Advertisement
U.S. markets open in 4 hours 15 minutes
  • S&P Futures

    5,213.75
    -1.00 (-0.02%)
     
  • Dow Futures

    39,226.00
    +3.00 (+0.01%)
     
  • Nasdaq Futures

    18,228.25
    -3.25 (-0.02%)
     
  • Russell 2000 Futures

    2,045.10
    -4.70 (-0.23%)
     
  • Crude Oil

    82.68
    -0.04 (-0.05%)
     
  • Gold

    2,155.90
    -8.40 (-0.39%)
     
  • Silver

    25.09
    -0.17 (-0.69%)
     
  • EUR/USD

    1.0850
    -0.0027 (-0.25%)
     
  • 10-Yr Bond

    4.3400
    0.0000 (0.00%)
     
  • Vix

    14.45
    +0.12 (+0.84%)
     
  • GBP/USD

    1.2687
    -0.0042 (-0.33%)
     
  • USD/JPY

    150.4500
    +1.3520 (+0.91%)
     
  • Bitcoin USD

    63,001.48
    -4,729.04 (-6.98%)
     
  • CMC Crypto 200

    885.54
    0.00 (0.00%)
     
  • FTSE 100

    7,716.71
    -5.84 (-0.08%)
     
  • Nikkei 225

    40,003.60
    +263.20 (+0.66%)
     

Ingersoll-Rand PLC (IR) Q2 2019 Earnings Call Transcript

Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.
Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Ingersoll-Rand PLC (NYSE: IR)
Q2 2019 Earnings Call
Jul 30, 2019, 10:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks

  • Questions and Answers

  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning. Welcome to the Ingersoll Rand 2019 Q2 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Chris and I will be your operator for the call. The call will begin in a few moments. With the speaker remarks and then a Q&A session. [Operator Instructions]

Thank you. Zac Nagle ,Vice President of Investor Relations, you may begin your conference.

Zachary A. Nagle -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Thanks operator. Good morning and thank you for joining us for Ingersoll Rand second quarter 2019 earnings conference call. This call is being webcast on our website at ingersollrand.com where you'll find the accompanying presentation. We are also recording and archiving this call on our website. Please go to slide 2. Statements made in today's call that are not historical facts are considered forward-looking statements and are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of federal securities law. Please see our SEC filings for a description of some of the factors that may cause our actual results to differ materially from anticipated results.

This presentation also includes non-GAAP measures, which are explained in the financial tables attached to our news release. Joining me on today's call are Mike Lamach, Chairman and CEO; and Sue Carter, Senior Vice President and CFO. With that, please go to Slide 3 and I'll turn the call over to Mike. Mike?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Zach and thanks everyone for joining us on today's call. I'm proud of our team's performance in the second quarter. Once again, we delivered strong revenue growth, margin expansion and EPS growth. We welcomed our new Precision Flow Systems team into Ingersoll Rand and we are well under way toward a seperation into two stand-alone businesses and our proposed strategic combination with our industrial segement in Gardner Denver. With that backdrop, let's get started.

Please go to Slide 3 I'd like to start with a brief overview of the global business strategy that we're executing to deliver consistently strong financial results for our shareholders. Fundamentally, our strategy is up the nexus of environmental sustainability and impact which are strong secular tailwinds for our business. The world is continuing to urbanize while becoming warmer and more resource constrained as time passes. We excel at reducing the energy intensity of buildings, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, reducing waste of food and other perishable goods and we excel in our ability to generate productivity for our customers all enabled by technology.

Unless you think the world is getting cooler, less populated and less resource constrained as time passes, these strong secular tailwinds will continue to provide opportunity for shareholders and purpose for our vision. As we continued separation, integration planning and business transformation activities related to our strategy and combination of our Industrial segment with Gardner Denver and move toward creating the premier pure-play climate business in 2020, our aggressive pursuit of excellence and delivering solutions, to mitigate the impact of these secular trends only intensifies. Our climate business squarely focuses 100% of our portfolio at the Nexus of sustainability and global environmental impact where our products and services can reduce the impact of these megatrends and create a platform for the company to grow above average global economic conditions.

Moving to slide 4, I'll spend a few minutes discussing our 2019 has progressed through the first half of the fiscal year and what we're expecting to see through the balance of 2019. The key takeaway is that we remain bullish on our strategy, our end markets broadly and our ability to execute, using our business operating system to deliver against our organic revenue growth and adjusted EPS guidance ranges for fiscal 2019. In fact, today, we are raising EPS guidance by $0.05 to approximately $6.40. We expect to deliver top-tier financial performance again in 2019.

Commercial HVAC globally and particularly in North America and Europe is continuing to be very strong for us and our backlog, incoming order rates and sales pipeline give us confidence, this business will continue to deliver strong results in the second half of 2019. Our residential HVAC business had strong, mid-single digit growth in the second quarter and we expect this business to continue to deliver strong performance for the full year, supported by a solid residential replacement market. In our Industrial segment, we saw healthy order growth and long cycle projects in our Compression Technologies business in the second quarter. And we have a favorable outlook for continued long cycle growth in the second half of the year.

Conversely, the short cycle market softened in the second quarter, primarily impacting revenue growth in our core Compression Technologies and tools businesses, which are both down low-single digits. We expect short cycle markets to continue to be challenging throughout 2019. The positive impact of healthy long cycle markets presents a positive set up as we move into 2020 when these orders convert into revenue and operating income given the long lead times associated with these projects. Price realization has been outstanding across our businesses and we're effectively managing all inflation and tariff related costs with an 80 basis point spread in the second quarter. As we've highlighted before, we have been effective in managing inflation and we expect to continue to maintain a positive spread and our target range of 20 to 30 basis points in the second half of the year, when we begin to lap the strong price realization in the 3rd and 4th quarters of 2018 and when we begin to see the full impact of the increase in list 3 tariffs on Chinese imports, moving from 10% to 25%.

Lastly, we continue to expect strong free cash flows in 2019 of equal to or greater than 100% of net income, which will further strengthen our balance sheet and enable us to maintain good optionality. We've deployed significant capital on dividends, acquisitions and share repurchases over the years and again in the first half of the year. We'll continue to follow our dynamic and balanced capital allocation priorities and we expect to deploy 100% of excess cash over time.

Please go to slide 5, we delivered solid bookings and revenue growth in virtually all businesses and regions in the second quarter. On the booking side, our largest HVAC businesses continue to lead the way and deliver strong growth with North America and Europe HVAC up high single digits in the second quarter. China was also healthy with low-single digit growth against a very tough comp of low 20-ish growth in the second quarter of 2018. We also drove strong bookings growth of 8% in our industrial segment, versus a tough comp of 8% in the prior year, led by Compression Technologies and small electric vehicles. Compression Technologies growth was driven by strong growth and long cycle, partially offset by softness in the short-cycle markets, small electric vehicles growth was driven by successful execution of our consumer vehicle strategy.

Transport refrigeration had a significant decline of bookings against very tough comps in 2018 for reasons we've discussed in detail on prior calls. However, as we've said before, these declines don't impact or negate the strong growth in our other transport businesses or impact their ability to grow revenues in 2019 and '20. The transport refrigeration business had extremely strong bookings in 2018 and its returning to historically normal levels of bookings in 2019. But with backlog that is more than 2 times historical levels, with the strong backlog and solid bookings we're seeing in 2019, we expect this business to deliver solid revenue growth in 2019 and the prospects heading into 2020 continue to look promising. On the revenue side, our largest HVAC businesses continue to deliver very strong growth with North America, Europe and residential all up mid to high single-digits in quarter 2. Transport refrigeration also delivered strong revenue growth.

Bringing all the pieces together, we're pleased with our organic bookings and revenue growth performance through the first half. We expect organic revenue growth rates to increase heading into the second half based on healthy backlog, deliveries and incoming order rates, and remain confident in our 5% to 6% organic enterprise revenue growth target for the full year.

Please turn to slide 6. We've outlined a number of takeaways for each major business on the next 2 slides. Commercial HVAC continues to be very strong, particularly in North America and Europe. Our backlog, incoming order rates and pipeline of projects are driving confidence that we'll continue to see solid growth in the second half of the year.

Residential HVAC had solid mid single-digit growth in quarter 2 and we head into the second half of the year, expecting 2019 will shape up to be another good year, led by a healthy replacement market. I've talked at length about transport refrigeration, which continues to be led by North America trailer, truck, APUs and aftermarket. Based on a record backlog and healthy incoming order rates, we remain confident that our transport business will deliver another solid year in 2019.

Please turn to slide 7. In our Compression Technologies business, we're seeing healthy growth in long cycle markets and softness in short cycle markets. The long cycle business strength positions us well for good growth in late 2019 and in 2020 as these orders convert into revenue. Small electric vehicles is having a great year driven by successful execution of our consumer vehicle strategy.

And now I'd like to turn it over to Sue to provide more details on the quarter. Sue?

Susan Carter -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Mike. Please go to slide number 8. I'll begin with a summary of a few main points to take away from today's call. As Mike discussed, we drove strong financial results in the second quarter with adjusted earnings per share of $2.09, an increase of 13% versus the year ago period. Our Q2 performance gives us confidence in our ability to execute against the full-year growth and margin targets we provided in our guidance in the beginning of the year. As a result, we are raising our full year adjusted continuing EPS guidance to approximately $6.40 up from approximately $6.35 that we communicated last quarter.

Second quarter organic revenue growth was strong, particularly in our Climate segment. We also saw strong organic bookings across most of our major businesses. When excluding our transport business with some outsized order growth in 2018 organic bookings were up approximately mid single digits for both the Enterprise and our Climate segment. In our Industrial segment, organic revenues were up 2% compounding on a tough comp of 9% organic growth in the prior year. Strong revenue growth in CTS services and small electric vehicles offset the weakness in the industrial short cycle markets Mike mentioned previously. Industrial organic bookings were strong, up 8% and compounding on an 8% growth rate in Q2, 2018 fueled by long cycle Compression Technologies growth and small electric vehicle demand. Despite ongoing trade and tariff negotiations, CTS China bookings growth continue to strengthen in Q2 providing cautious optimism going forward.

During Q2, we expanded adjusted operating margins 80 basis points and delivered 37% operating leverage, which is ahead of our full year expectations. We continue to leverage our business operating system across the enterprise to manage direct material. tariff related and other inflationary headwinds. As we look to the back half of the year, we anticipate we will continue to realize price to effectively manage material inflation and tariffs, including the recent increase in list 3 tariffs on Chinese imports from 10% to 25% but this spread should narrow as we lap the 2018 mid year price increases.

As Mike mentioned, we continue to expect strong free cash flows in 2019 of equal to or greater than 100% of net income. We exit the second second quarter with working capital sufficient to support our ongoing cooling season demands, and we expect working capital requirements to approach the long-term target of approximately 4% of revenues by the end of the year. Importantly, we continue to deliver on our dynamic capital allocation strategy. So far this year, we have completed the strategic acquisition of Precision Flow Systems for approximately $1.45 billion deployed approximately $259 million in dividend and approximately $215 million on share buybacks. Looking forward, we expect to consistently deploy 100% of excess cash over time.

Please go to slide 9. We delivered organic revenue growth of 4% adjusted operating margin improvement of 80 basis points, and adjusted earnings-per-share growth of 13% . Organic revenue growth was led by strong broad based growth across our Climate segment. Continued disciplined focus on pricing and productivity actions enabled us to effectively manage inflation and tariff related headwinds and drive margin expansion across the enterprise.

Please go to Slide 10. Our Climate segment delivered another strong quarter of operating income growth, enabling us to drive solid year-over-year EPS growth in the quarter.

Our Industrial segment delivered solid results. Our full year Industrial margin outlook remains intact. In addition to good segment performance, second quarter corporate costs were lower than prior year impacting results by approximately $0.05. The cadence of corporate expenses is lumpy in 2019, driven primarily by the timing of stock-based compensation that is not linear, as well as the timing of a number of other functional spending items. The full year corporate cost guidance of approximately $250 million remains unchanged.

Please go to Slide 11. In Q2 strong execution drove 80 basis points of adjusted operating margin improvement. Price versus material inflation was positive for the fifth consecutive quarter. Pricing, net of material inflation expanded margins by 80 basis points, reflecting strong carryover price from 2018 and incremental pricing actions in 2019. We delivered solid margin expansion from volume growth in the quarter, margin expansion was tempered by softness in short cycle industrial revenues which tend to have higher margins. Consistent with our full year expectations, we continue to deliver productivity in excess of other inflation. We continue to heavily invest in our business. Incremental Q2 investments of approximately 40 basis points were fairly evenly weighted between growth and operating expense reduction projects.

Please go to Slide 12. Our Climate segment delivered another strong quarter with 5% organic revenue growth and adjusted operating margin expansion of 50 basis points. Consistent with our expectations, we delivered strong volume growth, price realization and productivity. Please go to Slide 13. Our Industrial business delivered solid organic revenue growth of 2% against a tough comparison of 9% growth in Q2 of 2018. Industrial leverage was impacted primarily by the inclusion of the PFS acquisition midway through the quarter. PFS acquisition revenues lever at operating income margin rates instead of gross margin rates for the first year under our ownership. Additionally, as I mentioned previously, margin expansion was tempered by softness in short cycle industrial revenues which tend to have higher margins. Excluding these factors leverage in the Industrial was north of 30% in the quarter. Looking at EBITDA margins, the PFS acquisition was an immediate contributor to our EBITDA margin expansion of 60 basis points in the quarter.

Please go to slide 14. We remain committed to a dynamic capital allocation strategy that consistently deploys excess cash to the opportunities with the highest returns for shareholders. We maintain a healthy level of business investments in high ROI technology, innovation and operational excellence projects which are vital to our continued growth, product leadership and margin expansion. We have a long-standing commitment to a reliable strong and growing dividend that increases at or above the rate of earnings growth over time. We continue to make strategic investments and acquisitions that further improve long-term shareholder returns, like the PFS acquisition completed during the quarter. Earlier this year, we secured an additional $1.5 billion in senior notes, taking advantage of the current favorable interest rate environment. We remain committed to maintaining a strong balance sheet that provides us with continued optionality as our markets evolve. We continue to see value in share repurchases when shares trade below their intrinsic value and we expect to consistently deploy 100% of excess cash over time.

Please go to slide number 16. The integration of Precision Flow Systems with our existing ARO business is under way and is progressing according to plan. We expect PFS to contribute approximately $400 million in revenue on an annualized run rate. That equates to approximately $250 million of incremental revenue in 2019 with approximately $50 million already delivered in Q2. EBITDA margin expectations for PFS remain unchanged, with the percentages in the high 20s and adjusted operating margins are expected to be in the mid-teens for 2019. PFS is expected to be cash flow accretive, consistent with the EBITDA attribution in 2019. For your reference, we have also included estimated non-GAAP adjustments related to PFS for the year.

Additionally, we completed a senior notes offering in March, which we anticipate will add approximately $60 million in interest on an annual run rate basis $47 million incremental to 2019. For 2019, we expect the adjusted operating income of PFS to essentially offset incremental interest from the senior notes offering. Please go to slide number 17. I want to take a moment to further clarify the impact of PFS on our full year 2019 revenue guidance. As you can see on the chart, adding approximately $250 million of PFS revenues to our prior revenue guidance range increases our Industrial reported revenue growth rates by approximately 7.5 points and our enterprise revenue growth rates by approximately 1.5 points. There is no other change to our revenue guidance ranges for 2019.

Please go to slide number18. When we are on the road, we often get questions about the status of the strategic announcement we made at the end of April to combine our Industrial segment with Gardner Denver. We continue to be excited about the prospects of creating a premier industrial company as well as a leading pure-play Climate solutions company focused on HVAC and transport refrigeration.

I'll give you a brief update today. One of the transaction closing conditions was recently satisfied. The HSR Act waiting period expired. We will continue working through the remaining regulatory and other closing conditions. We anticipate approximately $150 million to $200 million in separation and transaction related costs, including the estimated cost of separating legal entities. We also expect to mitigate the approximately $100 million in stranded cost by the end of 2021. This is unchanged from what we communicated last quarter.

In preparation for closing, we have begun three separate work streams. The first work stream is focused solely on the separation of our Industrial segment. After years of leveraging across our Industrial and Climate segments, we have tasked the separation team with separating Industrial segment business processes, systems and functions. This includes, technical and financial operating processes including tax and systems, manufacturing operations and supply chain services, real estate along with all business regulatory filings. There is a lot of work to be done and the team has a methodical road map to work this out.

The second work stream center is on integration planning with Gardner Denver. Given that we continue to operate as two separate companies and compete in the marketplace until the close of the transaction, the integration planning work must be managed under clear rules and antitrust protocols. While integration preparation is under way and will continue over the coming months in compliance with these rules, much of the work to integrate the two companies will take place after the expected close. The final work stream is focused on the transformation efforts for our Climate segment, as we plan and execute within the transformation work extreme, we have the advantage of building in on an incredibly strong foundation with great businesses, engaged and talented people and a distinctive winning culture and core values.

Our strategy focused on reducing the world's energy intensity and greenhouse gas emissions remains unchanged. We are focused on developing a new Climate structure that allows us to better serve our customers and unlock value for shareholders. At this point. this work is early on and we'll give more updates at a later date.

All in, we are well under way on this strategic transaction, and we believe we are on track for closing in early 2020. And with that, I'll turn the call back over to Mike .

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Sue. Please go to slide 19. In summary, we're pleased with our first half performance, and we expect to deliver strong revenue and EPS growth and free cash flow in 2019. Looking forward, we continue to believe the company is extremely well positioned to deliver strong shareholder returns over the next several years . Fundamentally, our strategy remains at the nexus of environmental sustainability and the impact. Today 15% of the world's carbon emissions come from heating and cooling buildings and transport refrigeration creates another 80 million metric tons of CO2 emissions annually, which can be eliminated through our electrification over time. We are bending the global warming curve by changing the way the world heats and cools buildings, and moves refrigerated cargo. New technology, we've developed can reduce up to 99% of the emissions that come from heating and cooling a commercial building. And this doesn't include the substantial environmental benefit of increasing system energy efficiency to reduce both power generation at the source and storage requirements. We're continually working to innovate in this way to electrify heating, electrified diesel engines used to cool trucks and trailers that transport perishable goods and to reduce the energy intensity and greenhouse gas emissions and residential and commercial buildings.

We recently announced our 2030 ESG commitments to meet the challenge of Climate change, while increasing access to Air Conditioning, perishable foods and medicines and improving the quality of life for people and communities where we operate and serve. We are committing to reduce our customer carbon footprint by 1 gigaton of CO2 to our HVAC and transport refrigerant products and services. We believe this is the largest Customer Climate commitment made by any B2B company. And our math shows that this reduction could equate to 2% of the world's emissions. The size and scale that's equivalent to the annual emissions of Italy, France and the UK combined.

We continue to transform our supply chain and operations to have restored of impact on the environment, including achieving carbon-neutral operations and giving back more water than we use in water-stressed areas. We are committed to increasing opportunity for all strengthening economic mobility and bolstering the quality of life of our people. This includes gender parity and leadership roles, workforce reflective of our community populations, maintaining a livable market competitive wages and broadening community access to cooling comfort and healthful foods.

We've been investing heavily for years to build franchise brands and to advance our leadership market position to enable consistent profitable growth. We have an experienced management team and a high performing culture that instills operational excellence into everything we do. We remain committed to dynamic and balanced deployment of capital and we have a strong track record of deploying excess cash to deliver top-tier shareholder returns over the years. Lastly, we're extremely excited about the proposed transaction and the strategic combination of our Industrial segment with Gardner Denver, combining two of the premier complementary industrial companies offers the opportunity to drive significant innovation and growth with meaningful revenue and cost synergies supported by secular growth trends and diverse end market exposure.

We're also very excited about creating the premier pure-play HVAC and transport refrigeration company with our existing Climate segment businesses. We have a tremendous opportunity to leverage a simplified business model and structure and sharpen our sustainability focus with our investments. Our Climate businesses have clearly differentiated performance and we see significant opportunity as a pure play to build on this performance for our employees, customers and shareholders.

And with that Sue and I will be happy to take your questions. Operator?

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions]. Your first question comes from Steve Tusa of JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan. -- Analyst

Hello?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Morning, Steve.

Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan. -- Analyst

So I just wanted to ask on HVAC. What are you seeing in resi so far in July. And also on the commercial unitary front, how are trends in that part of the business this quarter? And what you expect for the rest of the year there?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

The resi was strong in the quarter bookings and revenue. We think it continues for the balance of the year. We think the market might be low single digit, mid-single digit Steve, we think it will be mid-single digit for the year there, so that's progressing again. It's, as you know, well, it's 80% replacement, we're heavily indexed there and anything we do incrementally with new construction is actually an add, its growth for us. So we feel like we're in a great position.

With regard to commercial North America, we're seeing strength in unitary, we're seeing strength in applied and services, we are seeing particular verticals like K-12, labs and datacenters that are are growing nicely. So no let up there. And then just to anticipate some questions, I think that people may ask, if you think about our backlog today across the globe from an HVAC perspective were up 21% year-over-year and even up sequentially from quarter one to quarter two. So that is I think indicative of just continued strong markets and a solid pipeline going forward.

Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan. -- Analyst

Okay, great. And then, so do you think you guys are taking care. It sounds like some of the other guys that put up numbers that are obviously not as good as that?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, in the markets that we get really good data, the third party, which is the easiest to look at. Absolutely. That's a fact. Yes.

Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan. -- Analyst

And then, lastly, just third quarter, can you just talk about seasonality? Do you expect normal seasonality here in the 3rd quarter? I know things are moving around in the global economy and also orders, do you think the orders are going to take kind of another step down or how does that compares look so that maybe we're more stable here in the low-single digit type of number for Climate. I know you don't like the guide that, but there's obviously a lot of moving around in the economy. I was just curious as to how you guys see that playing out?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, I don't see any changes really in sort of -- in HVAC globally. I think we've got a pretty good read on the global landscape, most markets are strong and there is pockets where there is weakness but surprises where markets are strong. Example of that would be Mexico has gone through a couple of quarters of negative GDP. It's a pretty big market for us. So that's the newer information, but we're relatively strong and an equivalent market in the Southern Cone Latin America. So it's that sort of thing on the edges that we're looking at, but the markets remain strong. So a lot of focus on Thermo King and I think we've done a decent job explaining the constraints that exist in 2018 at Class A tractors, and how customers wind up in advance, really to pull on that, the supply capability, it translated down through trailers and of course that I'll translate it to those customers ordering either APUs or refrigerated trailers. The actual takt time of how the heartbeat of a plant runs and we match trailers in units to actual tractors or trailers, it's very smooth. And that backlog generates just mid-single digit revenue growth, it's been pretty consistent.

So the noises around the TK bookings, but again, I think you have to separate that from the 28 constraints with our customers and think more about the HVAC market being strong and transport just generating solid revenue growth and good backlog and generally healthy markets. And we're still seeing good order intake rate at transport. So it's not as if things are driving up even on the order input side there, just tough comps.

Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan. -- Analyst

Okay, great, thanks a lot.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Steve.

Operator

Your next question comes from Julian Mitchell, of Barclays. Your line is open.

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Thanks, good morning. So maybe just sticking to the two-question rule. My first question would just be around the Industrial division. It looks like on slide 17 you're still assuming maybe 5% organic growth this year. That seems to imply a step up from the first half. So maybe just help explain why you think Industrial organic growth should reaccelerate in the second half. Please?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think we've got our eyes wide open on the short cycle and we've accommodated that in our forecast. We had strengthened longer cycle, some of which we expect to ship in the fourth quarter a lot, we'll ship in 2020, we've had excellent growth and our consumer strategy related to small electric vehicle. So, Julian, we just finished a 5 plus 7 forecast not even a month ago. We've had the opportunity to update that last month with risks and opportunities. I think that we feel pretty good about that forecast. When I look back at the beginning of the year relative to guidance, I would say that Climate markets are trending toward maybe the upper end of that and industrial markets maybe -- it would be trending to a lower side of that, but net-net we feel like we're right where we need to be in terms of the guidance that we gave.

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Thanks very much. And my quick follow up would be around the Climate Division. You had about 7% profit growth in the second quarter, a bit of a step down from Q1 and then you're sort of guiding for a pickup in the second half similar question, I guess, I guess, what drives, do you think that slightly better EBIT growth in the second half, maybe slightly with resi versus commercial versus transport or something on the margins around price material. Any color at all on that aspect?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah Julian. I mean, when you look at leverage first of all in the quarter, we actually had really good leverage. We have leverage above gross margins they are north of 30% and we were able to be right about 30% for the first half of the year. So the question probably relates to what you're thinking to be a step down in the revenue, but again here when you look at 21% year-over-year backlog and sequentially improving backlog from quarter one to quarter two known deliveries and service business being about half the business, the amount of book in turn we need to do is actually a small as I can remember it. So again, we feel pretty good about the revenue number and I think that, that segment in general leverages pretty close on the full year at a 25% rate we guided to originally. So I'm not seeing a lot of weakness there.

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Perfect, thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from Scott Davis of Melius Research. Your line is open.

Unidentified Participant

Hi, good morning, Mike.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Who is that ?

Unidentified Participant

Sometimes when you are executing kind of a deal like this, of this size there tends to be a little bit of a letdown ahead of the closing and some companies we see they have to adjust compensation plans as such to prevent that, but have you guys, do you feel the need to do anything, have you done anything, is there a risk that there is a little bit of a distraction among the operating heads walking into the back half of the year here?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

We've got over the years a wonderful operating system that in terms of the metrics, the early warning indicators that we would get Scott feel good about seeing that, of course we're seeing none of it today. The more important thing we're doing though is organizing ourselves in a way that we can compartmentalize we needs to happen and then think about the inner dependencies between things. So as an example, our number one priority is to run the business and run it well every day and execute on the commitments we made .

The second priority is the separation itself, of course there is no integration without the separation. So there is a separate team focused on separation that does not involve the integration team, which is the third priority. Third priority around integration is to the extent we can under the rules of engagement is to support GDI as a lead in that effort and so that continues. And the fourth thing that we're doing is using the opportunity, the value stream app much of the company and core process to customers and use the opportunity to think about those core processes in a way that we can make sure that the maximum value added to customers is being delivered, and how we might structure from that output and with that what might mean in course to the cost structure, it maybe speed to market, in some cases it's pretty exciting, but we've tried to make sure that the teams, different people to the extent we can, of course, a group like tax. It's going to be related to all four of those activities, but we're doing a pretty good job of compartmentalizing that and running it and using the metrics that we've always used to run the business.

Unidentified Participant

Okay, that's helpful. And then just as a quick follow-up and this, I know this is always hard to answer a question around market share on the HVAC side, but sometimes, I mean, it's clear that you're gaining share, but sometimes that's due to geographic mix or the types of projects that are growing. I mean is there kind of a no, bias answer to that question of why you think you're winning and not the usual, we're better than the rest kind of stuff, but is there any other explanation that you can give that will be helpful in that regard?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

We've really designed, really our technology and go-to-market strategy around sustainability and around eliminating both emissions and reducing efficiencies. So this passion around having the most energy efficient commercial systems out there in the world today using the most responsible refrigerants that we can put into these systems, leveraging the analytics, the data that controls around that to put more sophisticated service offerings together. The belief that on that commercial side, we need to be doing that ourselves not through independent distribution, because of the complexity of what it takes to model, sell, service deliver against those plans. That's been our strategy and we've been consistent about that and just executing hard against that. I think from a goal deployment perspective, again another core part of the operating system. There is no mystery in the company as to what our goals are, what's expected, what we're measuring, so that it just coming together in a way that is worked Scott, over a long period of time.

Unidentified Participant

Yeah, clearly. Well, good luck to you guys.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Your next question comes from John Walsh of Credit Suisse. Your line is open.

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Hi, good morning

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Morning, John.

Unidentified Speaker

Morning

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

So I guess just going back to the price cost spread, you talked about the 20 to 30 basis points here in the back half. I guess -- I understand the tariffs, but just kind of looking also at recent price increases and I realize, they're not all created equal. It does look like you push through some kind of another round of healthy price here across the commercial parts of your portfolio. I mean is that, -- should we view that as kind of a conservative place holder for the back half or is there something else that would kind of make that decelerate further?

Susan Carter -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Right, John, what I would say is, when you think about how we called price cost for the year, we were basically in line with how we called it. So we knew that we were going to have some great price comparisons on a year-over-year basis in the front half of the year and we knew that in the back half of the year, we were going to lap some comparisons to last year. So prices is going to actually be -- it's not a deceleration at all, but the comparisons to the price in the back half of last year are going to result in a little bit less of a spread than in the first half of the year. But in terms of expectations that's exactly what we would have expected. The prices are going through, they are sticking, they are actually being realized in the business and material inflation is actually doing approximately what we thought it would do for the year, which is we've got to tariffs covered, we've got all of the elements of cost covered and we're seeing a little bit of material stabilization. But again, stabilization to our expectations in the back half of the year and a little bit of deflation, but given the way that we buy materials, probably more of a 2020 impact. So, when I think about the whole price cost is sort of put it in a basket, I think the price comparisons are more difficult in the back half of the year than the front half of the year. Material inflation is doing about what we expected and that gives us roughly the 20 to 30 basis points of spread for the entire year on price cost, I mean, maybe it's ESCOs conservative, but it looks about like we thought it would look, which is the really good part of that.

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Okay, thank you. And then I guess just as a follow-up if we could maybe look at the Americas or maybe actually drill down into the US versus China, just what you saw in terms of service versus equipment growth in the quarter?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Both are progressing well there, John, I'm always surprised at the degree of service penetration in China, how quickly that's maturing. So there's really no surprises there and from a service perspective, we continue to do well there. So not much more to say. Obviously the US and Europe are the gold standard around penetration and linkage and then China's quickly over the years coming to that point. And over the next five years, I think it will be at the same level as our North American, European penetration.

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

All right. Thank you.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah.

Operator

Your next question comes from Nigel Coe of Wolfe Research. Your line is open.

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research. -- Analyst

Thank you. Good morning.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Morning, Nigel,

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research. -- Analyst

I wanted turn it back to to industrial and the long cycle bookings growth that you call-outs and I mean I think we're all sort of thinking capex getting kicked on the road, perhaps some of these projects push out, but where are you seeing the bookings strength there? Would you call out any end markets in particular? And then, switching to the shorter cycle pressure you were seeing, would you say that's mainly inventory reductions or genuine end market weakness?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah Nigel. I would call it, Asia, on your first question probably to be where we're seeing the long cycle bookings and here you are seeing chemicals manufacturing energy --

Susan Carter -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Air seperation.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Air seperation would be another for sure. So that would be what I pointed out there. With North America and with US in particular, there was a slowdown. It seemed after there was a flurry in the US MCA discussions between Mexico and the US and the possibility of the US opposing additional tariffs, if Mexico wouldn't secure the borders from the Mexican side, roughly after that we saw a slowdown. I think it was certainly an end user demand and that obviously affected sell-through of distribution short cycle products there. And it's bounce around a little bit, but off kind of that lower level. So hopefully all that, I guess, cleaned up permanently and I think that will have a restorative impact on short cycle, when it does, I think it will be a nice bounce up when there is certainty around that.

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research. -- Analyst

Okay, that's great. Thanks, Mike. And then just digging back into the North American commercial as a quick follow on. Yeah, I think some of the peers or weakness within the commercial unitary markets in particular on the placement side and weather impacted call out there, did you see that as well? Would you call out the light commercial as weaker in North America?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

No. Actually it was exceptionally strong for us. So, no, I would say it would be a highlight of the quarter as opposed to a weakness.

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research. -- Analyst

Okay. That's great.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I can't tell you why it would be different, but I can tell you it was a standout in the quarter.

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research. -- Analyst

I'll just take it. Thanks, Mike.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from Jeff Sprague of Vertical Research. Your line is open.

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

Hi. Thank you. Good morning, everyone.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Hi, Jeff.

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

Hey, Mike, you never like to mention whether or Nigel just through it out, I mean, anything in the resi business that you felt was discernible and you run your inventories pretty lean, but is there anything kind of in the early setup in the third quarter, an overhang from that, that would be of note?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

No, there was a little bit last year of some pre-buy. I think they got pulled into the second quarter. That's really the only kind of -- it wasn't a big number, but it was a little bit of a compare difference there. I think number of companies said that happened. So, no, not really, Jeff, to answer your question. I think it's just fundamentals remain strong. I think that consumer generally still feels pretty good, pretty healthy and we're not seeing any changes to that.

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

And then, bigger picture, Mike, I was wondering if you could elaborate a little bit more on what you mean by transformation? Right. I think, you know, the idea may still be kind of coming into view, but it seems like you've got a relatively crystallized view of where you want to take things. It just be interesting to get a little bit more perspective now kind of 3 months hence making the the announcement, kind of what you're thinking about kind of pure play transformation?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, the starting point just to be clear, is something that we're all very proud of over 10 plus years. And so transformation is not meaning, from something bad to something good, it means as an opportunity here to really go think every -- I mean, obviously, from a name and a brand all the way through to the simplification of legal entities, the way that we might look at the way support services are performed across the company. We will apply the same value stream mapping that we would do in a manufacturing process to the way record to report or procure to pay or any kind of order to cash process would work. We'll look through our field organization and understand how that would pan out in terms of incentives and some of the metrics that are out in the field and just make sure that those are we want them to be. There is likely different structures that will evolve when you answer those questions and I think with the goal toward customer focus, a goal toward simplification being tighter on some of the investment focus on our core sustainability themes, all those things I think are exciting, the people inside the company because we're building off a piece of a strong foundation.

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

Great, thanks.

Operator

Your next question comes from Gotham Khanna of Cowen & Company. Your line is open.

Gotham Khanna -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Thanks, good morning, guys.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Hi Gotham.

Gotham Khanna -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Just a follow-up maybe on Jeff Sprague's question; you mentioned in the year-over-year on orders with the pull forward last year, but just speaking about Q2 '19, did you see any difference on the resi HVAC side between your indirect and direct channels. And maybe if you can speak to Lennox on their call talked about being over-indexed to some of the swing regions in the US where it can be hot or cold and so whether it was particularly uncooperative given their exposure. I mean how does your footprint kind of contrast with that, if at all?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I can't really contrast it to anybody else. But I can tell you, we're about 50-50 direct and indirect. We didn't really see any difference in order rates there at all. I guess in 45 or so earnings calls, I can't remember if I've ever -- I don't think I've ever used, whether as a strategy or as an excuse. So I can tell you weather normalizes very quickly often within a year with a bias toward a warming planet, mostly there is more degree days in the future not fewer. So it's a great place to be and we like the footprint that we've got. Our focus is on market share and margin expansion as it is for every product routine we have inside the company, those are the two clear goals that we have and that doesn't change.

Gotham Khanna -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

That's helpful. And then just as a second question, maybe can you give us some color on your expectations for Thermo King growth next year given what we're seeing in the truck market and what you have as offsets with the APU penetration and like you said, the backlog running into next year. Any preliminary view on that?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. It's too early on that. I mean we'd like to see the Act data coming out around Class A. We would like to see the Act data coming out around refrigerated trailers to know that. My sense was no way to burn off all the backlog we've got in '19. I know we're into '20 as it stands. Order rates are still healthy. So just a really early view which was the same view we gave last time is when you normalize the '18 bookings over '19 and '20 revenue cycle, I think you get, kind of the steady tact coming out of the business sort of mid-single digit growth rates. So I would have no reason to deviate from that at this point.

Gotham Khanna -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Thank you, guys. Good luck.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

In fact, Gotham, I hope depending on how you sort of Brexit really unfolds and unwinds that next year we're sort of getting through this low point in Europe and potentially we're seeing strength in Europe which has been markedly slower than North America as a result of just what's happening with the broader European economy.

Gotham Khanna -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Appreciate it. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from Andrew Obin of Bank of America. Your line is open.

Andrew Obin -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Hey guys, good morning.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Andrew.

Andrew Obin -- Bank of America -- Analyst

I have just a question, there's been a lot of articles -- I think the Wall Street Journal had an article how the Europeans are still reluctant to embrace HVAC even despite sort of climate change in the heat wave that you're seeing in the Europe. What kind of conversations are you having with customers in Europe regarding HVAC and are you seeing any structural changes and adoption rates?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think you're largerly talking about what consumers might think. But, if you think about any institutional building, any data center, any industrial building in Europe, they've got the same requirements that you've got all over the world and I would just say the booking rates there for us, for multiple years have been extraordinary. We said I think in '16 that we were would doubled the business by 2020 and we're going to definitely do that. So I look at an economy there that even though it's modeling around kind of flattish, we've had bookings growth and revenue growth that's been in that high-teens low-20s range now for multiple years. But we're not focused on the consumer there per se, although there is an extraordinary opportunity, I think going forward around the electrification of heat in Europe. As you'll see more of that application as opposed to the prevalence of boilers in Europe over time When that happens, I do think we've got a business and a product portfolio that will benefit from that regulatory conversion in Europe to electrification of heat.

Unidentified Participant

No, I think I was referring more, again, if you visit office buildings in Europe in August they certainly have a different idea of what HVAC is versus North America. So I was wondering if requirement to changing, but we can take it offline. Another question is on supply chain, are you guys will be thinking where and how you're spending capex , given all the uncertainty that's taking place?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Are you meaning uncertainty in the economy or uncertainty, where?

Andrew Obin -- Bank of America -- Analyst

No. I'm thinking about it -- I'm thinking trade uncertainty and are you thinking, are you changing, where are you spending capex globally? And are you sort of having conversations with your supply chain and about moving some sources?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, when we think about our capex , there's been little difference to how we think about it, because we want to make things where we sell things and that's generally what we've always done, and I would say there is even a stronger concentration of that, then there was five years ago, that's been our strategy. As it relates to the supply chain, it depends where there is an easy answer, yes, we'll look for an opportunity there, if we can and we've made some movement there. So the answer to your question is, from our own footprint perspective, we're continuing to do what we do from a supply chain perspective around the edges, there's things that we do to move supply where we can.

Andrew Obin -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Great. Always, nice just to have a HVAC company that doesn't play weather. Thanks a lot.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Andrew, just on your question, I'm just going to follow-up, I know you're off the line here, but, it's interesting a lot of the Chinese customers that we had, that we're looking to move production away from China to maybe avoid some of the US China tariffs, we're thinking about Mexico as well. I think that some of what they've done and decided has changed over time and I think we're seeing more in areas like Vietnam, as an example as opposed to Mexico. So there are changes with our customers in terms of how they're working their footprint for sure.

We'll take the next question, Chris.

Operator

Your next question comes from Nathan Martin from Seaport Global. Nathan Martin from Seaport Global. Your line is open.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

There is no Nathan on in the call queue. I think you've got the wrong person.

Operator

The next from Joe Ritchie of Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Joe Ritchie -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Thank you. Good morning, guys.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Joe.

Joe Ritchie -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

All right. So maybe my first question Mike, just focusing on Climate operating leverage for the quarter, and so obviously like price cost came through well, it seems like the leverage is maybe a little bit lighter than we expected, was there anything that like just impacted Q2 just from a mix perspective on the Climate side, anything out of the ordinary?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

So Joe I've got 32% and were you expecting more than that in the quarter?

Joe Ritchie -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Then my assumptions on price cost must be slightly different.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Okay, I'm just taking $40 million of operating income on $124 million revenue raise and that's what I'm looking at .

Joe Ritchie -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Okay, all right. I can take it offline. I was trying to strip out the price cost component and trying to really determine what the volume leverage was and it seemed -- it seems like it was a little bit lower than anticipated, but that's OK. And then I guess maybe just kind of sticking on the commodity, the price cost question and through your comments earlier on it being ESCOs conservative in the second half of the year. I guess as you're thinking about commodity inflation in 2018 [Phonetic] you do look at copper, copper steel are going to be pretty depressed, you guys typically will buy ahead of it. And so I guess where are you locked in on copper for the second half of the year and I guess what are the kind of, what are the offsets potentially to a copper tailwind in the second half of the year?

Susan Carter -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Well, so Joe if you remember, we actually -- when we gave our original guidance for the year, we had actually planned on both copper and steel perhaps having less inflation in Q3 and Q4 and that's basically coming true. So if you think about copper specifically that you ask about, we're about 75% locked for the back half of the year, which is typical for us where you'll see the benefit of those spot rates on copper that really have come down, it's really in 2020 as I said, so we're doing buys every month for -- whether it's for 2019 or for 2020. So you'll see the advantage of that appearing in the 2020 numbers and pretty much the same thing on steel, we know what we're paying for steel about six months in advance and with either one of those commodities, the highest spot prices were in Q1, they started to come down in Q2, and they'll, the spot rates that we see right now are down in Q3 and Q4, but again that's more to our expectations. I don't expect that to be a huge tailwind in the back half of the year. On the other hand, the good news is, it's not actually a headwind like we've seen for the last couple of years. So like I say, we're taking advantage of it with our buying processes and with our supply chain each and every time we buy the commodities, but it actually is performing about like we expected in cold forward during the year.

Joe Ritchie -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Got it. Thank you, both.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Joe..

Operator

Your next question comes from Andrew Kaplowitz from Citi.

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Hey, good morning guys.

Unidentified Speaker

Good Morming, Andrew .

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Mike just following up on China HVAC, last quarter you basically were flattish in terms of order growth and this quarter up modestly against the tough comps you mentioned. You mentioned, in last quarter you were seeing China related demand and improve throughout Q1. So did you see that include demand level off at all in Q2 as other industrial companies have seen or generally stay steady or even improve in the quarter?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I would say in both Climate and Industrial from March forward bookings have steadily improved in China, specifically. And, but the markets have shifted as an example, electronics would be down say 15% as a market, but you're going to find other markets that have been compensating for that and some of the heavier industries that would have compensated steel would be an example there, something that's or power generation where there is a market both for industrial and for process cooling in those markets. So that's been good.

Yeah, we're stacking quarter one and quarter two of '19 against plus '20 it's kinds of comps in quarter one, two of '18. So the stack that is sort of still mid -- kind of low to mid-teens growth over the two year period. So we're happy with kind of what's going on in terms of the strategy there that we had around the direct sales force that we've put in place and then we're happy with the linkage at the service there. China is slower than it was historically, but still a pretty good market and there is a focus, not quite as strong as Europe around sustainability. But certainly, as I've talked in the past, much more of a focus in China around cleaner and clean water and that's having a positive impact on what we do .

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citigroup -- Analyst

That's helpful, Mike. And then Mike, so you gave us good clarity on PFS, but could you give us more color on how it's doing, as it entered the Ingersoll portfolio? Obviously a fair amount of Industrial and upstream oil and gas exposure there. So have you seen any slowdown in that business for the Initial expectations. It would be helpful to just talk about how it's coming in so far?

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, let me start by saying -- first of all, from a cultural set and from a performance mentality, from a goal deployment process from -- it feels like these guys have been here for years, which is fantastic. It's a great fit inside the company and in terms of achievement of their management plan, they're on track with that. So the mix has changed a little bit and you've seen it with some of the short cycle, but they like the rest of Ingersoll Rand they've got countermeasures for how they're dealing with changes, so frankly it's been,positive. Sue, do you have any color on that?

Susan Carter -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, it is actually a refreshing type of business, because they do you have several different brands that they operate under in several different end markets that they go to and the management team is excellent at finding a real balance between the opportunities in the portfolio and the risks in the portfolio and they are operating to the management plan that we used when we bought the business, which is great news great news, both revenue operating income as well as cash flow.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Andy, maybe, I'm just to give you one point of specificity here, positive bookings growth in the quarter against, if you think about sort of all the fluid management peers that are out there, but I think are booking negative. We're very proud of that.

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Thanks guys. Appreciate it.

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

And I will now turn the call over to Zac Nagle for closing comments.

Zachary A. Nagle -- Vice President, Investor Relations

I'd like to thank everyone for joining us on today's call. And we -- Shane and I will be available for questions over the next day or two and then in the coming weeks. So if you're interested in having a call, please give us a call and we'll schedule some time. We look forward to seeing you soon on the road. Thanks.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks].

Duration: 64 minutes

Call participants:

Zachary A. Nagle -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Michael W. Lamach -- Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Susan Carter -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Unidentified Speaker

Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan. -- Analyst

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Unidentified Participant

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research. -- Analyst

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

Gotham Khanna -- Cowen & Company -- Analyst

Andrew Obin -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Joe Ritchie -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citigroup -- Analyst

More IR analysis

All earnings call transcripts

AlphaStreet Logo
AlphaStreet Logo

More From The Motley Fool

This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.

Motley Fool Transcribers has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Advertisement