morning, everyone. Thanks for joining us. Third quarter sales increased 3% from the year-ago period as anticipated. In constant currency, sales grew 6%, reflecting 10% growth from pricing actions, partially offset by a 1% decline from the Kitchen Basics divestiture, the 1% decline attributable to the exits of low-margin business in India and the Consumer business in Russia, and a 2% decline in all other volume and product mix. Our underlying third quarter growth reflects the strength of our broad global portfolio, as well as the effective execution of our strategies and pricing actions against the backdrop of a volatile operating environment. Using 2019 as a pre-pandemic baseline, third quarter sales grew at a constant currency three-year compounded annual growth rate, or CAGR, of 7%, reflecting the sustained momentum in our business across both our Consumer and Flavor Solution segments.
Moving to profit, adjusted operating income was down 12%, or 11% in constant currency, and adjusted earnings per share was down 14%. During the third quarter, supply chain challenges continued and recovery of certain constrained materials is taking longer than expected. We continue to incur elevated costs to meet high demand in our Flavor Solutions segment, while in our Consumer segment, where demand moderated from elevated consumption trends more quickly than expected, we are experiencing lower than optimal operating leverage. Across the supply chain, we remain focused on managing inventory levels and eliminating inefficiencies, though the normalization of our supply chain costs is taking longer than expected, pressuring gross margin and profit realization in the current period. Over the coming months, we will be aggressively eliminating supply chain inefficiencies.
Importantly, as we had expected in the third quarter, our price increases are catching up with the pace of cost inflation in both segments. We began to recover the cost inflation that had been outpacing our pricing actions and other levers, most significantly in the Consumer segment. We expect this will continue into the next year as we plan to fully offset inflation over time. Before discussing our third quarter segment performance in more detail, I'd like to comment on our supply chain plans, starting on slide five. We have a focused plan in flight that leverages the discipline of our established comprehensive continuous improvement, or CCI program, to ensure that we are able to flexibly support customer demand, both where it has been sustained at higher levels and where it has moderated, while eliminating inefficiencies and normalizing both our cost structure and inventory levels. Our actions are well underway.
Our top supply chain priority remains keeping our customers in supply and supporting their growth. There are areas of our business that have sustained high levels of demand for an extended period, and our supply chain has been pressured to meet this demand. We have several initiatives in progress that will increase our capacity, strengthen our supply chain resiliency, and importantly, enable us to service our customers so they can grow their business. For example, we're investing in additional Flavor Solutions seasoning capacity, which will be online in early 2023. We're expanding FONA's footprint to support our flavor growth. We recently opened our new U.K. Peterborough Flavor Solutions manufacturing facility to support our strong growth momentum with quick service restaurants. Just earlier this week, the first pallet was shipped from our new Maryland logistics center.
From a cost perspective, as we responded to demand volatility over the past several years, we have incurred additional costs above inflation to service our customers and have seen inefficiencies develop in our supply chain. These are costs we have absorbed. We have not passed them to customers in our pricing actions. We are targeting to eliminate at least $100 million of these costs with a significant benefit in 2023. We're moving aggressively to take these costs and inefficiencies out, as well as normalize inventory levels that have built up. Some of our actions include investing to increase both manufacturing capacity and reliability in bottleneck areas to enable better customer service and repatriation of production from excessive use of co-packers. We're returning to more normal shift schedules and reducing our spend on extensive surge capacity.
We are already seeing the benefit of lower overtime and temporary labor reductions. In this more normalized environment, as well as through customer collaboration, we are already beginning to reduce expedited freight costs and less than truckload shipping costs, as well as other transportation inefficiencies. We are resolving raw material and packaging supply issues. For example, we are beyond the shortages of glass bottles and certain organic spices which impacted supply of our U.S. gourmet line. A supplier facility closure announced in September drove the discontinuation of a component of our dry recipe mix packaging, and through our quick qualification of alternative suppliers, we mitigated a major disruption during the fourth quarter. Long-running shortage of French's mustard bottles will be resolved in the first half of 2023 as new molds come online at a second supplier.
From an inventory perspective, we are also executing on plans to return to historical safety stock levels, which were raised to protect against supply disruption. We expect the impact of our actions will normalize our supply chain costs, increase our efficiency and ability to meet demand, lower our inventory levels, and importantly, increase our profit realization beginning in the first half of 2023. We have managed through various supply chain challenges over the last several years with the peak disruption experienced in the third quarter of last year. Since then, there has been steady improvement, building progress and bolstering our confidence in our plan to enhance our operational performance and optimize our cost structure. While we will always prioritize meeting our customers' needs, I'm encouraged by our disciplined approach to resolving the increased costs within our supply chain.
We've continued to define and quantify specific actions within our plan since we shared we would be driving the elimination of the supply chain inefficiencies in our pre-announcement last month. We look forward to sharing more details and progress with you in January when we provide our 2023 outlook. Now, moving to third quarter business updates for each of our segments. Starting with our Consumer segment on slide six and the status of our pricing actions, our third quarter sales reflect the impact of our pricing actions in all three regions with an acceleration of effective pricing in the quarter versus the first half of the year, in line with what we expected. While broad pressure on consumers' cost of living from inflation, which heightened during our third quarter, has resulted in higher price elasticity than we originally anticipated, our elasticities remain lower than historical levels.
In our most recent pricing actions, which in the U.S. took effect as we began our fourth quarter, we focused on areas that are less elastic and did not take pricing on some products where we had seen the highest elasticity. Now for some further highlights by region, starting with the America. Our total U.S. branded portfolio consumption, as indicated by our IRI consumption data and combined with unmeasured channels, grew 4% in line with our shipments. Over the last three years, since 2019, consumption has grown at a three-year CAGR of 8%, which highlights how the sustained shift in consumer consumption continues to drive increased demand for our products and outpace pre-pandemic levels. In early August, we divested our Kitchen Basics business.
We consistently grew this brand over the years, but as it was the only U.S. brand we had in the stock and broth aisle, our resources were better focused on core categories where we have leading brands. Demand has remained high with strong growth in the majority of our categories. Spices and seasonings has been one of our strongest categories in the past three years, and as a result, we are lapping all-time highs in consumption. This has created challenging comparisons in some product lines, such as baking-related items, which have returned to a pre-pandemic level unlike most of our categories. Grilling-related items were impacted versus last year by high meat prices, although grilling is still strong versus pre-pandemic. Sales conditions continue to improve, as seen in our recipe mix share performance with the fourth consecutive quarter of share gain.
Our spices and seasoning share was pressured by service-related distribution losses, a shortage of certain packaging items, as well as certain organic spices, which has largely been resolved, and some trading down by consumers who remain under pressure from broad-based inflation. We are using our category and revenue management capabilities to strengthen our spices and seasoning presence on shelf. The strength of our brands and our category leadership has recently won us new distribution, which we're beginning to realize now. In EMEA, we continue to have solid share performance in herbs, spices, and seasonings in the U.K., Eastern Europe, and Italy, somewhat offset by softer performance in France. We're continuing to gain share on Frank's RedHot in the U.K., and we are beginning to build momentum with Cholula as we expand that brand into this market.
For the quarter and year-to-date versus last year, as well as since 2019, we are driving the U.K. hot sauce category growth. Our Vahiné brand of homemade dessert products in France, a product line unique to our EMEA region, has slowed as we have seen baking return to a more pre-pandemic baseline level in EMEA too, again unlike our other categories. Turning to the Asia Pacific region, last year the region experienced supply chain challenges such as ocean freight capacity constraints, and lapping that impact contributed to growth in the third quarter. Additionally, following an extended lockdown in the second quarter, COVID restrictions in Shanghai and some other cities throughout China eased as we began the third quarter, resulting in trade and pantry replenishments contributing to growth.
Recently, several cities in central China, which is the primary market of our Wuhan operations, have experienced new COVID-related lockdowns, and we're continually monitoring the situation. Overall, our China performance is on track with our expectations. Across all regions in our Consumer segment, we are achieving the price realization we expected, and we're executing on our proven growth strategies, pivoting action plans as needed based on our consumer insights and the environment. We continue to invest behind our brands. We increased brand marketing investments in the third quarter and have additional investments planned for the fourth quarter. In addition to our highly effective and inspiring holiday messaging, we have pivoted our digital messaging to emphasize value and show consumers how our products help them stretch their grocery dollars without sacrificing flavor. We are focusing our innovation efforts to meet the needs of consumers concerned about their budgets.
In the Americas, we have launched a new Lawry's branded opening price point range of everyday ten spices, and our large size format, Super Deal, is one of the best performing product lines as consumers are looking for greater value. This format size is approximately 40% better value per ounce than the smaller sizes. We've also launched large size resealable pouches of top selling items in markets across all regions. In terms of category management, we are collaborating with our customers to ensure the right assortment and price points on shelf to optimize category performance and increase profitability for our customers. As always, we have a strong merchandising program planned for the holiday season. We are confident in our brand marketing investments, innovation, and category management initiatives, which will continue to drive strong growth. Turning to Flavor Solutions on slide eight.
Our sales performance for the quarter was strong, with growth led by our pricing actions in all three regions, with an increase in our effective pricing versus the first half of the year, as we expected. Now for some regional highlights. In the Americas, strong growth was driven by snack seasonings, savory flavors, and branded food service products. Demand continues to strengthen with branded food service restaurant and institutional food service customers as mobility and strong summer travel continue to fuel consumption. Importantly, we also are expanding distribution. In EMEA, growth remains strong across our entire customer base. Our third quarter growth was led by strong quick service restaurant, or QSR, momentum in all markets, partially driven by expanded distribution and our customers' promotional activities. We're seeing an acceleration of demand in branded food service as customers shift to more economical formats.
Our full spectrum of solutions across price points is driving growth. We are winning in both regions with our new product momentum. In Americas, growth from new products contributed approximately 25% more growth in flavors in the third quarter than the year ago period, driven by beverage, savory snacks, and performance nutrition flavors. We're continuing to win share in these categories. In EMEA, our third quarter new product launches accelerated versus earlier in the year. For the full year, we expect new product introductions to outpace 2021. We are fueling future growth. In APZ, we're driving further menu penetration with our QSR customers, winning new limited time offers, as well as realizing growth from strong performance of their core menu items we flavor. In many cases, we are the heat in their spicy offerings.
Overall, Flavor Solutions has remained strong, and for certain parts of our business in the Americas and EMEA regions, our supply chain continues to be pressured to meet this high demand. As I said earlier, we are still taking on some extraordinary costs to service our customers. We appreciate our customers working with us, and we see light ahead. Now, some summary comments before turning it over to Mike. Turning to slide nine. Global demand for flavor remains the foundation of our sales growth, and we have intentionally focused on great, fast-growing categories that will continue to differentiate our performance. We continue to capitalize on the long-term consumer trends that accelerated during the pandemic, healthy and flavorful cooking, increased digital engagement, trusted brands, and purpose-minded practices.
These long-term trends and the rising global demand for great taste are more relevant today than ever, with the younger generations fueling them at a greater rate. McCormick is uniquely positioned to capitalize on this demand for great taste. With the breadth and reach of our strong global flavor portfolio, we are delivering flavor experiences for every meal occasion through our products and our customers' products and are driving growth. We are end-to-end flavor. We remain focused on the long-term goals, strategies, and values that have made us so successful. We have grown and compounded that growth over the years, including through the pandemic and other periods of volatility. Our solid track record of achieving our long-term objectives highlights the resiliency of our business through a variety of market conditions, as well as our focus on sales growth and profit realization.
The long-term fundamentals that drove our industry-leading historical performance remain strong. The strength of our business model, the value of our products and capabilities, and the execution of our proven strategies by our experienced leaders while adapting to changes accordingly give us confidence in our growth momentum and in our ability to navigate the global dynamic environment. The compounding benefits of our relentless focus on growth, performance, and people continues to position McCormick to drive sales growth and balance with our focus on lowering costs to expand margins, realize long-term sustainable earnings growth. The teamwork of our McCormick employees drive our momentum and success, and I want to thank them for their dedicated efforts and engagement. Now I will turn it over to Mike.
Thanks, Lawrence, and good morning, everyone. Starting on slide 12, our top line constant currency sales grew 6% compared to the third quarter of last year, including a 1% unfavorable impact from the Kitchen Basics divestiture, as well as a 1% impact from the exits of low margin business in India and the Consumer business in Russia. In our Consumer segment, we drove constant currency sales growth of 4%, with 10% related to pricing actions, partially offset by a 1% impact from the Kitchen Basics divestiture, as well as lower volume, with the exits of low margin business in India and the Consumer business in Russia contributing a combined 1% impact to the lower volume. On a three-year basis, our third quarter constant currency sales CAGR was 6%.
On slide 13, consumer sales in the Americas increased 3% in constant currency, driven by pricing actions partially offset by a decline in volume, as well as a 1% impact from the Kitchen Basics divestiture. As Lawrence mentioned, the volume decline was impacted not only by elasticities, but also by constrained supply of certain input materials, primarily packaging items. Over the past three years, constant currency sales in the Americas grew at a CAGR of 6%. In EMEA, constant currency consumer sales declined 1%, which included a 3% unfavorable impact from lower sales in Russia. Growth in other markets was driven by pricing actions, partially offset by lower volume, with the most significant volume impact attributable to lower sales of Vahiné homemade dessert products. Over the past three years, EMEA's constant currency sales grew at a 3% CAGR.
Constant currency consumer sales in the Asia Pacific region grew 10%, including a 7% unfavorable impact from the exit of low margin business in India. As Lawrence mentioned, growth was driven by higher volume, mainly attributable to trade and pantry replenishments in China following the extended Shanghai lockdown last quarter, as well as the region lapping supply chain challenges in the year ago period. Pricing actions in all markets across the region also contributed to growth. On a three-year basis, APZ's third quarter constant currency sales grew at a 4% CAGR. Turning to our Flavor Solutions segment and slide 16, we grew third quarter constant currency sales 10%, primarily due to pricing actions, with higher volume and product mix also contributing to growth. Third quarter constant currency sales for the last three years grew at an 8% CAGR.
In the Americas, Flavor Solutions' constant currency sales grew 10% driven by pricing. Higher sales to packaged food and beverage companies with particular strength in snack seasonings led the growth. Higher demand from branded food service customers also contributed to growth. Over the past three years, constant currency sales in the Americas grew at a CAGR of 8%. In EMEA, we drove 11% constant currency sales growth, with 7% related to price actions and 4% volume and mix. EMEA's Flavor Solutions growth, excluding a 1% decline related to lower sales in Russia, was broad-based across its portfolio, led by strong growth with QSR, branded food service, and packaged food and beverage company customers. Over the past three years, EMEA's constant currency sales growth was 9% CAGR.
In the Asia Pacific region, Flavor Solutions sales grew 11% in constant currency, with pricing actions and higher volume contributing to the increase. Growth was driven by higher sales to QSR customers, in part due to the timing of the promotional activities. APZ grew constant currency sales at a 6% CAGR over the past three years. As seen on slide 20, adjusted gross profit margin declined 320 basis points in the third quarter versus the year ago period. Let me spend a moment on the significant drivers. First, almost 80% of this decline, approximately 250 basis points, is due to the dilutive impact of pricing to offset our dollar cost increases. Next, I'll cover the impact of supply chain challenges on gross margin.
In our Flavor Solutions segment, we have continued to incur elevated costs to meet high demand for certain parts of that business, and there has also been an unfavorable impact from the startup and dual running costs as we transition production to our new U.K. Peterborough manufacturing facility. In our Consumer segment, where demand has moderated more quickly than we expected, we are experiencing lower operating leverage. Overall, while the normalization of our supply chain cost is taking longer than expected, pressuring gross margin, we are taking actions to normalize our costs, as Lawrence mentioned, which we are confident will be reflected in our 2023 gross margin. Partially offsetting these impacts I just mentioned were our CCI-led cost savings, where we are on track to deliver our expected savings of $85 million for the full year.
Finally, of note, in line with our expectations, the impact of our pricing actions in the third quarter began outpacing cost inflation in both segments, more significantly in the Consumer segment. We expect pricing to continue outpacing inflation into next year as we plan to fully offset inflation over time. Overall, our cost recovery and gross margin improvement will vary by region and segment, with a slower Flavor Solutions recovery. Importantly, though, we have now passed the inflection point with significant gross margin improvement since last quarter, driven by our Consumer segment performance, and we expect further improvement in the fourth quarter. Now, moving to slide 21. Selling, general, and administrative expenses, or SG&A, were comparable to the third quarter of last year, with higher distribution costs and brand marketing investments offset by lower employee benefit expenses.
As a percent of net sales, SG&A declined 60 basis points. The net impact of the factors I just mentioned resulted in a constant currency decline in adjusted operating income, which excludes special charges and transaction and integration costs of 11% compared to the third quarter of 2021. In the Consumer segment, adjusted operating income declined 1% in constant currency, and in the Flavor Solution segment, it declined 34%. Turning to income taxes on slide 22. Our third quarter adjusted effective tax rate was 21.2% compared to 14.1% in the year ago period. Both periods were favorably impacted by discrete tax items with a more significant impact last year. At the bottom line, as shown on slide 23, third quarter 2022 adjusted earnings per share was $0.69 as compared to $0.80 for the year ago period.
The decrease was driven by our lower adjusted operating income. A favorable impact from optimizing our debt portfolio in the third quarter was fully offset by the impact of higher adjusted effective tax rate in the third quarter of this year. On slide 24, we summarize highlights for cash flow and the quarter end balance sheet. Our cash flow from operations was $250 million through the third quarter of 2022, which is lower than the same period last year. This decrease was primarily driven by lower net income and higher inventory levels. We returned $298 million of cash to our shareholders through dividends and used $167 million for capital expenditures through the third quarter.
Our priority is to continue to have a balanced use of cash, funding investments to drive growth, returning a significant portion to our shareholders through dividends and paying down debt. While our fourth quarter has historically generated our highest cash flow from operations, based on our current profit outlook and working capital position, we do not expect to delever to our targeted net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio of approximately 3x by the end of fiscal 2022. We remain committed to a strong investment grade rating, and we have a history of strong cash generation and profit realization. With our improving gross margin, as well as our plan to normalize our supply chain costs and inventory levels, we will be better positioned to continue paying down debt. Now turning to our 2022 financial outlook on slide 25.
We are projecting strong top-line growth with profit impacted by cost inflation and supply chain challenges. We also expect there will be a 3 percentage point unfavorable impact of currency rates on sales and a 2 percentage point unfavorable impact on adjusted operating income and adjusted earnings per share. On the top line, we expect to grow constant currency sales 3%-5%. We expect sales to be driven primarily by pricing. While we anticipate volume and product mix to be impacted by price elasticities, we expect elasticity to remain at a lower rate than historical levels, given our focused approach led by consumer insights.
Our volume and product mix will also be impacted by the divestiture of our Kitchen Basics business, the demand disruptions experienced in China, and the exit of our Consumer business in Russia, as well as continual pruning of lower margin business from our portfolio. We plan to drive continued growth through the strength of our brands as well as our category management, brand marketing, new product, and customer engagement growth plans. We are projecting our 2022 adjusted gross profit margin to be 350 basis points-300 basis points lower than 2021, primarily driven by our Flavor Solutions segment. Given the rapidly escalating cost environment this year, cost inflation outpaced pricing in the first half of the year. We expect pricing to outpace inflation in the second half of the year and continue into next year.
This adjusted gross margin compression reflects the impact of a high-teens increase in cost inflation, higher supply chain costs, lower operating leverage, an unfavorable impact of sales mix between segments, and favorable impact from pricing and CCI-led cost savings. As a reminder, we have priced to offset dollar cost increases. This has a dilutive impact on our adjusted gross margin and is the primary driver of our projected compression. We expect our adjusted operating income to decline 11% to 9% in constant currency. In addition to our gross margin impacts I just mentioned, this projection also includes our CCI-led cost savings target of approximately $85 million and a low single-digit increase in brand marketing investments compared to 2021. We are projecting our 2022 adjusted effective income tax rate to be approximately 22%.
This outlook is expected to be a year-over-year headwind to our 2022 adjusted earnings per share of approximately 2%. We are projecting our 2022 adjusted earnings per share to be in the range of $2.63-$2.68 as compared to $3.05 in 2021. This projection includes a $0.02 unfavorable impact from the divestiture of the Kitchen Basics business. As we currently progress in our fourth quarter, we are confident in delivering our 2022 outlook, continuing our strong top-line growth trajectory, and as our guidance implies, delivering fourth quarter operating margin expansion while executing on a focused plan to drive improvement in our cost structure.
We are targeting to eliminate at least $100 million of these costs, or approximately a 150 basis point impact to our operating margin. With our proven track record of delivering CCI-led savings to fuel growth investments and expand our operating margin, we are leveraging the discipline of the CCI program to aggressively eliminate costs and inefficiencies. Overall, we are confident our focus on profit realization will drive margin improvement. While parts of our plan to optimize our cost structure will take longer than others, we expect to begin seeing the benefits of our actions in the first half of 2023. We look forward to sharing more details on progress with you in January when we provide our 2023 outlook.
Thank you, Mike. Now that Mike has shared our financial results and outlook in more detail, I'd like to recap the key takeaways as seen on slide 26. Our third quarter sales performance reflects the strength of our broad global portfolio and the effective execution of our strategies against the backdrop of a volatile operating environment. Our sales growth momentum is strong. Though challenges in our supply chain have taken longer to normalize, we have now passed an inflection point. We've begun to recover the cost inflation that has been outpacing our pricing actions while executing on a plan to aggressively eliminate supply chain costs. We expect 2022 fourth quarter operating margin expansion and continued improvement into 2023. Our long-term performance, including through periods of volatility, has been industry-leading, and long-term fundamentals that drove this historical performance remain strong.
We have a proven track record of execution and are confident we will successfully navigate this dynamic environment for our future sustainable growth and build long-term value for our shareholders. Now, let's turn to your questions.
Thank you. We'll now be conducting the question-and-answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star one from your telephone keypad, and a confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question is from the line of Ken Goldman with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your questions.
Hi. Thanks so much.
Hey, good morning, Ken, by the way.
Hi, good morning. You highlighted that you're past the inflection point, right? Where your pricing's now ahead of your costs. This, of course, is natural, right, given the timing, and not unexpected. You know, one of the pushbacks we hear on the industry is that larger retail customers, as they start to, I guess, maybe notice these margin trends, they'll start to ask for a bigger piece of the profit pie. I guess my question is, you know, to what extent do you expect sort of these gross margin net tailwinds to be sustainable? Or, you know, is it reasonable to expect maybe some pressure from customers as they see their vendors' margins starting to get better?
Well, I think that, there's always some tension when you're talking about pricing and margins with customers. I don't wanna get into anything with any one specific customer, but really right now, all of our customers recognize that inflation is ongoing and we, you know, continue to have, you know, you know, I'd say productive pricing discussions, you know, with our customers. We, you know, we just did take another round, that is effective here in our fourth quarter, and we're really not seeing that kind of pushback right now.
I think the reality, Ken, is we're still recovering. You know, our pace of pricing has caught up now with cost. Like we said, we'll recover dollar for dollar in 2023. But we've you know, there is a trend that is going in the right direction. Obviously, as you know, as we look at 2023, we'll look at you know, what's the cost environment, things like that we need to do again next year, but that's still kind of real.
I think particularly on the Flavor Solutions side of the business, we still have, you know, more work to do.
Got it. Thank you. For my follow-up, you're guiding to at least $100 million of incremental cost savings. It's not a small number, so I just wanted to get a little bit of clarification. How much of that is incremental to ongoing CCI? And how much of that is derived from maybe a normalization of certain factors such as inventories versus what you would consider more, I guess, discrete savings beyond that?
Well, first of all of this is incremental to our normal CCI program. We're using the processes and the organization talent that drives our CCI program to actually execute on these. This is incremental savings. Although you know some of the you know I would characterize as a one-time takeout. It goes straight to run rate. You know these are incremental costs that we have incurred due to you know expensive surge capacity you know some of the things we talked about in our prepared remarks you know over time temporary labor inefficient shifts you know excessive use of co-packers a lot of premium transportation charges.
We expect to get that out of our system, get back to our pre-pandemic operating standards. We would expect, you know, while this is, you know, a one-time takeout, it goes straight to run rate.
Understood. Thanks so much. Yep, very clear.
Our next question is from the line of Robert Moskow with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, thanks. Flavor Solutions is really the division that has stumbled the most. I mean, when I look at profit this year compared to like pre-pandemic, it's well below your pre-pandemic levels. Can I assume that most of the $100 million in savings or recovery is gonna happen there? My second question is. I remember years and years ago that the Flavor Solutions had problems because it was trying to do too many things for too many customers. It had spread itself too thin. It needed eventually to have a rationalization of its customer base. I wanted to make sure that that's not possibly one of the root causes today. You know, you've grown your sales a lot.
Do you feel like the organization is capable of still getting back to, like, 12% operating margin across all of those customers?
Yeah. You know, I think that stumble is the wrong way to characterize it. I think that we're a bit of a victim of our own success. You know, we've won a lot of new business, and we prioritize, you know, keeping our customers in stock and supplying them. And that has put a lot of pressure on our supply chain in a few areas. We've got projects underway to address the, you know, kind of a normalization of our production and, you know, through capacity additions.
You know, some of these wins are substantial, and we've had real brick-and-mortar projects that take a couple of years to put into place that are coming online right now and that are gonna get at a lot of the, you know, extraordinary costs. You know, there's some parts of our business. You know, the 24/7 shifts that we've gotten out of in most of our business, you know, we're still doing that in parts our Flavor Solutions business. Well, I wouldn't say a lot of parts of our Flavor Solutions business, and that is a less efficient shift pattern, even though it does, you know, get you some capacity. That'd be an example of expensive surge capacity.
You know, we've got new seasonings capacity coming online in the Americas. You know, some of it now, some of it in the early part of 2023. We're starting up a new Flavor Solutions plant in the U.K. We've got expanded distribution that's shipping, we're really starting to ship right now. You know, I think that we've got a lot going for us in Flavor Solutions to support that strong growth in a more efficient way.
You know, the margin issue on Flavor Solutions partly is just the way our contractual arrangements work, you know, with our customers. You know, there is a pass-through mechanism for the major raw materials that go into their products. There's a lag to it. You know, at times when inflation was, you know, 1%, 2%, 3%, that lag really wasn't important. You know, this year where it's been double digits, it has been important. We are gonna catch that up.
I think too, remember, we've talked about this before, you know, over half of the dilution this year is due to the, you know, costs versus pricing. That's just the math that we'll get back over time. Also, you know, these projects Lawrence mentioned, there's a lot of double running costs as we bring those big projects up, like U.K. Peterborough, that eventually will go away, so that will help the margins too. To your point, though, about, you know, are we spread too thin? I was actually at the flavor division back in 2005 when that was identified. There's no comparison to today. It's really focused. Brendan, why don't you-
I was just gonna say, Mike, one thing I would add there, Rob, is the composition and profile of our business is so different to 2005. You know, this, our strategy to keep, you know, driving and evolving the business towards that higher value-added, you know, portfolio is what you're seeing in our business, you know, portfolio today. There's a very different, I think, set of conditions compared to, you know, the point you referenced.
We have done a lot of portfolio pruning behind the scenes, especially as we went through, you know, these last three years, where the extraordinary growth, you know, that we had in the parts of the business that we're focused on, you know, more than made up for parts of the business where we were getting out of, you know, low margin, high- touch businesses. I think it's been a self-reinforcing strategy. You know, the migration of our business more and more towards, you know, the value-added, technically insulated, and flavor end of the spectrum has made our product wins stickier and our R&D teams more able to work on new business and not focused on constantly re-winning bid business.
Great. Well, I'm sorry to bring up 2005, but we're all old and that we all remember it. Maybe just one follow-up. Of the $70 million or so of profit decline this year in Flavor Solutions, can you quantify how much of that is just pricing catch up?
I would say I wouldn't I think the bigger bucket is actually some of the excess costs that we've talked about in which actually would've driven more sales if we could have supplied it. The excess cost that we you know, part of the reason we called down in our pre-announcement was we haven't been able to get those out of the system yet. Yeah, pricing is a bit behind. I mean, the thing that gives us the comfort that we're gonna recover more at margin in Flavor Solutions is we've seen it in Consumer. You know, Consumer is turning positive from a gross margin and operating profit perspective as pricing wave comes through. You'll see the same in Flavor Solutions, but I don't have an exact number for you.
Okay. Thank you.
Our next question is from the line of Steve Powers at Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.
Yes. Hey, thank you and good morning.
Good morning.
Picking up on that last thread on the pricing catch-up in Flavor Solutions. Can you talk a little bit about the expected timing of that and cadence of that? Because it seems like, you know, most of it or a good portion of it should be, I think, foreseeable just based on the timing of like sort of the contracted adjustments in pricing and contract renewals and that kind of thing. Should we be expecting a relatively smooth catch-up from here? Or, you know, is there a reason to believe that the catch-up happens on a more accelerated timing?
I'd rather describe it more in terms of our gross margin trajectory than to talk about pricing specifically, because I worry that it's gonna get into things that might upset our customers. You can see the margin trajectory on this business beginning to turn. You know, we talked about an inflection point. You know, Flavor Solutions margins have been ticking down through the second quarter of the year. They're turning. It's. The year-on-year comparison has narrowed in the third quarter. We expect it to continue to narrow and begin a recovery as we go through next year.
Yeah, I mean, from a dollar perspective, we're, like I said before, for both Consumer and Flavor Solutions business, we will catch up on the cost next year. We just took branded food service as a part of Flavor Solutions, along with our Consumer business at the beginning of the quarter. That will be a positive going into next year rapidly. So yeah, there's no like one big bag, you catch up. It's over time, but in 2023, we will catch up.
Okay. On the manufacturing startup costs, are those, you know, I guess, what inning are we in there, and how much of that remains versus, is it in the rear view?
You know, I would say, I mean, you're always gonna have some of these programs, I'll just say that. You're always gonna have some of this. Yeah, I think this year is kind of a high watermark that we should get some tailwind next year. You know, these programs take, you know, a bit of time to get fully done. These are big programs. I mean, we just shipped our first pallet, as Lawrence said, out of our big Northeast distribution center. You know, we wanna move over time into 2023. We'll be moving parts of our business into that. You know, there'll be a bit of an efficiency there, but-
Yeah, I wanna just emphasize that the things that we talked about on the call in terms of getting at the, you know, on our prepared remarks in terms of getting at the cost were examples. I don't want to overly focus on any one particular thing and give it too much weight. You know, we were sharing, you know, examples and when we next report in January, we'll be able to give some progress updates on those exact examples as well as-
Okay.
... for other items.
Okay. Thank you. If I could, just one little housekeeping. I'm sorry if I missed it, but just was there anything, you know, notable that caused that resulted in reported EBIT this quarter coming in above what you had pre-announced at quarter close? Is anything as you closed the books that was?
No, I mean, you know, like we said, we pre-announced. I mean, we haven't closed our books yet, so these are all estimates, and we felt pretty good about where we landed. I mean, there was a, you know, a couple things. Taxes came in a little bit more favorable. That was about $0.01. You know, some other SG&A things came in a little bit more favorable, but nothing, you know, nothing material. You saw-
No one -
... sales landed right where we thought.
Yeah. I mean, when we pre-announced, it was hard. It was-
We had a little bit more visibility in the sales versus profit. You know, between Q3 and Q4, there's a little shift.
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Thanks so much.
Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Chris Growe with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. Good morning.
Hey, good morning, Chris. Sorry, it was hard to get in.
No, no worries. No, thank you for accommodating my question here. I appreciate it. I just wanted to go. I guess, follow-up questions. I just wanna be sure on that, lag in pricing in Flavor Solutions. When we talk some of the pass-along features of that business, that had typically been like a one quarter lag. Is that still the case, or have you caught up now when you talk about pricing being over inflation out there, have you caught up with that? I guess I just wanna also understand, was that a factor weighing on profit in the quarter, or was it more just those supply chain challenges?
Well, of course, it was a factor weighing on profit in the quarter and it has been all year. You know, again, you know, every customer's got a slightly different contractual arrangement. I think thinking about a quarter lag is a good way to think about it. Remember, costs keep coming in. I mean, we didn't just get, you know, cost inflation, you know, on January 1st and price for it. You know, these costs have been steadily increasing, you know, all year and in fact continue to increase. You know, the inflationary outlook has not settled.
You know, there's been a bit of a, you know, we've passed costs through, but there's been a bit of chasing it as new costs have continued to go up. I'm gonna let Brendan comment on this a little further.
Well, sure. I think just, you know, the thing I would key in on is there is unlike, let's say, our consumer and our branded food service business, there's not, you know, sort of one moment in time w e're, you know, that pricing is, you know, therefore effective in the business. That's another way to maybe think about it, Chris. I think, you know, just to build on, you know, part of your question, you know, certainly supply chain, as we've been talking about quite a bit in the prepared remarks, you know, we're certainly an influence on how we're looking at that.
Okay. Thank you for that. Just to understand if I'm hearing it properly, but, like, the pricing should accelerate in the fourth quarter. It sounds like there'll be, again, some continued catch-up in pricing. I guess that's true for Flavor Solutions. As I think about Consumer, is that one where we should expect incremental pricing based on what you've announced so far? Not asking for anything new there, but I also wanna understand maybe how you're utilizing promotional spending there, you know, as a means of, you know, trying to attack some of those price gap issues in some areas of the business there.
Well, I think I'm gonna try and unpack that in pieces. You know, we have been guiding all year and you can see it coming through now and not just in our reported numbers, but also through the scanner, that we would have more pricing in effect in the second half of the year, especially going into the fourth quarter, than we have, you know, than we did in the early part of the year. You know, we've, you know, in the Americas, you know, this year have taken, you know, a number of rounds of pricing that included the most recent one being here right at the beginning of the fourth quarter.
There is more pricing in effect now. I'm talking about our Consumer business primarily there. You can see that coming through now. Really, other than the, you know, the contractual windows that we were just talking about in Flavor Solutions, we largely have our actions for this year in place, and we're looking ahead to 2023 now. I think that in Asia, we've got one more round that goes into effect, it's actually this month. Really our 2022 actions are away. I gave such a long answer to that I forgot the second part of your question, but I'm gonna let Brendan answer it.
I think where you were going was just looking for some context around promotional spending. You know, I think the context we would provide is as we go into the holiday, you know, we feel really good about our supply. We have a strong program, you know, planned for the holiday season, as we would, you know, every year. It certainly feels, you know, I think a little bit more robust, you know, now compared to, let's say, you know, 2021 and 2020, just because we're in a better situation from the standpoint of the overall context in the market. We are turning back on promotions where we feel really confident about supply and we're looking at the holiday season that way.
Those choices are not necessarily connected to any pricing decisions we're making in the market, but really just support of the business and, you know, helping to drive the category for our retailers.
Yeah, I would say that our supply situation on the Consumer business, you know, going to holiday is the best it's been in the last several years.
That's great. Thanks for all that context. I appreciate it.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Lazar with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.
Great. Good morning, everybody.
Hi, Andrew.
Good morning.
Hi there. Maybe to start off, I think, when you had pre-announced results for the quarter, one of the factors that you had highlighted in the Consumer business was that sort of private label price points at some retailers on shelf had not yet really sort of moved upward leading to some price gaps that get wider maybe than you'd like or had been anticipated. If I missed this, I apologize. I didn't know if you've seen any movement there yet, or have heard of any movement that's likely to happen on that front.
Right. Andrew, no one has asked that yet, so I'm glad that you did. You know, it has been only a very short time since we pre-announced, and so we don't have a lot of new information on consumer behavior or on retailer behavior. I'll let Brendan give some color on that, and then I'll take it back.
Yeah, I think, Andrew, things are largely, you know, consistent with what we had discussed, you know, or had shared, you know, broadly, you know, within the last four weeks. We haven't really seen a lot of new information or data. They seem, those price gaps seem to be kind of, you know, holding in the very same range that we talked about before. But, you know, we still are a leading supplier, you know, private label into the category and, you know, we're passing those price increases along to, you know, customers just as we have on branded products. You know, that's a retailer by retailer decision, I think, on what gets, you know, realized at shelf.
In the meanwhile, we're still driving a lot of that value programming that we had talked about, whether it's not only our messaging, but also, you know, we're seeing a lot of lift in, you know, some of those parts of our portfolio that, you know, tend to drive more value. You know, we offer our offerings are really across the spectrum, you know, that would meet consumers' needs. We're seeing growth on the premium end. We're seeing growth on the value end. You know, parts of our business like Gourmet Garden, which tend to be on the premium end, are actually doing really well, you know, in this context. Then, you know, we see our value sizes like Super Deal performing very strongly, you know, also off shelf and in the market.
We're introducing, you know, more value into the market through this opening price point Lawry's program, and we're also doing that in other parts of our... In other markets around the world where we're, you know, in many of them, we're launching resealable pouches that are larger than usual and allow consumers to kind of, you know, realize more value that way. That's probably the added context I would share, you know, since the last month.
Yeah. Andrew, it isn't exactly what you've asked, but you're giving me a chance to talk about this a little bit. I wanna emphasize that, you know, we have in our offering items for every price point and every retailer strategy and category, from the premium end all the way down to opening price point and private label. We've spent a fair bit of time talking about, you know, the consumer that's under pressure, and rightly so. You know, we are concerned about pressure on the consumer, especially, you know, the consumers on the lower half of the income spectrum. We wanna make sure that our products are accessible and approachable. The gourmet and premium end of our business is still very strong.
Sometimes those price gaps can be exaggerated. You know, Brendan mentioned large size and Super Deal. You know, the Nielsen data is a pretty blunt instrument when it reports unit price. It doesn't catch the fact that, you know, some of these value packs are really big and carry a high price point. If you adjust it out, you know, the large size packs that are growing strongly for us, then that price gap actually narrows quite a bit.
Got it. That's a very helpful perspective. Thank you. I know we're running short on time. Just a quick one. Obviously, we're not at a point where you're gonna get too specific at all about next year, of course. But with, you know, with the sort of the inflection that's starting to happen in pricing, the new cost savings, you know, and margin recovery actions that you've kind of highlighted today, you know, the, I guess, consensus already has McCormick sort of getting back to what we'll call more of an on-algorithm type of earnings growth next year, particularly as you would deem, I think, you know, a bunch of the things you talk about impacting this year as somewhat more transitory, you know, as you improve them going forward.
I didn't know if there were even just any broad comments around that, you know, whether there's a need, you think, to lean in right on the marketing side going into next year. Just given the, whatever the value orientation of the consumer or some of the new product innovations you've got planned, or just things larger puts and takes that we should sort of think about, you know, as given how, I guess, the Street has already started to sort of lock in expectations for next year. Thanks so much.
I will start with the caveat that we're not gonna give any guidance for 2023 right now. I've got everyone's standing around here a little bit sort of holding their breath, w ondering if I'm gonna say something rash about that. It is a bit early for that and I appreciate the confidence in the investment community that's reflected in those consensus outlooks. There are some big puts and takes, I'm gonna let Mike talk about those.
Yeah. Obviously, a big wild card for next year is the inflation environment. You know, we're in the process now of actually rolling up budgets and things like that, taking a look. You know, that drives pricing actions, obviously. You know, some of the other puts and takes you think about, you know, interest expense. Obviously, some of the actions we took this year might be a negative for next year. This cost program we talked about, which we're gonna give you a lot more detail in January. You know, I'd say right now it's just there's so many big moving parts, it'd be hard even to give you any guidance. But-
I mean, frankly, a set of comps has to be rebuilt.
That's right.
Yep. Thank you.
Our next question is from the line of Adam Samuelson with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your questions.
Yes, thanks. Good morning.
Morning.
Morning. A lot of ground's been covered. I wanted to just come back to Flavor Solutions quickly and just the way you'd characterized kind of the business performance on the strong demand. I guess I'm trying to volume mix in the quarter was up 80 basis points, and I'm just trying to get a little bit more color on kind of the pieces within the Flavor Solutions business, because it's not really one business, it's a collection of a bunch of them. It would seem from the way you characterize some areas of strength that maybe some of the higher value flavor businesses were at or below kind of segment average growth. Just A, is that the right calibration, and B, just any color on the growth of some of the different pieces.
You know, I'm struggling to think of a part of it that was weak. We had strong performance on Flavor Solutions in that segment across the globe and really all regions and all of the pieces of it.
Well, maybe a little bit, Adam, I mean, we did talk about a month ago, I mean, some of the challenges on Flavor Solutions this year were cost related to supply constraints. We could have sold more. We could have had higher volumes than you noted. I think from that perspective, you know, some of the actions we've talked about to get more capacity will help. The demand is very strong.
Demand is very strong.
Okay. All right. I just, I guess, relative to historical performance of that business, 80 basis points of volume mix growth. And I know there's noisiness in the comps with COVID recovery, and it's a lumpy business. That doesn't usually, that business could be stronger than 80 basis points of volume mix. That's why I'm trying to get the calibration on that.
Yeah, but we had enormous price.
On 10% pricing, we feel pretty good about that, actually.
Okay. And then quickly on SG&A, and I used to lose this in thinking about 2023 a little bit. But it would seem like the way the gross margin and EBIT guidance lays out implies for the fourth quarter that total SG&A is gonna be down high single digits. Is that kind of the right calibration? And within that, just how much is incentive comp resetting lower? Talk about kind of the declines in SG&A dollars that you've seen this year.
Yeah, I mean, SG&A, you're right, is gonna be down in the quarter, and it's primarily driven by incentive comp. We're also getting higher fixed cost leverage too, as you think about it. Yeah.
It was most of that decline in incentive comp as we think about the headwind that would be rolling into next year?
I mean, we adjust incentive comp every quarter, so I wouldn't take one quarter to then try to extrapolate to next year.
Yeah. Okay. All right.
Okay.
I appreciate the color. Thank you.
Yep.
Thank you. Our final question is from the line of Peter Galbo with Bank of America. Please proceed with your questions.
Hey, guys. Good morning. Just two really quick ones from me. Maybe just to pick up on Adam's question there. Mike, I just wanted to clarify. The operating margin comment for the fourth quarter of operating margin expansion, that was a year-over-year comment in the fourth quarter, not a sequential?
I think it's both.
Both. Okay, that's helpful. Just broader question on just thinking about the cost savings for next year. I know we spent a lot of time talking about that. Just as you think about, like, repatriating production, surge capacity coming down, normalizing inventory levels, like, is there a way to quantify? I would imagine there's probably a volume impact that comes with that. You know, you'll get the benefit on the cost side, but maybe there's an offset a little bit, at least on top line on volume. Is there any way to quantify that at this point?
Well, no, I don't think that's what we're saying at all. You know, I think we've quantified the cost benefit, but I don't think that there's an impact on volume at all. You know, I mean, this is normalization and you know that we're going through this year. I don't think that it has an impact. Now, of course, you know, I kinda don't wanna get into 2023 guidance. But whatever is, you know, that'll, that would all be reflected in whatever guidance we give for, you know, for next year.
You know, I do wanna, you know, emphasize that, you know, we've spent, you know, a lot of time talking about supply chain, you know, in our remarks and on and in the Q&A here. You know, I do wanna be clear that what's the most important thing, I'm glad you really brought this point up about volume, you know, is that the continued growing demand for flavor and the strong growth of our business that we're fueling with executing on our strategies and with our passionate and engaged employees is the most important thing. You know, inflation is a reality and our pricing has caught up with it. We're seeing that coming through in the margins now.
You're gonna see it, you know, see us keep caught up and take the actions that are necessary. Then comes supply chain. That's really kind of the third most important thing, which is, you know, to eliminate the excessive cost and inefficiencies that have crept into the supply chain. I do wanna keep that in the perspective that growth is still at the top of the heap.
Fair enough. Thanks very much, guys.
Thanks.
Thank you. At this time, I'll turn the floor back to management for closing remarks.
Great. Thank you. McCormick's alignment with consumer trend and the rising demand for flavor, in combination with the breadth and reach of our global portfolio and our strategic investments, provide a strong foundation for sustainable growth. We're disciplined in our focus on the right opportunities and investing in our business. We're continuing to drive further growth as we successfully execute on our long-term strategies, actively respond to changing consumer behavior, and capitalize on opportunities from our relative strength. We continue to be well-positioned for continued success and remain committed to driving long-term value for our shareholders.
Thank you, Lawrence, and thanks to everybody for joining today's call.