Good morning, and welcome to Newell Brands fourth quarter and full year 2021 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. After a brief discussion by management, we will open up the call for questions. In order to stay within the time schedule for the call, please limit yourself to one question during the Q&A session. As a reminder, today's conference is being recorded. A live webcast of this call is available at ir.newellbrands.com. I will now turn the call over to Sofya Tsinis, VP of Investor Relations. Ms. Tsinis, you may begin.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Newell Brands fourth quarter and full year earnings call. On the call with me today are Ravi Saligram, our President and CEO, and Chris Peterson, our CFO and President, Business Operations. Before we begin, I'd like to inform you that during the course of today's call, we will be making forward-looking statements which involve risks and uncertainties. Actual results and outcomes may differ materially, and we undertake no obligation to update forward-looking statements. I refer you to the cautionary language and risk factors available in our earnings release, our Form 10-K, Forms 10-Q, and other SEC filings available in our investor relations website for a further discussion of the factors affecting forward-looking statements. Please also recognize that today's remarks will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, including those we refer to as normalized measures.
We believe these non-GAAP measures are useful to investors, although they should not be considered superior to the measures presented in accordance with GAAP. Explanations of these non-GAAP measures and available reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP measures can be found in today's earnings release and tables, as well as in other materials on Newell Investor Relations website. Thank you, and now I'll turn the call over to Ravi.
Thank you, Sofya. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our year-end call. We continued our growth momentum from the past five quarters into the fourth quarter, which helped us achieve an important milestone in 2021 as we return the company to core sales growth with strong results across each business unit and geographic region. Despite a challenging and disruptive operating backdrop, as well as significant inflationary pressures, we delivered over 12% growth in both core sales and normalized operating income in 2021, with further progress in complexity reduction, productivity, cash conversion cycle, and a robust innovation pipeline. Let me share some highlights from fiscal 2021. Core sales increased 12.5% as each business unit grew versus last year and on a two-year stacked basis.
This was fueled by strong consumption in the U.S. relative to both 2020 and 2019. Domestic consumption increased across all eight business units relative to 2019, with Writing, Food, Baby, Commercial, Home Appliances and Home Fragrances in the double digits. Even as mobility is returning and some trends are moderating from peak levels, we are seeing stickiness in consumer behavior versus pre-pandemic levels. We believe that the strategic work we've done to rejuvenate our iconic brands, sharpen brand positioning, strengthen our marketing and innovation muscle while leveraging consumer insights and foresights is enabling us to better capitalize on consumer trends. Our major brands are healthy, and in 2021, each of our top ten brands grew, with Graco, Oster, Coleman, Yankee Candle, Sharpie and Paper Mate, each registering double-digit growth.
2021 was also a stellar year for all our regions, as each one delivered double-digit top-line growth, with international outpacing North America. We continue to believe that the international markets abound in opportunity, and we just appointed Maria Fernanda Mejia as CEO, International. Maria Fernanda has three decades of international CPG experience at firms such as Kellogg's and Colgate and has a track record of accelerating growth and profit. She'll join Newell at the end of this month with the goal of fully unlocking international's growth potential and accelerating profit by leveraging scale, reducing fragmentation, and building up brand franchises outside of the U.S. Strong omni-channel execution allowed us to attract shoppers across all channels.
Despite consumers' return to brick-and-mortar stores through the year, Newell Brands' global e-commerce sales grew at a low double-digit pace in 2021, as digital penetration for the company remained at about 22% of net sales, similar to 2020 and significantly ahead of prior years. Our go-to-market strategy is yielding strong results and enabling us to forge stronger connections both with our consumers and customers. Although our service levels were challenged due to the supply environment, we saw excellent growth at our top customers and developed strong joint business plans. We're also building momentum on our innovation operating model with tighter integration of consumer insights and foresights into the process. This is yielding more impactful launches. Not only are innovations becoming a larger contributor to sales, we also see opportunity to continue to scale many of the franchises such as Sharpie S-Gel, Mr. Coffee Iced, FoodSaver, VS Line, and Rubbermaid Brilliance.
In 2021, although Newell's normalized operating margin declined about 10 basis points to 11%, normalized operating profit grew more than 12% despite approximately a 700 basis point inflationary headwind, which was 9% of comps. Offsetting levers was strong fuel productivity, pricing, and tight cost control. Normalized earnings per share grew nearly 2% versus 2020. On a tax-adjusted basis, that would represent over 20% increase in normalized EPS, a remarkable result, particularly in this environment. Our cash conversion cycle improved by five days year-over-year to 68 from a high of 115 in 2018. Strong cash generation, despite strategic inventory build, allowed us to de-lever our balance sheet to 3.0x .
As we focus on driving sustainable and profitable growth, we're placing significant emphasis on building operational excellence throughout the organization with Project Ovid and automation being two major initiatives that we are implementing. We also significantly improved our employee engagement. Based on a Glint employee survey, the company's engagement score moved up significantly to 75 at benchmarks, indicating that culture is becoming a competitive advantage for us. We continue to strengthen our commitment to corporate citizenship, sustainability, as well as diversity, inclusion, and belonging, guided by our core values of truth, transparency, teamwork, and trust.
I am pleased to share that Newell Brands has been named one of Fortune's 2022 World's Most Admired Companies. The company was also recognized on several other lists, such as The Wall Street Journal Management's Top 250 Best Managed Companies of 2021, Forbes World's Top Female-Friendly Companies in 2021, Forbes Best Employers for Diversity in 2021, Newsweek America's Most Responsible Companies in 2022, and was awarded 100% on the Human Rights Capital Foundation's Corporate Equality Index in both 2021 and 2022.
Last year, we also continued to give back to our communities, donating products worth nearly $17 million. Let me share some insights on 2021 results for each business unit. Writing had a terrific year with double-digit growth, almost double the rate of the total company, and market share gains across each geographic region as schools came back to a more normal cadence. We saw strong domestic consumption relative to both 2020 and 2019. On a two-year stack basis, writing core sales grew despite the delayed return of the Commercial channel as new variants continued to disrupt back-to-office plans.
The rebound in the Writing category, in combination with excellent market share gains in the U.S., Canada, U.K., and Australia, drove excellent results for the business in 2021. In the U.S., Newell outpaced the market, delivering a 7+ year high in market share and over two points in share gains in writing instruments. Sharpie S-Gel continued to turbocharge our share in pens for the second straight year, resulting in U.S. share gains of nearly 500 basis points in this important category. Newell share of the Writing category also improved by more than two points in Australia and Canada and almost one point in the U.K. We're confident Writing is well-positioned for a great 2022 when we expect more of a rebound in the Commercial channel.
2021 was a solid year for the Baby business, both on the gear and care sides, as core sales grew at low double-digit rate due to distribution gains, innovation, increased stimulus, and child tax credit funding, and continued strength in e-commerce. We saw strong momentum in domestic consumption. There was lots of great innovations throughout 2021, and I'm pleased to share that Newell Baby Gear won four awards at the annual Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association Awards, the most of any company, including the Tried and True Award for the Graco 4Ever and Green/Environmentally Friendly for Century. Along with Writing, Home Fragrance was the best performing business unit during 2021 as consumers focused on their well-being and homes, drove strong double-digit core sales growth, supported by healthy consumption relative to both 2020 and 2019.
Net sales for the Home Fragrance business reached record levels in 2021, despite closure of underperforming retail locations and exit from the fundraising business in 2020. We saw really strong performance from Yankee Candle retail stores this year, with positive comps as consumers returned to in-store shopping. The 2021 launch of the Yankee Candle Signature Collection, as well as added distribution points, helped drive modest share gains in the candle category in tracked channels. In EMEA, we delivered strong growth across all territories, leveraging e-commerce and added distribution points. Moving on to Food. 2021 was another strong top-line year for the Food business, even as performance moderated in the second half against very challenging comparisons, and we experienced supply challenges across some businesses. Domestic POS was significantly ahead of 2019 and slightly below elevated year ago levels.
In 2021, two of our brands, Ball and FoodSaver, achieved record sales, and Ball continued to drive significant share gains in the canning category, benefiting from the 2021 launches of Ball storage latch pantry jars as well as the nesting jars. We also saw share gains in the Rubbermaid brand, drawing upon the successful expansion of the Brilliance line into glass and pantry categories. Our products are also getting external validation as Good Housekeeping named Calphalon Best Nonstick Cookware, Rubbermaid Brilliance Glass was named Best Food Storage, and FoodSaver was recognized as Best Vacuum Sealer for 2021. We continue to believe that in a world where hybrid work environments are likely to prevail, at-home cooking and food consumption occasions will remain above pre-pandemic levels and have an exciting lineup of new products for 2022.
In 2021, core sales growth for Home Appliances accelerated relative to already elevated 2020 levels led by Latin America, North America, and EMEA. Domestic construction was up significantly ahead of 2019 levels and up modestly versus 2020. Due to strong demand, we hit an all-time record product production of blenders as Oster blenders celebrated the 75th anniversary in both the U.S. and Latin America. In 2021, our Outdoor & Recreation business grew core sales in each quarter, demonstrating momentum and the strength of the turnaround strategy we began 18 months ago. For the full year, core sales improved across all regions with robust growth driven by Japan, U.S., Europe, and Latin America. The iconic and largest brand in the O&R portfolio, Coleman, led this growth, showing our lifestyle brand building focus is working.
We also saw strong results from our portable beverage category with both Contigo and Bubba driving double digits. Key product innovations in Outdoor & Recreation including the Coleman PEAK1 platform, Coleman 1900 Collection, Contigo hydration, and a new camping gas grill in Europe. Our global marketing campaign with Coleman, The Outside Is Calling, is resonating well with our outdoor enthusiast consumer as brand sentiment and brand health scores continue to rise and helping us win new distribution for 2022 across various channels, including outdoor specialty. In beverage, the Contigo Streeterville Desk Mug, which was introduced in 2021, has become the number one mug in the coffee mug category, and Contigo is restoring its leadership position. I'm also encouraged by the progress in margins, both in Outdoor & Recreation and Home Appliances.
In 2022, we will exit some lower margin categories such as bedding, fans, and airbeds, which will be a headwind to top line but will help make further inroads on improving profitability. From a top-line perspective, 2021 was another solid year for the Commercial business as core sales grew on top of very difficult comparison fueled by consumption growth. We saw strong consumption performance across major categories, with the exception of washroom, which surged a year ago due to the pandemic. While the business has been among the hardest hit by inflation, the team has done an outstanding job in implementing a series of price increases to help mitigate the impact. Given our expectations that resin prices have stabilized, we're confident that we will restore gross margins and drive strong operating profit growth in 2022.
Lastly, core sales for Connected Home & Security increased in 2021, driven by strong domestic consumption. Earlier this week, we announced an agreement to sell the CH&S business to Resideo Technologies, and it is consistent with our strategy of tuck-out divestitures. We're confident that Resideo is the right strategic owner for this business and believe this transaction will enable CH&S to re-realize its full potential. At the same time, it allows us to bring even greater focus to our core businesses where we see the highest potential for value creation. Since CH&S was not integrated with the rest of Newell, we do not expect this transaction to be disruptive.
We're exiting 2021 from a position of strength, and I am confident that the strategic investments behind brand rejuvenation, omni-channel and social media listening capabilities, as well as supply chain resiliency, position us well for driving sustainable, profitable growth. As we look to 2022, an overall theme is that if 2021 was a year of top-line growth, 2022 will be a year of margins. We are focused on five key priorities. First, laser focus on improving gross margins as we double down on our efforts to mitigate the significant inflationary pressures and supply chain challenges while improving customer service levels. The strength of our brands has allowed us to take the appropriate pricing actions on all our businesses while ensuring they remain a good value for consumers.
In addition, we will continue to optimize promotional spend, price innovations to be gross margin accretive, direct A&P spend towards higher gross margin categories, and drive productivity. Second, we'll continue to drive core sales growth and innovations, focus on mastering the 360-degree consumer journey, and delight consumers at each touchpoint with compelling storytelling and joyous brand experiences. I genuinely believe we're making the shift to becoming a consistent growth company. Third, turbocharge international to accelerate growth and profits. Fourth, continue investing in transforming our supply chain through Project Ovid and automation. Fifth, and last but not least, continue to strengthen the One Newell culture and build on our employee engagement momentum. Folks, it is a new Newell. Our can-do teams delivered over 12% core sales growth and normalized operating profit growth in 2021.
In 2022, we're committed to rebuilding gross margins and delivering top and bottom line growth despite a tough macro environment. I'd like to express my sincere gratitude to our employees whose grit, hard work, and agility make it possible for us to deliver on our commitments and pivot as necessary. I continue to believe that Newell's best days are ahead of us, and that our focused and deliberate actions will drive sustainable and profitable growth, achieve strong shareholder returns while being a force for good. Onwards and upwards, now I'll turn it over to Chris.
Thank you, Ravi, and good morning, everyone. The decisive actions we have taken over the past three years as we have executed on Newell's turnaround, in combination with strong financial discipline and consumer demand, have driven more effective and agile operations of the company. This has enabled Newell to successfully navigate the current environment and deliver full-year top and bottom-line results that are well ahead of the outlook we shared a year ago, despite significant escalation in inflation and ongoing challenges across the supply chain that are impacting all companies. Before discussing fourth quarter results, let me provide some insights into the operating environment as we expect many of the dynamics from 2021 to persist in 2022. In 2021, Newell experienced unprecedented inflationary costs, largely driven by resin, ocean freight, source finished goods, and labor cost.
Inflation accounted for about 9% of cost of goods sold. To mitigate these inflationary headwinds, we accelerated our productivity initiatives, which accounted for close to 4% of cost of goods sold, successfully implemented price increases across each of our business units, with six of our business units communicating several pricing rounds, continued to maintain tight cost controls, optimized effectiveness of promotional spend, and leveraged strong top-line trends. While these actions helped mitigate the impact from inflation in 2021, Newell has not yet realized the full benefits from them, particularly as it relates to pricing, which lags inflation. In addition to the carryover impact from last year's pricing actions, each of our business units are implementing further pricing increases in 2022, as we expect this to be another year of high inflation.
While prices for some commodities, such as resin, came off their peak, we expect sourced finished goods, ocean freight, and wages to be major sources of inflation this year. At this point, we forecast inflation to account for about 8% of cost of goods sold in 2022. Importantly, we plan to more than offset this through pricing and productivity, with gross margin expected to bounce back from 2021 levels. The supply chain backdrop remains challenging, and we expect the disruption from longer lead times for sourced products, port congestion, limited container availability, as well as shortages in components, labor, and truck drivers to continue throughout 2022.
To deal with this, we continue to implement a number of offsetting measures that enabled us to deliver a $1.2 billion increase in net sales in 2021 and secure supply in constrained markets. These actions include enhancing the forecasting process and extending planning windows to account for longer lead times, building an inventory on top-selling and high-priority SKUs, diversifying our supplier base and qualifying alternatives to critical components where possible, accelerating automation across our facilities, diversifying ports of entry through Project Ovid, and enhancing compensation benefits, training opportunities, and working conditions for our frontline employees. Although we expect supply bottlenecks to persist, we remain confident that we are taking the necessary actions to both effectively manage them and create more agility within our supply chain in the future.
In 2021, we kicked off Project Ovid, a major supply chain initiative which we expect to transform Newell Brands' go-to-market capabilities, enhance customer service levels, and drive operational efficiencies. We are planning to optimize the company's distribution network in the U.S. by consolidating 23 business unit-centric supply chains into a single integrated supply chain. In 2021, we completed the detailed concept, design, and build phases of the project. The start of this year, we shifted to the testing, refining, and implementation stage and recently completed the first round of systems integration testing.
I'm very pleased to share that our new distribution center in Newville, Pennsylvania is on track to start receiving initial shipments in March. This summer, we plan to stand up Newell Brands Distribution Company, which will allow us to accept one order, send one invoice, and receive one payment from customers while shipping our products on one truck. Ovid will enhance Newell's supply chain resiliency and agility. As we build operational excellence throughout the organization, it's important to recognize the meaningful progress we have made on the operational front, which has considerably simplified our way of working and put us in a stronger position to manage through this challenging environment. For example, we ended 2021 with about 36,000 SKUs, which represents a 65% reduction from 2018, with plans in place to continue to simplify our SKU portfolio in 2022.
We completed another four ERP conversions in 2021, and now expect 95% of Newell sales to be on two platforms going forward. Let me now move to fourth quarter results. In Q4, net sales increased 4.3% to $2.8 billion, as core sales grew 5.8% on top of 4.9% a year ago. This was partially offset by unfavorable foreign exchange as well as business and retail store exits. Core sales increased in six of eight business units and across every major geographic region. On a two-year stack basis, core sales increased in every business unit. Normalized gross margin contracted 280 basis points year-over-year to 30.1% as approximately 700 basis points of inflationary headwind more than offset the contribution from pricing and fuel productivity savings.
Normalized operating margin declined 150 basis points year-over-year to 9.9%, reflecting the reduction in gross margin, which was partially offset by and cost leverage. Net interest expense came down by $10 million year-over-year to $59 million due to debt paydown. The normalized tax rate of 17.4% was significantly above last year's tax benefit of 2.6% due to a lower contribution from discrete items. Normalized diluted earnings per share came in at $0.42 versus $0.56 a year ago, with the tax rate difference representing an $0.11 delta. Normalized diluted EPS exceeded our outlook on stronger top line, tighter control over expenses, and a slightly lower than anticipated tax rate. Turning to segment performance.
Core sales for the Commercial solutions segment increased 1.7% against a very difficult year-ago comparison of 13.8%, with both Commercial and Connected Home & Security business units up relative to a year ago. Core sales for Home Appliances grew 5.6% on top of mid-single digit growth in the prior year, reflecting strong performance in both North America and Latin America. Core sales for the home solutions segment increased 3.2%, lapping a difficult low double-digit comp. Strong growth in Home Fragrance, particularly in Yankee Candle retail stores and in the EMEA region, offset a slight decline in food, which faced a tough comp.
Core sales for the Learning and Development segment grew 5.3% as double-digit growth in Writing, which continued to rebound, was offset by a decline in the Baby business, which lapped its toughest comparison of the year. Core sales in the Outdoor & Recreation segment increased 23.9% versus last year on very strong consumption in the quarter and an improving supply chain situation with broad-based strength across all regions. In 2021, Newell generated operating cash flow of $884 million, below our outlook of about $1 billion. As a result of the aforementioned challenges across the supply chain and strong consumer demand for our products, we decided to strategically build inventories on top-selling SKUs.
While the temporary investment in inventory resulted in a miss to our forecast on cash, we believe it was prudent as it puts the company in a much better position to service customers and meet consumer demand going forward. Despite the temporary increase in inventory, we improved the cash conversion cycle by another four days versus a year ago. Through our proactive deleveraging efforts, the company's balance sheet is significantly stronger today than several years ago. Newell Brands' leverage ratio came down to 3.0x at the end of 2021 from 3.5x a year ago, reflecting a $721 million reduction in gross debt during the year, as well as about 11.5% growth in normalized EBITDA.
Before going into the outlooks for full year 2022 and Q1, I'd like to provide some context for the forecast and discuss the Connected Home & Security transaction. Our planning stance is that the divestiture will be completed at the end of the first quarter so that Q1 results still include the contribution from this business. Core sales outlooks for both Q1 and full year excludes CH&S. The company expects to use after-tax proceeds to both repay debt and buy back shares with the goal of maintaining Newell's current leverage ratio. Considering the anticipated use of proceeds, the divestiture is expected to have an approximately neutral impact on the company's normalized earnings per share in 2022. We are entering 2022 from a position of strength.
We've seen healthy top-line momentum early in the year and are encouraged by the quality of our innovation funnel. Although consumer behavior will continue to evolve as mobility improves and government stimulus is lapped, we think many of the recent habits will persist, even as some categories continue to normalize. We are assuming a moderate level of volume elasticity from price increases, although thus far, we have not seen much of an impact. On the cost side, we expect inflation to remain elevated, albeit slightly below 2021 levels. We also anticipate continuation of the supply chain challenges that plagued the industry throughout 2021. As previously discussed, we have mitigating actions in place to address both inflationary and supply-related dynamics.
We will maintain disciplined cost and cash management throughout the year and continue to build operational excellence as we accelerate automation and move into the implementation stage of Ovid. For full year 2022, we are forecasting net sales of $9.93 billion-$10.13 billion as compared to $10.59 billion in 2021. This outlook assumes core sales are flat to up 2% and a more than 6% headwind from the sale of the CH&S business, exits from low-margin categories, particularly in the Outdoor & Rec and Home Appliance businesses, closure of some Yankee Candle retail stores, as well as unfavorable currency.
We expect normalized operating margin to expand about 50 to 80 basis points versus last year to 10.5% or 11.5%-11.8% ahead of our evergreen target. This outlook assumes that pricing, along with productivity and mix optimization actions, more than offset a roughly 500 basis point headwind from inflation, as well as higher investment in advertising and promotion spend. For 2022, we are forecasting normalized earnings per share of $1.85-$1.93 versus $1.82 in 2021, reflecting a mid-teens normalized effective tax rate and a 1%-2% reduction in diluted shares outstanding as we deploy deal proceeds.
We are budgeting for operating cash flow in the $800 million-$850 million range, which includes the year-over-year headwind from the loss of profits on CH&S once the divestiture is completed and one-time cash tax payment on this transaction. We expect to continue to improve Newell's cash conversion cycle with a particular focus on drawing down on the strategic inventory build in 2021. Capital expenditures for 2022 are estimated around $350 million above normal levels due to one-time capital costs supporting infrastructure build for Project Ovid.
For Q1, our outlook assumes net sales of $2.25 billion-$2.3 billion as core sales growth of 2%-4% is offset by a 3%-4% unfavorable impact from currency, exits from low-margin categories, and closure of some Yankee Candle retail stores. Due to external dynamics, some retailers have accelerated their orders on seasonal merchandise into Q1, which is reflected in this outlook. We are forecasting normalized operating margin of 8.9%-9.3% as compared to 10.1% in the year ago period. Although in Q1, inflation is still expected to exceed pricing and productivity, the gap is much narrower than Q4 2021, and we expect operating margin performance to turn positive in Q2 2022.
Our Q1 outlook assumes a normalized effective tax rate in the low 20% range and normalized earnings per share in the $0.26-$0.28 range. We have driven significant progress over the past several years and continue to see tremendous opportunity for value creation ahead. We believe Newell is a much stronger company today and better equipped to successfully navigate the external dynamics with a focus on driving sustainable and profitable growth. Operator, let's now open the call for Q&A.
Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. Again, that is star one to enter the queue for questions. We will now take our first question from Peter Grom of UBS. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, everyone, and I hope you're doing well. I kinda just wanted to ask around the comfort or, you know, around the core sales guidance for the year. There just seems to be, you know, a lot of uncertainty out there around price elasticity, you know, pull forward of demand across many of your categories and kind of what the health of the consumer looks like as we lap stimulus in the coming weeks here. You know, what gives you confidence around delivering growth against these tough comps, given the uncertainty that lies ahead? I guess, you know, is there enough flex in the range should things deteriorate from here that this, you know, core sales outlook would still be achievable?
Peter, good morning and happy New Year, both Chinese and regular. What I would say is, yes, we had 12.5% growth in 2021, which is quite awesome. When you look at the top end of our range at, say, 2% or so, we're talking a stack growth of nearly 15%. Then against 2019, about 14%, against 2020, about 14%. Yeah, it is definitely high numbers. Look, here's the thing. We strongly believe we've turned the corner to becoming a sustainable growth company. The strength of our brands is, I think, quite high. We've got robust innovation pipelines. When you look at the full year 2021, our consumption levels were pretty high. We're also gaining market share.
When you look at that, and then we had some supply challenges, I think some of those will get mitigated, not all, but some. When you look at all of that, we feel pretty comfortable. The other thing is, there are certain consumer behaviors that started after the pandemic that we believe will continue. On one hand you have home as hub, and the hybrid work environment, I think is here to stay. Most companies, I think are adopting like a flex schedule two to three days a week or so. That means in-home cooking will continue. I do think that is a positive.
Then on the Writing business, on the other hand, even though the opposite side, which is the hybrid, at least people are going back, that'll help us to bring some growth on the Commercial channel. The other business I'd point out is Outdoor, which we were really struggling in the past. The team has really done, you know, a remarkable job of moving forward. Our Coleman brand is sort of back to its iconic days with this lifestyle positioning. The fact that we grew almost 25% in fourth quarter, which is not the seasonally high business, is just, I think, terrific. The Contigo and Bubba businesses in beverage are doing very well.
When I look at all of that, I think the only places where there are two businesses which there was some, I think, forward acceleration from both consumers and customers, which would be Appliances. There we are more muted. Of course, Baby really had a breakout year last year because of the stimulus. I think those will be a bit softer. But other businesses, I feel very good. Look, on the Candle business, the consumption was just incredible with this whole tranquility thing, so that may be a bit more muted, but we're launching so many innovations and expanding geographically. That's another thing you should look at as my final comment. We're turbocharging international, so that should help the growth. Look, I feel pretty comfortable with our stance. If anything, I'm hoping that there is some upside.
Peter, I would just add one comment, which is, I alluded to it in the prepared remarks, which is, we are expecting a significant impact from pricing in our top line this year in 2022. We have assumed that there is volume elasticity. We've assumed that, you know, because of the pricing, that volume is going to be down. We haven't seen that so far, and so, you know, I think that also gives us comfort that our guidance we view as prudent, and not something that is likely, you know, is very aggressive.
Thanks for that. I'll pass it on.
We'll take our next question from Kevin Grundy of Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Great. Thanks, morning, everyone, and congratulations on a strong year, particularly in this environment. Question for Ravi, just on satisfaction with the portfolio. You know, the organization obviously went through a period of great change. It went from a $16 billion company post the merger. Roughly half of that was then divested through a period of sort of a fire sale period, almost, if you will. You came in, you and Chris have done a great job of sort of mending the culture and stabilizing the portfolio. You know, the divestiture is sort of noteworthy, I think, within that context of the home security business. Can you just comment overall on your level of satisfaction with the portfolio as it stands? Should we expect further divestitures? What's kind of the role in M&A?
Chris, I have to ask too, just sort of the role of buybacks and share repurchases here and how you're sort of weighing that relative to M&A as you sort of look at the portfolio more broadly. I have a quick follow-up. Thank you.
Right. Let me start, and then Chris can address the buyback question. Overall, I think we've got a really resilient and good portfolio. The good news about this portfolio is that they feed off of each other, but we've got like, think about sort of 2020. When the pandemic hit, the food business and Commercial business really grew, and as did Appliances and Writing suffered because of all the school closures. 2021, you've seen Writing have a blockbuster year, Food and Commercial a bit more muted. I think this portfolio where each business helps the other out and our aim is that all our businesses grow, they may just grow at different levels. Second, we went through a strategic planning process and classified our businesses into three buckets.
First being the value accelerator growth engines, and those were Food, Home Fragrances, and Writing. Clearly those are the businesses that we have higher gross margins. Very satisfied with that. The innovation funnel on all of those businesses is very robust. Feel very good. The second was we had said, Baby and CH&S, which are sort of solid and commercial, which are solid businesses, steady Eddie businesses. In that CH&S, the issue for us there was it really not core and didn't connect with the rest of the businesses, but a solid business nevertheless. We just felt, look, that, hey, divesting that we had always said we'll look at tuck-in acquisitions and tuck-out divestitures. We decided to do that. We're very happy.
Commercial business, I really think it has got tremendous potential in the long term, as does Baby. Outdoor and Appliances, these were our troubled businesses. The teams have done a marvelous job. We've identified, hey, what is the big issue on these businesses? It's all about gross margins. It's a tale of two cities in both those businesses, U.S. versus international. International, both Outdoor and Appliances flourish. There is a huge gap between gross margins. Our job is how do we improve, and that's because the brands are a lot stronger. I think the teams are now really doing some real good work. As you're seeing, I was a little concerned about Appliances and Outdoor when I started, and both teams, and this year, Outdoor has really lived up to my expectations.
I would say overall, I feel very good about this portfolio, and we think we've got enough juice here to really continue to drive shareholder value. With that. Then look, we'll always look at tuck-in acquisitions, as we with especially our top tier. It'll be more on, are there some complementary businesses. I think we're just, you know, those are gonna be small, and we'll wait for the appropriate time. We've got plenty of great brands to work on internally before we go on the acquisition machine.
Yeah, just on the capital allocation question. I think our stance on capital allocation remains consistent, which is we think we've got significant opportunity to drive continued strong operating cash flow because we continue to see opportunity to reduce the cash conversion cycle of the company. With that operating cash flow, our first priority is to invest in the business where we see strong opportunities to drive high returns. Beyond that, we expect to pay the dividend and maintain the dividend at the current level for the foreseeable future. Beyond that, I think that's where we get into share repurchase and/or tuck-in acquisition. I think you'll see share repurchase feature more prominently in the near term versus tuck-in acquisition.
The other comment that I would make is, we also think that after having paid down $721 million of debt last year, after we finish the allocation of proceeds from CH&S, we think our level of gross debt will remain consistent, and we'll start to move into share repurchase going forward, and get our net debt to EBITDA leverage ratio from the 3.0 down to the 2.5 long-term target through EBITDA growth rather than debt reduction.
Makes sense. Good to hear. If I could just slip in one more because I think it's important around the long-term margin opportunity. Chris, you've spoken a lot about this, and your team has done a good job. You know, kind of taking a step back, understanding the volatility of the environment we were in last year that we're still in this year, you know, there's an opportunity for margins here to be EBITDA margin 17%-18% versus 13% now. How big of a priority is that for the organization? What's the timeline you think you can achieve it? You know, assuming we sort of get to sort of a more steady state in the environment looking out to next year, and how are you sort of balancing that with strategic investment and top-line growth? Thank you for that. I'll pass it on.
Yeah. I would say we see that opportunity. It is a major focus of the company and the organization. You know, we've done a couple of things. We've changed the company's compensation system this year to bonus business units on gross margin in addition to top-line growth and operating income to put a more specific focus on it. You've seen a lot of the actions we're taking, whether it's SKU count reduction, whether it's the comments Ravi made around margin accretive innovation, the low-margin category exits are all designed to drive the company's margin up. We also are continuing to aggressively go after overhead. We've taken the company's overhead rate down by, I think, 450 basis points from 2018 to where we ended this year.
We still see opportunity ahead of us there. We think margin improvement is a major source of opportunity for the company, for the next, you know, 3-5-year period at a minimum.
I don't see top-line growth versus margin improvement as being either/or. We have to walk and chew gum at the same time, and our teams realize that. The key is it can't just be growth for the sake of growth. It really has to be profitable growth, and that's what we've emphasized to all our VPs of marketing and this putting the gross margin in. If there's one focus in this company right now, if there's one word you ask people, it is gross margin.
That's great to hear. Thank you both. Good luck.
We'll take our next question from Lauren Lieberman of Barclays. Please go ahead.
Great. Thanks. Good morning. I was curious. I was really overwhelmed when you were running through, Chris, all the progress made on Ovid over the last, you know, I guess, six to 12 months. It just kind of struck me because I think, you know, productivity in general has been an area that companies have really struggled with, you know, or h ad to take a step back from in order to just focus on, you know, making product and getting it from point A to point B.
I was curious if you could comment a bit, I guess, on how it is that you've been able to make so much progress. Same goes for the productivity in the quarter itself. As you look out over 2022, I mean, what's the risk that focusing on these, you know, very important operational changes for the long term, you know, sort of divert attention from the here and now, you know. Just again, this necessity to, you know, keep up with the current pace of play given all the challenges coming at you. Thanks.
Yeah. Thanks, Lauren. So I'll just give you a couple of thoughts. I think one of the things that we did as part of the turnaround plan when we put it in place back at the beginning of 2019 is we really wanted to go after productivity. We knew that we needed to change the culture to unlock the productivity and change the culture in a way that we enabled ideas from the bottom up. We went through this journey that we internally call PEAK, where we effectively have enabled people throughout the organization to come with productivity initiatives.
When we look at the productivity savings from last year of 4% of cost of goods sold in 2021, that is a remarkable achievement, but it comprises probably 2,000 or 2,500 different projects. It's important that it's not one thing that's driving it. It's the people, the person who's running a factory line who knows the factory line better than others is coming with an idea, and we've created a culture now that encourages that person to come with an idea and then enables us to act on it at pace. It's a broad program that's embedded in the culture throughout the organization, and I think that's what's enabled us to sustain it.
To your point, for 2022, I would mention that we are seeing in our plan, we have assumed a little bit of a step back in 2022 on productivity, and let me describe that. We think on manufacturing and distribution productivity, we're gonna have another very strong year. We think on what we call value add, value engineering of products, we're gonna have a very strong year in line with the last few years. But on the sourcing side, our plan assumes that we have a little bit below average year because of the inflationary pressure. It's unlikely that we're gonna be able to drive as much cost reduction from suppliers because of the inflation that they're feeling.
What we're doing instead is we're pivoted to this is the year of implementation on Ovid, and we think that that will set us up to then bounce back with another very strong productivity year in 2023. Relative to Ovid itself, we are being very prudent in our approach. We've got an incredibly robust testing program. I mentioned that we completed in the month of January our systems integration testing, which went very well. We've got our first distribution center, new distribution center starting up at the beginning of March to receive product. We already have product that's on the water from China now being shipped to the East Coast for the first time.
When we look at that, we actually think it's gonna enable us to navigate the current supply environment better. I'll just give you one example. Last year, we shipped 80% of our imports from Asia, shipped through L.A. and Long Beach. Once we get fully into the Ovid model, we're gonna be 50/50 between the West Coast and the East Coast. Our ability to navigate different ports of entry and move product to the ports that are most equipped to receive our product is going to go up substantially. We also are gonna move, as I mentioned previously, from less than truckload shipments to full truckload shipments, and it is much easier to secure a full truck delivery than a less than truckload delivery in the current environment.
We think that we're being rigorous on the testing. We think as we move into the new Ovid model, it actually systemically makes things easier for us to navigate.
I'll just add one thing, Lauren, which is sort of stepping back, really the sea change in the company, which is enabling us to really walk and chew gum at the same time, regardless of which area, is that the culture, we have ignited the passion of our people. When you look at a score like 75 on engagement, and it came up, I mean, it used to be a few years ago about like 45. When you look at our frontline workers, their engagement was actually at 78, which is pretty incredible in this environment. What's really happening in this company, our hybrid structure and creating alignment against the vision of what we're trying to do, empowering on the front side with consumers for the business units.
On the back, unifying, we have 600 people involved in Ovid, for instance. Laser focus on execution. I think that those are the things because you asked the question, "Hey, how do you also do the day-to-day?" I think we just have to do these things, and the secret sauce is our people and our leadership teams that are driving this.
Okay, that's really helpful. The one other thing I was gonna ask, 'cause I think Chris, back at our conference when talking about Ovid, you'd mentioned, I think it was like a 30% reduction in miles driven. There was something specific you gave it as an output on the logistics side of Ovid. I was just wondering, you know, when you think about payback, you know, given elevated transportation logistics costs, which I think it's a sort of consensus view that it's not going the other way. How is the current environment change the payback, you know, or payback period on this work? I'd love to hear anything about that you can offer.
Yeah. Just at a high level, the statistic we shared at the conference was 40% reduction in miles driven, we believe in the U.S. once we get fully into the Ovid network model. What we've seen is that the savings from Ovid are actually now gonna be higher than what we originally thought when we started the project. The reason for that is there's a significant amount of savings in transportation. With the rates being up, the amount of money that we expect to save is going to be higher.
Now, I will say that the capital investment is also a little bit higher because the cost to build the two new distribution centers, not build them, we're leasing them, but the cost to put racking in and buy equipment has also gone up. I would say the payback overall from the program is looking even better than when we first started the program. We were fortuitous in starting it at the time we did. I think the program is going to deliver better than what we thought in terms of financial return.
Okay, great. Thank you so much.
We'll take our next question from Andrea Teixeira of JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Thank you and congrats on your results. I wanted to just go back to your comments on balancing pricing elasticity and margin progression. Could you share some data points on volume share across all channels most recent against the levels that you had in 2020 or perhaps even before COVID? I understand that you also started taking pricing some categories back in the second quarter of last year. I think for investors probably will be useful to see how you could retain some volume share there. Related to that, I know your Appliances business grew well in LatAm and became a pretty strong area for you within that segment. I think Maria Fernanda probably will be part of that, you know, initiative.
I was wondering if obviously there is a high inflationary environment that we all know of, for I mean a good part of my own life-lifespan. Is this something that you are accounting for in terms of elasticity, in terms of like what Ravi's comments were? And I think, Chris, you too alluded to some elasticity embedded in your guide. I was wondering if you can kind of like help us bridge all of that. Thank you so much.
Yeah. Let me take a shot at that, Andrea. Look, when we look at 2021 and versus 2020 versus 2019, definitely in a lot of our categories, we've been gaining dollar share. And the Writing business, the Food business, many of the brands that I cited in my prepared remarks and growing better than the categories. When we look at consumption trends, clearly, you know, last year we had very strong consumption along with sales, so sales and consumption keeping sort of track. It's not just last year when we look at pre-pandemic versus 2019 as well, there's been consumption growth. And we've participated in all of that. I think that really sets the brands in pretty good health.
When we then look at 2022, it's very early. In our planning, look, we did expect January to be a little soft because there was a huge surge last year and everyone, all the retail ex-industry expected some softness because of what would happen. In the early weeks of February, we're seeing pick back up. It's right now very early to tell where all of this is gonna land. We're just confident that with sort of the overall trends we're seeing when we look at, for instance, Contigo as just an example, you look at four weeks, 13 weeks, gaining share, gaining consumption as we're driving those innovations. Yes, we have in our models put in some volume shortfalls because the price increases. The big question will be how much is that gonna be?
That's a bit of an unknown. Tough for us to tell, but overall, we feel pretty confident in the guidance we've given, as I mentioned earlier. Next one, I'll just quickly hit on your Latin America question. Look, the thing about Latin America, especially on appliances, as you would know, Oster is such a strong brand, and that's the big difference. Oster is really considered a MPP, low HPP brand. It's been driving innovations for so many years. We had record production of blenders, and so we're able to manage the inflationary environments with the right levels of pricing just because of our brand strength and the innovations we're driving. Chris, was there anything you wish to add? Okay.
I think you're covered.
We will now take our next question from Olivia Tong of Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Great. Thanks. Just for some pricing, if you could just talk a little bit about when you expect the pricing to sort of layer in, sort of range of pricing maybe from top to bottom, since obviously lots of different businesses in there. Then, with respect to sales, can you talk a little bit about you know, the flat to +2% in aggregate. My sense is there's gonna be a fairly wide range of growth expectations by business. Can you just talk about that? You know, obviously the home-related category, you know, decelerate some as we hopefully get to spend more time outside of the home. It sounds like you don't think it will fall off meaningfully.
Can you talk a little bit about what Commercial looks like if you know, once Connected Home & Security is out, and then, you know, your views in terms of back to school for 2022 and timing of return to office? Thanks.
Chris, why don't you start with pricing? I'll hit some of the.
Sure
categories.
On pricing, maybe this will be helpful. The 12.5% core sales growth that we reported for 2021 had about three or four points of pricing in it. You know, the balance was volume and mix that were contributing to the growth. With respect to our outlook for 2022, you know, we're expecting the pricing contribution to be in the high single-digit range. It's a much bigger contribution from pricing to the top line in 2022 than was in 2021. Most of that pricing has already been announced. I think, in our plans, virtually all of our pricing will be announced by the end of the first quarter.
What you'll see is that in Q1, not all of the pricing is yet effective, but in Q2, the vast majority of the pricing will be in effect. That's why in the guidance, we're expecting in Q2 our operating margin performance to turn positive. As we said, I think, in the third quarter call, the third quarter was sort of the low point relative to operating margin trend versus prior year. It got better in Q4. It's gonna get better in Q1, and then it will start to turn positive in Q2. That's where we are on pricing. You know, I would say broadly, the range this year is sort of high single digits on average across the company is the financial impact.
Let me quickly go through the businesses to just highlight our quick views. Writing, we think is gonna have another great year. We're in fact seeing acceleration of retailer orders in anticipation of a strong BTS. Our brand's very strong. The big upside, and it'll all depend on how the offices open, is the Commercial channel. We'll need to see whether offices will open up, and that's a significant portion that we didn't have for 2020 and 2021. I feel very good about our prospects in Writing. You asked about the Commercial business.
Right now, other than washroom, a lot of the categories on Commercial actually did very well in 2021, and we were comping on 2020 because of all the hygiene issues. The washroom surge occurred in 2020. In 2021, as offices open up, as well as the hospitality sector opens up, we think that the Commercial business should be in good stead as well. On Home Fragrance, consumption could be a little bit more muted just because during the pandemic and after that, there was a lot of fragrance use. We're innovating into a lot of new categories outside of candles, and we're also geographically driving it. We expect that to be a good business. Food, I think we've got a lot of innovations, and as I said, in a hybrid model, people are gonna continue to cook.
This Rubbermaid Bakeware that we're launching is gonna be great. We're doing a big restage on Calphalon. I think that should help. I feel pretty good about that. The two businesses and then O&R, look, it's on a tear. As you said, people are gonna go outdoors, and we're seeing that. I feel and given that we're making the turnaround, the one brand left there to turn around is Marmot, which we're now making some progress. Contigo, Bubba, and Coleman are all in great shape, both domestically and internationally. Those five businesses feel very good about their prospects. The two businesses, Baby, because the very strong comps, the stimulus, the child tax credit, et cetera, is not gonna be there this year, that I'm a little bit more muted.
Home Appliances, there was just so much consumer acceleration, and just given that these are long purchase cycles, so that could be a little bit muted. Our goal is to try and grow each business. They may just grow at different paces. We feel, and look, all the businesses have taken price increases.
Great. Thanks so much.
We'll take our next question from Chris Carey of Wells Fargo Securities. Please go ahead.
Hi. Hi, good morning.
Good morning.
Good morning. Can I just follow up on that, you know, Olivia's question there? I guess I'm just trying to, you know, understand maybe the level of elasticity that you're building in or if it's about comps because I mean, high single digit pricing and it sounds like, you know, I think you said, you know, inflation is 500 basis points to gross margin. I mean, pricing's gonna be well ahead of that. It sounds like you're almost implying that, you know, volumes are gonna be down 50-80 points, which seems quite a bit more than modest elasticity.
I guess, you know, I'm trying to understand if you're seeing something in the business, which it doesn't sound like you're seeing on elasticity, if you're concerned about, you know, the trajectory on comps. Basically what I'm trying to do here is just to dimensionalize. You know, the comment on modest elasticity I think in the prepared remarks with what seems like pretty significant elasticity if you kinda take the outlook on pricing. Thanks so much for that.
I'll just hit one quick point, and then Chris can elaborate. Don't forget, we are also exiting some businesses which affect core sales because they may be particular SKUs because they're low margin. We did talk about some of that. With that, Chris, why don't you
Yeah. What I would say overall is that, you know, the high single digit pricing that we've got in the plan, if you were to back into core sales, would say that, you know, our planning for volume is sort of down mid-single digits. Pricing we expect to more than compensate for the volume down mid-singles. The down mid-singles on volume, I think is an assumption on our part as we talked about relative to volume elasticity. We have not seen that so far. We've seen volume growth and continued volume growth, but we also are trying to be prudent in our planning for the fact that stimulus is coming off.
As Ravi mentioned, we have a couple of categories that we expect trends to normalize in. We know that pricing is going to have some impact on the consumer at some point. You know, if we continue to see no volume impact from pricing or limited elasticity, we would have upside to our guidance range on top line. We don't think that it's reasonable to assume no impact on volume elasticity, so we've tried to set that in sort of a prudent range, recognizing the comps, recognizing the pricing, and recognizing the macro environment.
Obviously it's a more challenging planning environment heading into this year, but we think it's important to set the top line in a place that still allows us to deliver very strong profit growth, earnings per share growth, and not overbuild working capital. If we see the top line coming in stronger, we'll be in a position to react to that and supply it.
I appreciate the perspective. Can I ask just one quick follow-up? Very quick.
Mm-hmm.
From a gross margin.
Yeah.
Perspective, obviously operating margin seen up this year. You know, there's a comment around laser focus on gross margins, and I appreciate there's been commentary on various kind of puts and takes as we get through the year. With this level of pricing, would you expect gross margins to build and also be up for the year? I apologize if I missed that earlier in the call, but I don't recall hearing it. Thanks.
Yes. Just maybe some additional perspective, and obviously we don't guide gross margin specifically, but we've guided operating margin to be up 50-80 basis points. I think, you know, our expectation is gross margin will be up more than that, because we are planning, you know, higher investment in advertising and promotion as well.
Thanks so much.
We'll take our next question from Wendy Nicholson of Citi. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks very much. Just a housekeeping question, Chris, maybe on home fragrance. I mean, the growth there has turned out to be, I think, better than a lot of us expected. Can you just remind us, are you finished with the distribution changes, the closing of the stores, and pulling back in some locations? Are the headwinds there now behind us, and are you happy with where your distribution sits today? My second bigger picture question is just on international. It's exciting that you're now kind of moving forward, but can you just, number one, give a sort of, you know, a 20,000 foot view of which markets you think are the ones that have the most potential? How quickly can you move to build out that international business?
Is there any risk to your margin expansion goals over the next couple of years as you maybe invest in some of those newer markets? Thanks.
Sure. I'll hit Home Fragrance, and then Ravi can come on international. On Home Fragrance, we feel very good about the transition that we've made in that business to an omni-channel business. We have a very strong and growing direct-to-consumer business with our online website. We have rationalized our store footprint, and I'll come back to that specifically in a minute, and we've grown our business with leading retailers and feel very good about the position. That change has allowed us to not only get the business back to growth, but to dramatically improve profitability in the business. From a stores perspective, when we started this journey, I think in 2017 or 2018, we had over 500 stores.
We ended this year with about 300 stores in 2021, and I think our plan is to close maybe 30 stores or something in that range in 2022. The pace of store closures is clearly slowing down and I think you know, you'll see that most of that store rationalization is behind us at this point, although there is still a little bit to go.
Wendy, on international, yes, it is exciting. In my past life having been a president of international twice, for me it's a natural bias. I think we have a lot of opportunity here. I think the thing about it is for us, we actually see this not only as a growth opportunity, but a profit improvement opportunity. Right now, our gross margins actually in international are slightly better than the U.S. and, particularly when you look at Outdoor and Appliances. But here's the issue. Whereas we're becoming more and more One Newell in the United States, we're still very fragmented internationally. We've got a lot of offices, though we've been rationalizing them, but you don't have that One Newell view.
There's a lot of fragmentation, and we don't go to market leveraging our strengths. In the U.K., we'll have different sales forces calling on the same retailers. One of the opportunities is, hey, leverage our scale and go to market to those retailers as One Newell. Or on the other hand, we have a very strong infrastructure of people and a great country management systems in Latin America, but it's all on Appliances. We have not really leveraged that for the other businesses. Close business adjacency food, how can you drive that in? It is really leveraging our current infrastructure and people as well as to drive top line.
The way we'll focus, I think there's tremendous opportunity in Latin America to take our existing stuff to drive the writing business, the Outdoor business and the food business. When you also ask specific countries, one of our big focus points will be to focus on the top ten countries. You know, with our kinds of brands, you need countries which are developed and have good discretionary income. Places like for us, U.K., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, France, Brazil, Mexico, Japan, these are the kinds of places that we're putting a lot of focus on because we already have infrastructures there. It's not a lot about, hey, let us go make huge investments into developing markets. It's being very focused. In fact, we'll probably exit certain countries and also move to a distributor model in many countries.
We don't think we need to be in as many countries, so it's all about depth rather than breadth. Now we've got the right person who's done this many times. Maria Fernanda is just amazing. I think she will really turbocharge this.
Terrific. Sounds exciting. Thanks so much.
Our final question comes from Nik Modi of RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks. Good morning, everyone. Ravi, I just wanna ask you, I mean, Newell historically has competed in very fragmented markets. A lot of your competitors are much smaller in scale, and obviously the environment's been tough for everyone, but more so for smaller companies that, you know, don't have the resources or the capabilities to kind of manage and navigate what's been going on. I just wanted to get kind of your state of the union on what you've seen in the competitive environment and if that could foster even better market shares as we kind of move forward in a more normalized environment.
I think, look, it's both a plus and a minus because the key is never to get complacent and because sometimes a smaller competitor can be more agile and then if we get complacent with our size, we can get not as has happened maybe in the back in the past. I always have our teams be a little paranoid and say, "Who's gonna disrupt you?" Let's disrupt ourselves first. I do think one of the biggest advantages that Newell had not taken advantage of in the past is that we didn't take advantage of our scale. We acted like eight, now it's seven, but eight sort of billion-dollar plus companies instead of being a 10 billion dollar company. We didn't take our clout to drive it with customers.
We didn't use that to come up with. We had very fragmented distribution networks. In many ways, we competed with the competitors just coming down to their size as opposed to really being leveraging the scale size that we have today. Ovid is the perfect example of what Chris has talked about, 23 supply chains into one. This whole concept, one truck, one invoice, one order, because our customers in the past have gone nuts a little bit saying, "Gee, we have eight people calling on us, and it's so many different Newells." I think that is changing now. I think that'll really help us. Also this very sales-focused way of saying, where are we gonna take our A&P spend and put it against really those high growth margin businesses?
I think that'll give us traction as we're doing, and that's why you're seeing us on these share gains. Rather than just being sort of peanut butter and spreading it all across. Look, we respect our competitors. We look at each category and fight it out. The fact that we're seeing share gains in so many different brands and that all our top 10 brands grew in 2021 and 13 out of our top 15 grew is all really positive for us, and I think we'll bring that strength as we go forward.
Excellent. Thank you, Ravie.
Thank you, Nik.
A replay of today's call will be available later today on our website, ir.newellbrands.com. This concludes our conference. You may now disconnect.