Earnings Call Transcript

CARRIER GLOBAL Corp (CARR)

Earnings Call Transcript 2021-09-30 For: 2021-09-30
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Added on April 02, 2026

Earnings Call Transcript - CARR Q3 2021

Operator, Operator

Good morning, and welcome to Carrier's Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. This call is being carried live on the Internet, and there is a presentation available to download from Carrier's website at ir.carrier.com. I would like to introduce your host for today's conference, Sam Pearlstein, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Sam Pearlstein, Vice President of Investor Relations

Thank you, and good morning, and welcome to Carrier's third quarter 2021 earnings conference call. With me here today are David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer. Except as otherwise noted, the Company will be speaking to results from operations, excluding restructuring costs and other significant items of a non-recurring and/or non-operational nature, often referred to by management as other significant items. The Company reminds listeners that the sales, earnings, and cash flow expectations and any other forward-looking statements provided during the call are subject to risks and uncertainties. Carrier's SEC filings, including Forms 10-K, 10-Q, and 8-K, provide details on important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated in the forward-looking statements. This morning we'll review our financial results for the third quarter and discuss the full-year 2021 outlook. We'll leave time for questions at the end. Once the call is opened up for questions, we ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up to give everyone the opportunity to participate. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to our Chairman and CEO, Dave Gitlin.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Sam, and good morning, everyone. I'll start with a summary of our Q3 results on Slide 2. Q3 was another strong quarter for us, particularly in light of the widespread supply chain challenges. Our growth continues to benefit from our ability to leverage broad economic momentum, our position at the epicenter of important secular trends, and our strategic investments and execution on our growth initiatives. Demand and orders remain encouraging. We are experiencing record backlogs, positioning us well for continued growth in Q4 and 2022. Our key challenge remains operational, both in mitigating the continued inflationary headwind and supporting customer demand. I will provide more details on the next slide, but I want to thank our team who has been working tirelessly to support our customers and I also want to thank our customers and suppliers who continue to partner with us as we address these issues. You see the efforts of the team reflected in our Q3 results. Organic sales were up 4% over Q3 of last year and up 7% over Q3 of 2019. Adjusted EPS of $0.71 was better than we anticipated, helped by a lower tax rate. Given the rising input cost headwinds, we have been aggressive on price and controllable costs while preserving investments critical to differentiation and growth. Our HVAC team managed price costs more effectively, which was reflected in a segment margin of 19.1%. Our fire and security team also reacted aggressively, but it is our business that is most impacted by chip shortages. The refrigeration story is mixed. While the segment drove solid 14% organic growth and continued to gain traction on strategic initiatives, we did not react aggressively enough on both price and costs, resulting in disappointing segment margins. I am confident that Tim and the team are taking the right actions to position us well for 2022. All in all, this is shaping up to be a strong year for Carrier. We are raising our top-line expectations from 10% to 12% organic growth to about 13% over last year, indeed up 6% over 2019. We are also raising the adjusted EPS range to the high end of what we previously indicated, now projecting approximately $2.20, up 33% over last year. Despite inflationary challenges, we remain on track to deliver over 70 basis points of margin expansion this year while generating about $1.9 billion in free cash flow. Turning to Slide 3, the supply chain challenges are significant. Between raw material escalation, supplier price increases, chip shortages, and logistics costs, full-year input cost pressure has now increased from about $250 million in our July forecast to about $375 million. We are tackling this situation both tactically and strategically. Tactically, we have a virtual global supply chain war room that operates 24 hours a day. We have devoted significant additional resources into supply chain management, many of whom are on-site at our suppliers. We have redirected ocean freight routes to avoid extended port delays using a newly implemented digital tool. Strategically, we are taking actions to emerge from this period with a more resilient supply chain. For example, we are working to minimize single points of failure. 2020 had roughly 25% dual sourcing of critical components. We will end 2021 with over 35%, and we are targeting 75%. Integrated circuits have our acute focus, and we're working directly with our chip OEMs on securing supply. We are also localizing certain commodities to remain low-cost and reduce logistics costs and complexity. We have increased our investments in automation by 50% this year. We will have more than 3 million automated manufacturing hours by the end of this year, and we have a plan to have 6 million by the end of 2026. Our investments in digital tools provide better visibility and drive more proactive actions across our factories and supply chain, and we are deploying Carrier excellence to drive productivity. For 2022, we expect inflationary headwinds at a minimum to be offset by the price increases that we have already implemented and others that we will be announcing by the end of this year. Equally important is our focus on managing the controllables on the cost side, including G&A. We remain committed to investing and playing offense on growth, and you see our progress on Slide 4. Our North Star remains consistent: to be the world leader in healthy, safe, sustainable, and intelligent building in cold chain solutions. In Healthy Buildings, we have over $350 million in orders and a pipeline of over $550 million ahead of our full-year expectations. We continue to see strong traction in key verticals, including K-12, with a pipeline that is 30% higher than Q2. We are very well positioned to address our customers’ sustainability needs. Over 30% of our residential heating sales in North America are now heat pumps. We were honored to win a prestigious innovation award at the recent AHR Expo for our Infinity 24 heat pump with Greenspeed intelligence, the industry's most advanced heat pump with premium energy efficiency. Globally, 33% of commercial heating sales are now heat pumps, up from 15% five years ago, and we project this to be 50% within five years. We plan to capture more than our fair share by driving differentiation. For example, earlier this year, we launched our new air-cooled chiller heat pump platform in Europe. Its global warming potential is 70% lower than our previous chiller and improves our customers’ energy efficiency by up to 30% versus legacy technologies. Our chiller and heat pump sales for this platform were up 30% year-over-year through Q3, contributing to share gains. On Abound, it is the connective tissue for intelligent connected buildings. For example, I recently visited it with Dr. Scott Boden from Emory at his newly opened state-of-the-art healthcare facility. Carrier and Emory are innovation partners in this healthy, intelligent, and sustainable facility with the full suite of Carrier technology: HVAC, building automation systems, fire detection, access and video management, digital solutions, and abound which ties it all together. Our progress on Lynx is equally encouraging. Our truck trailer and shipping fleet customers are increasingly adopting our subscription-based connected fleet monitoring digital solutions. We have seen mid-teen growth in our subscription portfolio year-to-date, and we have a strong order book and pipeline. We recently signed an agreement with one of the largest refrigerated truck fleets in the United States to provide subscription-based telematics and refer fleet monitoring. The customer will benefit from increased efficiencies, less downtime, and loss products, and overall lower energy consumption and costs. We continue to see progress on our three pillars of growth with share gains, VRF expanded geographic coverage, and increased digitally-enabled aftermarket and recurring revenues, which I will discuss more on Slide 5. Q3 aftermarket revenues were up about 12% year-over-year, and we are tracking to double-digit aftermarket growth this year. We have launched a broad portfolio of aftermarket solutions, including spare parts, preventative maintenance, break-fix repairs, midlife modifications and upgrades, remote monitoring, and other digital services. Digital enablement is foundational. In addition to abound, we recently launched Breeze, a new e-commerce platform focused on capturing high-margin part sales with our National Account customers in residential and light commercial HVAC. Our service coverage levels are at all-time highs. In commercial HVAC, we remain on track to have 60,000 chillers under service contracts this year. In refrigeration, we signed a three-year BluEdge service contract with ScottsRL, Australia's largest national refrigerated transport fleet. Tangible progress on these strategies is driving strong organic growth in 2021 and positions us well for continued top-line sticky growth in 2022 and beyond. Another component of our growth is acquisitions. As you can see on slide 6, we are making great progress in this area as well. Our strong balance sheet enables us to play offense on capital deployment, including M&A, focusing on digitally enabled recurring revenues. For example, nLight is complementary to our ALC building management system offerings in the fast-growing data center vertical. nLight software optimizes rack loads and monitors power and heat generation. ALC has market-leading technology, which automates the cooling systems to effectively and efficiently dissipate that generated heat. Together we provide an integrated solution to monitor and control both the power and the cooling systems to optimize data center operations. Similarly, BrokerBay is complementary to our Supra business. Supra leverages the mobile credentialing capabilities used across our broad security portfolio to give us high market share in locks that support residential real estate showings, enabling 45 million property showings in 2020. Agents love our technology and have been pushing for more digital offerings such as scheduling, real-time communication, and actionable insights. BrokerBay brings a highly differentiated real estate management cloud ecosystem that adds the sought-after capabilities. Together, we provide a one-stop shop to improve agent productivity. Early customer response has been tremendous. Last week, we announced the acquisition of Denmark-based Cavius, an innovative residential alarm company. Cavius has a complete range of smoke, heat, flood, and carbon monoxide alarms, including the world's smallest photoelectric smoke alarm. In combination with Kidde, we can further enhance our innovative residential fire safety product offerings and strengthen our connected technologies innovation pipeline globally. The market opportunity is very attractive as fire safety regulations expand across the globe. We continue to build out our M&A pipeline, and we will remain focused on our strategic priorities. With that, let me turn it over to Patrick.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Dave. And good morning, everyone. I'll start with comments about the quarter and provide details on our outlook. Please turn to Slide 7. As expected, the results were very similar to Q2. Price realization was better than expected, but that was offset by higher-than-expected input costs. All segments were on track to over-deliver on top-line growth, but increasing supply chain constraints impacted availability, led to shipment delays, and contributed to record backlogs. Sales of $5.3 billion were up about 7% compared to last year. Currency was a 1-point tailwind for sales in the quarter, and acquisitions, mainly GE, added another two points of growth. Given the unusually strong residential HVAC performance last year, this quarter had a more challenging comparison. Nonetheless, we delivered organic sales growth of 4%. Adjusted operating margin of 16.1% was down about 120 basis points compared to last year but was up about 100 basis points from the second quarter on lower sales. The year-over-year margin decline was impacted by the absence of last year's cost containment activities. As expected, price cost was modestly negative in the quarter. I'll address our outlook for the balance of the year with respect to price and cost in a few slides, but I'll share that we plan additional pricing actions to offset rising inflationary pressures throughout our supply chain. Some of these price increases were announced earlier this week, including up to double-digit price increases in our residential and light commercial HVAC businesses in North America. Fire & Security and Refrigeration are also planning additional price increases. Free cash flow was $505 million in the quarter and $1.1 billion through nine months. Inventories are higher than expected as we incur shipping delays given component shortages. Last year, Q3 benefited from timing around payables which did not recur this year. Finally, we repurchased about 2.7 million shares in the quarter for $146 million, and we remain on track to repurchase about 10 million shares this year. In the appendix, we included the year-over-year Q3 adjusted EPS bridge, summarizing many of the points I just discussed. You will note that Q3 operational performance reflected the impact of the absence of last year's temporary cost containment actions and benefited from $0.05 in discrete tax items not included in our July guidance. This benefit is separate from the tax charge of $136 million included in GAAP earnings. In essence, we're in the process of some legal entity reorganization to enable the pending Chubb sale, triggering tax liabilities. On our balance sheet, you will note that Chubb's assets and liabilities have now been reclassified as assets and liabilities held for sale. As previously communicated, we still expect to net about $2.6 billion of cash from the sale of Chubb. As to timing, we currently estimate the transaction to close in December or January. Let's now look at how the segments performed, starting on Slide 8. HVAC organic sales were up about 2% in the quarter, including the better-than-expected 2% decline in residential HVAC, given the tough compares. Distributor movement was up about 3% over an exceptionally strong quarter last year. The result is that residential field inventories were down high single-digits sequentially from the end of Q2. The North American light commercial business continued the growth we saw in the second quarter at 14% versus last year. Distributor movement was about 9%, and light commercial field inventory levels are now down about 11% year-over-year. Overall, commercial HVAC sales were up about 4% organically. As expected, HVAC margins were down about 160 basis points year-over-year, driven by the tough residential comparison, last year's benefit from the temporary cost actions, and the impact of additional pricing to offset cost inflation. Margins were up about 40 basis points from the second quarter, and the segment remains on track to generate about 16% adjusted operating margin this year. Moving to Refrigeration on slide 9, sales were up 14% organically as growth in transport demand continued. Transport refrigeration was up about 24% in the quarter, with very strong growth in both global truck trailer and container. Our Sensitech business continued to benefit from the vaccine rollout and was up about 20% in the quarter. Commercial refrigeration was slightly down year-over-year due to a mid-single-digit decline in China. Margins were up about 40 basis points in the quarter compared to last year as the benefit from higher sales was offset by substantial supply chain and labor challenges, the timing of price increases, as well as last year benefiting from temporary actions. We continue to incur higher costs to meet customer demand in this segment. As mentioned, we're disappointed in the margin performance in this segment, and we now expect the 2021 operating margin to be in the mid-12% range, lower than we previously expected. Moving on to slide 10, organic sales for the Fire & Security segment grew above 2%, as products were up about 3% while the field was flat. Within the product business, which represents about 60% of the segment sales, residential fire was down slightly while commercial fire was up. Access solutions and industrial fire were both up high-single-digits. Operating margins were down about 100 basis points compared to last year, as last year benefited from the temporary cost actions. Margins were up 240 basis points sequentially, and we continue to expect overall margins for this segment to be in the mid-teens for the year. Now let me review the order activity we saw in the third quarter on Slide 11. As you can see, our residential and light commercial orders remain positive despite the very strong third quarter last year. Within that business, orders were down in residential in the high single-digits on tough comparisons, but light commercial orders were up over 40% as the recovery in that business continues. Backlog in residential is up sequentially and remains some 70% or so higher than at this point last year. Commercial HVAC orders were up about 12% compared to last year and backlog increased about 5% sequentially and about 20% year-over-year. For Refrigeration, order activity for the global truck trailer business remains solid and is up about 15% year-over-year, driven by strong growth in Europe. The order intake and backlogs exiting Q3 continue to position the Refrigeration segment to achieve the expected high-teens organic sales growth for the year. Order intake for the Fire & Security segment also remained strong. Product orders were up 10% year-over-year, with strong double-digit growth in access solutions and industrial fire. Field orders were up mid to high single digits organically. On the right, you can see that orders are up in all geographies except in China. In China, HVAC orders were up in the mid-single digits, while orders in refrigeration and fire and security were down in the double-digits. Let's move to slide 12, updated outlook. To reiterate what we said last quarter, we are including Chubb in the outlook until the transaction closes. Based on our Q3 performance, price realization, and higher backlogs, we now expect organic sales to be up about 13% for the year, which is higher than our prior 10% to 12% outlook. The benefit of higher organic sales is offset by higher input costs. We now expect to exit 2021, with price costs being neutral in Q4 versus our prior guide of positive price costs in Q4. We continue to expect an adjusted operating margin of a little over 13.5%. Full-year incremental investments are expected to be about $150 million, consistent with prior guidance. The Q3 discrete tax benefit of $0.05 carries over, so this all leads to an updated 2021 adjusted EPS outlook of about $2.20. As you build your models, note that Chubb represents about $0.24 of the 2021 annual earnings, including the non-cash pension income. Also, if we thought the 2021 outlook would be above $2.20, we would have included that in a range. We continue to expect free cash flow to be about $1.9 billion. Slide 13 shows the bridge from the midpoint of our prior guidance to the current guidance. As you can see, the biggest driver is the lower-than-expected adjusted tax rate, as higher volume is offset by price costs. Just a note about the fourth quarter: we expect incremental investments this year to mostly offset the benefit of the absence of $0.04 of unusual items in last year's fourth quarter. In closing, the first nine months of the year were strong with double-digit organic growth and 35% adjusted EPS growth. Thank you all. Thank you to all of our colleagues and partners managing and supporting strong demand in a very challenging supply chain environment. With that, I'll turn it back to Dave for Slide 14.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Patrick. We are very pleased with our performance as we are now three quarters of the way through 2021, and we remain confident in our team's ability to navigate supply chain challenges to support our customers and drive continued results in the fourth quarter and beyond. With that, we'll open this up for questions.

Operator, Operator

And thank you. Our first question is from Andrew Obin at Bank of America. Your line is now open.

Andrew Obin, Analyst

Yes. Good morning. Can you hear me?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Andy. Good morning.

Andrew Obin, Analyst

Yeah. Good morning. Just a question on just sort of a philosophical approach to Carrier 700 in this inflationary environment, right, because you're actually putting numbers, but sort of the optics of it seems like you're missing your targets despite the fact that your pricing is very strong. So how do you guys think about maybe changing the framework here to change incentives, right? Because clearly, it seems that this plan was designed for a low inflation/deflationary environment and we're in a very, very different world. What are the thoughts? What are the management and the Board thoughts about it?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Andrew, thanks. And let me start, and Patrick can add. You're absolutely right. Carrier 700 is an all-in number. And what happened last year is that it was such a unique year where you had some one-time cost takeouts that we were doing with furloughs and other things and some one-time benefits we were doing seizing on the productivity side. And it got a bit tortured as we went through last year into this year, which is what we're seeing as sort of inflationary pressures that we haven't seen in a few decades. So, what we've really fixated on as an organization is doing everything we can to make sure that we are price-cost positive, which means aggressively pricing as much as we can, and also controlling the controllables on all things that are related to cost. So, we are doing a lot with Carrier Alliance, we're driving productivity, we're managing commodities as best we can. So our focus as an organization is doing everything we can to make sure that in this very unique environment, we stay price-cost positive. So we still mention where the Carrier 700 number is to make sure that we didn't lose that thread. But as we go into next year, obviously, Chubb will be gone, which will form a bit of a reset, and then we have to kind of step back and look at where we are. The underlying principle of Carrier 700 and having 56,000 people around the world focused every day on making sure that we control everything we can control on the cost side is still there and it will never stop. What we'll do in our February 22nd Investor Day is kind of give some context on where that is to reframe it going forward. But the underlying drive of cost takeout will always be a part of Carrier.

Andrew Obin, Analyst

Thank you. And then just a question about thinking about connecting orders and sales into next year, because I think this year has been very different in terms of how long the sales season was, right, the strength of the orders to comps. So how should we think about what the existing backlog and order rates in September, October? What's the early indication for 2022, given how unusual '21 was, specifically on HVAC?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. I think if you look broadly, Andrew, the backlog almost across the portfolio is at record highs. So we feel very, very good about where we are in terms of our order, our sales forecast for the rest of this year. And as we start thinking about next year, we're more booked now for early next year than we normally would be at this time, given the record backlogs. If you think about our residential backlogs, we're up 40% in terms of our backlog sequentially, we're up 70% year-over-year. So, we're at a very high level of bookings. Our challenge is making sure that we continue to keep up with the demand, but we feel very, very encouraged by our backlog positions pretty much across the portfolio.

Andrew Obin, Analyst

Thank you very much.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator, Operator

And thank you. Our next question comes from Deane Dray from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

Deane Dray, Analyst

Thank you. Good morning, everyone.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Deane.

Deane Dray, Analyst

Hey, I’d like to start with light commercial HVAC that 40%-plus orders really do stand out. Just talk about the drivers, how much of this might be catch-up? Is it easy COVID comps, but is it part of an underlying rebound in non-resi construction? That'd be helpful. Thanks.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well – yes, I mean, clearly the comps are a bit easy compared to last year, but there's just a lot of strength. What we had said when we were forecasting light commercial coming into this year, as we reminded people, that it’s 80% replacement, 20% new. So there was a lot of pent-up demand coming out of last year. Some of the key verticals that have been strong all year continue to be strong. We see a lot of demand in places like warehouse. K-12 has been extremely encouraging. We have a whole dedicated focus on making sure that we support that vertical. Retail restaurants are coming back online and we gained share. It looks to us like we gained 300 basis points of share year-to-date in light commercial. And I think part of that is driven by our ability to support the customer. It hasn't been without input cost pressures, but we've gone to great lengths to make sure that we can support our customers. So, when you look at all the different variables, order is up more than 40% year-over-year when we look at the quarter. Field inventory is down significantly, which bodes well for the future. Our backlog is up sequentially. It's up almost 3x over 2020, and movement from our distributors into our end-customer base remains in the double-digit range. And we just announced a price increase of up to 12%. So, a lot to like in light commercial.

Deane Dray, Analyst

Got it. And then as a follow-up, can you comment on China? It looked like HVAC was a bit better, but it certainly overall, you bear more pressures and just give us a sense of what the demand is and any operating conditions that you would comment on?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

China orders for HVAC were up in the mid-single-digit range, although we faced some challenges in other areas of our portfolio. The main focus has been on commercial HVAC, where we are still seeing some order support. The positive aspect is that China is a strategically important market for us, representing 8% of our sales, and we remain committed to long-term growth there. Our aim is to engage with the market specifically for China. Regarding the Evergrande situation, its impact appears to be mostly felt in Tier 3 and Tier 4 cities focused on multi-family residential projects, which constitute a very small fraction of Carrier's sales—around 0.5%. We believe we are managing these challenges effectively. Overall, real estate is a crucial sector in China, and we anticipate that the government will be motivated to support it. We feel well positioned in this market.

Deane Dray, Analyst

That's real helpful. Thank you.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Julian Mitchell from Barclays. Your line is now open.

Julian Mitchell, Analyst

Hi, good morning. Just wanted to focus on the HVAC segment and just a bit more clarity on your outlook for residential HVAC in North America. I think you'd mentioned the sales are down very slightly in Q3, the orders down a little bit more. Maybe help us understand how you're thinking about that business for the next couple of quarters, how comfortable you feel with the inventory levels in the distribution channel, and the degree of your concerns around any sort of major step down in that market coming up?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, Julian, Residential HVAC in North America continues to be encouraging for us. We did say that Resi was down a couple of percent in the quarter, which was less than we thought. We had previously thought it would be down in the 5% to 10% range. What it really means for us is that the second half is going to end up being probably up low single digits, and we previously thought the second half for us was going to be down 5 to 10%. The good news is that movement continues to be positive. Field inventories, Patrick mentioned, sequentially were actually down 7% versus Q2, and even splits are down versus prior year. And our backlog, as I mentioned to Andrew, is up significantly over the last quarter and even more significantly over previous years. Look, when we look at orders, there are some going to be some tough comps in the third quarter. We look at October, orders continued to be strong, and all the underlying fundamentals with new housing starts this year are in the +13% range year-over-year. I think for the home builders, there's going to be some push out into next year given some of the supply chain challenges that they and like the rest of us are seeing. But the work from home phenomenon units having a slightly shorter life. A lot of those underlying factors continue to give us some confidence as we go into next year. So, when we get into February, we will give more specificity. But for right now, a lot of the underlying factors that have been supporting the demand continue to be there.

Julian Mitchell, Analyst

That's great. And then maybe on refrigeration, you'd called out sluggish price increase and that helped drive that disappointing margin performance. Maybe help us understand how quickly you think you can catch up on that price cost aspect, and in particular, how you're managing in transport refrigeration, where you've got extremely volatile orders and builds numbers in the market right now.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Julian, Patrick here. So first of all, there are good things happening within that segment. So, you noticed the very strong sales growth, double-digit growth in transport. Commercial refrigeration was about flat. But as we mentioned, the margin performance is disappointing given the strong sales growth. And so, focus in that segment now is better control on the cost side, but also, and I would say especially being more aggressive and timelier on price increases. You mentioned that we have significant backlogs there. Those started at the end of last year, which has given us somewhat limited ability to pass on pricing, but that is changing now. And so, as that window opens up, and as we take on orders for next year, we are ensuring that one, the process for these orders are higher, and two, that we retain the flexibility for these orders to adjust pricing if raw material prices change. And so, it's a significant focus for Tim White and the team.

Julian Mitchell, Analyst

Perfect. Thanks.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Julian.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Nigel Coe from Wolfe Research. Your line is now open.

Nigel Coe, Analyst

Thanks, good morning.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

Nigel Coe, Analyst

Interesting times. So, very strong performance in light commercial plus 14% revenue, and obviously, very strong orders. We haven't got a whole lot of detail on the market right now. But when you compare that, it had much weaker trends, the supply chain. I'm just wondering if there was some share shift around the quarter. Any context there would be good. And then within applied, that seems to be a little bit weaker than the first half run rate. Maybe I'm wrong there, but any color on applied trends by market.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

When we examine the Light Commercial segment, it's challenging to assess market share based solely on one quarter, but we believe we've gained 300 basis points in share year-to-date. While this can fluctuate, we are confident that we are making progress in the Light Commercial sector, which is a key strategic market for us. We will continue to introduce new products and collaborate with our distributor network to aggressively pursue this market. In terms of commercial HVAC, there are many positive indicators. The ABI has consistently outperformed the architectural billing index and has remained above 50 for eight consecutive months. As Patrick noted, we experienced mid-single-digit growth overall, with North America tracking similarly, while Europe and China saw slightly higher increases. Orders for commercial HVAC rose over 10%. We are particularly pleased with our ALC controls business, which demonstrated strong sales growth in the high teens and is a high-margin, differentiated segment. Additionally, the aftermarket segment has been consistently strong for us, achieving double-digit growth. We are optimistic about commercial HVAC, and if we examine equipment applied orders, those increased by 15%. Our primary focus for HVAC, as with the rest of our portfolio, is to continue driving orders and ensuring efficient delivery.

Andrew Obin, Analyst

Thanks, Dave. And then on the residential, what kind of reaction are you getting from pricing pieces? How much of that headline price increase do you think will stick? And as we go into next year, what price increases are you planning? So, assume you offer January 1, and what kind of price premises or price range do you think will stick for 2022? And is that enough to offset the patient?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I think the short answer is yes. We announced actually earlier this week that we would have a price increase effective January 1 of up to 10% for residential. We're seeing realization in the range of 6% last quarter. We probably will see about the same number this quarter, which is higher than historical price realization. These conversations are always difficult, the earlier question on transport, but we have to have these direct discussions with our direct and end customers because of the inflationary pressures we're seeing. So, we're very encouraged by the price stickiness we've seen this year. I would say the residential business has been the most effective within Carrier at ensuring that we try to stay out in front on these price increases. And I think that will bode well for us as we go into next year.

Nigel Coe, Analyst

Great, thanks very much.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Nigel.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Josh Pokrzywinski from Morgan Stanley.

Josh Pokrzywinski, Analyst

Yes. Can you hear me?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Yes.

Josh Pokrzywinski, Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking the question. Yeah, I guess so. First question, Patrick, you were probably one of the earlier ones out there in the industrial talking about the reset or wrapped around inflation into the first quarter of next year that you have contracts and other kind of locked-in buys that will reset. Do you feel like you have enough price out there right now as we flip over the line into '22 to cover that in the first quarter? It sounds like you're okay in 4Q, but you've already mentioned that that'll mechanically go higher sequentially.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Josh, good morning. I want to discuss our outlook for 2022 instead of focusing on specific quarters. For planning, we are implementing additional price increases to tackle ongoing input cost challenges and the hedges that are ending, which benefitted us last year. This week, in HVAC, we announced price increases of up to 12% for residential and light commercial sectors. It is safe to say that we anticipate input cost pressures next year will surpass the $375 million we are experiencing this year. As Dave noted, the total headwinds this year from input costs are above $375 million, and we expect that to increase next year. The pricing actions we have taken this year are expected to generate a carryover of about $350 to $400 million, excluding the new price increases we announced this week and any forthcoming price increases in other areas of our business. Our goal for 2022 is to at least achieve price-cost neutrality, though we aim to do better. The main point for our team is that we need to remain highly adaptive and respond quickly to changes in input costs.

Josh Pokrzywinski, Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. And then on the commercial business, Dave, I appreciate the commentary on the earlier question there. I guess orders earlier in the year were pretty strong. I get comps are a factor. Anything that would have held back the quarter delivery-wise or order-wise, like a project getting pushed out or supply chain making delivery a little tougher? Just wondering how we square up the order commentary with the sales growth this quarter.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah Josh, we do continue to see some supply chain challenges affecting some of the output. I would say that if you look at our Charlotte facility, which does a lot of the production for our Commercial HVAC business here in North America, we had some initial issues about a year ago that we then addressed. And just as we were coming out of those 3PL related type issues, we then ran into a bunch of supply chain issues. So, our sales could have clearly been higher in the quarter if we didn't have that. We're working closely with our customers to make sure that they know what they're going to get when, but orders are strong; it's one of the factories that we would expect to start to recover as the supply chain issues from their tier-1 start to recover.

Josh Pokrzywinski, Analyst

That is helpful. Thanks, guys. Best of luck.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Josh.

Operator, Operator

And thank you. And our next question comes from Joe Ritchie from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.

Joe Ritchie, Analyst

Thanks. Good morning, everyone.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Hey, Joe.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Good morning, Joe.

Joe Ritchie, Analyst

I know we've talked a lot about price cost and touched on Carrier 700, but just to make sure we've got this straight for next year, Carrier 700 hasn't included the pricing increases. And so, is the way to think about the benefits we should expect next year, I think is being somewhat below the $225 million I think that we were originally expecting but more than offset by these pricing increases that you're taking through the rest of your organization?

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

I think the easiest way to consider this is from an overall price cost perspective. This explains some of the pricing actions we announced this week and those we will announce in the coming weeks. Our goal is to remain neutral at worst, which includes everything related to Carrier 700. As Dave mentioned earlier in response to Andrew's first question, no matter how we measure Carrier 700, whether gross or net, the key point is that our organization is focused on consistently reducing costs and improving efficiencies to counter any increases in input costs, like merit or inflation. This also enables us to continue investing in our business for the long term.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

What I would add, Joe, is that I think the good news is we're going into next year with eyes wide open on the inflationary pressures, and I think our team is pricing accordingly.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Joe, I would say very completely consistent with what we mentioned in the last quarter. Our first priority, fund organic growth, then to fund inorganic growth, and then funding a growing and sustainable dividend, and then returning cash to shareholders through share repurchase. What we mentioned last quarter with the proceeds, one, we expect to pay down about $750 million of debt that's prorated from a capital structure point-of-view with the EBITDA we lose from Chubb. But we've also said last quarter, we announced a share repurchase authorization of about $1.75 billion. We still expect to buy about 10 million shares this year. And with that, would leave us at the end of this year, will leave us with about $1.6 billion of authorization remaining at the end of this calendar year. And what we've said from a repurchase point-of-view is that we would redeploy this over 12 to 18 months for share repurchases. So, that gives you an idea of the sequence for the share repurchases. But of course, as I mentioned, priority number one is funding growth, including inorganic growth. And obviously, we have significant capital that we can put to work. And that's why we have the growing pipeline of acquisitions. We've made some acquisitions this year. We covered them in some of the slides. But there are some acquisitions that are a little bit larger in size in the pipeline as well. And so, we're working hard on getting some of these onboard.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Patrick.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Tommy Moll from Stephens. Your line is now open.

Tommy Moll, Analyst

Good morning and thanks for taking my questions.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Hey, Tommy.

Tommy Moll, Analyst

Appreciate all the commentary around price cost, Carrier 700, etc. If we boil it all down for 2022, is high 20s still a fair aspiration to think about for a core conversion? And then if you think about, sometimes we talk about core operational versus what's actually going to be reported in the P&L. Any big delta between those two that you would want to make sure to point out for folks? Obviously, the Chubb divestiture would be one, but anything else you want to make sure to point out today?

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Yes, Tommy, Patrick here. I understand there's lots of moving pieces in conversion. And this year, particularly what's playing an important role is one, some of the acquisitions we've made that in year one don't contribute to earnings, two the impact of currency, and then of course, an important element this year is the whole price cost dynamic, where we're adding this year pricing of well over $300 million for the full year. Yet that is not falling through the bottom line. Of course, it has a negative impact on our conversion number. That being said, for next year, and I'm going to exclude any significant changes in mix because we don't want to get into that good or bad. But from an operational point of view, we absolutely would still target earnings conversion at the high 20% to above 30% range. Depending on what we do on the acquisition side and on price costs, that might be slightly different. But operationally, that's absolutely something that we target and work towards. No change.

Tommy Moll, Analyst

Great. Thank you, Patrick.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Tom.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Tommy, I wanted to follow up on a big picture question here. You've moved quickly as a pure play on a lot of fronts. I'm curious, what's the body of big work that remains in front of you maybe for next year just in terms of changes you envision making to the business with that pure-play flexibility? G&A transformation or process improvement is one area that comes to mind. But what are some of the big priorities in your mind at this point? Tommy, we continue to stick with the playbook that we laid out at our February 10th Investor Day of last year. We said that we would invest in growth. And this year, despite all the input cost challenges, we're going to continue to invest $150 million in growth along the lines of our three pillars of growth. Continue to grow the core and continue to look at adjacencies like VRF and geographic expansion like you saw with Cavius, and then continue to really lean into recurring revenues, aftermarket digital. We're on the first ending of that journey. We have a long way to go with our aftermarket growth and recurring revenues, and that will be very thematic for us certainly going into next year and for years to come. We said that we would be super aggressive on costs, and despite the fact that the Carrier 700 number itself is what it is, the focus on costs within the organization G&A transformation is a major theme for us. We've set up these global centers of excellence. We're going to be pushing more and more work into these low-cost centers of excellence, with more G&A reductions. Simplification across the portfolio will continue to be important. And we've gone from $10 billion of net debt when we spun to now, after we sell Chubb, closer to $4 billion of net debt. So, our ability to play offense in organic and inorganic growth is in a great place. So, we'll continue to look at where we can really complement our existing portfolio to play off. And so, we like our playbook, we like our focus. What we have to do is now transition from doing what we said we were going to do to doing best-in-class in everything we do. And that's going to be our focus in '22 and beyond.

Tommy Moll, Analyst

Thanks, Dave. I appreciate it, and I'll turn it back.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Tommy.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Steve Tusa from JP Morgan. Your line is now open.

Steve Tusa, Analyst

Hi, Mr. Tusa.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Yes.

Steve Tusa, Analyst

So just on the realized price in the quarter, what was that for total on an absolute basis?

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

You can think of pricing, Steve, about $125 million in Q3, significantly better than Q2, growing to about $150 in Q4. And so, from a price realization point of view, you'll recall because you asked me the question and after Q1, we started from less than half a point. In Q2, we were above 2 points, give or take, and in Q4, it will be between 3% and 4% of overall Company price realization. We're seeing it pick up, but, of course, we've been trailing a little bit of the input cost increases. But in Q4, we do expect price cost to be neutral.

Steve Tusa, Analyst

Right.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

We can consider residential for both Q3 and Q4, expecting around 6% realization. We achieved this in Q3 and anticipate the same for Q4. While I cannot provide the precise dollar amount, that is the realization we saw in residential.

Steve Tusa, Analyst

Okay, that makes a lot of sense. To follow up on Joe's question, there was a significant amount of carryover cost savings expected next year, potentially a couple of hundred million dollars. Are you now indicating that this amount is uncertain due to recent developments? It seems that while the cultural mission statement, Carrier 700, remains intact, the feasibility of achieving those savings for a mechanical bridge next year has been significantly impacted by these events.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Let me start, and then Patrick can provide more details. We have made efforts to be clear about the pricing costs we're encountering each quarter, and we will continue to do so next year. The costs associated with Carrier 700 have changed; for example, it's now ten times more expensive to get a container from China to the U.S. Additionally, when purchasing chips on the spot market, we've seen significant inflationary pressures impacting Carrier 700 overall. That said, if you were to visit our facility, you would witness a dedicated focus on commodity management with our suppliers and a global initiative to enhance productivity. We will provide specific information on cost carryover, inflationary impacts for the coming year, and our strategies to at least offset these with price adjustments. Our clear objective is to be price-cost positive. However, the Carrier 700 figure this year is lower than we originally anticipated. Patrick, would you like to add anything?

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I believe our goal is still to reduce costs next year compared to this year. That hasn't changed. Therefore, we anticipate our earnings conversion next year to be better than this year.

Steve Tusa, Analyst

That makes a lot of sense. Just a follow-up on that, you mentioned you're considering more sources like dual-sourcing. In a stable environment, that could improve margins as you're essentially pitting suppliers against each other. However, in the current environment, dual-sourcing might lead to structurally higher costs, where you are trading off higher costs for availability. Is that the correct way to view it?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Go ahead.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Actually. Because there are shortages of some of the components, we do have to go to sources that otherwise we would not have gone. And so that's one of the reasons why today we are incurring some higher costs just because our normal sources have some constraints as well. Some of the increases we see this year are associated with that, but clearly, in a more stable environment, having more dual-sourcing should help from a cost point of view.

Steve Tusa, Analyst

Right.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. I would add, Steve, that, look, there is an investment when we say we've gone from, say, a million automation hours to 3 million this year on our way to 6 million; that's an investment. But what happens is that really starts to pay back when you look at the investment set up dual sources; there's an investment. But when we get hopefully towards the second half of next year, as you get out there, then you have more supply-demand imbalance, and then we will feel much better about our ability to get back on the year-over-year cost reduction numbers that we're used to seeing.

Steve Tusa, Analyst

Got it. And then, sorry, a quick 1, Sam going to kill me. I did not myself believe anything on the table though. The $150 million in investments, how much of that is like rebates to distribution or stuff like that, that you're investing in installed base if you will, in commercial or residential or something like that. How much of that is that kind of activity versus like R&D and pure sales dollars of hiring people and things?

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

For this year, it's nothing.

Steve Tusa, Analyst

Okay. Got it. Okay. Thanks. Appreciate it.

Patrick Goris, Chief Financial Officer

Fine.

Operator, Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from Vlad Bystricky from Citigroup. Your line is now open.

Vlad Bystricky, Analyst

Morning, guys.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

Vlad Bystricky, Analyst

Giving Josh a run for his money there with that pronunciation. Thanks for taking my question. We've covered a lot of ground here, obviously. Just going back to labor. Obviously, labor availability seems to be a growing issue, and we've now seen some labor actions in the U.S. in terms of strike activity. So, can you talk about what you're seeing in terms of wage inflation and labor availability in general? And then more broadly, how you're thinking about labor relations overall and the risk of potential disruptions?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Vlad, to set the stage, we have 80% of our people outside the U.S. And I would say the real labor challenges we have are at a couple of our sites in the U.S. And we have very close relationships with our union partners. In some areas in the U.S., we've had to raise wages a bit, and we've also put in place some bonus structures for output. But we stay very, very close with our, our union partners here, and we feel confident that we continue to create the right environment where people want to work here, then we'll manage that.

Vlad Bystricky, Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. And I think it makes a lot of sense around the incentives for production. It seems like it's helping with the results. Just following up, I think back to last year, I think you've added 600 or so salespeople. Now that we're approaching the end of '21, and they've been onboard for a while, can you talk about what you've seen from those incremental resources in terms of them ramping sales productivity and just more broadly, how you're thinking about the sales force positioning today, whether you see opportunity to continue to add incremental talent and resources there?

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

We are very happy with the results from the additional sales staff we have brought on board. We made strategic decisions about where to add these personnel, focusing particularly on certain regions in North America and China. This has led to a noticeable increase in sales. At the beginning of the year, we projected a growth of 5%, but we now anticipate an organic growth of 13%. Our investments in sales personnel and digital research and development have played a key role in this success. We recognized that we were lacking in sales representation, and I believe we have brought on the right amount of new staff. We mentioned that our overall investment in this area will begin to stabilize as we move into next year, with an addition of 50 new hires. While it takes some time for sales personnel to generate returns, we evaluate their performance by measuring sales against our gross margin. Overall, we are satisfied with both the investment and its resulting payback.

Vlad Bystricky, Analyst

Great, that's helpful. Thanks, guys.

Operator, Operator

And that concludes our question and answer session for today. I would now like to turn the call back over to David for closing remarks.

David Gitlin, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you very much. Thanks to everyone. We appreciate you joining, and we look forward to hosting you all here in our West Palm headquarters in Florida on February 22nd for our Analyst and Investor Day. Of course, as always, Sam is around for follow-up questions, but thanks to all of you.

Operator, Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.