Good morning. My name is Christina, and I will be your conference operator today. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Timken's First Quarter Earnings Release Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question- and- answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star then the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star then the number two on your telephone keypad. Thank you. Mr. Frohnapple, you may begin your conference.
Thanks, Christina, and welcome everyone to our First Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference call. This is Neil Frohnapple, Director of Investor Relations for The Timken Company. We appreciate you joining us today. Before we begin our remarks this morning, I want to point out that we have posted presentation materials on the company's website that we will reference as part of today's review of the quarterly results. You can also access this material through the download feature on the earnings call webcast link. With me today are The Timken Company's President and CEO, Rich Kyle, and Phil Fracassa, our Chief Financial Officer. We will have opening comments this morning from both Rich and Phil before we open up the call for your questions.
During the Q&A, I would ask that you please limit your questions to one question and one follow-up at a time to allow everyone a chance to participate. During today's call, you may hear forward-looking statements related to our future financial results, plans, and business operations. Our actual results may differ materially from those projected or implied due to a variety of factors, which we describe in greater detail in today's press release and in our reports filed with the SEC, which are available on the timken.com website. We have included reconciliations between non-GAAP financial information and its GAAP equivalent in the press release and presentation materials. Today's call is copyrighted by The Timken Company, and without express written consent, we prohibit any use, recording, or transmission of any portion of the call.
Finally, I would like to announce that we are planning to host an Investor Day on Wednesday, September 28th in New York City, so please stay tuned for more details. With that, I would like to thank you for your interest in The Timken Company, and I will now turn the call over to Rich.
Thanks, Neil. Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. Timken delivered an excellent first quarter with record revenue, record earnings per share, and 20% EBITDA margins. We delivered the results in the face of continued inflationary pressures, supply chain challenges, and lingering COVID issues. Our performance demonstrates the resiliency of the company and builds on our track record of delivering strong financial results through industrial cycles and dynamic market conditions. In the quarter, demand continued to be very strong across almost all markets and geographies. Despite the persistent supply chain and COVID challenges, we increased revenue by 10% over last year's first quarter and by almost 12% compared to the fourth quarter. Even with the strong revenue, incoming orders continued to outpace shipments and backlog grew sequentially.
We achieved neutral price cost in the quarter, which was the primary driver of the improved EBITDA margins. We repriced many of the annual contracts at the start of the year, and we continued to move spot and aftermarket pricing through the quarter. We are on track to achieve greater than 4% price this year. Earlier in the year, we forecasted that costs would hold at fourth quarter levels, and that is largely what happened until late in the quarter when we saw costs tick higher after the Russia-Ukraine war began. As a result, price realization in the quarter completely offset the significant year-on-year increases in material and logistics costs, and manufacturing costs were essentially flat from prior year. Sequentially, performance strengthened each month through the quarter, both operationally and financially. COVID and supply chain issues persisted but improved as the quarter progressed.
However, the Russia-Ukraine war and the China COVID disruptions did not become issues until late in the quarter, and we are assuming they will both have a bigger impact on the second quarter results. More on that in a moment. In terms of capital allocation, we repurchased 1.5 million shares of stock in the quarter, or approximately 2% of the outstanding shares, and we paid our 399th consecutive dividend. On Friday, we announced the acquisition of Spinea. Spinea is a technology leader in serving robotics and automation OEMs, particularly in the factory automation sector. The business is an excellent complement to Cone Drive, and together the businesses will provide customers a package of leading technology solutions for their factory automation systems. Spinea comes to Timken as a solid financial performer with pre-synergy EBITDA margins of around 20%.
We are excited to soon have it in the portfolio and welcome Spinea employees to Timken. Overall, it was an excellent start to the year. Timken has established its ability to deliver results through all sorts of varying economic and geopolitical conditions, including inflation, and now, unfortunately, a war in Europe. Timken will perform well in an inflationary environment. While rising commodity prices and input costs may pinch our margins in the short term like they did at the end of last year, we will recover those costs in the market with time.
While the inflation we've experienced in the last year is significantly more pronounced than any we have seen in the last couple of decades, we remain confident that we can recover input costs in the market through pricing, and the first quarter demonstrated that ability. Turning to the outlook, uncertainty remains elevated and the range of possibilities for the rest of the year remains wider than normal. We lowered our revenue outlook slightly for the full year due to the possibility of headwinds from the Russia-Ukraine war, currency, and the continuation of the supply chain issues. We suspended Russia operations near the end of Q1, and we are assuming in our guide no Russia revenue for the remainder of the year. Last year, Russia was about 1% of sales. The change in revenue outlook is not a reflection of current demand for our products or our ability to supply.
Demand for our products continue to grow through the first quarter and remains very strong. The pricing environment for Timken is also very positive. Pricing took a step up in Q1 from the fourth quarter, and we expect it to continue to increase modestly through the remainder of the year. We have continued to increase production levels through capacity adds, increases in staffing, and through productivity gains. We are in good position to deliver the 10% organic revenue for the full year, and that assumes that we, our customers, and our suppliers all continue to deal with various supply chain issues at an elevated level for the full year. Across the company, April shipments continued at roughly the March pace, and that is despite a slowdown in China from the COVID restrictions and no revenue in Russia.
Overall, the demand situation is stronger than our revenue outlook as we continue to assume in the revenue forecast that there will not be any significant improvement in supply chain performance through the course of the year. As I mentioned, our China revenue was impacted in April from COVID restrictions. Our plants are running and have not been significantly impacted, but customer shipments as well as exports are both down as customers and logistics networks have been impacted. We have assumed that this will improve by the end of the second quarter and will not be an issue in the second half, but that remains uncertain. From an earnings perspective, we are holding the prior guidance range of $5-$5.40, which also reflects the higher level of uncertainty that we are facing.
We are assuming our costs to be higher in the second quarter than they were in the first and to hold at the higher level for the rest of the year. We saw energy, steel, and commodity prices increase with the start of the war, and other costs, including logistics, have not eased. We don't know if the recent uptick in costs will hold or be transitory, but I would say that we are being significantly more cautious on our cost outlook than we were at this same point last year. Last year at this time, we assumed that much of the inflation would be transitory. This year, we are assuming that it will stick. We are, of course, working tirelessly to mitigate both the inflation and supply chain costs, and there is also the possibility that the costs ease through the balance of the year.
We are also preparing that we will need to realize more pricing both this year and in 2023 to offset the net impact of these higher costs. We expect cash flow to seasonally improve the rest of the year, but to remain well below 100% conversion. This is due to increasing working capital to serve the growth and to mitigate supply chain challenges. Our balance sheet remains strong. We remain active in the M&A market, and we expect to continue to allocate capital through the remainder of 2022. In closing, I want to reiterate that our performance the last several years, including our first quarter results, has really demonstrated the enduring strength of our product portfolio, the diversity of our market mix, and the capabilities of the Timken team. Timken has been a mid- to high-teens EBITDA margin business every year for over a decade.
That's through the highs and lows of industrial cycles, falling and rising commodity prices, special tariffs, currency swings, a pandemic, and now most recently, through inflation, unprecedented supply chain challenges, and a war. Through all of those conditions, whether positive or negative, demand for Timken products and technology remains strong, and we continue to grow and deliver for our customers, investors, and employees. In 2022, Timken is on track to deliver record revenue and earnings per share for the fourth year out of the last five, while at the same time continuing to advance our strategy to grow the company's industrial leadership position. Phil?
Okay, thanks, Rich. Good morning, everyone. For the financial review, I'm gonna start on slide 14 of the presentation materials. Timken delivered a great start to the year with strong performance across the board in the first quarter. You can see a summary of our financial results on this slide. Revenue in the quarter was over $1.1 billion, up about 10% from last year and a new record for the company. We delivered an Adjusted EBITDA margin of 20%, and we achieved all-time record Adjusted Earnings Per Share of $1.61. Turning to slide 15, let's take a closer look at our first quarter sales performance. Organically, sales were up 11% from last year, which reflects broad growth across most markets and sectors, as well as higher pricing.
On the right-hand side of the slide, you can see organic growth by region, excluding both currency and acquisitions. All regions were up in the quarter versus the year ago period, led by the Americas. Let me add a little color on each region. We were up 22% in Latin America as most sectors were up year-on-year, with industrial distribution and rail posting the strongest gains. In North America, our largest region, we were up 14%, with most sectors up there as well, led by distribution, off-highway, and marine. In Europe, we were up 11%, with strong growth in distribution, off-highway, and general industrial. This was partially offset by lower renewable energy and Russian rail shipments.
Finally, in Asia, we were up 3% as sales were down in China from the very strong first quarter of last year, but up solidly across the rest of the region. From a market standpoint, rail was notably up while automotive was lower. Turning to slide 16, Adjusted EBITDA was $225 million or 20% of sales in the first quarter compared to $204 million or 19.9% of sales last year. Adjusted EBITDA was up $21 million or 10% with margins up 10 basis points from last year's strong first quarter. We delivered a sizable step-up in margins from the fourth quarter. Looking at the change in Adjusted EBITDA, the biggest thing that jumps out is that price mix and material and logistics costs fully offset each other in the first quarter.
This allowed us to capture the benefits of our strong organic volume growth, which more than offset the impact of higher SG&A expense. Let me comment a little further on a few of these items. As I mentioned, price mix was positive in the quarter. Pricing was meaningfully higher in both Mobile Industries and Process Industries, reflecting our recent pricing actions. Mix was also positive, driven by strong distribution sales. Moving to material and logistics. As expected, we saw significantly higher costs in the first quarter compared to last year, driven by inflationary pressures and supply chain challenges. I would point out that these costs were largely in line with fourth quarter levels. On the SG&A line, costs in the first quarter were up in dollars, supporting the higher revenue and reflecting annual compensation increases.
SG&A was down as a percentage of sales as we continue to leverage our cost structure very well coming out of COVID. Finally, I want to touch on manufacturing performance. In the quarter, we benefited from higher production volume and achieved productivity improvements. This was fully offset by the impact of higher energy, labor, and other costs, as well as continued supply chain-related inefficiencies. On slide 17, you'll see that we posted net income of 118 million or $1.56 per diluted share for the quarter on a GAAP basis. This includes $0.05 of net expense from special items driven largely by Russia-related charges. On an adjusted basis, we earned $1.61 per share, up 17% from last year and a new Timken record for any quarter.
You'll note that we had fewer shares outstanding on average in the first quarter compared to last year, reflecting our buyback activity. Our first quarter adjusted tax rate was 25.5% in line with last year. Now let's move to our business segment results, starting with Process Industries on slide 18. For the first quarter, Process Industries sales were $584 million, up more than 12% from last year. Organically, sales were up 13%, driven by growth across most sectors, with distribution and general industrial posting the strongest gains. Heavy industries, marine, and industrial services were also up, while renewable energy was down modestly as expected. Pricing was also positive in the quarter.
Process Industries Adjusted EBITDA in the first quarter was $158 million or 27.1% of sales compared to $136 million or 26% of sales last year. The increase in segment margins was mainly attributable to the impact of higher volume and positive price mix, which more than offset higher operating costs in the quarter. Now let's turn to Mobile Industries on slide 19. In the first quarter, Mobile Industries sales were $540 million, up roughly 7% from last year. Organically, sales increased nearly 9%, with off-highway and rail posting the strongest gains. We were also up slightly in aerospace and heavy truck, while automotive was down modestly against a difficult comp last year. Pricing was also positive in the quarter.
Mobile Industries' Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was $79 million or 14.7% of sales compared to $80 million or 15.9% of sales last year. EBITDA dollars were roughly flat year-over-year. The decline in segment margins was driven by the impact of higher operating costs, which more than offset the benefits of higher volume and positive price mix. While mobile continues to be more negatively impacted by cost headwinds in Process Industries, I would point out that margins in mobile were up over 600 basis points from the fourth quarter, driven by a meaningful improvement in price cost. Turning to slide 20, you'll see that operating cash flow was just slightly negative in the first quarter, reflecting higher working capital to support our sales growth and customer service. After CapEx of $34 million, our free cash flow was -$35 million.
The first quarter is normally the lowest quarter for cash flow, given seasonal working capital needs and our annual incentive compensation payouts in March. We expect a significant step-up in cash flow over the course of the rest of the year, but it will be more back half weighted. Taking a closer look at our capital structure. We ended the quarter with net debt to Adjusted EBITDA at 1.8 times, well within our targeted range. Note that gross debt includes the $350 million 10-year bond issuance we completed in March. This provides us with additional financial flexibility at an attractive fixed rate of 4.8%. It will also enable us to fund the Spinea acquisition with cash that's already on hand.
From a capital allocation standpoint, during the first quarter, Timken returned $124 million to shareholders through the repurchase of 1.5 million shares of company stock and the payment of our quarterly dividend. The step up in share buybacks during the quarter demonstrates our confidence in the long-term outlook for the business and our commitment to consistent and accretive capital allocation. Now let's turn to the outlook with a summary on slide 21. Our first quarter performance was a terrific start relative to the full year earnings outlook we provided three months ago. However, the level of uncertainty has risen over the past couple of months with the Russia-Ukraine conflict and ongoing COVID lockdowns in China. Given this uncertainty, we have decided to hold our full year earnings outlook and continue to evaluate it as we move through the rest of the year.
Our full year earnings guidance is unchanged, with Adjusted Earnings Per Share in the range of $5-$5.40 per share, which would be up 10% from last year at the midpoint and a new record for Timken. The midpoint of our earnings outlook implies that 2022 Adjusted EBITDA margins will be roughly flat with last year, which is modestly better than our prior outlook. Our outlook assumes a step up in inflationary pressures and supply chain inefficiencies over the remainder of the year compared to our prior guide. To the extent these headwinds don't materialize as assumed or are transitory, or to the extent we can otherwise mitigate them, it would be upside to the guidance. Turning to the revenue outlook.
We're now planning for revenue to be up around 8% in total at the midpoint versus 2021, compared to 10% in our prior outlook. The 2% reduction is comprised of 1% organic and 1% currency. Organically, we now expect revenue to be up 10% compared to the 11% in our prior outlook. The change reflects the impact from suspending operations in Russia and the expectation for continued supply chain disruptions. We continue to see solid demand across most markets and sectors, and we also expect to benefit from outgrowth initiatives and positive pricing. Our demand outlook is supported by our strong backlog as well as incoming order rates and customer sentiments. With respect to currency, we now expect a 2% headwind on the top line for the full year, up from 1% in our prior outlook.
This is based on April spot rates, which reflect the strengthening of the U.S. dollar versus key currencies since the beginning of the year. Please note that our outlook does not include any revenue from Spinea, which is expected to close in the June timeframe. Moving to free cash flow. For the full year, we estimate conversion at around 65% of net income. We expect CapEx in the range of 4%-4.5% of sales, which includes several growth-related projects and other initiatives to improve productivity and margins. For 2022, we anticipate net interest expense to be roughly $65 million, reflecting the recent bond issuance and our expectation for higher variable interest rates. We estimate that our adjusted tax rate will be around 25.5%, in line with the first quarter, but up slightly from our prior guide.
To summarize, Timken delivered an excellent start to the year, and we remain well positioned to achieve record results for 2022. Our team remains focused on driving our profitable growth strategy, winning in the marketplace, and performing well through this ever-changing environment. This concludes our formal remarks, and we'll now open the line for questions. Operator?
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Again, press star one to ask a question. We'll pause for just a moment to allow everyone an opportunity to signal for questions. We'll take our first question from Rob Wertheimer with Melius Research.
Hey, good morning.
Hey, Rob.
Good morning.
Actually my first question or my question is really just gonna be a strategic one with the Spinea acquisition, which looks pretty interesting. I wonder if you could compare the technology of Spinea to what you do currently. You mentioned it's highly engineered. I don't know if it's a bit more advanced. I wonder if you could describe. I understand it fits well into kind of automation markets, which are growing nicely, but does it also represent a branch into, you know, more highly engineered product? Does it expand your TAM on acquisitions? And does it open up new avenues for future growth? Thanks.
Yeah. Thanks, Rob. Cone Drive organically has developed what we call the harmonic drive for robotic applications, and Spinea's specialty is a cycloidal drive, which differences in torque and weight and the very complicated subject, making it simpler, but generally bigger, heavier applications would lean towards the Spinea solution, and smaller joints or smaller applications, lighter duty would lean towards Cone. Now we would have a full complement of products. I would say the precision level and the complexity is similar for both. But two things.
We wanna fill this out, and too, since we're organic, we're working our way into that market in Cone's case, and it's taken us some time, but now, you know, we just acquired a significant position, so customer access, and Spinea's been at it for 20 or 30 years. Cone's been at it for a few. In terms of your follow-up question there.
In terms of other areas, there are actually some other similar adjacent products that we still don't have in this. Moving beyond factory automation into a bigger presence in guided vehicles and other precision drives applications. For Spinea specifically, European history, European focus, a huge Asian market in this space, and they have a very small presence in Asia. We think being a part of the Timken family can help them significantly there as well. I think it's, you know, it's not a huge acquisition, but it's a very exciting one for us in what's a very exciting growth market, and we look forward to getting it in the portfolio here in a couple of months.
Okay. Thanks, Rich. If I can just my last, just your general feeling on the acquisition pipeline, backlog, seller feelings right now in periods of uncertainty, and I will stop there.
I think our activity level is good. I would say it's, you know, fully back to where it was pre-pandemic. Also, as we talked about in the last call or the one before that, we spent a little bit of time on some larger possibilities. I would say we're back to 100% focused on cultivating and getting active the small to mid-size that you've seen us do, you know, say Spinea size, up to two, three times that size. That's where we're focused. We've got a lot in the pipeline, and I would be hopeful that Spinea will not be our only acquisition closed in 2022. Obviously a lot of factors there.
Thank you.
Thanks, Rob.
Go to our next question from Bryan Blair with Oppenheimer.
Thank you. Good morning, guys.
Morning.
Morning, Bryan.
I apologize if I missed this detail, but can you break out the volume and price contribution that's now factored into your 10% organic sales outlook? I think it's 7% and 4%, last quarter or thereabout, and I'm assuming that we now have a few more balance or perhaps some price weighting to the revised outlook.
Yeah, Bryan, thanks for the question, and welcome to the call. Thanks for picking us up. You know, on the sales outlook, I think you heard Rich in his remarks talk about, you know, pricing coming in as we thought. We expect to achieve greater than 4% pricing for the full year. The rest of that would be volume, if you will. We're not getting more specific on the pricing than that. You heard from Rich that the Q1 pricing came in as we expected. We continue to move spot pricing through the quarter.
We continue to look at aftermarket pricing and feel really good that we'll exceed our 4% target for the year. You know, you can think of the rest of it being volume. As we talked about, really strong growth across sectors. You know, the only sector that'll be flat for the year as we anticipated was renewable energy. We should be flattish for the year, but the rest of the markets, looking across markets, looking across geographies, you know, very strong across the board, as you can see on that one slide in the materials.
Just to be clear, it's 10% organic 'cause, we also-
Exactly
We start with a little bit of headwind from FX.
Right. Exactly.
Yep. Understood. Appreciate the color. No surprise that your cost profile steps up sequentially. I was wondering if you could offer a little more detail on that front, how we should think about the impacts on a segment basis. You had mentioned that Mobile is understandably facing a little more pressure there and how that influences its second margin outlook and cadence for the year.
I would say, first, I would say through the quarter, as I mentioned, our operational performance supply chain challenges actually reduced as the quarter progressed. You know, go back to January, we were dealing with, you know, significant Omicron cases, high absenteeism in our plants, and still a lot of delays in the supply chain. Those persisted, so I wouldn't say anything went completely away. I would say we did see for the first time in a while some clear, you know, momentum going in a positive direction on that front.
When the Russia-Ukraine war broke out, energy costs, mostly in Europe on the energy side, steel globally, and we saw scrap prices go up in the U.S. almost, you know, within a week or two of that happening. Logistics costs have gone. We thought those might start coming down. They've instead held. You know, whether those are end up being transitory or they're here for the rest of the year, again, we've taken what we think is a prudent approach to assuming they are here to stay 'cause they've been, you know, we're now on six quarters of increasing costs. We're taking the approach that they are here, but certainly it could be more transitory than what we're assuming as well.
Yeah. Understood. Thanks again.
Thanks, Bryan.
Go to our next question from David Raso with Evercore ISI.
Hi. Thank you. Maybe I missed it, but the margin cadence for the year, can you give us a little help with that? Just given the fourth quarter, you would think, you know, should provide a relatively easy year-over-year comp. It looks like you're implying the rest of the year, the margins are only flat year-over-year. Can you help us a bit with the cadence, particularly, you know, 2Q? Thank you.
Yeah. Thanks, David. I would tell you know, the guidance would assume that we still would expect some second half improvement in the margins year-over-year. As we said, you know, by holding the earnings guidance, which again, as Rich said, you know, it's admittedly a prudent approach. We think we're being
Conservative relative to the guide. We would expect cost to tick up a bit, you know, the planning for cost to tick up a bit in Q2, and then kind of sustain for the rest of the year. I think still would expect second half margins to be up year on year. Then for the full year, you know, the guidance would imply the full year margins would be roughly flat with 2021.
Just so we level set though, on the second quarter year ago, EBITDA margins were 18.8%. Just to give us some framework here a little bit. I mean, is it 150 basis points lower year-over-year? I think we're all just trying to square up the price cost for 1Q. How much does it go negative again in 2Q to drive the margin down? And then.
Yeah, David , I don't think we wanna go into second quarter specifics and outlook. You know, to add a little more color to what Phil said, you know. Maybe I'll switch from margins to Earnings Per Share. Obviously, we have our revenue outlook. I mean, you know, the last four years, our EPS, I think, has ranged from 51% in the first half to 58% of it in the first half. And so we do have a seasonal part to our business that's almost always there. Then, both in 2019 and 2021, it was in the higher 50s. Last year was the rising cost. 2019 was a little bit of, you know, easing volume.
You know, I think the midpoint of the guide weighting on that. It's basically a similar performance to what we saw last year for the full year, you know, off of the first quarter level.
That's very helpful. When it comes to having to price more from your original thoughts based on the cost outlook, have you already seen the cost increase to where you have gone back to the market since your original increases, or you just have, you know, that in the ready in case it does go up even further than what you're currently seeing?
We had to step up from Q4 to Q1. You know, some of our global distribution prices went up mid-quarter, so not all of that was in the run rate. We have some other contracts that are opening up mid-year. You know, as I said, I think what we would be planning for in this or assuming in this guide is probably a similar progression from this point through the end of the year, what we saw last year, which is you know, prices modestly going up quarter- to- quarter for the rest of the year. That being said, as we've gone through the contracts this last year or this year, I mean, we are increasingly, I'll say structuring our commercial negotiations to where we will have more flexibility.
As you know, we have a lot of pricing mechanisms, a lot of indexes, contracts, spot pricing, quotes, et cetera. But as we've gone through that, generally, I would say we have shorter deals than we had before and/or we have more coverage. Whereas we may have had a scrap index, now we're trying to get a material index or an inflationary index. In some cases, we had a contract and we don't have a contract anymore, and we're just putting pricing through. You know, I still think we have some limits as to what you could see this year if costs took another step up. We are in a better position today, if that's the case, than we were a year ago.
If we're still in this situation, you know, if 4% pricing a year or more is the new norm, we will be in a better position for it, this year, and we'll be in even better position for it next year.
Just to summarize that, you have more flexibility for the next nine months than if we had the same conversation 12 months ago? Just so I'm clear that it-
Let's say flexibility or better coverage of what the index is covering, yes.
Perfect. Okay. Thank you so much. I appreciate it.
Thanks, David.
Thanks, David.
We'll take our next question from Stephen Volkmann with Jefferies.
Hi. Good morning, guys. A couple of demand questions, if I could. I know you said Russia was somewhere around 1% of your sales. I think it was actually more, if I'm not mistaken, for some of your large competitors. I'm just curious if there's any type of an opportunity there to backfill some of the other shortfalls based on that.
Yeah. Well, I think take the Russia business for us, historical Russia business into two parts. The rail business produced in Russia, sold in Russia, probably gone. The non-rail business produced outside of Russia, sold into Russia, and certainly with supply constraints, capacity constraints, et cetera, there's a possibility that we can make that up, and direct that capacity and revenue into other places. You know, the market share itself is gone at this point. You know, that market is getting served by others.
Yeah, maybe the other points too, I maybe might be referencing is some of our competitors may have larger footprints. You heard from Rich, our footprint in Russia is mainly rail. The rest of the rest of the business we serve from outside Russia. To the extent folks have larger footprints in the region that are impacted, it does give us some ability to continue to broadly serve you know the European markets from the remainder of our footprint.
All right.
Historically, we were in the rail market, and then I'll say metals and commodity markets, mining, not in automotive, not in truck, and I think some of our competitors have market positions in those industries as well.
Okay. On the flip side, everybody's kind of watching for signs of demand destruction because obviously you're not the only one seeing cost increases. I'm curious if there's any of it. It doesn't look like it based on your end market chart, but is there anything that you're worried about relative to demand and kind of demand destruction on price and so forth?
No, we haven't seen anything you could point to. I think, you know, war certainly makes people a little more nervous, ourselves included. There's been nothing that you could point to. You know, the one thing you can point to today is China with the lockdowns. There's a general sentiment there that that's not affecting end demand. When the lockdowns are restricted, things will, you know, like a light switch turn right back to where they were. That's largely what happened when they locked down a lot of the country back in early 2020. I think that's very plausible. It would certainly be good for us if that happened sooner rather than later and those restrictions were lifted.
No, we've seen no negative impact on demand from pricing, no negative impact on demand from the war, and the demand situation is very strong.
Yeah, maybe just a couple of anecdotal points on that to follow that up, Steve. You know, when you look at a couple of markets like in Process Industries, which typically moves, the latest was up significantly year on year, up significantly sequentially. You know, that's OEM demand coming out of heavier markets like metals, aggregates, cement, pulp and paper, even oil and gas. So we're seeing good momentum there. Strong momentum across the rest of the Process portfolio, you know, with the exception of renewable energy, which we expected would be flat this year. Then on the Mobile side we saw a nice step up in rail sequentially despite the Russia impact.
Despite the Russia impact, we were up pretty solidly year-over-year, up sequentially, and we're seeing some good momentum outside of Russia for the full year. I think those are a couple of markets that give us confidence that we're seeing that the momentum's there. Again within Mobile, strong momentum continues in off-highway and the other sectors. I think all signs are still very positive.
Okay, thanks. Appreciate it.
Thanks, Steve.
Go to our next question from Chris Dankert with Loop Capital Markets.
Hey, morning guys.
Chris.
I guess, first off, thinking about the automation portfolio now, you know, is that principally serving machine builders, you know, more end users? Is it kind of a healthy mix of both? Just any comments you can kind of give us on growth rates in that business during the first quarter here.
Yeah. The biggest part of that market for us is automatic lubrication systems, which would go into diverse markets, but is really replacing manual lubrication. That's the solution. When you move it in the end markets, our second biggest market would actually be automated warehouse systems before Spinea. We'd be automated warehouse systems, so Rollon has a nice position in that market along with a couple other product lines. I'd say you get into factory automation from there with Rollon, with Cone, with Timken housed units and some other products. It's a mix.
Again, it's a market that go back five or six years ago would have been sub 1% of the company because we weren't in automatic lubrication systems and these other markets. I don't want to get into the, you know, first quarter run rate, but I think the trend has been positive. You know, high single digit type overall growth in this. I think what we've seen coming out of the pandemic, if anything, is only putting more confidence and belief in that with labor shortages, the need for, you know, the need to reduce labor intensity, and the ability to increase output without that.
Also the development of the emerging markets where you're seeing more automation go into countries like China and India than what we're in for. It's a market similar to renewable energy we're very bullish on over the long term. It does have a cyclicality to it like most of our markets because it's tied to capital equipment. The current outlook for it is quite strong.
Gotcha. That, that's really, really helpful. Thank you. To kind of follow up on another key market driver here. I mean, we've talked about renewable energy. I think everyone understands, you know, you've got some pretty massive comps to deal with in that business and that's why it's flattish this year. I guess the order rate and kind of the interest in that business, do you feel like, you know, again, 2023 we should be able to get back to growth in that market specifically?
Yes. To back up that specific question, you know, I really think when you look at our revenue the last few years, I mean, we're really starting to see the benefit of the diversity of our markets. Renewable energy carried us in 2020 during the pandemic. China carried us in the pandemic. This year other parts of the end markets and other parts of the geographies I think are gonna carry us. Now coming specifically to your renewable energy question, we ended the year a little on a lower rate last year, so we expected to start out down in the first quarter. You know, we needed orders to come in to really support the second half growth. That happened.
I think similar to the automation story, what's happened in the world with energy dependence on other countries, et cetera, I think the capital going into this market is going to be there, whether it's regardless what geography. If anything that's what's transpired in the last three months and last couple years, I think has only increased our belief that this is going to be a growth market. I think what's, you know, the risk around probably this year is that, you know, we started slow, and then the China situation needs to resolve itself pretty quickly. Backlog has grown, orders are building, and I would say customer sentiment for the end of this year and into next year is growing.
Gotcha. Well, thanks so much for the color today. I really appreciate it.
Thanks.
Thanks, Chris.
We'll take our next question from Joe Ritchie with Goldman Sachs.
Hey, good morning, guys.
Good morning, Joe.
Hi, Joe.
Hey. Hey, Rich, can you maybe just elaborate a little bit more on what's happening, what you're seeing on the ground in China? I know it's about, you know, call it mid-teen% sales for you guys, and the environment has been very fluid, particularly since the end of the quarter. Any color on like end markets and specifically what you guys are seeing on the ground?
I think it depends on where your factories are, whether your factories or your customer's factories. Our factories have been very minimally impacted. We're not in Shanghai, we're not in Beijing, where the lockdowns are. We have an office in Shanghai, and a lot of our people have not been able to leave their homes or get to the office for some time, but we're able to operate. Our factories have not been significantly impacted. However, ports have been impacted. Trucking's been impacted, and some of our customers, depending on where their locations are either impacted or they're having trouble getting some material. We did see a double-digit decline in China revenue in April from March.
We expect to be down in May as well. You know, I think our team generally feels this is going to work its way through the system quite quickly. You know, the optimistic case is probably by the end of this month, it's back to normal. It's not, certainly not normal as we sit here today, and I think there's some uncertainty around it. You know, we're not looking at 40%-50% drops, and industry is still running over there. It has been impacted for sure.
Got it. That's helpful. Is it impacting your Mobile markets more so than your Process markets at this point?
No, I would say there's probably no real correlation there. It tends to be more of a Process Industries market for us, particularly because of renewable energy. I'd say it's probably an even impact between the markets percentage-wise, but more dollars probably in Process.
Okay. Got it. Then my one other follow-up. I saw that you guys break out on a dollar basis, you know, the materials and logistics impact, you know, year-over-year. That seemed to decline in the first quarter versus the fourth quarter. I'm just curious, like are you seeing any easing on both or either, and where are you seeing kind of like just a little bit less pressure?
I'm not sure the decline from the fourth quarter to the first you're referencing in dollars. I think it was flattish. But I would have said material was flattish to down a little bit on a unit cost basis. But again, we saw it go up in April, after the war and, you know, commodity costs, the alloy costs have gone up, et cetera. That's happened globally. Then logistics, I would say is a little bit off peak, but peak is up dramatically from where it would've been, a year ago. We're still up a lot year- over- year. There was some forecasts that that was going to be easing. I think that's probably between what's happened with China and in Europe and Russia.
I think, you know, we're taking a little more cautious outlook on that and not assuming that's going to ease.
Got it. Yeah, no, I was just referring to in the fourth quarter, it was a $58 million headwind year-over-year and $45 million in the first.
Okay.
No, that's helpful. Thank you.
We'll go to our next question from Steve Barger with KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Thanks. Good morning, guys.
Good morning, Steve.
Good morning, Steve.
Rich, going back to your comments on how strong demand is in most end markets and better than the guide suggests, we know orders for a lot of your customers have been pretty good in 1Q. Backlogs are sizable across the space. What are the real pinch points on production and your ability to supply at higher rates?
Well, I think, you know, the conservatism, or I don't know, the first step on that I'd say is it's also customers, right? I mean, they'd say, "Hey, we need 1,000 of this for the next three months," and then they have a labor problem. They can't get another part in, et cetera. I would say the demand, while strong, is still not as smooth a cadence as what you would normally have and/or like. I think there's it starts upstream. Then for us, we are definitely up from where we were a year ago in manning in our plants. We have spot issues with where material is either short or hand to mouth. But for the most part, we have enough material.
We're still adding staffing to our plants globally. You know, on the specific supply side, you know, we're certainly having some problems with electrical components where we have automatic lubrication systems and smaller things like that. Rubber has been a tight commodity. But I would say it's more just delays. And then also, you know, through the first quarter, January and February, we still had extremely high absenteeism in the plants. Now, that really started easing in March, but now we've got, you know, the magnified problem in China. So, I'd say it's just a combination of issues, Steve, that's keeping a little bit of a lid on the efficiency and throughput that you're able to get through the supply chains.
Would you say it's more your customers' inability to take that next piece or more internal in terms of your inability to get the electronic component or whatever?
I would say it's both. Yeah, I would just say it's both and probably leave it there.
Okay. On industrial automation, we've seen a lot, or some of the public OEMs and integrators call out growth in some areas high teens to 30% plus across their portfolios. Is there anything you can do to position for the higher growth verticals in automation? Or what is your strategy for accelerating market share there?
I think it's combination of organic product development and inorganic. I think, you know, and the answer certainly is yes. I think, you know, the move into lubrication systems, certainly feel that that is a, an I don't know, a business that we would put on a CAGR like you just threw out there. But certainly one that we would expect to grow significantly faster than the portfolio and significantly faster than, you know, industrial GDP, et cetera, just again, because it's addressing labor shortages, and it's improving equipment uptime and equipment maintenance and deferring capital cycles, et cetera. Now we were doing quite well with the business then did the BEKA acquisition and then hit the pandemic.
We're, we've really just bounced back in the last year here, but would expect that to have a high growth rate. Then on the factory automation, which is the gist of the Spinea acquisition, certainly again, would expect that to have a significantly higher growth rate than a lot of our core industrial markets. We have a lot happening both in, I would say, in product development as well as our M&A pipeline to continue to scale that position and mix into that. I think all of the global cost and demographics and labor shortages are all playing squarely into that market.
Yeah. The pictures you have on slides eight and nine are of the bigger industrial robots. Are you also selling into the cobot space?
Yeah. As I said, the harmonic drive that we already have in the portfolio would tend to be on the smaller side, and the cycloidal, which we just acquired with Spinea, would tend to be on the larger side. Quite often the robot has both in it depending on which joint and again, the weight torque of the joint. Yes, our objective is to build a position in both.
Got it. Thanks.
We will take our next question from Courtney Yakavonis with Morgan Stanley.
Hi. Good morning, guys. Thanks for the question.
Morning, Courtney.
Appreciated some of the color on, you know, the quarterly EPS distribution. Can you also just comment a little bit on, you know, the revenue cadence for the year? I think usually, you know, 2Q is pretty similar to 1Q, but given some of the disruption that you had, you know, from COVID in North America in January, February, and then the disruption you kind of called out on the China side in 2Q. Any thoughts about how the revenue cadence should progress through the year?
Yeah. I think typically first quarter or second quarter is our peak revenue and peak Earnings Per Share. Typically, we'd see a little bit of an uptick from Q1 to Q2, I mean, 1%-3%. I think this year, we're probably a little more cautious on that given the immediate loss of the Russian revenue, the direct Russian revenue as well as the start of April in China. Then typically from Q2 to Q3 and Q4, you know, a 2%-3% per quarter decline is pretty normal for us. I think those numbers all are within a bandwidth of what we're looking at again this time on the revenue cadence.
Okay, great. That's helpful. Just on some of the changes that you had called out on end markets, one, can you just remind us what percentage of rail is Russia? I think, you know, that was really the only end market that you took out of that, you know, higher growth bucket and lowered, assuming that was all related to Russia. You know, I think the comment was that the ex-Russia business is actually performing quite well. So just if you can give us a little bit more color on how that would look ex-Russia. Similarly, I think industrial services got pulled up. So if you can have any comments on what you're seeing in that end market.
Yeah. I would say globally rail, excluding Russia, is performing well. It was a market that was lagging last year. I would say the U.S. was still lagging, but I would say the U.S. rail market is really preparing for a good run into and well into probably through 2023. I would say the rail market globally, to your comment, is doing well excluding Russia. You know, Russian rail sales, call it 0.5% of company revenue, maybe a little less. That would come obviously all out of the rail segment, so it would lower it meaningfully. Corporation-wide, not a big deal.
Got it. Industrial services?
Yeah, I would say, just to comment on industrial services, you know, up in the first quarter, pretty solidly. You know, that business tends to be tied to industrial activity, mainly, you know, mainly in North America. I mean, it is a global business, but it's mainly in North America. For the full year, we did see an improvement in the backlog in that business, an improvement in the bookings in that business. We do expect stronger growth across the services sector for the full year than we had coming in. 'Cause, yeah, some of the sectors that our services business is tied to, as an example, pretty strong position in oil and gas.
We saw some improved activity there, with what's been happening around the world and just more broadly, industrial activity in the Americas and even in Europe to a lesser degree. Just a step up in bookings, a step up in activity. We saw it in Q1 and expect that to sustain itself for the rest of the year.
Great. Thanks.
Go to our next question from Michael Feniger with Bank of America.
Hey, guys. Filling in for Ross here. I appreciate you have more flexibility than you were on pricing a year ago. If pricing's 4% in Q1 and your costs are going up, why is that 4% number not moving higher on a full year basis? Is it because of annual contracts? How does the pricing mechanism work, if you could remind us on the process side? Are competitors not raising pricing as aggressively? Maybe kind of just flesh that out for us.
Yeah. You know, our pricing metric is a year-over-year comparison for exact mix of parts sold. Last year at this time, our pricing was probably close to zero, and then late in the second quarter, it started ticking up. To get 4% in the second half of the year, we have to, you know, have more pricing than we have today 'cause our comp today. The pricing comp gets harder as the year goes on. Not so much in the second quarter, but certainly in the third and the fourth. We are expecting more pricing. You know, we said we'd go into the year getting more than 4%, and we are getting more than 4%, and we're probably not gonna go into too much more detail of how much more.
Fair enough. Rich, you made a comment about how inflation isn't transitory, it's indeed permanent. I'm just curious if that permanence kind of even lasts going forward. Other than pricing, does it change the way you operate, you run the business outside of just raising prices? Does it have to change maybe your footprint and where you guys invest capacity? Obviously there's been comments about reshoring supply chains, and you're a critical supplier. I'm just curious if you could maybe comment on that portion, and if we do see inflation more permanently, how it kind of changes, you know, the business model other than just maybe pricing. Thanks.
Yeah. I certainly think on the labor side, as we said, it would play into our CapEx and automation and certainly a sizable percentage of our annual CapEx spend is either for pure automation and/or assets, equipment technology that is more efficient and state-of-the-art in improving labor productivity and material conversion efficiency, et cetera. I think you could certainly see that step up. I do think the footprint's relevant as well, because the labor challenges around the world are different depending on where you're at in the country, in the United States, and even more so where you're at in the world.
You know, I think historically there would've been too many cases where we would've been reluctant to make an investment in a facility because we were concerned we couldn't hire the people, and I think that is now a real concern, you know, particularly where we have some things in smaller communities where you do have to, you know, you have to concern yourself, are you gonna be able to attract the labor into those markets? I think those would be the two factors. I think there's an impact on automation within the footprint and an impact on the capital going to the parts of the footprint where the labor availability to support it is assured.
Thanks. Thank you, guys.
Thank you.
Thanks, Michael.
As there are no further questions.
Okay.
Please go ahead, Mr. Frohnapple.
Yeah. Thanks, Christina, and thank you everyone for joining us today. If you have any further questions after today's call, please contact me. Thank you, and this concludes our call.
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