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spk15: All participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised, we will be limiting each person to one question today. If you'd like to Ask a second question, you may enter and re-queue. Please also be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Brian Sullivan, Investor Relations. Brian, please go ahead.
spk12: Thank you, and good morning, everyone. With me today are Patrick Kivitz, CEO, and Dustin Simak, President and CFO. Before we begin our call, I would like to note that we have provided a slide presentation to supplement the call. Please visit sealedair.com where today's webcast and presentation can be downloaded from our investor relations page. Statements made during this call stating management's outlook or estimates for future periods are forward-looking statements. These statements are based solely on the information that is now available to us. We encourage you to review the information in the section entitled forward-looking statements in our earnings release and slide presentation, which applies to this call. Additionally, our future performance may differ due to a number of factors. Many of these factors are listed in our most recent annual report on Form 10-K as revised and updated on our quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and current reports on Form 8-K. We discussed financial measures that do not conform to U.S. GAAP. You will find important information on our use of these measures and their reconciliation to US GAAP in our earnings release. Including the appendix of today's presentation, you will find US GAAP financial results that correspond to the non-US GAAP measures we referenced throughout the presentation. I will now turn the call over to Patrick and Dustin. Operator, please turn to slide three. Patrick?
spk02: Thank you, Brian, and thank you for joining our third quarter earnings call. Before we dive into today's earnings discussions, I would like to take a moment to update you on the progress we have made on the actions outlined during our last earnings call. Over the past few months, I've been engaging with our largest customers and distribution partners to gain deeper insight into how we can meet their needs and address their packaging challenges. Separately, I've connected with our investors to get their perspectives on the opportunities ahead for creating shareholder value. Through these discussions, it became clear that reorganizing into two verticals, food and protective, was a critical foundational step to enhance our customers' experience and maximize shareholder value. Each business is distinct, with unique end markets, customer base, innovation needs, and manufacturing assets. We are returning to our core value proposition as a company, combining industry-leading material science, best-in-class services, and differentiated automation technologies. offering to deliver world-class packaging solutions. As we refine our strategy, serving our customers and addressing their critical packaging challenges remains a guiding principle. Next, we need to ensure we have the right team in place to drive accelerated progress in each protocol. We focused on bringing in talent from other packaging companies with strong commercial and portfolio expertise, looking for leaders that have successfully improved commercial execution and navigated sustainable portfolio shifts while consistently delivering sales and profit growth. The first critical hire was Byron Reckie, who now leads our protective vertical. With over 20 years of experience in the packaging industry and strong commercial acumen, Byron brings valuable knowledge in fiber, similar to my own background, and he has successfully navigated substrate and packaging format transitions in his previous roles. He is spearheading the turnaround of our protective business. In October, we brought on Steve Flannery as head of our food vertical. With over 25 years of experience at Avery Dennison, Steve has held leadership roles across sales, innovation, marketing, and operations. He has led businesses in multiple geographies driving market-leading innovations, and fostering a team-based culture that consistently delivered robust sales and earnings growth. Steve will build on the momentum within our food business and unlock further growth. Emilio Chamaz continues to be our Chief Operating Officer, leading our efforts to optimize the supply chains for both food and protective, ensuring each respective supply chain is tailored for those end markets and expected service levels. We also hired Belinda Hyde, as our Chief People Officer, who will focus on enhancing the employee experience, cultivating a high-performance culture, and ensuring we have the right leadership and capabilities across the organization. Lastly, our President and Chief Financial Officer, Dustin Simak, is partnering closely with me to develop a long-term plan to create shareholder value and drive a broad transformation across the business. Beyond strengthening the management team, we are also enhancing the board, In October, the board appointed Tony Allitt as a new director. Tony is an experienced senior executive in the packaging sector. He successfully led Silgan for over 16 years as president and chief executive officer, where he created significant shareholder value. He continues to serve as Silgan's chairman. We look forward to leveraging his expertise in leading packaging companies with diversified portfolios to help accelerate our transformation. With our food and protective presence now in place, we have aligned our operating units, innovation, customer service, and automation functions within each vertical. These changes will enable each vertical to swiftly adapt to market trends, leverage their global scale, enhance customer focus, and execute their respective growth strategies. This represents a significant milestone in our transformation, and I'm eager to build on this foundation as we continue to evolve the business towards achieving long-term sustainable growth. I would like to highlight some early successes resulting directly from the transformation actions we have initiated. With our dedicated food commercial teams now aligned to each local end market and fully focused on execution, our food business is delivering above-market growth in each of our end markets and across most product lines. This above-market performance is driven by a mix of commercial excellence, new product launches, and competitive wins. On the protective side, while volumes in the business continue to be soft, we are gaining traction in the market with our sustainable packaging solutions. We recently announced our partnership with a large retail customer, Best Buy, to provide a suite of high recycled content and fiber-based products to help reduce the amount of virgin plastic used in their packaging. Additionally, we collaborated with them to arrange the collection of plastic waste from their distribution centers for recycling. Beyond this example, we continue to position our portfolio to match our customers' sustainability needs. while still addressing their most critical packaging challenges. With that said, we still have much more work ahead of us. Over the next couple of months, we will focus on operationalizing each vertical. On protective, we are continuing to work through sustainability-related portfolio gaps, improving commercial execution, and infusing talent throughout the organization. On food, we are focused on accelerating growth outside of our shrink bags business with case-ready and fluid and liquid solutions. successfully navigating sustainable packaging transitions and improving pricing dynamics. Until we see improvements in volume and price performance, we are accelerating our cost takeout initiatives to further right-size each vertical and drive overall profitability. Before I hand it over to Dustin for a business update, I would like to take a moment to discuss the impacts of Hurricane Helene. Hurricane Helene's path impacted many of our plants and sites across South Carolina and Western North Carolina, affecting over 1,500 employees. These locations experienced challenges across many aspects of the infrastructure. Our team quickly mobilized to ensure that first, our people and their families were taken care of, and second, to restore normal operations. Despite these challenges, our team members kept us operational and ensured each other's safety, minimizing the impact on the corridor and to our customers. It was really inspiring to witness our team come together to support one another their communities, and our company. I'm excited to be here and look forward to updating you on our transformation and 2025 outlook in February. With that, I'll turn it over to Dustin to give an update on the business and our outlook. Dustin?
spk09: Thank you, Patrick. Let's turn this slide forward to review Soder's third quarter performance.
spk08: We closed the quarter with sales of $1.35 billion and adjusted EBITDA of $276 million, each down 3% compared to last year on a reported basis. Our third quarter results reflect a continued solid performance in food, persisting challenges in protective, and strong productivity benefits, including our cost takeout initiatives. Adjusted earnings per share in the quarter of 79 cents were up 3% compared to a year ago. Our adjusted tax rate was 24% compared to 25.7% in the same period last year. The decrease in tax rate year-over-year was driven by the jurisdictional mix of income and non-recurring discrete items in the prior year.
spk09: Our weighted average diluted shares outstanding in the third quarter of 2024 was 146 million. Turning to slide five. In the third quarter, organic sales were down 2% driven by lower pricing across both the food and protective segments.
spk08: On a year-over-year basis relative to prior quarters, third quarter pricing was sequentially less negative as the carryover pricing actions from 2023 started to diminish. Volumes were relatively flat year-over-year for the quarter, the growth in the food segment across all regions offset by declines in protective in Americas and EMEA. Third quarter adjusted EBITDA of $276 million, decreased $9 million or approximately 3% compared to last year with margins of 20.5% down 10 basis points. This performance was mainly driven by lower volumes and unfavorable net price realization in protective, partially offset by higher volumes and favorable net price realization in food, and lower operating costs, mainly driven by productivity benefits, including cost takeout initiatives. Moving to slide six, food net sales of $898 million for the quarter were up approximately 1%. Lower pricing, primarily in Americas and EMEA, was more than offset by positive volume growth in all regions, driven by strength in protein and market demand and share gains within our bags and case-ready solutions. In the third quarter, the global protein markets were net positive by approximately 1%. Continued strength in Australian cattle cycles, stronger than anticipated U.S. beef production, and robust pork demand more than offset declines in poultry production caused by avian flu outbreaks affecting North American turkey flocks. Amid increased consumer demand in the protein markets, we further drove competitive wins. Our case-rate solutions experienced high single-digit growth driven by the ongoing recovery of the roll stock business, where we lost share in previous years due to resin shortages, and by market share gains in the retail space with our trades and lending offerings. Equipment sales, however, declined as customers continued to exercise caution in deploying capital. Food adjusted EBITDA of $206 million in the third quarter was up 6%, with margins at 22.9%, up 120 basis points compared to last year. The increase in adjusted EBITDA was mainly driven by volume growth and net price realizations. Transitioning to protective. Third quarter net sales of $447 million were down 8% as anticipated in our Q2 guidance. Industrial portfolios remained weak due to subdued manufacturing activities in the developed world. Volume and fulfillment portfolios declined approximately 10% driven by the slowdown in equipment automation and continued pressure within void fill product lines. In our APAC region, volumes grew approximately 1% in the quarter as the gain in box right-sizing automation offset weakness in industrial and fulfillment portfolios. In the Americas and EMEA regions, volume performance remained largely unchanged from the prior quarter. Sustainability pressures on the void-filled product lines, ongoing weakness in the industrial sector, and lower automation sales continue to negatively impact our results. Protective adjusted EBITDA of approximately $75 million in the third quarter was down 21% year-over-year, with margins at 16.9%, down 260 basis points. The decrease in adjusted EBITDA was driven by lower volume and unfavorable net price realization, partially offset by productivity benefits, including cost takeout initiatives. On slide seven, we review our third quarter net sales by region. On an organic basis, America was down 2%, primarily due to lower pricing. Volumes were down 1%, driven by continued softness and protective portfolios, partially offset by strengthened food. EMEA declined 6% organically, driven by lower pricing across both segments and volume declines in protective. APAC was up 3% organically as tailwinds from Australian cattle cycle and the gain in fulfillment automation more than offset lower pricing and continued weakness in our other protective portfolios.
spk09: Now let's turn to free cash flow and leverage on slide eight.
spk08: With the focused efforts of our teams around the world, We delivered strong free cash flow of $323 million as of the third quarter year to date. This is well above the $183 million a year ago when excluding payments and deposits for resolution of certain prior years' U.S. tax matters. Our teams continue to focus on improving working capital, which as a percentage of sales is improved by 120 basis points year over year as we continue to improve payables and inventory velocity. We maintained our focus on deleveraging the balance sheet and ended the quarter with a net leverage ratio of 3.7 times. Our total liquidity position was $1.4 billion, including $386 million in cash and the remaining amount in committed and fully undrawn revolver.
spk09: We are highly confident in achieving our net debt to adjust EBITDA target of below 3.5 times by the end of 2025. Let's turn to slide nine to review our 2024 outlook. Our third quarter results were largely in line with expectations.
spk08: We are pleased with the continued momentum in our food business. At this point, we expect our protective volumes to remain soft in the fourth quarter due to continued portfolio challenges and overall market dynamics. As a result, in total, we expect our Q4 volumes to be slightly up year-over-year in Q4, with the strength in food being partially offset by weakness in protective. Heading into the fourth quarter, we expect sales to be approximately $1.38 billion, consistent with the midpoint of our sales guidance, with the year-over-year volume performance improving slightly versus the third quarter levels for both businesses. Continue to expect adjusted EBITDA to be in line with the midpoint of our guidance range, mainly driven by continued cost control actions. We are raising the midpoint of adjusted EPS to be at the higher end of the previous range, driven by lower interest expense, expected tax rate, and depreciation and amortization expense,
spk09: reflecting improved discipline around capital deployment. We are also raising the midpoint of our free cash flow guidance to $400 million, reflecting the continued improvement in working capital.
spk08: We will be working with a new management team over the coming months to operationalize each vertical and fully form the growth strategies and transformation plans for each business. This will inform our outlook for 2025 and beyond.
spk09: In the meantime, we are accelerating our cost reduction and operational excellence initiatives to drive profitability. Turning to slide 10, I'm very excited about the reorganization into food and protective verticals and their new leadership teams.
spk08: As Patrick mentioned earlier, the transformational steps we have taken will position each business and SILDARE as a whole for long-term growth and success. With that, Patrick and I look forward to your questions. Operator, we would like to begin the Q&A session.
spk15: Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question and answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star 1 1 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 1 1 again. Please note, we will be limiting each caller to one question. You may re-queue to ask an additional question. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. The first question comes from the line of George Staphos at Bank of America Securities. Your line is open.
spk07: Thanks very much. Hi, everyone. Good morning. Thanks for the details. My question is on fourth quarter and, in particular, how protective plays out. So, you know, traditionally, again, fourth quarter tends to be, over time, a bit better versus 3Q. And nonetheless, if I'm doing my analysis correctly based on your guidance, we're looking at down sequentially both year on year and in the quarter. Protective is obviously weak. I think you said, though, both segments should be up sequentially in volume, both food and protective. So can you talk a little bit further about what is happening, assuming it's in protective that's driving that, fourth quarter versus last year and the year ago. And in particular, or in addition, can you talk about what kind of growth you're seeing between fiber and poly, if you will, within protective? Thank you.
spk08: Hey, George, you have Dustin here. So a couple of comments, just to clarify one, as you think about the kind of the guidance for the full year. When you look at both businesses, they're going to step up sequentially, right? So if you think about food, you're looking at roughly $920 million coming off the quarter of $898 in Q3. When you look at protective, you're seeing we're laying in the quarter for Q3 $447 million, and we'll be stepping up to roughly $460 in the fourth quarter. That implies we're still down, but the commentary is around the fact that we're actually performing better in the sense that Q3, we're down roughly 8%, and it would imply Q4 is going to be down roughly 6%. And so what's driving that, so one is you do get that sequential step up in protective, that's being driven by seasonality, largely associated with the holiday season, which at this point in time we still see, you know, we perceive to be strong, particularly in the U.S. And so that's reflected in that particular number. The growth in fiber versus poly, just keep in mind, and this commentary I'll make it specific relative to protective, is that you're still only looking at that business about 15% in the fiber base. Fiber is performing better than poly. But at that size, you know, it's not going to be able to compensate relative to the declines we're seeing in some of our other broader portfolios. But the other clarifying point I'll make is that just keep in mind, too, that within protective, not all is equal relative to how each of the portfolios are behaving. If you look at our APS business, this is, you know, the mailers and the auto bagging. That could be fiber and or poly. It's performing well throughout the year. If you think about inflatables, they're performing well. It's just in other areas of the portfolio specifically as we've related to, you know, void fill, et cetera, that we're seeing that pressure.
spk09: Hopefully that answers your question.
spk15: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question. Our next question comes from Anthony Petanari with Citi. Your line is now open.
spk06: Good morning. Just following up on George's question, understanding you don't have a crystal ball on the economy. Is it possible to kind of update, you know, just even directionally when you might expect to see flattish year-over-year volumes in protective? And then just looking at parts of that business, you know, when does void fill, you know, when is it kind of shrunk to a point where declines are not maybe big enough to move the needle on overall segment volumes? And is there a point where automation comps get easier on a year-over-year basis?
spk02: Yeah, good morning, Anthony, it's Patrick. Just let me start by saying, as a reminder, and I think Dustin hit on that, so the overall void filler and mailers, this is where most of the fiber transition takes place, is roughly 10% of our business in protective. So that's roughly the size of it in total. So I had the opportunity to visit the PEC Expo exhibition this week in Chicago, and if you look at all of the changes you're seeing in that space, a lot of people commented on how they were surprised how many paper offerings we actually have on the market. And obviously we will not, we will continue to drive focus on, on, on all of our existing incumbent offerings, if you will, as we pivot towards more fiber based offering in that space. So in the next couple of months, I referenced the best buy win, which is a really significant one, which actually showcases that yes, we may have been late to the party with fiber based offerings in this space, But our offering is a really good one. And I do think we will continue to drive further growth in that space. It's a little bit too early to tell how much that will do to the mailer space at this point. We'll come back to you on that in February. But at the grand scheme of things, and these are the vehicles we're using in a portfolio shift, our go-to market changes that I talked about in order to drive to a turnaround in that space.
spk08: And then just to follow on a couple of Patrick's comments, so right now, We're working with the coming months, going back to the points about understanding the market, but in general, just the comments in the script around fully forming those growth strategies, overall transformation plans, and in February, Anthony will have a better idea of how we see protective playing out across 2025 and beyond. The couple of points you made about Boyfield specifically in terms of benefits going into next year, keep in mind that we talked about the specific Amazon loss at the beginning of the year that was in our guidance, but then Boyfield deteriorated further than that. You are going to have a wrap. So the comp going into next year on Boyfield is going to be much better than this year just because you've moved past that one large customer loss. And then automation in general, it's a great question. We talked about this year has been challenging due to capital deployment, et cetera. A lot of that's an extension of last year. The market dynamics are getting more favorable with rate cuts, et cetera. And what we've seen across this year is our book-to-bill ratio in both food and protective has largely been one-to-one. And so implying that we're coming into 2025 in a much better starting point relative to our backlog and our ability to drive flattish to growth in our automation space, which will also benefit from a materials perspective. So give us some time, and we'll come back, and we're going to put this all together over the next couple months.
spk15: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question. Our next question comes from Gansham Punjabi with Baird. Your line is open.
spk13: Thank you. Good morning, guys. You know, I just wanted to go back to the operating structure shift into two distinct verticals. Can you sort of put that change in context for us on a historical basis? Are you basically just going back to the structure of the companies? had in place a few years back, and then there was a shift. And also, what do you expect the positive changes will be coming out of this operating model shift, including the leadership changes that you've announced there?
spk02: Yeah, good morning, Ganshan. Great question. So let me start by saying this is – so we were organized as a vertical organization towards the end of 2018. We changed this to a more regional-focused organization, and we are going back to the model of verticals. But it's not just rearranging the deck chairs. I'd like to make that very, very clear. Because this is really about a different way of going to market, a different look at our value proposition and our portfolio. So it's not just the rearrangement of those tech chairs, as I mentioned earlier. What is important here to mention is that we would like people to wake up every day to worry, to be concerned about the growth in the areas that they're responsible for. And by doing this on a vertical basis, this is where people have things in common. This is where I can drive that growth strategy. What is important on the go-to-market is we, maybe in the last couple of years, we've been really focused on new aspirational, sometimes visionary initiatives. And these were great by themselves, but at the end of the day, it sort of defocused or it was hiding the real problem that we had to deal with, the secular decline that we had in protective. So we're moving away from that and we're looking at a go-to-market because with that, some of our distribution partners that I met in the last couple of months really got the perception that we were starting to compete with them to alternative channels, right? So maybe e-commerce or maybe online ordering tools. And we have reinforced the message with them that they are a very important part of our go-to-market strategy. It's not an easy model to implement, and that's why we're getting all of the feedback to say, how can we really drive, get traction? with our salespeople and their salespeople where the rubber meets the road. So the go-to market is a very important one. The second one, as I highlighted before, the portfolio shift from plastic-based offerings to fiber-based offerings will continue to be pushed very strongly in the organization and into the market. So those are the things that you will see, change market approach and also change portfolio, predominantly in the protective side. And on the food side, we will drive more towards further growth in areas that are currently under-penetrated.
spk08: And just to compliment a couple of the comments Patrick made, specifically to shifts innovation, customer service. We talked about getting closer to the customer proximity. So innovation in itself has been reorganizing to the verticals. And then specifically customer service. You go back to improving that three legs of the stool on the service side. Those are two fundamental shifts. And the comment you made around when to expect is kind of improvements associated with it. You know, you already see it today within food, because keep in mind the operating model shift we made earlier in the year. You've seen the food business perform. We're talking about share gains, not just in one region or one product line, but across all regions and most product lines. So food's already benefiting from that focus and protective, and the comments that Patrick's alluded to around the go-to-market change, as well as the portfolio shift, you know, there's more of a focus there in protective, and that's where we'll see. And between now and kind of February, we're going to continue to lay out the transformation plan there and give you more clarity in February.
spk15: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question. The next question comes from Stefan Diaz with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
spk16: Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. So you mentioned in the prepared remarks stepping up the CTO to grow initiative. I believe the previous cost takeout number was $140 to $160 million. Do you have an update for that number? And then maybe if you could also highlight some of the additional actions you're taking as far as cost takeout versus before. Thanks.
spk08: Okay. This is Dustin speaking. So, if you go back to the original intent of the program, we talked about $140 to $160 million of cost takeout savings. And as we announced this back in the middle to later part of 2023. We're on track right now for the $90 million, and we talked about it across a number of different buckets, right? This is related to network optimization across our supply chain. It's related to G&A, back office, as well as touching other areas of go-to-market that we're largely non-customer facing. And so we continue to execute on that. And what we talked about originally was next year is going to be roughly $50 million. And if you look how the volume drop we've had in protective in Q3 and Q4, we're now reevaluating that and looking to step that up as we go into next year. We haven't landed on exactly what that will be, and that work will complete over the next year. Over the next two to three months will be factored into kind of our outlook for 2025. But that's the intention. So we at this point have at least another 50 million already baked in in terms of actions that we're taking that will continue to roll through next year. And then we have another, you know, kind of X amount that we're working through to determine that. And our commitment is that we're going to be driving profitability. Right. That's the main message I want to leave you with on that point. And so in terms of areas that we're focused on, it is largely in those same buckets that we talked about. You know, but I would say there's a more primary focus on protective than relative to food due to the performance of each of those individual businesses. And that's one of the great benefits of moving to the models that we're going to is being able to better really understand those cost structures kind of because they're now aligned to each individual vertical.
spk14: Thank you. You're welcome. Thank you. Please stand by for the next question.
spk15: Our next question is from Josh Spector with UBS. Your line is open.
spk10: Yeah. Hi, good morning. I wanted to follow up again on some of the comments around the two segments and the different presidents. So you talked a lot about the operational side, which is good to see. I guess the question is really strategically, does this change anything? So you're investing more, I guess, in protective to improve it. Does that change your willingness to look at any divestment opportunities or carve outs within there? So how are you thinking about that today versus maybe three, six months ago? Thanks.
spk02: Yeah. Good morning, Josh. I think it was a good, a very good question. So at the moment we really laser focused on operationalizing all of the changes that we're making. We do believe that feedback from our distribution partners that we are on the right path in terms of the go to market. We do, we are confident that, you know, the fiber offering is going into the right direction. The accountability, a clear line of sight, those are the issues that we've been trying to address with this protocolization. So I do think we have a lot of opportunities right now to improve our business as we go forward. We will always look into opportunities for footprint rationalization or areas where we think we're maybe not that successful in the future or the markets aren't growing that much. But in the grand scheme of things, I think we are very comfortable where we are today with all of the changes we're making, and we are going to drive change in those organizations.
spk15: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question. The next question comes from Mike Roxland with Truist Securities. Your line is now open.
spk05: Thanks, Patrick, Dustin, for taking my questions. Just quickly, I wanted to follow up on the comments that shifted to two verticals. Obviously, you established these distinct operating units, but How do you now fully separate each business such that if you were to parse out protective, the disenergies would be minimized? And then just quickly on food, I think you've been going to food margins about 21% in 3Q. You round up around 22.9%. What exactly occurred during the quarter that allowed you to be in? How should we think about that margin progression in 4Q? Thank you.
spk02: Well, thank you, Mike. Great question. I'll start with the verticals and let Dustin answer the fluid question on the margin. So the reason for changing or putting our verticals back in place and changing the operating model there is really about the organizational effectiveness. I mentioned earlier that you want people to wake up every day to just focus on the areas they're responsible for. We create that clear line of sight. We will create clear accountabilities with P&L structure with subject matter experts in order not to lose traction in the market because I think that's where we have been in the last couple of years. The benefit of doing that is having innovation in our verticals means that now, where the rubber meets the road, you have one individual that's responsible for that and we no longer have the situation where we start finger pointing and we have innovations that actually are based on customer pool rather than trying to develop something that we think a customer needs without really asking. So that is the basic premise for doing this. Obviously that gives us optionality in future, but the real focus has been on driving that verticalization to get a stronger operational effectiveness. Dustin?
spk08: And so just to compliment that comment, going back to the prior statement that I made as well, Obviously, going through the reorganization the way that we are, it is giving us a chance to really look at that cost structure and really take a step back and ask ourselves what is really needed to support our growth expectations for each business and take a look at it in a very different way. And so I think if it left from a synergy standpoint, how do we maximize the value of each individual business? and get them back to driving towards long-term sustainable growth, which I'm highly confident that we have the opportunity. Both businesses demonstrated today based on how food is already operating. And going back to food margin, we benefited this year from the volume growth. We talked about it. We are driving volume growth across all the regions, across the businesses themselves, different product lines. You're creating an opportunity for higher utilization across our network. And so you're seeing that come through in the margin pull through. We expect that business to operate still in the low 20s, right, where you have, you know, you could have a point of difference every quarter or two, depending on how you're operating. And so right now, any expectation above and beyond that, we would think about in terms of reinvestment economics going forward in terms of how we can continue to unlock further growth in the areas that Patrick outlined earlier.
spk14: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question.
spk15: The next question is from Chris Parkinson with Wolf Research. Your line is open.
spk11: Hi, everyone. Good morning. It's Andrew on for Chris. I just want to delve into food volume trends both in this quarter and, you know, looking into the fourth quarter, into 25. Would you mind walking through protein substrate and sort of the success of new products and how those two have interplayed and what you expect going forward? Thank you.
spk08: Okay, I'll make a couple comments, right, just to kind of reorient. Again, you're looking at food overall, and in Q3, we talked about driving, you know, kind of low single-digit growth, 2.4% from a volume perspective. It's really 4% underlying strength that we talked about in Q2 that pulled forward of some of the tomato season that would have pulled forward back into Q2. So, again, Q3 very strong. We're going to expect similar performance in Q4. One of the big changes this year from a market perspective that we talked about is that the U.S., beef cycle has actually been much better than we'd originally anticipated coming into the year. But just keep in mind that you're going to see that become more challenging in Q4 and going into 2025. I would say that it's been a market headwind this year, but a slight one where we thought it was going to be higher. And going into next year, it's going to be a little bit heavier relative to impacting our volume, particularly in bags. But outside of that, I would tell you that our Latin American beef cycles and our competitive gain share there It's pulling through. EMEA is performing very well. And we talked about that in Q1 and Q2 as well. And you're seeing a lot of competitive wins in that business continue to ramp up with volume being very strong in Q3 as well as Q4. And so, you know, our expectation is those competitive wins, you know, as well as just the progress we're making across a number of our different product lines outside of just our core bags business, that momentum will continue into 2021. into Q4, but also into 2025, albeit the market dynamics in terms of proteins, we're still evaluating that, recognizing the US beef cycle was better this year. You're delaying some of the impact. You're pushing it further into 2025, and we're still working through that, and we'll have a better understanding of what that means to the overall business and our outlook in February. Thank you.
spk15: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question. The next question comes from Arun Viswanatha, RBC Capital Markets.
spk14: Your line is open. Arun, your line is open. All right. We cannot hear the caller. We'll be moving to the next in the queue. One moment.
spk15: Our next question comes from Eden Rodriguez with Mizuho. Your line is now open.
spk01: Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Just a quick one for me, and that's about the guidance. Patrick, of course, you're new to the firm. This is like the third quarter in a row where you have exceeded your expectations. it's very likely that the guide for 4Q is as conservative as the prior quarters. But the question for me is, where is the uncertainty coming from? What's driving results higher than you initially expected? Is it a question of volume visibility? Is it cost? What's making two quarters different from what you expected just a couple of months before that?
spk02: Great question. I think, you know, as we went into Q3, this was really about the volume developments in protective. I think we anticipated a different volume situation in the protective business. We continue to see strength in our food business, which I think is really strong, despite some of the headwinds we had in certain cattle cycle in certain regions, and we're very well hedged there. But at the end of the day, that's the main uncertainty in terms of our guidance going forward.
spk08: Yeah, so a couple comments I'll compliment there. One is if you look at Q3 relative to your point around meeting or being expectations, on the top line it was relatively tight, I would say relative to our expectations. Both businesses came in protective in the way that we thought as well as food. On the bottom line, there's some benefits and that's largely coming from leverage in terms of how we're optimizing within our plants and some of the cost takeout and some of the timing of that. But again, I would say if you look at Q3, it's more modest relative to Q2 and Q1. And so as we go into Q4, I would tell you that if you go back to the beginning of the year and say what's played out, you know, throughout the year, our food business has gotten better and better and better, right? And our protective business has actually gotten worse, you know, from our original expectation. If you go back to the beginning of Q1, we would have at that point thought more of an L-shaped recovery, but some inflection towards the end of the year, particularly in Q4. And our outlook has changed, right? That's been the downside to the So the strength in our food business has been continuously offset by the weakness in our protective business due to the portfolio challenges we've had and that we're working through. And so that, to me, is what set up our view of guidance. When we look at Q4, we think that that's what we're guiding towards is what we expect to actually happen. And so it's reflective of that. So it's not intended to be conservatism per se.
spk09: Thank you. You're welcome.
spk15: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question. Our next question comes from Gabe Hodgdy with Wells Fargo Securities. Your line is open.
spk03: Patrick, Dustin, good morning. Morning. I'm going to try one more time. You kind of gave us a top line number, Dustin, for food and protective. And you talked about maybe some sequential strengthening, actually, or seasonally speaking, for protective. I know price cost was a little bit worse in protective versus food. In fact, food was positive. So, um, is there anything discreet in, in the fourth quarter for some of these hurricane or weather impacts that you alluded to, um, that you haven't quantified for us? And, and then the variability on, on cashflow is still a hundred million, which is obviously wider than the EBITDA range. I appreciate, I think I know it's, it's probably working capital related, but once you get to your desired level, um, I don't know when exactly that will be. Maybe give us some insight into that. But then we should be stable and then it'll move with growth in the company. Or is there something that could unwind maybe next year? So we got to be mindful of that on the working capital side.
spk08: Yeah. And so, Gabe, I appreciate all that commentary. So let me start with discrete events related to Q4. We don't see at this point in time anything that we believe that would have happened as part of Hurricane Helene has been factored into the guidance you have. There's no material discrete impact to our business. And that's really a testament. Patrick made the remarks earlier in the script. That's really a testament to our teams and their ability to drive everything that they did. So we're really pleased with that.
spk02: Maybe to build on that, Dustin. So if you remember, the hurricane just happened two business days before the end of the quarter. So I think we were able to manage the quarter pretty well. So some of the costs were just a carryover between the two quarters, but at the end of the day, it was immaterial.
spk08: And so the other comment I would make, kind of shifting from there relative to the working capital and as well as the free cash flow comment, look, we're really pleased with what we've been able to drive this year. And what we're committed to and what we've always been committed to is driving a high conversion from adjusted net income into free cash flow, right, which we expect that to be the same going into next year. The one-time benefit, Gabe, that you would have this year is the restoration of our compensation pools. Okay. As a reminder, last year we talked about the fact that we were benefiting from the fact that we're going to have very low, think of it as executive compensation, and that's played a factor this year. And on a positive note, if you actually look at the 1100 adjusted EVA DA at the midpoint, that's also factoring in a $30 million step up in our compensation expense due to the restoration of those compensation pools, which you would have remembered during our original guidance and outlook for 2024. We do expect working capital. I would say it's largely normalized now. There's still a little bit of opportunity probably in inventory going into next year, but we don't see, you know, because next year we'll factor in the fact that we'll be paying out bonuses more in line with historical expectations, at least at this point in time. And so I think that this, you know, we still expect a very strong year for next year. Free cash flow, it'll be somewhat determined obviously based on our our profit outlook once we get to February, and we still expect very high conversion, and we wouldn't expect our ability to deliver and hit the commitments that we've outlined. We still feel it's fully intact and within our control at this point.
spk15: Thank you.
spk14: Please stand by for the next question.
spk15: The next question comes from with Jeffrey. Your line is open.
spk04: Hey, guys. Congrats on the strong quarter. I guess from a high level, I would say demand for food's been pretty solid. My question is really, is there a scope for positive price mix when we look at the 2025? Have you started having those conversations? Separately, pricing and protective seems to be fairly stable. Any color on the competitive landscape, your ability to maintain price. Ultimately, Dustin, I'm trying to get at, is there opportunity for price costs to actually I'm sorry, net price to flip positive in 2025 in either of your two businesses?
spk08: Yeah. So, Phil, I really appreciate the question, you know, as it relates to kind of price cost dynamics for each individual business. And you're correct in what you said. Obviously, if you look at Q4, what's implied in our guide beyond the overall kind of low single-digit growth that we have for volumes, which is kind of commensurate with the prior three quarters, you're also seeing price – the spread come down almost to where it's almost flattish, right, which is obviously a very positive indication in terms of going into next year. There are still some pressures within the food business related to some of the largest industrial processors, particularly in their businesses, going into next year, but we still, we see pricing dynamics more favorable going into next year than where we sit today. Now, I'll caveat that and say that obviously input costs, resin costs are obviously a big factor into that. They've been very stable this year, and we talked about the positivity around reducing a lot of that volatility. And so we do think the wraparound effect going next year is going to be a better pricing cost dynamic than we had in 2024. To what extent for food, we're still working through. And that will be kind of thought through kind of over the next three to four months. On protective, there are still, you know, pricing pressures, right? It's definitely narrowed because a lot of the comes down, you know, in terms of the price reductions due to a number of things kind of working through the supply chain, but really the bring down on resin happened across 23 into 24. So that wraparound effect You still feel it to some degree, but it's narrowed again, similar to food, but not quite to the same degree. So you'll see about a 1% reduction in price in Q4, which will obviously have a tail going to next year. A lot of that is coming from competitive dynamics, particularly in the areas that we talked about where you have deterioration of volumes, like poly void fill. So it's not just that there's a volume loss there, but because there's less volume to grab right now, you're seeing a lot more pricing pressures across the competitive landscape in that particular area. But again, in a similar vein, we see it to be more positive going into next year than we experienced in 2024. To what extent, and does that mean it will be positive? You know, overall from an NPR relative to the, just as a reminder, we're down, it's improved throughout the year, but we're down about negative 60 million this year. So TBD, but we do expect it to be better. Okay, very encouraging. Thanks a lot.
spk04: Yeah, thank you. It's a great question. Thank you.
spk15: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question. The next question comes from Matt Roberts with Raymond James. Your line is now open.
spk17: Hey, Patrick, Justin, good morning. I know we spent a lot of time talking about fiber, but maybe I'll try to give them one more here. Patrick, you did say you spoke to many distributors and customers over the last couple of days. So can you help me understand specifically where your fiber product lacks versus peers? I mean, What products or changes are there in the pipeline that we could expect to see? How long would it take to commercialize any of those new products to stop the erosion you're seeing in mailer and void fill areas? And what type of investment would it require to ramp those up? Thank you for taking the question.
spk02: Thank you, Matt. So start with the mailers, right? So as you're replacing plastic mailers with the bubble wrap on the inside, the traditional Jiffy mailers, if you will, the perception of the protection of those products is actually very different. So people are actually compromising from moving from plastic to fiber-based products, and the protective nature of that fiber-based mailer is actually very important. So one of the things I think we've been lacking a little bit as I came into the organization and looked at some of our competitive offerings is like even though, in theory, our product is as protective as the alternative offering in the market, it wasn't perceived that way. So we're working on the perception and actually the protection so that we can get a better mailer out in the market. And there's some prototypes that we're actually launching at the moment and that are in very good condition and actually can help us drive sales in that space. So as far as the void filler goes, I think in general terms, our focus has been on the mailers because the void as such has been under pressure quite a bit and people are trying to design out the void because it's a challenge per se. Now there is still very solid volume growth in the space, but it's really about getting the sweet spot in terms of all of the different applications you have in terms of what kind of protection do you need. So again, the protection there is critically important, but it is more going hand in hand with automation. So if you go to the timing of things, and I'll get to your question around what kind of investment does it require? So the timing of the paper mail is we'll go faster because we have a lot of offerings already available and we have fine tuned, sharpened the pencil on that offering quite substantially. So that is faster when it comes to the capital investment. I think we're in a good position on the capital investment. It's not as capital intense as, for instance, on a food business. So it's easier to implement. And then as far as the void filling goes, this is more an interplay between automation and the paper that you're using. So that is something that will take a little bit longer in terms of our portfolio change being effective.
spk14: Thank you. Please stand by for the next question.
spk15: The next question comes from George Staffos, Bank of America Securities. Your line is open.
spk07: Hi, thanks very much for taking the follow-on. It's on protective as well. So, one, what are your views on Instapack and how important that is in the portfolio on a going-forward basis? Relatedly, in terms of protective, does the affinity for sustainability, the focus on fiber versus poly, vary depending on whether we're talking with a large distribution company or e-tailer or a smaller one. I would imagine, but maybe this is incorrect, the smaller distribution guys, the guys more in the street, don't care as much. But, you know, if you could help us understand that. And then lastly, as you move this transformation over time to fiber versus plastic, recognizing there are no guarantees here because it's still nascent days for you, Does it make the business more or less price competitive? Do you think it makes your pricing more variable, less predictable, or more if you move to fiber over time? So thanks, guys, and I'll turn it over, and good luck in the quarter.
spk02: Thank you, George. Great question. So let me start with the question you asked about – so where I see the difference is really more – between products that touch the consumer and products that go into a more industrial space those are the biggest shifts that i see yes there will be differences between larger and smaller consumers but it is actually more pronounced when it comes to what products touch the consumer and that goes back into your instapack question so instapack typically hits more in the industrial space because your products are typically heavier more higher value And the industrial segment is much more price sensitive and much less driven by consumer preferences who want to get out of the portfolio and going into paper. So these are areas actually that I think Instapack is an important part of our portfolio. That is an area that from a fiber-based shift is much less on the pressure because simply fiber-based products will not give these products the same level of protection. And that is important as we move forward. Plus, the other thing is the curbside recycling for consumers is a very different ballgame than the recycling opportunities you have in industrials. So more price sensitive, industrial recyclability is more available. So from that point of view, I do believe there is a difference between the different segments, but not necessarily as much in the small and larger space, more in terms of whether product touches the consumer or not. So then let's talk a little bit about that pricing. So I talked about, you know, as we develop more fiber-based alternatives, it is really important to us that we become more substrate agnostic. And why am I saying that? That is very important as we develop our equipment that we have a drop-in. So customers have choices. So whether they use poly or they use a fiber-based alternative, we do have that opportunity. Now, typically, just by nature of how much more material you use on the paper side, it's going to be more expensive to use a fiber-based product than a poly product. Customers have that choice now. So I do think the price predictability is relatively stable from that point of view. But what is more critically important to us as an organization is that people want to go shop for fiber-based products. They don't have to go somewhere else. They can use the fiber-based options that we're offering them and potentially just a drop-in in the equipment that we're using today.
spk07: Thanks very much, Patrick. Thank you.
spk15: Thank you. This concludes the question and answer session. I would now like to turn it back to CEO Patrick Kivitz for closing remarks.
spk02: So I'd like to thank everyone for their time today. I look forward to updating you over the coming quarters on the progress we are continuing to make to transform sealed air. And lastly, I'd like to close by thanking the global sealed air team for their efforts in solving our customers' most critical packaging challenges every day. Thank you.
spk15: Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program, and you may now disconnect.
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