10/29/2020

speaker
Operator
Moderator

Good day and welcome to the DuPont Third Quarter Earnings Call. Today's conference is being recorded and at this time I would like to turn the conference over to Leland Weber. Please go ahead.

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

Good morning everyone.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative

Thank

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

you for joining

speaker
Investor Relations Representative

us for DuPont's Third Quarter of 2020 Earnings Conference Call. We're making this call available to investors and media via webcast. We have prepared slides to supplement our comments during this conference call. These slides are posted to the investor relations section of DuPont's website and through the link to our webcast. Joining me on the call today are Ed Breen, Chief Executive Officer, and Laurie Koch, Chief Financial Officer. Please read the forward-looking statement disclaimer contained in this slide. During our call, we will make forward-looking statements regarding our expectations or predictions about the future. Because these statements are based on current assumptions and factors that involve risk and uncertainty, our actual performance and results may differ materially from our forward-looking statements. Our 2019 Form 10-K, as updated by our current and periodic reports, includes detailed discussion of principal risk and uncertainties which may cause such differences. Unless otherwise specified, all historical financial measures presented today exclude significant items. We will also refer to other non-GAP measures. A reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAP financial measure is included in our press release and posted to the investor page of our website. I'll now turn the call over to Ed.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Leland, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I'd like to begin by recognizing the tremendous efforts of our employees across the world to deliver another solid quarter in the face of this global pandemic. Lori will cover the specifics of the quarter shortly, but I'd like to take a few minutes to highlight our performance in a few key areas. The timely actions that we took earlier this year to protect our employees, ensure the safe operation of our sites, strengthen our financial position, and do our part to combat the pandemic enabled us to deliver strong results this quarter. My senior leadership team and I closely monitor developments globally to ensure we are taking the right precautionary measures to continue protecting our employees. Their safety and well-being remains our top priority. Our intense focus on safety has enabled all 170 of our global manufacturing sites to continue operating according to plan. This in turn has given us the ability to deliver for customers during a period of continued uncertainty. Additionally, our balance sheet remains strong. In fact, so far this year, we reduced our commercial paper balance by approximately $1.4 billion to end the quarter with less than $400 million in CP, which was enabled by strong free cash flow and proceeds from the TCS and Hemlock divestitures we announced in September. Since the end of the quarter, we have further reduced our commercial paper balances and we look to make additional progress through year end. We also remain committed to doing our part to help during these unprecedented times. We continue to enable production of approximately 30 million Tyvek protective garments per month in an effort to provide health care and frontline workers with the protection they need to battle this global pandemic. I'll cover more details regarding operational excellence on the next slide, but let me just say that I am encouraged by the progress we are making here. We continue to remove structural G&A costs and execute on our working capital improvements, which helps drive our strong free cash flow and operating earnings improvements. We have moved faster and found additional pockets of G&A costs to streamline, enabling us to increase our expected cost savings from our 2020 initiatives from $180 million to $280 million. I am also pleased with the progress that we have made in advancing the NMB and IFF transaction, as well as the divestitures of non-core assets. In August, IFF shareholders voted overwhelmingly in favor of the transaction and we remain on track for a first quarter 2021 close and we are targeting February 1st. With regards to non-core, in September we announced the divestiture of the TCS business, along with our equity interest in the Hemlock Semiconductor Joint Venture for $725 million. Earlier this month, we also signed a deal to sell the biomaterials business for $240 million. These portfolio refinement efforts contribute to value creation by increasing cash flow, strengthening the balance sheet, and focusing our portfolio in markets where we expect to see solid growth opportunity. Moving to slide 3, I'd like to provide more specifics on the progress we have made in improving our cash generation and G&A productivity. Free cash flow conversion on a -to-date basis was 140%. Through September, we've delivered approximately $1.9 billion of free cash flow versus $1.6 billion for all of 2019. This growth is primarily attributable to actions we have taken to reduce our capital expenditures and improve working capital. During the quarter, we significantly reduced inventory balances, and the team's focus on reducing pass-through accounts receivable also yielded positive results as we reduced our pass-through balances as a percentage of accounts receivable to 4%. We've also lowered planned capital spending for 2020 to approximately $1 billion, nearly $500 million less than 2019 levels. As a reminder, we did not reduce any safety-related capex and have developed detailed plans for restarting our growth projects to ensure we are able to capture demand when markets fully recover. We delivered more than 185 basis point reduction in non-manufacturing costs as a percentage of sales in the quarter, mostly in G&A. Of the approximately $150 million of cost savings that we realized, $100 million was structural in nature. As I mentioned, we now expect our 2020 in-period savings from current year actions to be $280 million versus our prior estimate of $180 million. Our cost actions are targeted towards G&A expenses and are aimed at enabling a highly productive, appropriately scaled cost structure. Growth through innovation remains a key component of our strategy and we continue to invest in critical areas like sales, application development, and R&D so that we will be well positioned to capture growth when we fully emerge from the current market environment. Before turning it over to Lori, I'd just like to make a few comments on some of the sequential trends we saw in the third quarter. We saw a 15% increase in operating EBITDA as well as 200 basis point improvement in operating EBITDA margin versus the second quarter. This rebound was most significant within T&I as global auto bills were up more than 60% sequentially, stronger than our expectations going into the quarter. Additionally, our third quarter decremental margin was approximately 31% and a proven of approximately 1,400 basis points versus second quarter led by strengthening top line and continued structural cost removal across the company. I'll now turn it over to Lori to walk through some of the details for the quarter.

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Ed, and good morning, everyone. Turning to slide four and the financial highlights for the quarter. Net sales for the quarter were $5.1 billion, down 6% organically and as reported. Portfolio was neutral as acquisitions and water solutions offset divestitures in E&I and non-core. Likewise, currency was neutral in the quarter. Pricing was mixed across the portfolio with gains in S&P and non-core offset by price declines primarily in T&I. Price declines in T&I of down mince-dickle digits were in line with expectations. We expect similar T&I pricing through the fourth quarter as nylon 6-6 prices have generally stabilized in the back half of the year. On a regional basis, organic sales increased 3% in Asia Pacific versus the year-go period with declines in the other regions. China sales in our core segments improved 14% versus the third quarter 2019 and 10% sequentially from second quarter 2020. I'll provide additional color on our segment top line results on the next slide. We delivered operating EBITDA of $1.3 billion and adjusted EPS of $0.88 per share, well above expectations, driven by better than expected top line results in our E&I and T&I segments and more favorable product mix with continued strength in semiconductors, Tyvek protective garments, and probiotics. Once again, our teams maintained strong cost control to deliver operating EBITDA declines in line with the sales declines on a percentage basis. Our decremental margin was approximately 31%, also ahead of our expectations heading into the quarter. Excluding approximately 60 million of costs associated with temporarily idling facilities, primarily in T&I and SMC, as well as gains in both the current and prior year period, our decremental margins were in the mid single digits, a significant improvement from the second quarter driven by the improving top line and continued structural cost takeout. As Ed mentioned, we are also delivering on our cash targets. Free cash flow of approximately $1.9 billion through the first nine months of the year led to a conversion rate of approximately 140%. In addition to the strong free cash flow, Ed mentioned the progress we have made on non-core divestitures, which enabled the reduction of commercial paper balances in the quarter. These actions have lowered our net debt position and improved our net debt to EBITDA ratio to below three times. Slide five provides more detail on the -over-year change in net sales. Consistent strength across semiconductors, probiotics, home and personal care, Tyvek protected garments, and water solutions, coupled with improvement in automotive and residential construction markets, led to an overall organic sales decline of 6%, which reflects steady growth off the second quarter lows. Several of our businesses have market-leading products, which enabled them to succeed despite global challenges presented by the pandemic. Within electronics and imaging, semiconductor technology delivered its third consecutive quarter of organic growth. Likewise, within nutrition and biosciences, our probiotics and home and personal care offerings continue to capitalize on robust global demand, each with double-digit growth in the quarter. Finally, within safety and construction, the Tyvek protected garment business is providing critical PPE to our medical communities and frontline workers, and the water business continues to provide market-leading innovation demanded by our customers. In the third quarter, sales in the water business are up low single digits on an organic basis and up to 18% as reported due to the acquisitions we have made in this space. We also found market improvement in other key markets in the third quarter, most notably automotive and residential construction, which contributes to the sequential improvement in the top line. We estimate that global auto bills were down about 4% in the third quarter versus the same period last year, a substantial improvement from the historical lows in the second quarter and stronger than we anticipated. At down 9% for the quarter, our T&I volume performance is consistent with the improvement in market demand and the lag we expect due to the majority of our automotive sales going into the tier 1 and tier 2 suppliers. There are also green shoots in residential construction, a market that represents approximately 40% of the shelter business within SMC. Our solutions to the residential construction market include Tyvek building wraps, Styrofoam insulation, and Great Stuff insulating foam, which has also experienced strong retail demand from an increase in -it-yourself projects. Despite tailwinds in residential construction, our shelter business was down versus last year due to ongoing softness in commercial construction, which makes up the remaining 60% of the shelter business. Also contributing to the improving top line was demand for our materials that enable smartphone technology. Increasing material content, which now accounts for up to $4 a phone in the top end model, overcame an overall decline in the smart phone market and drove high single digit growth in our interconnect solutions business as premium phone manufacturers prepared for model launches and holiday demand. Overall, top line performance continues to be impacted by significant weakness in oil and gas, aerospace, commercial construction, and select industrial markets. These market dynamics are most prevalent in the safety and shelter businesses within SMC, the health and biosciences business within N&B, and across the non-core segment. Before moving to the next slide, let me comment on our year to date performance. I am pleased that our teams focus on execution and operational excellence, two areas that Ed and I have been focused on since day one. Through the first nine months, our sales have declined 6% on an organic basis, and our focus on streamlining our overhead structure has enabled us to better maintain our earnings. Over the same time period, our EBITDA margin has declined to 7%, excluding costs associated with temporary idling facilities in the second and third quarters. Choosing to run these sites for cash was the right decision for the strength of the company, and it is showing in the strength of our balance sheet and cash flow. Turning to the adjusted EPS bridge on slide six. Adjusted EPS at the $0.88 is down 8% versus the same quarter last year, driven by lower volume, costs associated with idling facilities, and the impact of non-core divestitures. These headwinds were partially offset by the delivery of cost savings. As Ed mentioned, our cost actions from the 2019 restructuring program, coupled with the incremental actions we are driving in 2020, contributed to approximately $150 million of savings in the quarter. The impact of portfolio actions is a net headwind, primarily due to the absence of the gain on sale of the DuPont Sustainable Solutions business in the third quarter of 2019. We realized three cents of benefit from -the-line items, primarily a lower share count due to share repurchases we executed in the second half of 2019 and early 2020, and lower interest rates enabled by reductions in commercial paper balances. These benefits were offset by a slightly higher base tax rate of 21%. In summary, I would emphasize again what Ed said at the start of the call. Our team is laser focused on execution, and we are now consistently delivering on our earnings, cash flow, and cost savings commitments. Through a period of significant uncertainty, we continue to progress our strategic priorities, which positions us well as we look ahead to 2021 to continue creating value for our shareholders. As we show on slide seven, we will continue to strengthen our balance sheet with the anticipated closing of the ENEDE and IFS deal in the first quarter of next year, as well as the closing of the biomaterial deal in the first half of 2021. These actions alone will generate over $7.5 billion of cash proceeds, nearly $2.5 billion of which we will have available after planned debt retainments to use for creating shareholder value. Additionally, we expect our strong free cash flow generation to continue into 2021. As we said earlier, we have significantly improved our net debt position with the reduction of commercial paper balances, and we do not have any debt repayments until the fourth quarter of 2023, beyond those that we intend to satisfy with the proceeds from the ENEDE and IFS deal. I am excited for what's ahead, and I commend our team for staying focused on execution to put us in a position to have the flexibility to capitalize on the opportunities for growth and shareholder value creation going forward. With that, let me turn it back to Ed for an update on the ENEDE and IFS transaction and some final comments on what we expect in the fourth quarter.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Lori. And now turning to slide eight, we highlight the progress we've made since announcing the ENEDE and IFS transaction. During the quarter, we completed two additional milestones. In August, IFS shareholders voted overwhelmingly in favor of the transaction, with more than 99% of the votes cast in favor of the deal. Then in September, NMB issued $6.25 billion of senior unsecured notes in a private placement. The net proceeds from the offering are intended to fund part of NMB's special cash payment of $7.3 billion to DuPont. The net proceeds are held in escrow until the deal closes. The offering was more than five times oversubscribed and resulted in a very favorable cost of borrowing for these notes. We continue to make progress regarding regulatory approval, and additionally, our integration planning remains on track as the teams work to a first quarter 2021 closing. I remain excited about this combination and confident that the new company will be well positioned for growth and to deliver sustainable value for shareholders. Let me close with our financial outlook on slide nine, which we have prepared assuming no substantial change in the slope of the recovery due to the pandemic. Obviously, this is a fluid situation with increasing cases, and we are monitoring this closely. We expect to deliver net sales for the year in the range of $20.1 to $20.2 billion and adjusted EPS in the range of $3.17 to $3.21. Sequentially from the third quarter, normal seasonal declines in E&I from smartphone production cycles and S&C from the timing of North America construction activity will be partially offset by improvement in T&I as auto demand continues to recover, although at a much more gradual pace as compared to the prior quarter. Our forecasted earnings also reflects the absence of a $30 million technology sale in E&I and the loss of earnings from Hemlock and TCS, which were divested in September. We will stay focused on driving improvements in working capital and delivering our cost savings commitments. With that, let me turn it back to Leland to open the Q&A.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative

Thanks, Ed. Before we move to the Q&A portion of our call, I would like to remind you that our forward-looking statements apply to both our prepared remarks and the following Q&A. We will allow for one question and one follow-up question per person. Operator, please provide the Q&A instructions.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And if you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star 1 on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please make sure that your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. And as a reminder, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Again, that is star 1 to ask a question. And we will hear our first question from Steve Tusa with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.

speaker
Steve Tusa
Analyst, JPMorgan

Hey, guys. Good morning. Hey, good morning, Steve. Can you just maybe comment on the – there was a bit of a change of language in the last, you know, filing with regards to the IFF transaction around, you know, your decision on whether you're going to spin or split. Can you maybe just talk about what your thoughts are there? Looks like maybe a split is more likely, but, you know, you want to obviously maintain the flexibility and optionality with the kind of whole cleanup spin dynamic maybe. Maybe just talk about what your latest thoughts are on that front.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yes, Steve. We will be making that decision by mid-December. And we truly have not made a decision yet. I wouldn't put a leaning one way or the other on it. We took some language change because we wouldn't do a hybrid type approach. We'll pick one or the other. And that was the change in language. But no decision at this point in time. I wouldn't read anything into it.

speaker
Steve Tusa
Analyst, JPMorgan

Okay. And then just the follow-up would be on the 4Q. I think the implied, you know, downside to 4Q guide is a bit more than what you're losing from non-core and that, you know, that gain in TNI. Okay. Is there anything else sequentially that's, you know, on an absolute basis kind of getting worse? I guess you mentioned seasonality and electronics. But is TNI basically, you know, did you overfill the channel before or is that, you know, are you kind of like, is it a timing dynamic where at some point in the next couple quarters that will, you know, snap back to the kind of line and recouple?

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So let me go first to the sequential. So there's no real change in market dynamics as we see it right now. So there's actually continued sequential lift in TNI kind of in the -single-digit space. The drop sequentially in revenue, even as more driven by seasonality and it's normal seasonality that we see in our businesses. So primarily it fits within smartphones. So as we get ready in the third quarter for the holiday demand coming up, we had a lot of sales in 3Q that would not be there in 4Q just due to normal seasonality. Additionally, within our construction space, third quarter tends to be high just with the summer months driving a lot of the construction. So you'll see a little bit of deceleration there from a seasonal perspective. So the decline that you're kind of getting at is roughly in the $100 million space sequentially, 3Q to 4Q. About a third of that is related to the seasonal decline that we just discussed. Another third of it is we did have a gain on a technology sale in E&I in 3Q that won't be there in 4Q. And the rest, the largest primary piece is the sale of the Hemlock TCS assets that were sold in September. So within T&I, we don't really see any level of channel, high inventory levels in the channel. So if you see where we look year to date, our volumes are down about 15% in T&I versus the auto bills are down about 23%. So I think we're outperforming there. There's really, if you look at where we fell into, as we mentioned on the call, we fell into the tier one and tier two players primarily. So it doesn't always exactly line up with the auto bills number. You kind of got to look at it year to date to understand the lag. So we're comfortable where we sit going in. There are material changes from a market perspective as we see it right now.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And we will hear our next question from Scott Davis with Milius Research. Please go ahead.

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

Hi. Good morning,

speaker
Scott Davis
Analyst, Milius Research

guys. Hey, Scott. Hi. I'm kind of curious. You've been chipping at corporate and G&A really since we got involved in your story. Is this kind of an end game, I guess? Is this kind of every quarter you look at just trying to take levels down where you opportunistically can? Or is there a certain goalpost of where you want to get to and then you feel like that's the sustainable right level?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yes, Scott. I mean, I'd put it more in the category of chipping away at it. You know, as we streamline some of our functions and capabilities, we can get, you know, do a little more streamlining on our overhead. You know, we're putting in some digital tools and we're going to do a central finance tool and things like that really help us out. So I think we're getting the best in class on our G&A. You know, when you look at peer companies and all, I think we're doing a heck of a job there. I would highlight one area we're not touching or taking down at all, as we said in our prepared remarks, is clearly our salespeople around the world, our application engineering teams around the world. And we're going to continue to spend at the level we've been spending out on the R&D front. So we want to come out of the softness in this pandemic period real strong with lots of new product introductions coming. So it's really going to continue to stay focused on the G&A piece of it. And then I would really say that the next big focus and we're focused on it now, but we're really doubling down, is going to be on the gross margin line and our factory efficiency, our uptimes. And again, we're doing a fair amount of digital tools. They're not overly expensive to really look at predictive analytics at our facilities with a lot of AI capability. And we really think we can do some fair amount of improvements there and hopefully help the gross margin line. So that's where you'll see some of the kind of the effort as we're going into 2021.

speaker
Scott Davis
Analyst, Milius Research

Okay, good. And then on the inventory side, another big drawdown this quarter. Where do inventories sit at kind of through the channel? And are you, do you feel like we've gotten to the level where you want to both your inventories and then obviously, you know, as you look through the channel?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Our inventories have a ways to go still. Now, by sales pick up, you know, that'll mute us a little bit here on progress. But we're expecting nice progress again in the fourth quarter. We still have over a five hundred million dollar opportunity on inventory to get to where we think we can get to. So that's kind of our bogey out there. And, you know, again, we'll make good progress in the fourth quarter as far as inventory in the channel. Scott, I actually feel very good about it right now. As you know, the auto industry is, you know, doesn't have a lot of finished goods. There's not there's not any stuffing in the channel going on. And I really don't see it anywhere except maybe just a little bit in the electronics space. I think there's potentially and I've heard some of our competitors talk about maybe a little pre buying from some of the Chinese players. I'm nervous about what's going on geopolitically right now, but I don't even think that was a big number in the scheme of all of our sales and electronics. You know, not significant, but that'd be maybe the one area

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

where there's a little bit of that.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And our next

speaker
Bob Court
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

question will come from Bob Court with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Thanks. Good morning. Good morning, Bob. I was curious in the T&I business, you guys have been idling capacity and obviously that's hurt near margins, but helping your working capital. If we look to next year in a more normalized world, and I guess global auto builds are going to be up mid teens and GDP up mid single digits. Can you talk about how powerful the incremental recovery might be and where those margins might get to relative to the to the 23 percent operating margin you just reported?

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so we see the T&I portfolio around the mid 20s from an even a margin perspective in the normal market. So we've got some sequential upside as we head into next year, really driven by the items that you had mentioned. So a top line recovery as well as having a lot of the idle facilities behind us.

speaker
Bob Court
Analyst, Goldman Sachs

And is there any update on the the the discussions with Kim or's and Corteva in terms of your separation and deminification agreements? Thank you.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Well, first of all, the arbitration is started up with Kim or's on that. And there probably won't be any decision on that until kind of mid next year. If you look at the timeline on it, but we continue to talk to each other about a settlement. In fact, Mark Renato, the CEO of Kim or's and I actually just talked this Monday, you know, a couple open points. We continue to get closer and then we'll see if we can get it to the finish line. So that's

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

paralleling along while the arbitration starts.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And our next question will come from John Inch with Gordon Haskett.

speaker
John Inch
Analyst, Gordon Haskett

Thank you. Yeah, thank you. Good morning, everybody. And Laurie, morning. What are the cost savings that spill over from actions taken in 2020 into 2021? And are you planning for, respectively, more restructuring or would that potentially be too disruptive given all of the restructuring that's already gone on against the backdrop of what I would describe as a fledgling recovery?

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so I think the savings that will trickle into 2021 is around 120 million. So we're targeting now 280 million of in period savings. So on a run rate basis, that's about 400 million as we exit. So another 120 next year. You know, those are some headwinds that we'll face next year as well. Obviously, there'll be some snap back in the temporary savings, but we've really biased our action towards the structural. So we don't have a material headwind, but there will be some opening up of the economy that would lend itself to some T&E and some other stuff that we've really seen clamp down this year. Right now, as I had mentioned, I don't see additional structural costs take out. Really, the opportunity for us is within gross margin and driving more productivity and gross margin. And second to that, continuing to drive our productivity and working capital. So we've made a lot of nice progress this year. We're up about, from a working capital trade perspective, only about 250 million year to date that we've nicely dug ourselves out of the hole that we got in earlier in the year. And we're still targeting more than 500 million of working capital savings this year, but we still have a ways to go to get to best in class there.

speaker
John Inch
Analyst, Gordon Haskett

I know. Thanks. Thanks for I'm assuming these gross the gross margin initiatives are probably longer term. And I wanted to ask you also kind of for your strategic thoughts to do possibly even further essence expansion into water. I'm thinking maybe technologies where you don't play currently, such as UV or even say, I don't know, getting into the production of equipment as well as the filtration products that you currently provide.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, so we're very interested if we can, you know, expanding the water business. So that would be one area. I don't want to comment on details because you get pretty specific and there's not that many targets out there. So I won't get into that, but the water business would be one, you know, there's some areas in the electronics business. You know, I will mention that when you know, 5G type stuff we would be interested in. And but let me just say overall, we're really looking at things I would put in the category of bolt on acquisitions. You know, nothing on a bigger scale in 2021, but, you know, could be several of bolt on

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

during the year if they make financial sense.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And our next question will come from Jeff Sprague with Vertical Research. Please go ahead.

speaker
Jeff Sprague
Analyst, Vertical Research

Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Good morning, Jeff. Good morning. Hey, maybe just a couple follow ups on kind of segment level kind of dynamics. First on TNI, just thinking about the price pressure there, I think is largely a function of kind of year over year dynamics. But I wonder if you could just give us a view on how you see pricing playing sequentially with the builds firming up. You know, did we move to a little more constructive price environment, perhaps not as soon as Q4, but, you know, into the early part of next year?

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, we do. We do see a more constructive price environment. So I think the majority of the nylon 6-6 headwinds that we've seen are behind us. So we did, you know, we did see year over year headwinds in the third quarter and we'll expect year over year headwinds again in the fourth quarter. And then the other thing that we're seeing is we do expect to get back to that one and a half times auto builds outperformance within that portfolio. You can see it year to date. So as I had mentioned earlier, our TNI volume is being down about 15% year to date versus auto builds being down 23% year to date. So you can see that outperformance and we'll look to continue that going forward once the market fully recovers.

speaker
Jeff Sprague
Analyst, Vertical Research

And on the semi side specifically, I mean, you kind of spoke to the seasonal let up on, you know, handset within with ENI. But, you know, semi has kind of continued to surprise to the upside kind of all year here. Do you, and there's a lot of consolidation starting to happen in that industry, right? Do you see anything that kind of disrupts your growth projectory there? And, you know, what's your view looking forward kind of a quarter or two there in terms of the end demand environment?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Jeff, I'll just comment on kind of October because I know that demand feels pretty good still on the semi side. So we're not really seeing any change from what we've been seeing in the last few quarters. So, you know, at least so far going into the fourth quarter, that feels nice. And again, I just think the dynamics of work at home and what everyone's doing with data centers and nodes and all that, you know, looks like potentially good momentum going into next year. But, you know, we'll see when we get closer to the end of the year. I know one of our key competitors, a very, very good company and CEO, a good friend of mine, he talked very bullishly about demand going into 2021 also. So that feels good. And again, the only thing in electronics, and you just mentioned it, was, you know, a little bit of the seasonality on the smartphones because we had such strong shipments in the third quarter for the shipments and launches of the new phones in the fourth quarter. But we feel good about the portfolio we have on the 5G side that, you know, as more phones are enabled 5G going into 2021, it's

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

nice, nice upside opportunity for us.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And our next question will come from John McNulty with BMO Capital Markets.

speaker
John McNulty
Analyst, BMO Capital Markets

Yeah, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. So I guess the first one would just be, look, we've had about a month of kind of the COVID resurgence, especially kind of out of Europe and a little bit less of that in the U.S. Any changes in demand pull that you've seen either positive for maybe some of your health care related products or negative as just some of the economy shut down? Anything that we should be thinking about and trying to think about extrapolating going forward?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Well, no change in any of the end market demand that we've talked about due to the rising cases. I mean, I say so far, it's all the same ones. I mean, obviously, auto coming back really strong. Residential construction, we're now seeing those green shoots coming back, not surprising with what's going on in the resi market. And all the areas that are down kind of significantly, oil and gas, aerospace, commercial construction, they've all come up a little bit, but not significantly. So they're not dropping anymore. You know, they're picking up slightly, but they're still all very negative numbers. So now we haven't seen any change in October in patterns that we weren't expecting.

speaker
John McNulty
Analyst, BMO Capital Markets

Got it. OK. No, thanks for the color. And then look on the other side, you've you've gotten a lot of the non-core assets kind of out the pipeline. I guess does that in terms of how you're thinking about going forward, does that free up time to look at kind of bigger, more strategic options? Or is it really right now a little bit more about running the business and admittedly a pretty volatile time with with a lot of kind of puts and takes going on? How should we be thinking about about where management is putting their time right now?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, no, no, John, it's very much running the business. I keep telling the team all hands on deck here. You know, we want to string together a lot of consistent results. We've been doing that. We've got a ways to go here. Some things still to get the best in class performance on like working capital. So, no, it's more that and it's more looking at bolt on next year. And, you know, I would think as we get into next year, we'll be having a serious conversation with the board about the share repurchase. You know, where we're trading at or where new DuPont will be trading at is as NMB goes out of the portfolio. So that that's the mode we're in.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And our next question will come from Steve Byrne with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

speaker
Steve Byrne
Analyst, Bank of America

Yes, thank you. Was there anything in particular that provoked the House environment subcommittee to ask for some, you know, NPD data from your part from the from the legacy Parkersburg in the Circleville facilities? And do you have a sense of where their where their diligence is going these days with respect to, you know, PFAS contamination broadly?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yes, Steve, I didn't read anything into it. You know, we're going to supply all the information and answer all the questions. You know, all that data is obviously available and it's been supplied to many federal agencies already. So I don't you know, it's just information we've given before. So we'll answer it in a timely manner. But maybe I would go to a little bit broader to your question there. You know, does the EPA, you know, put some regulation in place? You know, we're always asked that and that might be part of the push here. And we are actually for that. We said that in front of Congress when we testify. But not everyone in the industry is for that. But we think it would be great to have a national standard set on where those levels should be at instead of it being a patchwork by state and maybe by municipality. Who knows? And we actually think that would be very helpful that we're all targeting the same thing as we, you know, do remediation and all that. So, you know, that's where we see a lot of the push at the federal level. And, you know, we're all for that happening.

speaker
Steve Byrne
Analyst, Bank of America

And just to follow up on that, Ed, is a national standard something that you think would would focus their attention on, you know, less on manufacturing sources and more on product use as a source of PFAS contamination? And is that where you see the potential benefit?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

No, no, I just think having a standard set out there that we're all marching to would be very helpful instead of having literally 50 different standards being set. And by the way, just to make a point, I make every one of these calls. You know, there's many more locations that had PFAS, but remember how high percentage of this is firefighting foam. And I think you'll, you know, DuPont will let that play out here in the South Carolina consolidation here and potentially will settle it or we'll let it go through the court system. But we never made the firefighting foam. So, you know, our work is really remediation at some of our sites where we did some manufacturing, which is a handful.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And next we'll hear from David Beckletter with Deutsche Bank.

speaker
David Beckletter
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Thank you. Ed, first on the cost savings, what drove the increase from the 180 to 280 for the full year?

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so that was really a function of really clamping down on third party spends, so consultants and the like. And then we were able to accelerate a bit some of the off rolls that we had planned that benefit the spending and period savings for this year.

speaker
David Beckletter
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Got it. And Ed, with the IFF transaction three months away from closing, what are your updated thoughts on what's next for the DuPont portfolio, specifically perhaps unlocking some value in E&I to maybe another RMT? Thank you.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, David, I said a few minutes ago, we're operationally going to run new DuPont the way we are. I got it. We want to clean up the non-core some more. So we're very focused on that. Also, from a portfolio standpoint, you know, we'll be in an interesting position going into next year with the cash we're receiving from the IFF transaction. You know, as Lori mentioned, we'll have at least two and a half billion to three billion dollars of excess cash available. So, you know, as I said, we'll be talking to the board about how we're going to deploy that to create shareholder value in 2021. And I would expect, you know, a few maybe bolt on acquisitions would fit in there next year if they make financial

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

sense for us to do.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And our next question will come from Mike Sison with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

speaker
Mike Sison
Analyst, Wells Fargo

Hey, good morning. Nice quarter. In terms of nutrition biosciences, your EBITDA growth is up high single digits. So this year, you know, tough sales comps. So, you know, if you think about getting that getting better growth in that business next year, where do you think EBITDA growth should sort of be as volume this return?

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so we've always thought that the N and B portfolios could get closer to the company average from a margin perspective. So looking at 26 or 27 percent. So they've got continued upside. A lot of that's really going to come from just a higher favor rule mix. So as they grow probiotics, as they grow their enzyme portfolio, as they grow their meatless meat market, those are all very high margin product lines that will lift the overall margin of the segment.

speaker
Mike Sison
Analyst, Wells Fargo

Great. Quick follow up then. You know, if you do get to close the business on February 1st, how do you feel about the integrates synergy potential? You've had a year here to plan for it. Is there upside? And if there is, where could that be?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Well, I will talk about if there's upside. I should probably leave that to the IFF team when they do their earnings. That would not be fair of me. But but I feel good about it. We've got multiple teams as we did when we did Dow-Dupont and all that working on all the integration efforts. We're we're right on track. By the way, I must say I'm surprised we're doing as well as we are considering everyone's working at home. But every one of the work streams is right on track. The Lori and I review it literally weekly with the IFF team. So we're ready to go on the synergy work that we've outlined publicly and we'll get off to a very quick start.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And next we will hear from John Roberts with UBS. Please go ahead. Thank

speaker
John Roberts
Analyst, UBS

you. Staying on N and B for a second here, food and beverage sales were down probably close to the 4% decline for the overall segment. Can you give us some regional and maybe application granularity on the decline in food and beverages?

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so a big piece of the decline was driven by sales into the food service space, which makes us about 5% of total N and B. It would be bigger, obviously, within the food and beverage segment. That was down kind of in the mid teens. And so that's really selling into sports arenas, cafeterias. So really the industries that have been hit hard by covid. So nothing, you know, nothing underlying there beyond that. And a lot of that was in Europe. So I think Europe was one of the markets that were hit hardest within the N and B portfolio and it's really back to that the food services play. Also, another impact that we saw ahead when we should as travel has clamped down, we have a large market into like the chewing gum and space within our sweetener portfolio. So as there's less travel, less people going through airports, that that impacted the business.

speaker
John Roberts
Analyst, UBS

And then do you think you'll report your year end before February 1 close or after and do we get N and B as a discontinued often for Q if you report after February 1? I'm just trying to figure out the information flow we're going to get here over the next few months.

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so I would look at most likely to be after the February 1 spend date so we can report kind of on a remain co-basis when we report discops will be a function of when we make the decision on spin versus split. So if we end up doing a split, you have to do discops earlier. If you end up doing a spin, you do discops as of the separation date.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And as a reminder that is star one if you would like to ask a question. Our next question will come from PJ Juwakar with Citi. Please go ahead.

speaker
PJ Juwakar
Analyst, Citi

Yes, hi. Good morning, Ed and Lori.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

Good morning. There

speaker
PJ Juwakar
Analyst, Citi

is a big green movement happening in Europe, parts of Asia, California with both EVs and hydrogen. How is DuPont positioned for that trend in terms of your portfolio and particularly can you address the EV market?

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so this will obviously mostly be within T&I. There's also a play within S&C and E&I as well into the electric vehicle space. So we're very well positioned. Obviously as the conversion continues towards hybrid and electric, you need a lighter car so that advantages our T&I portfolio as we take out metal and replace it with polymer. Within S&C we have a nice opportunity within the battery play. We have a use of our Nomex paper as a separator and then obviously within E&I as the enhanced electronics to the electric vehicles really nicely positioned there. So it's obviously full electric vehicles are a small section of the total auto build production today but growing very quickly and we're happy with the portfolio that we have.

speaker
PJ Juwakar
Analyst, Citi

Great, thank you. I just have a follow up on E&I. Intel has had some well publicized issues at 7 nanometer nodes and companies like TSMC are gaining share. Can you talk about your position relative to your customers and what kind of wins or losses have you had at 7 nanometers? Thank you.

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

So I don't want to speak to a customer level but you can see by our results within this ME space that we're seeing really nice performance. So in this last quarter alone we were up -9% so we've got a nice dispersion. We play with all of the big players. So as the consolidation continues we still continue to be well positioned in this space. Also as the layers as you had mentioned get more and more complex that advantages our portfolio. So the more layers, the more steps, the more polishing that has to be done, the more cleaning that has to be done, the more complex the layers get with advanced nodes that advantages our portfolio within as well. So I think we're nicely positioned to take advantage of growth there.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And our next question will come from Chris Parkinson with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

Great. Thank you very much. You've

speaker
Unknown Analyst
Analyst

done an impressive job on the cash conversion front. I think we're all aware of the rough conversion targets over time which you've mentioned in the past. But do you have any brief updates on this front just given some of the portfolio changes as well as the ongoing incremental efforts on working capital? Thank you.

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so I think you're asking about our free TESO conversion. You cut out a little bit so I couldn't quite hear it. Yeah, so we've made really nice progress there. So we're up to about 140% year to date. We are actually fighting up against 200% in the quarter, really enabled by that strong, you know, greater than $300 million working capital productivity. So we'll look to keep that free cash flow conversion number greater than 90%. We've been right around 100% for the past several years. So I don't see any material headwinds there. And there's no real change in that metric as the portfolio changes. So each business was generating nice free cash flow conversion. From an ROIC perspective, the goal that we've had is to deliver 100 basis points of improvement annually. So we'll look to get that out as well. That's one important piece of that is once the separation happened mid last year, we started to put ROIC into our comp metrics. So within a lot of the executive pay metrics, there's a piece of ROIC. So obviously that would drive continued focus along with system management deep down deep dive within that space.

speaker
Unknown Analyst
Analyst

That's helpful. And just as a quick follow up, you know, you've also been doing a pretty solid job on the cost front, including the recent increase and also the percent that will be structural, which you hit on a little while ago. How should we be thinking about the further cadence as we enter 2021? And are there any consideration for based cost inflation if we're just trying to kind of figure out the net benefits on a per annum basis? Thank you.

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so we'll have another 120 million roughly on a run rate basis of savings into 2021. There will be offset. So as we had mentioned, so we are right now planning for a merit increase. We didn't have one in 2020, so we'll look to get back on track with that in 2021. We also will plan for a full bonus payout in 2021. So that'll be a headwind to 2020 where we won't pay a full bonus. And T&E is another piece that we will control the snapback. So we've seen T&E plummet down to about a million dollars a month. We used to be upwards of 10 or so million a month. So we'll see some snapback there, but we're looking to try to mitigate that pretty significantly, really cutting more so down on the internal travel versus the customer facing travel. So I think Met-Met with 120 million of benefits that we'll see in the offsets that we had just covered will probably have a slight headwind from a cost perspective heading into 2021. Probably nothing like some of maybe the others in the space just driven by our dedication to getting structural costs out versus the temporary that maybe some others have been doing.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And our next question will come from Arun Viswanathan with RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

speaker
Arun Viswanathan
Analyst, RBC Capital Markets

Thanks. Good morning. Yes. My first question is on S&C. You've directed some more of your capacity towards garments. Could you just talk about the trade off there? My understanding is that those are higher margin, but maybe it precludes you from participating as much in residential. And then as well, maybe you can just address the commercial markets and what you're seeing there in construction. Thanks.

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, so I think within Tyvek, so overall, the entire Tyvek enterprise in the quarter was up in the low 20s. And so obviously we continue to see nice strength within PPE that was up 50 percent plus within the Tyvek building envelope space. Just given the seasonality within when the construction really takes place, we did see nice growth there. We saw about 20 percent growth in residential Tyvek. Where the volume was taken from was more in the medical packaging space. And that's really just a function of the reduction in elective procedures dampening the demand there. But overall, up 20 percent plus, we have been able to enable additional production to come out. We sequentially, we were down a bit as we had to take the asset down for about two weeks or so. But year over year, we are having more product coming out off the line.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

And we're actually bringing up what we call line one, an older line that we had that it's not costing us too much to get that up and running. So we're bringing that up for incremental volume. So that's helping us.

speaker
Arun Viswanathan
Analyst, RBC Capital Markets

Thanks. And then as a follow up, could you also just talk about your plans for the proceeds? I know that from the NMB separation, I know that you've talked about buybacks for 2.3 billion of it and you leveraging for the rest. Is that still your current thinking or how are you thinking about deploying that capital? Thanks.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, yeah. Five billion of that money from IFF NMB will be used to delever and pay down debt. So we'll be in a great shape balance sheet wise when that occurs. And then I would think, as I mentioned, I don't want to get into exact numbers, but I would think we're doing share repurchase with where our multiples at as we get into next year. And we still want to gauge the effect of COVID in cases picking up and all that. But that would probably be our leaning along with some bulk on M&A.

speaker
Laurie Koch
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. If I could just add on to the debt conversation. So we really did a nice job. I want to highlight in the quarter of reducing commercial paper. And so we were able to use the proceeds from the hemlock and TCS transaction as well as organic cash flow generation to take that down to just under 400 million for the quarter. We've taken it down even since the quarter flows and we'll continue to do that. So that'll be a nice tailwind heading into 2021, not only from an interest expense perspective, but just giving us flexibility to use those 2.3 billion in proceeds for either M&A or shareholder remuneration.

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, our goal is

speaker
Leland Weber
Director of Investor Relations

to get the CP down to zero very quickly.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And we will take our final question from Frank Mitch with Fermium Research. Please go ahead.

speaker
Frank Mitch
Analyst, Fermium Research

Thank you so much. And nice quarter. I just wanted to follow up on IFF since part of the value proposition is tied up in IFF share price. And obviously we've seen a 20% decline over the past month. Ed, in your discussions with management, what's your confidence level that that can turn around? Any thoughts that you can share there?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Frank, I don't want to get into too much detail, but I think there's some technicals going on right now with that. You know, I've seen some reports. I think one of the analysts on this call wrote a nice report the other day. So I think there's some things going on short term, maybe over spin split that creates some pressure. But, you know, look, these sets of businesses, the IFF sets of businesses, the NMB, they do very well when there's the stress in the system because of the end markets that we're in. So these are consistent performers. Yeah, there'll be pockets of weakness like we saw because, you know, nobody's in airports buying chewing gum and all that. But generally speaking, they're going to do very well through this. And we got a lot of synergies coming up here to create additional value for shareholders. So, look, my gut is all that settles down here rather quickly as we get closer and closer to getting the deal done.

speaker
Frank Mitch
Analyst, Fermium Research

Terrific, very helpful. And just a question on the guidance for the fourth quarter. You know, obviously, yesterday we saw France and Germany implement lockdowns. How should we think about the, you know, the quote unquote wave to lockdowns being embedded into that guidance? You know, how much of that was factored in? You know, any thoughts there?

speaker
Ed Breen
Chief Executive Officer

Well, we knew Germany was talking about lockdowns when we just gave the guidance. It looks like France might be going now. But I think, look, if all of Europe locked down and there were lockdowns in the US, that's going to affect everybody out there. So, no, we're not counting on that in the guidance that we gave. You know, we see pretty far into the quarter now. But, you know, if there was massive lockdowns, that would probably affect December type numbers. And, you know, we just have to see. But as we sit today, as long as there's not massive lockdowns, you know, that's the way we gave the guidance.

speaker
Investor Relations Representative

Thank you, everyone, for joining our call. For your reference, a copy of our transcript will be posted on the PONT website. This concludes our call.

speaker
Operator
Moderator

And this concludes today's conference. Thank you for your participation. And you may now disconnect.

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

Q3DD 2020

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