Nexans S.A. (NXPRF) Q3 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

Nexans S.A. (OTCPK:NXPRF) Q3 2022 Earnings Conference Call October 26, 2022 3:00 AM ET

Company Participants

Christopher Guerin – CEO

Jean-Christophe Juillard – Deputy CEO and CFO

Elyette Roux – Corporate VP, Chief Sales and Marketing Officer

Elodie Robbe-Mouillot – VP, IR

Conference Call Participants

Miguel Borrega – BNP Paribas Exane

Daniela Costa – Goldman Sachs

George Featherstone – Bank of America

Sean McLoughlin – HSBC

Massimiliano Severi – Credit Suisse

Jean-Francois Granjon – ODDO

Akash Gupta – JPMorgan

Rajesh Singla – Societe Generale

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good morning, and welcome to Nexans Third Quarter 2022 Financial Information Conference Call. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. Please note, your lines will be on listen-only mode for the duration of the call. However, you will have the opportunity to ask questions at the end of the call. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the call over to your host for today’s conference call, Mr. Christopher Guerin, Nexans, CEO. Please go ahead, sir.

Christopher Guerin

Thank you. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for participating in Nexans conference call. I am Chris Guerin, CEO of Nexans. With me are Jean-Christophe Juillard, Deputy CEO and CFO; Elyette Roux, Corporate VP, Chief Sales and Marketing Officer; and Elodie Robbe-Mouillot, VP, Investor Relations.

I will turn you to Elodie for the conference call rules.

Elodie Robbe-Mouillot

Thank you, Chris. I would like to remind participants that statements made during the conference call, which are not historical facts, are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Readers and listeners are strongly encouraged to refer to the disclaimers, which are an integral part of our URD, along with the audio replay of today’s call that will be posted on our website nexans.com.

I’ll now turn you over to Chris who will go over the third quarter 2022 highlights.

Christopher Guerin

Thank you, Elodie.

I’d now propose that we move straight to Slide number 5 in regards to the Q3 highlights. So as you can see, I’m very delighted to confirm today Nexans’ solid financial trajectory on top line momentum, supported by our disruptive SHIFT transformation program, and of course, our solutions new offering that Elyette will comment.

Of course, both together, the transformation and new services and solutions enables Nexans to deliver sustainable results, structural result and now we are equipped – equipping our units to be a recession-proof, in case of recession in 2023.

For the first nine months of 2022, Nexans’ Electrification business generated an outstanding organic growth of 16.2% versus 2021 same period. What is important to remind you that it’s – majority of this organic growth is coming from value generation more than volume consumption. The third quarter organic sales growth was plus 10%, 10.3%, in line with the trends observed in the first half of the year with 16% for the Electrification business only.

It’s important to notice because we are still managing the crisis in Ukraine that our Automotive Harnesses is up 37% for the quarter, supported by growing market share and confirmed by the fact that Nexans has very, very well managed this Ukrainian crisis versus competition and that enable us to get more share from car manufacturers.

So today, our solid and structural performance is the bedrock upon which we have decided to upgrade for the second time, yes, second time of the upgrade in 2022, our full-year financial guidance and I will let JC comment this part.

We are consistently progressing on our strategic intention to become a pure player of Electrification. We have reached now a record in Generation & Transmission backlog with visibility further enhanced by our recent subsea awards.

Elyette will comment after me how we are accelerating through SHIFT Prime, the growth in connected objects and users fostering new recurring revenue model, based on, of course, the value-added product and solution, but as well subscription model.

Another important pillar of our strategy is, obviously, sustainability and corporate responsibility. Our E3 innovative model. E3 revenue stands for Economic, Environment & Engagement is now deployed across almost all units to find a good balance and equilibrium between those three elements.

Let’s now move to Page number 6. You’ve seen that Nexans has been very vocal on energy debates and many forefront. We were the main sponsor of the Climate Week in New York. We hold as well our third Annual Climate Day in New York City to talk about the U.S. energy transition, which is booming right now and with more than 900 people connected on as well, customers being with us in the room in New York.

We have as well done the same exercise in Canada with, what we call, change the current, is a new type of events that Nexans will do in many places of the world to make sure that energy transition and electrification is at the forefront of all the debate on the economic exchange.

We hold as well our Suppliers Day to strengthen the strategic relationship with our suppliers. We not only ask to be competitive, we ask them as well to bring new innovative solutions on a new way to manage sustainability between the two company.

Talking about sustainability, let’s move to Slide number 7, we keep progressing on our sustainability agenda. Big focus on carbon, and especially on deploying our E3 model across all the unit, which is, for the moment, ahead of schedule.

You see here some progress from our strategic stream, Nexans joined the Circular Plastics Alliance in Q3, circularity of our product has been developing and will keep being a strong point for us where we combine our R&D expertise with manufacturing capabilities. And more important, we keep amplifying our recycling capabilities, more to come on this topic in 2023.

We are accelerating our CO2 emission reduction. And I have to be as well transparent, the fact that we are more value-driven than volume is helping us to find a new way to accelerate this CO2 emission reduction. And that’s notably in Canada where we have been able to reach already our 2030 CO2 emission targets in Canada. So it’s a fantastic result for the team.

There is as well one recognition and we are very delighted for that, that we need to highlight. This is the EcoVadis appointing us Platinum. So Platinum means we are part of the top 1% company in our field, having this recognition for the third consecutive year.

Let’s move to Page number 8 to talk about the very high dynamic that we have in Generation & Transmission. You can see that we continue to convert a very healthy and risk-controlled contract for our Generation & Transmission backlog, which reached to a new record high this quarter as we announced new subsea awards notably BorWin6 wind offshore project off the coast of Germany.

We have so converted installation of the Revolution project as part of our Orsted frame agreement in the U.S. up to 2027. So we had only before the production, supply only, now we have both production and installation.

You know that we have been selected as preferred bidder for EuroAsia Interconnector. Today right now, negotiations are still ongoing. More to come in the coming weeks. And the third element, which is as well very important for us because that confirm our leading position in U.S. being the sole U.S.-based cable manufacturers. We remain a top of mind partner for ever-growing U.S.-based offshore wind farm industry, like I’ll confirm with the new EPCI contract that we signed for Empire Wind 1 with Equinor and bp.

So the project pipeline remains extremely strong. The most important is that project are not equal in terms of quality, means margin yield, technological risk or project – contractual term exposure, so Nexans remain highly selective to feed our state of the assets with the right, what we call, Platinum project. I’m sure you will have questions on this – on these specific elements.

But now, let me now turn to Elyette, that will explain how we implement our SHIFT Prime program to deliver the structural growth in the long run. On these elements, I think, be – please, I want to have your full attention because that’s a very important element for the benefit of our 2023 result to make sure that we are not facing conjunctural, I would say, increase, but turn everything to structural mode.

Elyette, now it’s for you.

Elyette Roux

Yes. Thank you, Chris.

So SHIFT Prime. So for those of you that are not familiar with this transformation program SHIFT Prime is a methodology designed by Nexans to premiumize our offers and convert innovation through marketing into EBITDA. We have built this recipe to launch and scale innovation through marketing in order to increase the value generation for our customers and to generate by 2024, €50 million incremental EBITDA.

SHIFT Prime is all about value creation, thanks to superior service level, brand equity, smart innovation, including enriched offers and digital services and partnership with key players. SHIFT Prime is powered by a new sales and marketing operating model, including design labs and with the objective to provide a Platinum experience to our Platinum customers and partners.

As we have explained in our CMD, we are moving from cable to solutions. We are seeing growing traction for our new solutions connecting both our users and our offers in power distribution and usages. Starting with our Nexans digital apps connecting customers with our products and providing additional services for energy savings and CO2 emissions reduction.

Our MOBIWAY range, our new smart packaging family to simplify cable installation will keep growing in 2023. Finally, our ULTRACKER digital suites that we announced this year, providing services on our connected objects like cable drums is enabling optimization of planning and operations before, during and after cable installation. Finally, we have more than 380,000 connected users globally, and thus a solid foundation for new recurring revenue model.

So now, as you can see on Slide 10, we have two concrete examples of innovation monetization through recurring revenue with our Platinum accounts in power distribution and usages. So let me drive you through the first one. In power distribution, utilities can benefit from the Peace-of-Mind asset management offer. It encompasses the ULTRACKER suites, which already reaches 20% penetration rates at our Platinum utilities.

Through monthly subscription and MOBIWAY smart packaging in leasing, it includes end-to-end field services such as scrap management or training. We ambition up to 2% recurring revenue on Platinum utilities DSO sales by 2024.

Now, on the second example, in usages, we are deploying a smart packaging leasing offer with our MOBIWAY range connected with digital apps and loyalty program for our customers in the residential markets, while we are connecting with ULTRACKER in the tertiary markets. There we ambition to generate up to 5% of recurring revenue through Platinum distributor sales by 2024.

So in a nutshell, with this new business model, Nexans is developing a consistent recurring revenue based on services and solutions that contributes to a Platinum experience with our customers in the Electrification value chain.

Now, I will hand it over to Jean-Christophe who will comment business sales in the first nine months of the year.

Jean-Christophe Juillard

Thank you, Elyette.

So we’re moving now to Page 12 of the presentation. You have here on Page 12, the snapshot of our Q3 and nine months organic growth and sales performance. So let’s start with the nine months. So we report 6.7% organic growth for the Group nine months 2022 versus last year. If you look outside of metallurgy, you know that purposely as part of our strategy, we aim to decline this metallurgy business.

So if you look at the growth of the, I would say, the other part of the business, excluding metallurgy, the organic growth for the nine months is close to 15%. On a quarterly basis, Q3 versus Q3 of last year, the organic growth is 10.3%, and excluding metallurgy, the growth is more than 18%. So quite strong momentum from this third quarter that continues in line with the first two quarters of the year.

Interesting also, very important for our strategy, is our Electrification businesses and they grew 16.2% on a nine-month basis, which is again carried on all our element on the Electrification chain, all have been growing significantly in the quarter and the year.

Now if we deep dive a little bit into the business segment, and I start with on Page 13, with Generation & Transmission, our former High Voltage and Projects business. Sales have been increasing by close to 17% nine months versus last year.

The growth is obviously coming from a good project phasing and the new capacities in our plant, in our plant in the U.S., Charleston and also the addition of our new vessel the Aurora. And at the same time, you know that we are right now increasing capacity in High Voltage with the expansion in Halden as well as in Charleston and both are progressing according to plan.

Important to notice also in the High Voltage segment, the adjusted backlog is reaching a record high of €2.4 billion at the end of September ’22, which is a growth of 55% versus September last year. And again, extremely important, as Chris mentioned earlier, the mix is positive in terms of profitability and risk assessment. We have now a very strong visibility in the pipeline of project on High Voltage until late 2024 and new significant award are expected before year-end.

If I move to the next slide and we look at Page 14 Distribution, which is the former Territories business, medium voltage cable mainly with utilities. Growth is supported by the successful renewal of several framework contract with large DSOs, such as Enedis, for instance, and also impacting – I mean, explaining the growth is growing grid investments across North America and Europe. In that Distribution sector most – more than 80% of the organic growth is coming from value.

If we move to the next page, Usages, 16.5% nine months ’22 organic growth reflecting the outstanding performance in all our markets and also supported by growth in value and not volume. Strong demand, new project launch and amplified solutions, explained basically as well as pricing the action explain the performance. Of course, as we had and we explained that in detail in the first semester, you know that part of the great result of the first half of the year in the Usages low voltage business was coming from some conjunctural impact.

We continue to see strong momentum. We continue to see strong momentum in the third quarter as the market is really continuing to be booming in North America, where we’ve seen a 55% growth in that market from the first nine months ’22, so the year-to-date ’22 versus last year. Obviously we don’t know when, how long this will last, but we continue to enjoy this very beneficial situation.

If we move to Page 16 and we look at our non-electrification businesses, mainly in Industry & Solution, Telecom & Data. Starting with Industry & Solution, a nice rebound versus the second quarter, 13.4% organic growth nine months ’22 versus last year. As Chris mentioned, auto harnesses has been very strong 22.8% growth for the nine months, mainly supported by growing market shares despite the Ukrainian crisis. And basically, all our customers in that segment recognized the strong performance of Nexans.

Automation is one of the segment in the industry that has been also doing very well, 19% growth, shipbuilding 28% growth, mining 16% growth. On the other side, not performing as well, Rolling Stock mainly impacted by the situation in China has been declining by 5%. Backlog remains very good and is up 37% on the period.

Telecom & Data, this is a segment, I would say, out of the portfolio that has been a little bit softer than the rest of the group. LAN cable had a good momentum in Europe, but Asia was quite affected by lockdowns. Telecom infrastructure was supported by sound business momentum, mainly in the U.K.

And the third quarter performance is really reflecting customer inventory building in Europe. Special Telecom backlog is down, mainly because consuming – we have been consuming the extraordinary backlog over the first part of the year a year ago and now it’s coming back to a more normalized situation and it should pick up again in the last quarter of the year.

So that’s for the brief description, I would say, of the organic growth and sales of our businesses. I’ll move now to Page 18 and that good performance of revenues basically pushed us to increase the guidance for 2022. As you see, we have both increased the guidance and narrowed the guidance. We moved from €560 million to €590 million as previously announced in July to a new range of €580 million to €600 million EBITDA.

And normalized free cash flow, which is a cash flow adjusted, I remind you, from strategic CapEx, from one-off tax impact as well as a divestment of land and PPE. Normalized free cash flow is increasing from €200 million and €250 million to €225 million and €275 million. This is again the second time this year that we are doing an upgrade demonstrating the strong performance of Nexans and our very high confidence in basically doing a great job of 2022.

Now that’s over. I turn the floor to Q&A.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We will take our first question from Miguel Borrega from BNP Paribas Exane. Your line now has been opened. Please go ahead.

Miguel Borrega

Hello. Good morning, everyone. Couple of questions from me. The first one just on the pricing environment in Usages. I remember you saying that you were a price follower of one of your competitors and did not see pricing as sustainable. Has there been any changes from your competitors, are they adjusting prices by any chance and we follow at some point? That’s my first question.

Christopher Guerin

Yes. Good morning, Miguel. It’s Chris. Yes, you know that we are talking here about North America only. We have one of our top competitor named Southwire, which is certainly a price leaders on the – number one in the market over there. We have not yet seen any sign of change on the price dynamic neither in terms of demand in North America. So for the moment, everything is as it was in H1.

Miguel Borrega

That’s great. And my second question on Industry & Solutions, obviously, the business is performing very well, specifically in auto harnesses. Have you reconsidered selling this business? And if not what would actually change your mind? And given that it is doing so well, any update on the carve-out?

Christopher Guerin

Yes, I will – there is no – we will not change the strategy from one year to another. In that case, it’s not strategy anymore. It’s tactics. And once again, let me reinforce the fact that our strategic intention is supported by 10 years forecast of demand on the market analysis on the electrification.

The main message on that we had in – during our Capital Markets Day is that we are a strong believer that the next 10 years are the years for pure player – pure player of telecom, pure player of automotive, pure player of industry, pure player for electrification. So it’s not a question of financial optimization. We will not change our way of doing on our objective to divest just because our businesses are doing good. We already say that all the business that we want to divest are doing good. This is not the problem, but they need an owner, a future owner that will keep develop them, make acquisition in their field, make more CapEx, that’s what we do.

On our side, our aim is to reduce the complexity of how we manage the company, reallocate the R&D resources and our CapEx capabilities to electrification only to – like it was our motto to simplify the way we run the company to amplify the impact. So, no change. Carve-out is still processing. As we told you, Miguel, on – to all the – your peers as well is that harnesses and telecom are the two candidates for soon divestments because they already carve-out, and this we will take a bit more time because of its complexity.

Miguel Borrega

Thank you. And just my last question on the backlog for projects is now €2.4 billion. Can you give us an update where this may go just taking into account the projects you were recently awarded or as preferred bidder? Thank you very much.

Jean-Christophe Juillard

So there’s two major – so first of all, the new projects that we – that entered the backlog in Q3, BorWin6. The two projects that we are – which will be tendered and will be awarded to us or not to us, but we are positive about the expectation of EuroAsia that we discussed, which is not in the backlog today, which is a €1.2 billion contract. And then there will be the award of [Celtic] but we – that’s another one that will be coming at the end of the year, not necessary to Nexans, but that’s another project.

So definitely the activity in terms of tendering is high. There is couple of big project coming up that could have a significant impact on the backlog depending on how – I mean, obviously, EuroAsia, we are preferred suppliers. So that’s a hedge, I would say, versus the other. But potentially, I would say, our backlog could significantly go between now and the end of the year and reach record level for Nexans.

Christopher Guerin

What is important, if I may add as well, is that compared to some others, whatever will be the number at the end of the year, which will be certainly significant, 90% of this backlog will be subsea-driven, which is – and only 10% land-driven.

And I think it’s an important information because we always buy – put everything in the same bag, subsea interconnection, offshore wind farm, short distance, long distance and land high-voltage interconnection. Nexans’ focusing is on – doesn’t want to discount this capacity, so we want to focus on, first, subsea interconnection and long-distance DC-type cables for offshore wind farm. This is our top priority.

Okay. Next questions? Operator?

Operator

We will take our next questions from Daniela Costa from Goldman Sachs. Your line now has been opened. Please go ahead.

Daniela Costa

Hi, good morning. If I may ask three questions. First, I wanted to follow up on your commentary that you aim to transform the conjunctural you have this year, which by the looks of what you just mentioned on the prior question, you will have some in 2Q as well into structural, and check, is that enough, you think, to offset maybe the cyclicality, you will see backlog is down on telecoms and it’s down on construction. Do you think 2023 earnings will – you can still end with them up year-on-year? That’s my first question.

The second question I wanted to ask was on cash usage and sort of how shall we think about like dividend into the end of the year given your raised free cash flow guidance, and of course, we already knew about the CapEx plans before. So just any color you can add on that.

And the third one is just wanted to check, there’s been some news flow out in some of the U.K. press regarding a problem on some underground cables that you’re connecting, I think, in Scotland. Can you confirm if there’s potentially any sort of one-off risks coming from that? I know it’s underground. So it’s probably like less margin impactful. But it sounds like it’s 800 kilometers of cables. So just wanted to make sure that there is nothing that sort of potentially can impact one of the results from an execution point of view. Thank you.

Christopher Guerin

Thank you, Daniela. JC, if you could?

Jean-Christophe Juillard

So I will start with the first question regarding the conjunctural part and potential growth of our earnings for 2023, Daniela. So right now, just for the situation, we don’t – still don’t see any slowdown, as I mentioned, for Q3. Q4, definitely, the last quarter of the year is always a specific quarter due to the fact that most of our distributors and customers are reducing their inventory and stock for the end of the year.

So there will be definitely a slowdown. But we don’t see this today. As of today, we don’t see this slowdown as being, I would say, a change in dynamic in the business, but just again an adjustment for the end of the year. Distributors will reduce the inventory, but they will continue – they are continuing to sell and to do a very healthy business.

So we’ll see how it evolves through the beginning of next year. But so far, I would say, the signals are still okay, still strong. I would say, obviously, there’s a lot of questions about potential recession in ’23. We are – in Nexans, we started now to prepare ourselves for downturn next year with strong measures and actions ready to be engaged in terms of fixed cost reduction, in terms of accelerating the transformation of our value burners. We talked a lot about value burners in the past. We are doing acceleration on turning them around.

Obviously, Elyette, as she explained, is also pushing a lot of actions that we’ll deliver next year. So we believe that this recession is not too – I mean, mild recession, I’d say. No one obviously knows what would be next year, but if recession is mild recession, we believe we will be in a situation to continue to deliver and to continue our transformation.

And we – obviously, you will – – all the conjunctural impact stop next year from the first day of the year, obviously, the growth of earnings will not be the same we’ve seen in – from ’21 to ’22, definitely. But again, we are – I mean, in our vision today and in our view today, we continue to see a more moderate growth of earnings, but we don’t see a flattening or a decrease of the earning for ’23. That’s how I can answer the first question.

I think your second question was regarding the cash increase guidance, and if we had any, I’d say, insight regarding dividend. Definitely, I mean, as we announced – as we explained and announced during our CMD last year, our objective is to grow our earnings according – or our dividend, sorry, according to our earnings and our cash flow generation.

So there will be – right now, obviously, we have not yet decided what will be the dividend for next year, too early. But definitely, our, I’d say, objective is to grow the payout ratio. We said that we will have a payout ratio above 20%, growing year after year. We will continue to grow the payout ratio, and therefore, increase the dividend payment for next year.

Christopher Guerin

And regarding the third question, it’s about our project Viking in a wind farm in the Shetland. So we are talking about medium voltage type cable, so it’s not high voltage. And that’s why that customers on Nexans have seen some visual anomalies detected on some part of the drums that have been supplied.

So we don’t want to take any risk. Quality is our top objective for those projects. So we have suspended the installation and we have a team here right now checking all the drums one by one. And if there is anomalies, of course, everything will be replaced. We are talking about – it’s a small order, it’s not significant and there will be no effect that will – that can impact 2022 result.

Daniela Costa

Very clear. Thank you.

Christopher Guerin

Thank you, Daniela.

Operator

Thank you. We will take our next question is from George Featherstone from Bank of America. Your line now has been opened. Please go ahead.

George Featherstone

Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. My first is a bit of a follow-up from kind of sort of things you’ve heard already. But clearly, you’ve seen demand has been sustained at a relatively high level for a prolonged period now, ahead of the growth rate sort of business that you had outlined at last year’s CMD. So just wanted to understand if you’ve done any work around how much of the growth that you’ve seen across the business this year is really structural and related to those electrification trends that you’ve called out before that’s perhaps at a higher level than you originally anticipated versus the sort of continued rebound effect related to demand recovery coming out of the pandemic. That will be the first question.

Christopher Guerin

Yes, George, I will take it. This is Chris. You have to split it in three different parts in the electrification ecosystem. As we mentioned during our Capital Markets Day, there is the foundation of a hyper-cycle in the electrification for the next 20 years. Can be slowed down sometimes because of recession, but the foundation of a hyper-cycle are there because of the shift of the fossil fuels to renewable energy, because of the unprecedented needs to renew the electrical grid, and that’s fundamental, each nation need to modernize their grid rapidly.

We are – in Europe and in U.S., specifically, we are suffering from 15 years of underinvestment in the electrical grid. And there is as well the electricity consumption that keep growing on the usage part because electrification is the fastest way to decarbonization. So that’s for sure. The last 10 years were all about tech. The next 10 years, it will be all about electrification and decarbonization. So the foundation are extremely structural.

Now, regarding the resiliency of our business portfolio, what we can say is that the first part is Generation & Transmission. Here, we are in the high voltage, where subsea, everything is contracted, everything is hedged. It’s just a matter of execution on recession, it’s on – I’d say, it’s recession-proof because customer will not delay that project because of a recession. There is a big, big fight right now from all customers for production slot. So this – you can consider that this part of our portfolio is extremely robust and, I would say, antifragile.

The second aspect is Usages. Usages – sorry, Distribution. Distribution with the utilities market, here is the unprecedented requirement to renew the grid. If you take the last major economic recession in 2009 with the subprimes, these sectors has been extremely resilient. So first answer is that this sector is resilient.

Second, our frame agreement are not sufficient to support the demand of the customers. They keep asking more than 20% of more cable right now that we are not able to cope with because of lack of capacity. So I do not see neither distribution be fundamentally affected by recession. The only element that – in the electrification that can be – only part that can be affected by recession is certainly the Usages because it’s directly linked to construction. We see already a slowdown in construction in U.S. We see some slowdown as well in part of Europe for the construction. But in parallel, what we didn’t have in the last 10 years, the renovation is booming. The shift from PVC cable to fire-resistant cable, so premium cable, is very, very, very high.

So we believe that there is a buffer from potentially downturn of new construction by the renovation. But of course, we are listening, like you, our top customers, Legrand, Schneider Electric, Rexel, Sonepar, all those customers that are very well ahead in terms of information of what’s going on. For the moment, all of them remain extremely positive. So from the information that we have today, I believe that Q1 will remain strong. Question mark on Q2 for this sector. That can go down very, very fast. But we don’t have much information. You can see that the backlog in these sectors, even if we don’t have a big visibility, it remained stable overall. So for the moment, no sign of recession, but the most important is to get prepared.

George Featherstone

Okay, thank you very much. Second question would just be turning to that Usages backlog, clearly does remain high, but it’s shown some decline if you look on a year-on-year basis. I guess, obviously, some price effect in there, too. Is this a function of lower lead times and the supply chain improving the deliveries? Or is it a signal that perhaps the business has reached the cyclical peak and now moderate that to more normalized levels in the coming quarters?

Christopher Guerin

No. First, we have more than 30% of our order intake, which is taken during the month and shipped during the month, the same month, so that you don’t see that – so you are not able to see that in the backlog. The fact that we have amplified our complexity reduction model everywhere in the units, of course, improve significantly the internal lead time and the customer lead time.

So that means that we are able to move from a make to start – or make to order to make to availability, that means that the inventory turn is going much faster than before. So you’re right, I think it’s the right comment. The backlog for these sectors is certainly not an indicator as such. The main indicator is the order intake, which is, for the moment, still robust.

George Featherstone

Okay, thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. We will now take next question from Sean McLoughlin from HSBC. Your line has now been opened. Please go ahead.

Sean McLoughlin

Good morning. Thank you. If I could just understand a little bit more about the negative organic growth you’re seeing in telecom, which seems, I guess, to be the only weak part. I mean, firstly, how are you seeing that trend into the rest of the year? And how is the pricing environment as a result of weaker demand? That’s my first question.

Christopher Guerin

Yes, Sean. Thank you. Good morning. Price environment has remained stable in the telecom sector. The backlog, that decrease that you see in this field is related to Special Telecom. We have shipped major project in the last quarters. And now we need to bring back new orders. But as well, we had to put some internal orders in our Special Telecom activity for our high voltage subsea business so – which is an interco move that – you don’t see that in the backlog.

What I can tell you is that we will announce certainly very important award in the Special Telecom field and the magnitude of the business, of course, in Q4 and Q1. And the activity for Special Telecom between interco business plus external business, it will be fully loaded next year. So no problem there. And it’s the same dynamic then Generation & Transmission, the foundation are very, very strong. So fully loaded on telecom.

Sean McLoughlin

Thank you. And another question on offshore wind. We’re hearing in the U.S. that some projects might require higher PPAs, that the – let’s say, the very aggressive bids that we’ve had against the rising equipment prices are causing potentially some delays. I just wanted to understand from your perspective if you’re seeing anything around this.

Christopher Guerin

We heard about it. We know that some of other customers that we do not supply had some delays. But I will say, so far with Orsted and Equinor, we have not heard anything and the dynamic is very, very strong. Charleston is running full speed. We have to make sure to execute on time our OTIF, our delivery for those projects. So we have no discussion of any kind of delays at this moment.

Sean McLoughlin

Perfect. Thank you. My last question, if I may. Just wondering around the recurring revenues. I mean, realistically, how quickly can this grow? And what percentage might – what is the potential of recurring revenues as a percentage of sales as you go forward?

Christopher Guerin

Elyette, it’s for you.

Elyette Roux

Yes. Hello. So as you know, as part of the SHIFT Prime program, we are actively working now for some years to grow our base of connected objects and users to engineer this new recurring revenue model, which is supported by our continued innovation and all the different launches that we’ve done in the past months related to product and solutions. So basically, what you know is that we have also grown our connected objects by more than 30,000 today globally, and this is really like the foundation for accelerating the growth in recurring revenue model in the coming years.

Christopher Guerin

But the potential is huge because we have now a digital factory of more than 50 people. To be honest, sometimes I don’t understand them because it’s a very new profile for Nexans, so real geek working in the scrum mode. So all these new techniques that – which is new for our cable industry. And the benefit from the – for the customers in terms of IoT development is huge. And that’s a fantastic opportunity for us to go to premiumization because we want to turn our passive components into active components.

And of course, and this is part of our structural change, we want to develop new kind of revenues, and of course, margin level, thanks to subscription model. So more of those connected objects will be connected to our drums, to our product. More revenue will be generated at that level. And of course, the level of margin is not at all the same than what we have on the physical products. So we are now turning into a phygital mode.

The demand from customer is very high. The leadership of Nexans on this field is really now recognized with Elyette. The difficulties we have is to answer to all demand. So we need to scale up very, very fast our digital team and marketing team in that regard.

Sean McLoughlin

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We will take our next question from our participant, Massimiliano Severi from Credit Suisse. Your line has been opened. Please go ahead.

Massimiliano Severi

Yes, hi, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. My first question would be, if you could help us clarifying how much of the 22% organic growth in Usages in Q3 comes from the conjunctural effect of pricing in North America versus what comes from more structural measures like SHIFT Prime that you already implemented.

Jean-Christophe Juillard

JC, you want to take it?

Jean-Christophe Juillard

Yes. What I can tell you is that if we look at – just to give you some different figures. If we look at 2021 and 2022 in comparison, year-to-date, for the full year and the estimation, I would say, for the full year of 2021 versus 2022, 2021, we did €231 million of sales in North America. We’re expecting to do about €340 million this year. EBITDA margin was 11% and now it’s 25%. So I don’t have the exact number to your question, but I can – you can do the math and see how basically we have increased EBITDA margin by 14% where basically revenues increased by about €100 million.

Massimiliano Severi

Thank you very much. Extremely clear. And my second question would be maybe on Distribution. North America is up 57% also here, but you mentioned that the conjunctural effect is mainly in Usages. So I was wondering, in North America, this big increase that we see, is it on frame agreements that last couple of years? And how much of the sales in Distribution are covered by frame agreements versus more spot pricing?

Jean-Christophe Juillard

It’s more than 80% of the sales are covered by frame agreement.

Massimiliano Severi

So here, the pricing in North America would expect it to be more resilient than Usages?

Christopher Guerin

Yes, but we don’t have the same, I would say, inflation on the pricing in that sector as compared to building part.

Massimiliano Severi

Okay. Makes sense. Perfect. And my last question would be on the Generation & Transmission side, if you could help us understand better what is exactly hedged in the high voltage contracts? Because raw materials are clearly hedged, but there are escalation clauses covering also employees cost inflation and energy cost inflation. Or we have to go back to customers to actually make sure that you get paid for that inflation as well?

Jean-Christophe Juillard

So yes, so there is not one straight answer to this question because it depends on the project. It’s a project by project situation. What I can tell you is that, definitely, everything which is raw material is a pass-through. So that’s for sure. Then after that, energy cost, labor cost, transportation cost and other type of cost, it really varies, change from say, business to business. But obviously, on the older contract, we don’t have many escalation clauses on all those cost line. So we are going back and basically talking to the customer when appropriate.

But on the new ones, obviously, all this year, as you know, is a big tender year, and on the new tendering we’re doing since now a few months, obviously, since the market have changed significantly, we are including basically escalation clauses, more escalation clauses on our cost structure in the new project. So I would say that today, our backlog is pretty well protected versus most inflation situations.

Massimiliano Severi

Perfect. Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. We will take our next questions from Jean-Francois Granjon from ODDO. Your line now has been opened. Please go ahead.

Jean-Francois Granjon

Yes, thank you. Good morning. The first question concerns the backlog of Usages on the slide. So we see limited decrease by 5% for the backlog. So can you give us more color about that? Do you expect a more limited depreciation or downgrade for the coming months for this business? The second question concerns EuroAsia, do you expect to gain the award at the end of this year or next weeks? Could you give us some more color about the timing? The third question – so the question is already asked, but could you come back on the trend for 2023? So are you okay with the fact that you could have moderate growth for the top line and for the earnings? And the last question, could you make an update on the timing for the M&A for the acquisition expected and for the disposal expected? Thank you.

Christopher Guerin

Thank you. So Jean-Francois, in regards to the Usages, it is what I said just before, we are strongly improving our internal lead time for shipments. So we have – the backlog is one of the indicators, but does not reflect the fact that when you receive an order on the first day of the month on that you supply on the third week of the same month, it’s not reflected in the backlog.

So this part of sales of – within the month supply is increasing big time. And that’s good for us. That’s the impact on the working capital and that means the inventory turn is going much faster. To be extremely clear on this Usages part, 2022, we have everything in backlog up to December in terms of visibility. So the big question will come for 2023. Of course, we’ll have more information on Q4. But we see all the orders that we need to produce up to the end of the year.

The second question was EuroAsia. Difficult for me to comment because we are in the negotiation right now, so I cannot give you much information, because customers say, we have publicly announced that you are a preferred bidder, but we don’t want any further information in the status of the negotiations. So very active on many, many aspects, technical, financials, legals going on. It’s a huge project. It takes time. So I cannot give you more information on that one. And we have other projects in parallel in the same kind of process.

Jean-Francois Granjon

Sorry. And you confirm the fact that you could be able to reach €4 billion for the full backlog in the coming weeks?

Christopher Guerin

Yes, we – this is the aim here. This is aim. But of course, take into – we have to take into consideration that we are really very, very advanced in Q4. Still a lot of points opened, more on the technical aspect because it’s a huge project. So yes, we aim to close all the deals that we are negotiating right now by the end of the year.

Jean-Francois Granjon

Okay.

Christopher Guerin

Third question was for you JC.

Jean-Christophe Juillard

Can you remind me Jean-Francois, please, what is your last question?

Jean-Francois Granjon

The last two question is the trend for 2023, so would you expect some limited or moderate growth for the top line for the earnings in 2023 despite the context? And the last question concern the timing for the M&A, sorry, the acquisition and the disposal.

Christopher Guerin

Sure. I will take the M&A, you take the growth.

Jean-Christophe Juillard

If you want. So for the growth, so definitely, as you know, we’re not betting on top line. So I mean, we will prepare our 2023 with moderate – very moderate growth on the top line because, again, this is not the aim of Nexans, this is not our strategy. Our strategy, as you know, value-oriented. So the real question is will we be able to continue to grow on the earnings side, on the EBITDA side, on the cash flow generation? And this is what I answered earlier, I think, to Daniela’s question. I mean, definitely, unless we have a very strong recession coming up that obviously would impact us, likely will impact everyone.

But right now, we are putting all the actions in place to be, I would say, as much resilient as possible for 2023. We have demonstrated that our model based on value is more resilient than obviously betting on volumes and top line growth. So we have strong action in place. I mentioned some of them. We continue to have businesses, which are performing below the average of the group in many areas, about €1.8 billion of sales, still below the average earnings of the company. So we are actively working on them to – we’re using SHIFT to turn them around and be ready for 2023.

So there will be significant value coming from that action. Then we continue, as Elyette described, to push a lot on transformation, moving up the value chain in all the segments of SHIFT Prime. So – and then at the same time, we’re getting ready, if situation gets bad, to work on both as we did successfully – and preserve our cash flow as we did successfully during the worst crisis, which was 2020. So top line, I would not bet on top line, but definitely, we will maintain and we are aiming at continuing to grow earnings next year.

Christopher Guerin

Yes. And to give a bit more color on – additional color on what JC said, to give you an example, Jean-Francois, is that last July, we said to our teams, we don’t want you to spend hours and days on – working on budget and scenario of what could be the growth generation next year. We prefer that you spend your time in launching actions on work streams to be recession-proof, how do you absorb the energy inflation, how do you absorb the labor inflation, how – what type of competitiveness levers do you launch, how can you accelerate all the actions on SHIFT Prime and as well new innovation that we plan to launch in 2023 to face this recession. So our team is not in a budget mode, try to work off what could be next year. They are already in action mode to prepare in case of recession.

In regards to M&A, we believe that it’s the right time for – more time – a good time for divestment. So when it’s a good time for divestments, maybe not a good time for acquisition. If any – we can look at the small, medium-sized acquisition, if we see any opportunity. So we are still focusing on divestments. And recession, of course, could be an important, I’d say, opportunity next year on the acquisition side if suddenly the multiples are a bit affected from some of our peers because of the recession impact.

So in that case, we are welcoming recession for our acquisition strategy, but we are more in a divestment mode for the moment.

Jean-Francois Granjon

Okay, perfect. Many thanks.

Christopher Guerin

Thank you, Jean-Francois. Next questions.

Operator

Thank you. We will take our next question from Akash Gupta from JPMorgan. Your line now has been opened. Please go ahead.

Akash Gupta

Yes, hi, good morning, everybody, and thanks for your time. I have a few as well. The first one is on high voltage and more on the capacity expansion side. I think it was last year Capital Markets Day when you announced intention to double capacity, and since then, you have been quiet on that front despite some of your competitors have announced further capacity increase given the strong pipeline of high voltage projects. So my question for you is that, given the booming demand for high voltage, when do you think you may need to further increase capacity? And I think the question here is more in the likelihood of strategic CapEx being continuing in ’24-’25 period. Or do you not see that as a scenario? That’s question number one.

Christopher Guerin

Yes. Thank you, Akash. First, we were one of the first to announce and as well NKT to be transparent on capacity expansion because both companies had seen first this big boom on the high voltage. There is a time of announcement, there is time of execution. So we are running now into execution of doubling our capacity in Norway and reinforcing our capacity in Charleston to be ready at the end of 2023.

Everything is on track, that’s the good news. It’s not easy right now to build a subsea expansion plan because of the inflation of raw material, because of the scarcity of labor. So I think right now where we are very proud is that everything is on track. We’d be careful to further announcements because of the dynamic of inflation on material that we see everywhere in the world.

And once again, on the – you know that by years like cash is that – the sectors have €20 billion pipeline in front of them, in front of us. So in terms of volume-wise, it’s extremely positive, and we are very, very happy about it. But the way we classify each project on the customers, we consider that one-third is really top Platinum ones on the three pillars, which are margin yield, technological fit and contractual term exposure.

So we want to have the right equilibrium and balance in terms of capacity versus those specific projects, not all the others, because there is a lot of project and you’ve seen that in the past where Nexans do not want to bid because of the risk. So it’s the balance of not having the biggest backlog, but extremely subsea driven, extremely healthy in terms of these three pillars. And as well, you have to take into account the fact that the demand is there, there is no doubt about it, but the offer could be a big, big constraint.

So in each project, the first question that we ask ourselves is, do we have the raw material access to supply those customers? Because in coming years – not now, because China is down, but in coming years, ’24, ’25, raw material scarcity will be a big, big, big talk. So we have to make sure that we find the right balance between the two.

Akash Gupta

Thank you. And maybe just a follow-up to that. So is it fair to say that you may be willing to lose some market share in the medium to long-term because you want to be more selective?

Christopher Guerin

Yes, Akash, the word market share have never been used in Nexans’ wording for the last four years, never. I’m coming from the sales field. So we – and we’ve learned as well, we have not been so good between 2009 and 2018 on the – everybody was talking about market share that time. I’d say, now market share word is banned in Nexans. Because market share doesn’t mean if it’s accretive or not accretive for our free cash flow.

So what we are challenging, where we are challenging our sales force today is making sure that €1 at the sales on the top line convert to a very high ratio of conversion ratio of free cash flow. This is the only thing that matters, this conversion to free cash flow. So growth for growth, not anymore in Nexans.

Akash Gupta

Thank you, Chris. And my final one is also on high voltage. So in the U.S., we had seen passage of Inflation Reduction Act, which gives domestic production tax credit. Do you think your Charleston factory could benefit from additional tax credit for local manufacturing? And are you having any conversations with customers in that regard?

Christopher Guerin

Too early to say, but – too early to say. But I think it’s a good question that you need to keep for next time because we will have a more elaborate answer. But that’s for sure, we see now a very strong dynamic to – in U.S. to be local for local, both on carbon footprint, on both for tax exemption. So being local right now for Nexans is a key leverage to get more business there. Nexans is shining in U.S., thanks to our presence there, there is no doubt about it. And we are alone for the next four years or five years. It gives us the opportunity to sign much more contract that what we have in the backlog in the coming years to take this opportunity of this implementation.

Akash Gupta

Thank you.

Christopher Guerin

And of course, all U.S. legislation will help us in that regard. Thank you, Akash. We have a last question.

Operator

We will take our next questions from Rajesh Singla from Societe Generale. Your line now has been opened. Please go ahead.

Rajesh Singla

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe a couple of them. So the first question is like you had made a very interesting comment in your discussion earlier that it’s a good time for divestment, not a good time for acquisition. So do you think that we are already at the peak of the cycle in the cable industry, that’s why it’s not a good time of acquisition because we are getting all the assets at a very high valuation multiple and we’re looking for a challenging time in 2023, that’s why it’s not a good time for acquisitions. So maybe your insights – a bit more insight into that?

Christopher Guerin

Yes. Of course, taking the electrification ecosystem, in the Generation & Transmission, what you can see – there you’re talking about EuroAsia, Tyrrhenian Link, all these projects that has been negotiating with the customers. And it’s essentially Nexans and Prysmian on the forefront is for those big interconnection subsea business, you need a very, very solid balance sheet, so – and as well, you need the leading-edge vessel that are our two vessels in Nexans on – our vessel in Nexans and the vessel of our colleague in Italy. So there is no doubt that the complexity of the project is very favorable to the two big players that we are and putting a lot of pressure on the others. There is no doubt about it.

Regarding the usage on the part, a lot of our competitors are benefiting to conjunctural effect, 80% or 90% of their profit. They don’t have these structural power that we are putting in place for the last two years because it takes a lot of energy. Everything we do on marketing, in service and solution takes a lot of energy.

So if they are not recession-proof, of course, their profits will collapse at the same speed that they have inflated in the last month. So that will give us some benefit. And the last part is we’ve seen a lot of regional players start to suffer in terms of raw material access. We were, last week, with the top, top management of Codelco to finalize our major agreement of the next five years of privileged access on first supplies on copper when copper already becomes scarcity.

So the combination of the conjunctural effect plus the stringent difficulties on raw material access should affect the multiple. But the foundation of electrification remains extremely robust. We are now in the momentum of 20 years investments. But I will say only the big player will survive.

Rajesh Singla

Thank you. My next question is probably on the Building and Territories segment, if I can. So if you look at the pre COVID and post COVID, so we are talking about, say, €280 million kind of EBITDA in Building and Territories segment versus €130 million EBITDA in 2020. So there is a very significant jump in EBITDA in Building and Territories, like around – and margins have also improved by 400 basis points. So – and earlier you mentioned that a significant part of the growth or most of the growth in 2022 was driven by conjuncture effect or, I would say, like pricing effect. There is no major volume growth you witnessed in 2022. So how much of this 400 basis point improvement in margin and this pricing effect could continue in 2023? And I believe, if you can share some insight like how much of this €150 million jump in EBITDA in Building and Territories is driven by volume growth and how much is driven by your transformational impact and how much is temporary in nature to that extent?

Jean-Christophe Juillard

Yes. Thank you for the question. No, definitely, I mean, the key thing is this year number, when you compare to, I’d say, a normalized number for Usages, Building and Territories is definitely pushed by conjunctural. But just to remind you, I mean, the conjunctural is very well-known and very localized, exceptional, I’d say, situation. It’s really linked to North America, namely Canada, mainly Usages and residential. So it’s very specific. We know exactly what’s coming from. And I gave earlier – I gave earlier in the call the numbers of how revenues and EBITDA have been growing in that specific market, specific business of Nexans. But overall speaking, I mean, the business in Usages is doing very well in Nexans.

Structurally speaking, thanks to our transformation, thanks to all the work we’ve done now for three years, we look at South America, Centelsa, for example, is the new acquisition we made, overperforming EBITDA. EBITDA has been growing by 200 basis points versus when we acquired the business. Other countries like Peru, like Chile, even our existing business in Colombia are doing very well. Brazil is doing fantastic.

We have – we start to see recovery in Lebanon, that was a very difficult market for many years due to the local situation over there. APAC, Australia, New Zealand, fantastic year. I mean it’s a global, I would say, improvement in the margin. A little bit of good demand for sure. But globally, it’s mainly coming from the – from all the efforts that have been paying off.

So I think the only part that you need really to put aside is what I gave – the number I gave for the North America, Canada part that might not repeat itself in next year. I think all of the other parts of the business and the growth of the – both the – I’d say, the top line, but again, the growth of the top line is the growth of the top line, but the organic growth itself, it’s been in pricing and the growth of the EBITDA is structural. And this will continue unless we have obviously a collapse next year that is like the one we’ve seen in 2020 with minus 11% top line situation. But I mean, I would say with even a very conservative approach on the top line, all the structural changes will continue to pay off, except that conjunctural part that obviously we cannot control.

Christopher Guerin

Yes. I think it’s important to, as well, highlight the fact that our salespeople are not incentivized on sales development. Not by volume. They’re incentivized on the margin generation and the free cash flow associated to the margin. So that sense completely perspective is what I say to our cash, the market share is not a topic. Certainly, the market share of our Platinum customers or Platinum project is a topic, there is no doubt about it. But not the overall market. So the most important for us is to make sure that they are injecting structural pricing, which is supported by solution and innovation, that will not collapse because the demand is down.

So we are reinforcing our collaboration with our Platinum customer. It’s important as well to mention that in 2019, pre COVID, the revenue was supported by 17,000 customers. And right now, we are running with only 4,000 customers. So of course, that gives us a more key account management model approach, being much closer to those customers, developing more sales, more innovation and making sure that each euro of sales that are on top of our result is converted into free cash flow. So that’s a very important element. That’s all about SHIFT program – all about SHIFT program. And this is why it’s a major differentiator versus our competition.

Rajesh Singla

Okay. Maybe a follow-up question on this. So in the last couple of years, we have seen a significant damage to the supply chain, and all these margin expansion – a significant part of this margin expansion could be attributed to the shortages across the segments what we have seen so far. So assuming that the supply chain is easing and probably we’ll have a better supply chain in the next couple of years, so do you see the downside risk to the margins what we generated in 2022?

Christopher Guerin

I don’t see – to be honest, I don’t see tension going down on the supply chain. Of course, that was a sort of a bullwhip effect post COVID. But now we are entering in the phase of a very, very critical supply chain risk of disruptions because of raw material access. Just the geopolitical situation of Europe put a big, big, big, I will say, tension on the aluminum. Most of the alumina – the powder that we need to produce aluminum is coming from Ukraine and Russia and some other countries. So access is very complex.

The production of aluminum is requesting a lot of energy, and because of the energy inflation, some of our suppliers are reducing their capacity because they are running at loss. So no, I don’t see the supply chain back to normal in coming years. And for the moment, it’s okay, I would say. But do not forget that the Chinese economy is down.

When the China will wake up, it will recreate a lot of tension on the raw material. It’s – for example, China, we know that China will suck the equivalent of 60% of the copper demand worldwide for their energy transition. So here, there will be a big, big, big problem when China will wake up.

Rajesh Singla

Sure. Thank you. Thank you very much.

Christopher Guerin

Thank you. I think a lot of questions. Thanks a lot for your attention. As you see, Nexans is still always on top in terms of financial results. I would not say bullish, but we say that we are running very, very well supported by our structural transformation. Get prepared for recession in 2023. So making sure we are always there for our financial results achievement. More information to come in the next months. Thanks for your intention. Bye-bye.

Operator

Thank you for joining today’s call. You may now disconnect.

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