Amcor Q3 2022 Earnings Report $8.56 -0.37 (-4.09%) As of 03:59 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Amcor EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.21Consensus EPS $0.20Beat/MissBeat by +$0.01One Year Ago EPS$0.17Amcor Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$3.71 billionExpected Revenue$3.40 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$309.71 millionYoY Revenue Growth+15.60%Amcor Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2022Date5/3/2022TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, May 3, 2022Conference Call Time11:55AM ETUpcoming EarningsAmcor's Q3 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, April 29, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Wednesday, April 30, 2025 at 4:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryAMCR ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Amcor Q3 2022 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 3, 2022 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 15 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day. Speaker 100:00:00My name is Savannah, and I will be your conference operator for today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Amcor Third Quarter 2022 Results. Today's conference is being recorded. Thank you. And I would now like to turn the conference over to Tracy Whitehead, Global Head of Investor Relations. Speaker 100:00:30Please go ahead. Speaker 200:00:32Thank you, operator, and welcome, everyone, to our March quarter earnings call for fiscal 'twenty two. Joining today is Ron DeLeeuw, Chief Executive Officer and Michael Cascimento, Chief Financial Officer. Before I hand over to them, let me note a few items. On our website, amkor.com, under the Investors section, you'll find today's press release and presentation, which will be discussed on the call. Please be aware that we'll discuss non GAAP financial measures and related reconciliations can be found in the press release and the presentation. Speaker 200:01:03Remarks will also include forward looking statements that are based on management's current views and assumptions. The During the question and answer session, we request that participants ask their question and then rejoin the queue for any additional questions. With that, I'll hand over to Ron. Speaker 300:01:35Thanks, Tracy, and thanks, everyone, for joining Michael and myself today to discuss Amkor's financial performance at the end of the 3rd quarter. We'll begin with some prepared remarks before opening for Q and A. And since safety is our first and most important value, we'll I'll start on Slide 3 with safety as we do in every meeting at Amkor. And we believe our ultimate goal of 0 injuries is absolutely possible, and we continue to make good progress. So far in fiscal 'twenty two, we've reduced the number of injuries across the company by 5% compared to the prior year, and more than half of our Sites have been injury free for at least 12 months. Speaker 300:02:11Now of course, this quarter, our attention has turned to the tragic and devastating war in the Ukraine. We moved quickly to close our Ukraine site in Kharkiv before the start of the invasion to protect our local team, and we continue to support those coworkers and their families in any way we can, including through direct financial support and by assisting those who've been displaced. All up, we've contributed more than $1,000,000 to vital humanitarian relief efforts. We also announced our decision to scale down our operations in our 3 Russian sites and to explore all strategic options for those plants. As always, our path forward will continue to be guided by our values and by our responsibilities to all of our stakeholders. Speaker 300:02:52I'd like to publicly thank all of my Amkor colleagues who are contributing from near and far to this challenging and upsetting situation. Your commitment, Caring and generosity has been an inspiration. Turning to our key messages for the quarter on Slide 4. First, the business delivered another strong result with the March quarter representing our strongest period of sales and earnings growth for the fiscal year so far. 2nd, our teams have continued to demonstrate an exceptional ability to remain focused on managing sales mix and inflation while delivering for our customers. Speaker 300:03:283rd, given the strong execution and consistently strong earnings growth through the year, we've raised our guidance for fiscal 2022 EPS growth. And finally, Amkor has established a strong foundation for growth and value creation over the last several years, and we're increasing capital investments in priority segments and geographies as well as in our innovation capabilities. Turning to the financial highlights on Slide 5. March quarter performance was strong across the board, and I'll start with a few highlights. Net sales grew 16% in the 3rd quarter, including more than $450,000,000 of incremental price increases related to the pass through of higher raw material costs. Speaker 300:04:09Excluding this pass through, organic sales growth was 5% in both the Flexibles and Rigid Packaging segments. Consistent with the first half, we continue to benefit from favorable mix as well as actions to anticipate and recover higher levels of inflation than we've seen for many years. This top line growth converted into adjusted EBIT growth of 9% in the quarter. The Flexibles segment delivered EBIT growth of 10% And in line with our expectations, Rigid Packaging returned to earnings growth after experiencing a unique set of supply chain challenges in the first half. As you see on the bottom of the slide, this strong March quarter builds on a solid first half so that on a year to date basis, net sales have increased 13%, Adjusted EBIT has increased 6% and adjusted EPS is up 11%. Speaker 300:04:59And our financial profile remains strong and we We expect to repurchase $600,000,000 of shares this year, which when combined with our annual dividend, means we anticipate returning around $1,300,000,000 of cash to shareholders in fiscal 'twenty 2. Before I hand over to Michael, I want to come back to a slide we presented last quarter, which touches on our priority segments. Amkor has a leading position in each of these categories, which collectively generate over $4,000,000,000 in annual sales and share a few common features, including large adjustable markets, higher than average growth rates and significant room for Amkor to grow and differentiate. By making deliberate choices to focus on these high value, higher growth categories, over time they'll represent a higher proportion of our sales mix, Contribute to consistent margin expansion and become an increasingly relevant driver of earnings growth for Amkor. And we've seen this trend so far this year in both Flexibles and Rigid Packaging, including in the March quarter, and we expect this will continue as we allocate more capital and resources to these segments. Speaker 300:06:08You'll hear more about these mix benefits from Michael as he provides some more detail on our financial performance. Speaker 400:06:16Thanks, Ron. So I'll begin with the Flexible segment on Slide 7. The businesses continue to perform very well through the year, executing to recover higher raw material costs, Manage general inflation, improve cost performance and deliver increasing mix benefits. Reported year to date sales grew 11% and 14% in the March quarter. This includes significant recoveries of higher raw material costs, which increased to $330,000,000 in the March quarter, representing 13% of growth and $1,300,000,000 on an annualized basis. Speaker 400:06:49The overall price cost impact has remained a manageable Headwind through this inflationary cycle, given the diversity of materials we buy, the multiple regions in which we consume those materials and the implementation of a range of pricing actions across the business. Excluding this raw material impact, sales grew 3% year to date and 5% in the March quarter. And as Ron mentioned, this performance reflects our continued focus on managing mix to drive growth, particularly in priority segments like healthcare, Pet Food and Premium Coffee, where we have seen mid single digit growth year to date. Supply chain disruptions have had a dampening effect on our volumes in certain high value categories through the year and in parts of the business we have taken action to direct constrained materials to their highest value use, which further enhances mix. As a result, year to date and March quarter volumes across the Flexibles business were in line with last year. Speaker 400:07:44In terms of earnings, adjusted EBIT growth of 8% on a year to date basis and 10% for the March quarter reflects strong price mix benefits and favorable cost performance. Margins also remained strong at 13.1% despite an adverse impact of 140 basis points from the mathematical impact of pass through pricing for higher raw material costs. Turning to Rigid Packaging on Slide 8. The key messages today are that underlying demand remains elevated and the business returned to earnings growth in the March quarter, in line with our expectations. Year to date sales grew by 19%, which includes favorable pricing to recover higher raw material costs of 14% And organic sales growth reflects 3% higher volumes and price mix benefits of 2%. Speaker 400:08:33In North America, year to date beverage volumes were up 2%. Hot fill container volumes increased 6% in the March quarter and 2% on a year to date basis, which reflects continued growth in key categories like isotonics and juice. Hot Fill Containers is a high value priority segment for Amcor, where we see significant opportunities to differentiate. And over a multiyear period, our ability to leverage technology, design and PCR handling capabilities has enabled us to deliver compound volume growth of 4 And consistently improved mix. Specialty container volumes improved sequentially in the quarter, but remained below last year on a year to date basis with the prior year benefiting from a strong first half in the Home and Personal Care category. Speaker 400:09:17And in Latin America, The business delivered strong double digit volume growth on a year to date basis, reflecting strength in Argentina, Mexico, Colombia and Peru. In terms of earnings, the North America business was adversely impacted in the first half by inefficiencies and higher costs, resulting from industry wide supply chain complexity and disruptions as well as capacity constraints. However, operating conditions and financial performance improved in the March quarter, where the Rigid Packaging business delivered adjusted EBIT growth of 4%. We expect this improved performance to continue through the balance of fiscal year 'twenty two. Moving to cash and the balance sheet on Slide 9. Speaker 400:10:01Free cash flow in the March quarter was $75,000,000 higher than last year, was a pleasing outcome in the context of continued raw material inflation. On a year to date basis, cash flow of 263,000,000 It's below last year, primarily due to unfavorable working capital outflows relating to higher raw material costs, as well as some planned inventory increases across the business. We continue to maintain a strong focus on working capital performance, which is even more critical in an inflationary environment, And our rolling working capital to sales ratio remains below 8% and in line with last year. Notwithstanding current high working capital requirements, We have ample capacity to increase capital investment in strategic growth initiatives. Ron will provide some more color on this shortly, but for fiscal 'twenty two, We expect capital expenditure will be approximately 15% higher than the prior year and year to date we are tracking in line with that expectation. Speaker 400:10:56Our financial profile remains strong with leverage at 3 times on a trailing 12 month EBITDA basis, which is where we'd expect to be at this time of the year given the seasonality of cash flows. And we continue to increase our cash returns to shareholders. So far this year, we've repurchased 423,000,000 dollars worth of shares and expect this will reach $600,000,000 by year end and our quarterly dividend per share of $0.12 is also higher than last year's dividend. Taking us to the outlook on Slide 10. Given our strong March quarter and year to date performance, we are raising our outlook for adjusted EPS growth to 9.5% to 11% on a comparable constant currency basis. Speaker 400:11:37This represents an EPS guidance range of approximately 0.795 $0.81 to $0.81 per share on a reported basis, assuming current exchange rates prevailed for the balance of the year. We expect significant free cash flow for the year of approximately $1,100,000,000 which includes the adverse impact of higher raw material cost on working capital. It is also important to note our fiscal 'twenty two guidance assumes no further earnings from the business in Ukraine in the final quarter and takes into account a range of possible outcomes in Russia. As a reminder, the 4 sites in Ukraine and Russia combined represent approximately 2% to 3% of Amkor's annual sales, approximately 4% to 5% of annual EBIT and approximately $200,000,000 to $300,000,000 on the balance sheet. So in summary for me today, the business has delivered another strong result as we remain focused on driving value by delivering for our customers, managing mix and recovering general inflation and higher raw material costs. Speaker 400:12:37And this strong execution gives us the confidence to raise our guidance for the 2022 fiscal year. So with that, Speaker 300:12:43I'll hand back to Ron. Thanks, Michael. Before turning over to Q and A, I'd like to spend a few minutes on the longer term, starting with our investment case On Slide 11, we've maintained a consistent strategy that's guided how we've evolved our portfolio over the years so that we're the clear global leader in most of our chosen segments within the primary packaging space for fast moving consumer goods and healthcare products. We have absolute and relative scale advantages And a strong track record of earnings growth, margin expansion, significant and growing free cash flow of over $1,000,000,000 each year and maintaining a strong investment grade balance sheet. And that cash flow and balance sheet strength enable us to step up investments for growth to drive increased momentum in the business. Speaker 300:13:26At the same time, we have the capacity to return a significant amount of cash to shareholders in the form of regular share repurchases And a growing dividend, which currently yields around 4% or double the average of the S and P 500. We continue to see no shortage of high quality organic growth opportunities across the three areas that we've highlighted in previous quarters and which are shown on Slide 12. I already mentioned priority segments and Michael's comments highlighted the mix benefits that are important are an important driver of earnings growth. We also have a leading and well diversified emerging markets portfolio, which we expect will grow at mid single digit rates over the long term. And innovation is increasingly a clear differentiator and growth driver for Amkor, particularly as it relates to the development of more sustainable packaging, such as the groundbreaking global product platforms shown on this slide, including Amlite, AmSky and AmFiber. Speaker 300:14:22And Slide 13 is a double click on Amprima, another example of a global product platform that sets us up as the partner Choice for customers as we work together to meet our mutual sustainability goals. AmPrima is a family of packaging solutions that are designed to be recycled and deliver significant sustainability benefits without compromising critical performance features, including heat resistance, Hi, barrier, transparency and run speed. Over time, we've introduced 2nd and third generations of Amfrima, Expanding the number of end market applications and adding recycled content options for certain products and the material structure is now prequalified by the How to Recycle program in the United States. Volume growth is now increasing rapidly as some of the most recognizable global brands begin to move from qualification and trial into commercialization. And Amprem is also a great example of a revenue synergy unlocked by the Bemis acquisition. Speaker 300:15:20Capacity was first implemented in Oshkosh, Wisconsin with some capacity allocated to other regions to see demand. And as volume commitments have grown, we've scaled up, Adding capacity in Europe and soon in Latin America as well. Moving to Slide 14 and to dimension The increasing investment we've referred to a few times and to bring it to life with some more examples, we've been stepping up CapEx by around 15% per year, including in the current 2022 fiscal year, as Michael mentioned, and we expect this will take our CapEx to sales ratio from the 3% to 4% range historically to 4% to 5% on an ongoing basis. We have a number of projects already underway or nearing completion, which will generate attractive returns and drive organic growth going forward. And this slide showcases a few examples. Speaker 300:16:07In Brazil and in the United Kingdom, we're adding multilayer film capacity to serve Growth in the Priority Healthcare and Meat segments. In Ireland, we're adding new state of the art thermoforming capabilities to strengthen our leadership position in medical packaging. And in Italy, we're adding production capacity for 1 of our global product platforms, Amlite HeatFlex. And since launching this recycle ready pouch reportable applications. We've seen significant interest from a long list of customers and the majority of this new capacity is already sold out. Speaker 300:16:39Just a few words on our broader sustainability agenda on Slide 15. Better package design like Amlite and Prima, which takes into account the full product lifecycle is a critical element of responsible packaging, but achieving the type of lasting large scale impact we envision requires broad cooperation with expert partners from across the value chain. One way we've been most impactful is by bringing our capabilities to the table as Standards are developed to make circularity the norm. Through the Consumer Goods Forum, Amcor recently contributed to the development of principles for advanced recycling technologies, which can play a critical role in reducing the environmental impact of hard to recycle plastic waste. We're also actively contributing to the changes needed in waste management recycling infrastructure by creating demand. Speaker 300:17:28In April, we announced a partnership with ExxonMobil, providing us access to their advanced recycled materials, which can be used in healthcare and food packaging applications. We have similar agreements in place with multiple suppliers. And as we increase our use of recycled materials, the carbon footprint of our products is also reduced. And that reduction, Combined with ongoing efforts to make our own operations less energy intensive sets us up to achieve our net zero ambitions, which we announced earlier this year. To summarize on Slide 16, Amkor delivered another strong result with the March quarter representing the strongest period of sales and earnings growth for the year. Speaker 300:18:08We continue to manage well through inflation and improvements in our sales mix while delivering for our customers. With strong year to date performance and good momentum, we've raised our guidance for fiscal 2022 EPS Growth. And looking over the longer term, we've built a strong foundation for value creation and we're stepping up our investments to drive growth, margin expansion and long term value for shareholders. That concludes our opening remarks. Operator, we'll now open the line for questions. Speaker 100:18:45And we will pause for a moment to compile the Q and A roster. And our first question will come from Anthony Pettinari with Citi. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:18:57Hi. This is actually Brian Bergmeier sitting in for Anthony. So you raised the EPS guidance, But free cash flow guidance moves towards the lower end of your range. Is that delta driven by working capital impacts from resin costs? And is there anything else that we should be mindful of in regards to your updated free cash flow guidance such as CapEx or payables or receivables? Speaker 400:19:23Yes, I'll take that one. It's Michael here. Look, the bottom line is it's all working capital related. And the impact the reason we're at the lower end of the range there Still holding to the range, is really around the continued escalation in raw materials that we didn't At the beginning of the year. And so through the year, we've seen that continue. Speaker 400:19:44We're holding our working capital to ratio. So that's been really pleasing through the year as we're managing working capital in a great way, sub 8%. But just from a pure sales revenue increase And on an annualized basis, it's going to be like in that $1,500,000,000 range. That just means you've got $120,000,000 impact on working capital out From that raw material increase. Other than that, nothing else of note, everything else is in line as we expected. Speaker 100:20:18And our next question will come from Keith Cha with MSP. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:20:25Hi, Ron and Michael. Just a question with respect to guidance on the Russia Ukraine issue. Ron, you mentioned the range of outcomes For what could happen in Russia. Can you give us a bit more detail in that respect? And also if you could address some of your peers or at least customers are saying that they would forego profitability in the region given what's happened. Speaker 600:20:52Is that part of the range of outcomes that you're exploring at the moment for Russia? Thank you. Speaker 300:20:57Yes. Just to dimension the Ukrainian position in Russian business, as Michael alluded to, we've got 4 sites in that region, 1 in the Ukraine and 3 in Russia. We've got about 1,000 people working in those four sites. The Russian and Ukrainian businesses combined generate about 2% to 3% of sales, 4% to 5% of EBIT, and as Michael pointed out, dollars 200,000,000 to $300,000,000 of balance sheet. The Ukrainian site has been closed. Speaker 300:21:25Obviously, our first priority has been keeping our people safe as it always would be, you'd expect. And so we closed the site in the Ukraine just before the invasion started and we're able to get our people safely out of that area. The Russian plants are continuing to operate. We're well aware there's a number of public announcements that customers have made. And I would remind you that our business in Russia is focused exclusively on a very small number of multinational customers, all of whom despite whatever the public announcements have been continue to operate there. Speaker 300:21:59And so we continue to support them while we explore our own options. And Look, our options range from continuing to run the business to every other possible extreme that you can imagine. Our tendency in our history has never been to be overly prescriptive about strategic moves like that. So I think We'd ask you to wait and see and view our actions more so than anything that we might say in advance. And as far as the guidance impact, clearly, the Ukrainian site is not running. Speaker 300:22:30The Russian plants are running at different Degrees of utilization and that's all factored into the EPS range that Michael outlined. Speaker 100:22:42Our next question will come from George Tsakos with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:22:49Thanks very much. Hi, everyone. Good day. Thanks for the details and congratulations on the quarter. Speaker 800:22:55Ron, I was hoping you Speaker 700:22:56could talk a little bit about the Flexibles business and go through a bit more of the drivers in the quarter. Overall, I think you said Volumes were relatively flat even though it looks like European flexibles accelerated in the quarter, while North America stayed in a low single digit range. If I'm correct, what drove the European acceleration? And it looks like Asia decelerated to maybe a flatter down and LATAM remained down even though the mix was good. Can you say whether that was in fact the case and talk about the drivers into the end markets in those regions and countries as well? Speaker 700:23:32Thanks very much. Speaker 300:23:34Yes. Look, I think the business is performing really well. So we had 5% organic growth, sales growth across the business On relatively flat volumes and then converted that to 10% EBIT growth across the segment. So we're really pleased with the profit conversion. North American business continues to grow. Speaker 300:23:52The organic sales growth is mid single digits with some volume growth in the low single digit range. The European business in the quarter had a slightly higher organic sales number, still in the mid single digits though on volumes that were modestly down, which I'll come back to. And then the organic sales growth in the 2 emerging markets businesses was up. Now with regard to North America and Europe, we're particularly pleased with the performance of both of those businesses, the 2 larger businesses in the quarter. And in particular because of their management of mix. Speaker 300:24:26Mix, as you know, from a long period of time And Amkor has been a key driver of profit expansion over many, many years. And it's a function of orienting our portfolio more and more towards higher value segments and higher value products. And that's exactly what we've seen in the quarter. So in Europe, we saw a trade out of lower margin products that are more intermediate in nature into other converters, and we used constrained raw materials to support some of our higher margin Segments in Pharmaceuticals, Medical Device Packaging, Pet Food, Coffee and some of the segments that have been focal points for us for many years. That's really the story of the quarter, which is really very much about mix. Speaker 100:25:21And our next question will come from Jon Fertel with Macquarie. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:25:35Good day, Ron and Michael. How are you? Speaker 300:25:38Hi, John. Hi, John. Speaker 800:25:41Just in terms of Raw materials and any impacts on demand, we continue to do a good job of recovering high Raw material costs, and I think that's true of the sector as well. A lot of this has been passed on to the customer. And now we've got another up leg in commodities. So I'd just be interested And any demand destruction that you're seeing in end markets? And are you concerned about that type of event? Speaker 300:26:08Well, listen, John, we're concerned about inflation generally like everyone else. In our space, given that we're exposed to consumer staples and Healthcare Products. Historically, we've not seen a high degree of demand elasticity. And I think So far, if you take the comments from other public companies through this quarter, there hasn't been very much Demand impact from the prices that have been taken across the segments we're exposed to. I think most customers that have reported and have commented on the topic have said that they've seen less Demand elasticity than they expected and also less than they've seen historically. Speaker 300:26:45And so, so far, we've not seen a demand impact. Speaker 100:26:53And our next question will come from Adam Samuelson with Goldman Sachs. Speaker 900:26:58Yes, thank you. Good evening, everyone. Speaker 300:27:03I'm maybe hoping to take a bit more on the mix Benefits in Speaker 900:27:07the period. And Ron, you talked just kind of alluded to prioritizing certain customers in the healthcare segment in particular. And Just how do you think about the durability of those benefits and if raw material availability improves over the next years, do you think there's still Net margin benefits from the volume you'd be recapturing or how do we think about the margin tailwinds or headwinds that might present into fiscal 'twenty three because you Seemingly had a pretty notable shift in your product mix in the period. Speaker 300:27:41Yes. Look, Adam, it's a good question. If you go back and look over a long period of time at Amkor, the margin expansion Period on period has been very consistent. And this could I'm talking about a 5 or 10 year view. You'd see consistent margin expansion regardless of the raw material cycle, Anywhere from 10 to 30 basis points in a given period when we're in more steady state environment absent any major M and A. Speaker 300:28:06And a big part of that margin expansion story has been this strategy we've had in place for a long time to constantly optimize the mix, Both the product mix, the segment mix and the customer mix, that's been the focal point for our commercial teams for a long period of time, and that's going to continue going forward. As far as where to from here, we don't expect that mix improvement impact to slow. What we do hope is that raw materials become more plentiful and more available And we can satisfy all of the demand that we have. I mean, we're still in an environment where certain materials are constrained, and We still have probably foregone in the low single digits of volume growth for lack of raw materials. So If we look forward, we would hope that that normalizes and the mix improvements will continue as they have for a number of years now. Speaker 100:28:56And our next question will come from Larry Gammler with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:29:02Hi, thanks guys. My question is on the CapEx guidance, Ron. I think you said 3% to 4% for the Was it 4% to 5% for the foreseeable future? And I can understand at the current point, you're building quite a few factories there that 4 to 5 now. But I'm just wondering, are you thinking that philosophically, the business needs to invest more organically? Speaker 800:29:29And maybe you can rope into that perhaps the acquisition pipeline for quite some time might be something you're thinking won't be too active. Speaker 300:29:41Yes. Look, Larry, yes, just to be clear, we've pointed to the historical range of 3% to 4% of sales. And what we've said is That will be more in the 4% to 5% of sales range going forward. And it's a function of a couple of things. Firstly, the opportunity set is rich. Speaker 300:29:56As the portfolio has evolved and a lot of it is through what we picked up in the Bemis acquisition in flexibles and as the Rigids portfolio has evolved into the more specialty space. We just have more organic opportunities than we've probably ever had. So that's the starting point. And when I say good organic opportunities, I mean those where we could deploy capital and generate an attractive return for shareholders. So that's the starting point. Speaker 300:30:22Secondly, the business is generating more and more cash flow. It's increasing its cash generation capacity, especially as we come through the integration era, if you will. And as we look at alternative Uses to that capital, we have, we believe, an ability to balance funding the organic growth that we see, Continuing to pursue acquisitions, buying back shares in the absence of acquisitions and then obviously maintaining a pretty The attractive dividend. So we just feel like the cash generation is sufficient now to support all of those Potential drivers of shareholder returns and the organic growth opportunity set has just never been more robust. Speaker 100:31:11And our next question will come from Mike Rocklin with Truth Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:31:17Thanks very much. Hi, Ron, Mike, Tracy, congrats on the quarter. Just one quick question regarding volume growth. Given the materials constraints, which obviously negatively impacted volume, can you comment on any potential reengineering or reformulation of your products to get The necessary finished products or revised finished products qualified into customers. Anything that you pursue to reformulated during the quarter Or have been doing through year to date to adjust for or to account for this material constraint? Speaker 300:31:49Yes. It's a great question, a great observation. I mean, you can rest assured we are doing everything we can to find viable alternatives when materials are just I think that we have an advantage in that we're a large scale buyer and we're buying materials in multiple regions. So The first thing we do when we run into any kind of a constraint is we look to source the material from another region. And so we've been able to Tap into our global network and our global footprint to, I think, navigate the situation quite well. Speaker 300:32:21But there are times when there's just no material available globally. And that's why in parallel, we're looking at reformulations wherever possible. Those typically do not happen quickly. And I think there's nothing I could point to in the quarter that's material enough, but There is plenty of activity in terms of qualifying alternative materials and looking to reformulate away from materials that have been more prone to outages. Speaker 100:32:53And our next question will come from Nathan Riney with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:32:59Yes. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 800:33:01I'm just interested, Ron, how much headroom have you got in terms of your plant The utilization at the moment, obviously appreciate you being somewhat volume constrained as well recently. But I'm also just curious to understand what type of volume uplift you'd be expecting Can you see from the increased investment in CapEx that you're flagging going forward? Speaker 300:33:23Look, Nathan, it's a broad network And the capacity utilization will vary across the business quite dramatically. So in the extreme, you have our rigid packaging business in the beverage space, which has been sold out for a long period of time now for several quarters, and we're adding capacity there, which is Just to satisfy the continued elevated demand we see in PET and in beverages. In the Flexibles segment, we see very high utilization for the assets that are directed to the more sustainable products that we make, some of the global product platforms that I alluded to and the prepared remarks. But we will be adding capacity and that capacity will help support the volume growth expectations that we have going forward, which have traditionally been in the low single digit range. Speaker 100:34:19And our next question will come from Ghansham Panjabi with Baird. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:34:25Thank you. Speaker 1100:34:25Good day, everybody. Just as a follow-up to some of the early questions, maybe you can give us a sense as to which specific Raw materials you're still short on and how do you see that sort of evolving over the next couple of quarters? And then just bigger picture, I mean, the current environment is obviously extraordinary for the entire Supply Chain and no one really knows how the consumer is ultimately going to react to all these inflationary inputs and so on. Just curious, Ron, terms of how you service your customers and how you go to market, is there anything that you noticed that's different in terms of what your customers are Sort of tasking you with now versus in years past, just given the nature of the current environment. Thanks. Speaker 300:35:06Yes. Look, on the materials that are short, I mean, it's been a bit of a whack a mole game, to be honest with you, in terms of where we're short, which material in which region, In which month or which week, I guess you could say. And more often than not, it's been some of the specialty Materials in Flexibles and Rigids, which are additives to the primary materials. So it's not been To a large extent, for quite some time now, it's not been the base polymers that we buy, the big commodities like polyethylene Or polypropylene. We did have some shortages in PET for a while, but those have abated. Speaker 300:35:43It's been more the specialty materials that are added to provide barrier or some other property that's required to deliver the full functionality of the package, which have really been Highly volatile. Aluminum to some extent, I guess, would be the other main commodity, which at times has been In short supply. Look, I think this too shall pass. I mean, there's no reason why we should expect indefinite Outages, but at the moment, it's just been continued volatility. Speaker 100:36:21And our next question will come from Richard Johnson with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:36:27Thanks very much. Thank you very much. Ron, my question is on rigid plastics. 1 of your major in fact, your major competitor in the U. S. Speaker 1200:36:35Talks But resin being something over 40% of the cost of sales, is that the same for you? And probably more pertinent, can you talk please about the 60% of non raw material costs and give and provide whatever detail you can on the inflationary pressures in that part of your cost basket, please. Speaker 300:36:55Yes. I'll talk about the COGS in rigid packaging and maybe Michael can talk about the inflation we've seen generally because we've talked a lot about raw materials, But inflation more generally is obviously front and center. Look, the rigid packaging business, I'm not sure who the competitor is, but The resin component of COGS is actually higher in rigid than it is in flexibles. And I would have said it's probably in the 60% to 70% range. And that's, as you know, a straight pass through that's linked to the commodity index, either PET or one of the olefins. Speaker 300:37:28But as far as general inflation goes, Mike, why don't you comment on what we're seeing? Speaker 400:37:31Yes. Look, I think general inflation across the globe, I mean, where we're seeing increases is predominantly in Energy and Freight. And it varies by region, but in we're seeing inflation there in They're in the range of kind of 15% to 20%. But the point to remember is that those elements of our COGS are quite small, low single digits. So we're out in front of that. Speaker 400:37:55Some of that we can pass through to customers. Other parts of that, we've got to take price, and we're out in front across the globe working our way through that To recover those increases that we're seeing in general inflation on those two items. In terms of labor, it's been more Supply then, I guess, labor wage rates for us. So we've had disruption in labor, particularly in North America and Europe around COVID and the like, which we've had to deal with. And we've seen some Elevated over time and other labor costs associated with that. Speaker 400:38:30But it's again been manageable and We haven't seen the rate increases, although we are expecting some of those to start to come through. Speaker 100:38:44And our next question will come from Kyle White with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Speaker 1300:38:52Hey, thanks for taking the question. I know your exposure to China is relatively limited, but just curious what impact you've seen from the lockdown situation there on your production And demand in that region and what did you assume in your outlook going forward from that situation? Speaker 300:39:08Yes. Look, China is a big important business for 5% of sales, it's a business, it's our largest emerging markets business. We operate the flexible packaging segment there. So there's not Rigid Packaging doesn't participate in China. And it's a business that's been growing at a pretty healthy rate for the last several years. Speaker 300:39:28First As well, we had kind of mid single digit top and bottom line growth. It's also a very profitable business. We have a national footprint there with 10 or 11 factories across the country. But importantly, it's essentially a China for China business. We do very little importing or exporting in and out of China. Speaker 300:39:48The Q3 was a little bit slower, I think primarily because We're cycling an incredibly strong Q3 last year, which probably had to do with the timing of Chinese New Year as much as anything else. But our business was Flat to modestly down in the Q3. April definitely slowed. And April, I would say, is where we started to see some impacts of the lockdowns And not so much on our operations, but in some of our customers' plants where they weren't able to operate for periods of time. We definitely saw a slowdown in April. Speaker 300:40:23And honestly, it's very difficult to tell what March or June So our guidance range from an EPS perspective includes a range of outcomes on China, Although we're bear in mind we're down to 2 months and we know the outcome for April. So I think we feel pretty comfortable with the range and The consideration we've given to the dynamics in China. Speaker 100:40:54Our next question will come from James Wilson with Jarden Australia. Please go ahead. Operator00:41:02Hi guys. Thanks for taking my question. It's James Wilson standing in for Jake DeCarnes from Chatham. If we back out the $120,000,000 of raw material impacts from your $100,000,000 working capital build over the quarter. Beyond seasonality, what's giving you confidence that this will unwind in the 4th quarter, Especially given that your guidance remains unchanged. Operator00:41:20And also just on that, are you able to tell us that this inventory spill up is declaring more enriched or inflexible? Speaker 400:41:28Yes. Hi, James. Thanks for the question. I'll take that one. Yes, look, what we've seen actually year to date in working capital is about a $200,000,000 outflow versus prior year and about half of that is price, the other half is building raw material and finished goods. Speaker 400:41:47This year, particularly, we've been able to build some inventory in the rigid packaging space, which we weren't able to do last year, and that's ahead The heavy season in Q4, which is typically what we would normally see. We would normally see inventories build, leading into Q4. So that's part of it. In addition to that, in the flexible space and across the board, we've also conservatively increased some inventory, particularly in some of the products we've had shortage of supply on. So we'd expect that, that is going to unwind. Speaker 400:42:18That component of The inventory increase is going to unwind in Q4 as we cycle through our busiest quarter of the year. So that's how we factored that into the full year guidance. Speaker 100:42:35And next, we have a follow-up from George Staphos with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:42:41Hi, guys. Thanks for thank you very much. Thanks for taking the follow on, guys. You had talked about Increasing your growth investments and you cited regionally where you're putting various projects. Ron, given some of that, Michael, some of the volatility that we've seen over the last couple of years, would that perhaps change where you'll put the next Growth investments and high value investments are really it doesn't really affect where you might put either a coffee line or a high barrier line or personal And are you at all raising the required rates of return given the volatility that we've seen in some of these markets, again, either for geopolitical or for macro reasons? Speaker 700:43:20Guys, and good luck in the quarter. Speaker 300:43:23Yes. Thanks, George. It's a really good question. I mean, you throw in intellectual property protection into the mix, And we've always had different criteria or differentiated criteria, I should say, for where we put capital and differentiated return expectations for any capital project. The good thing about our business is that the incremental capacity It's small as a percentage of the total capital that we'll deploy in a given year. Speaker 300:43:49So if you can imagine that our capital spend will be 500 something like that. A new even a new plant To produce one of the platforms that I've talked about might be in the $20,000,000 $30,000,000 range. So none of the Projects that I was alluding to earlier, with the exception of the new plant we built in China, which is a little bit more, none of them are a really substantial portion of our overall capital spend in any one year. And so what that does is creates a portfolio effect across the different investments that we make, which in and of itself is a risk Mitigation methodology, if you could think about it that way. Speaker 100:44:36And our next question will come from Larry Gammler with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:44:42Hi, Ron. Thanks, guys. I'll ask my obligatory ESG question. But Ron, the European Union is, I think reviewing the waste and packaging directive, looking to table a new bill into the European Parliament, And I think it's going to involve end producer or end user recycling schemes like container deposit, Yes, similar to that, but for flexibles. I'm just wondering if you guys are sort of reviewing that situation and what would those sort of Speaker 300:45:21Yes. There's a lot of legislation in play in Europe and in the United States and elsewhere in the world. We're across all of it, Larry, as you could expect. We provide comments. We're often consulted For perspectives which we provide both directly and through the various associations and affiliations that we have, Generally speaking, we see these regulations as innovation opportunities and ways to further differentiate and Adding great value to our customers. Speaker 300:45:53In many cases where there is an extended producer responsibility regime or plastics tax or something of that Nature, there's an ecomodulation component, which means the fee that the brand owner, ultimately the consumer will pay, can be reduced if the package or the product overall has a lower environmental footprint. So that creates an opportunity for us to add more value to our customers as they deal with these regulations. And generally speaking, if it's a well constructed EPR where the industry Has some control over the framework and where the funding goes back to the waste management infrastructure, we're supportive. We're certainly not supportive of general revenue raising taxes and things like that, but we're well structured. Frameworks are in place. Speaker 300:46:48We're certainly supportive. Speaker 100:46:53And our next Question will come from Andrew Scott with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 1400:46:59Thank you. Hi, Ron. Just a question with the flexibles business. You Talking about targeting or focusing your capacity towards your higher value customers, which obviously makes perfect sense. Just interested as we go forward and Do you see all of those customers coming back into the mix? Speaker 1400:47:18Or do you, for want of a better word, see yourselves doing some bottom slicing, which something you've done historically very Speaker 300:47:26well. Yes. Look, I think to the extent that we'll have better differentiated products, Then we'll be able to capture any portion of the market that we've not been able to satisfy more recently. There is an element of bottom slicing in the mix outcomes that you've seen even in the most recent result, albeit out of necessity for lack of raw materials. But look, I think we're in the business to sell and sell more units than rather than less. Speaker 300:47:55And at the moment, the limiting factor has been raw materials that will ease over time. Speaker 100:48:04And that will conclude today's question and answer session. And I would now like to turn the call back over to Ron Delia for closing remarks. Speaker 300:48:13Okay. Thank you, operator. Thanks, everyone, for joining today and for your interest in Amkor. We've had a strong quarter. We've had a strong 1st 9 months of the fiscal year and have increased our expectations for the run home to the finish. Speaker 300:48:26And again, thanks for your interest, and we'll speak to you all next Speaker 100:48:32And this will conclude today's conference. Thank you for your participation and you may now disconnect.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAmcor Q3 202200:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Amcor Earnings HeadlinesAmcor: Dividend Aristocrat Executing A Major AcquisitionApril 8 at 5:36 PM | seekingalpha.comAmcor and Berry Global Join Forces to Enhance Packaging InnovationApril 7 at 9:13 PM | tipranks.comTrump’s betrayal exposed Fair warning: this will not make for easy viewing. Especially if you voted for Trump, put your faith in him, and have any exposure to stocks, real estate, or crypto. But do not ignore this, as there’s likely nothing more important to your financial security in 2025.April 8, 2025 | Porter & Company (Ad)Amcor Advances Integration Planning with Berry GlobalApril 2, 2025 | tipranks.comAmcor Extends DeadlineMarch 24, 2025 | baystreet.caAmcor Lift-Off initiative extends deadline for compostable or recyclable barrier coating solution challengeMarch 24, 2025 | prnewswire.comSee More Amcor Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Amcor? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Amcor and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About AmcorAmcor (NYSE:AMCR) develops, produces, and sells packaging products in Europe, North America, Latin America, Africa, and the Asia Pacific regions. The company operates through two segments, Flexibles and Rigid Packaging. The Flexibles segment provides flexible and film packaging products in the food and beverage, medical and pharmaceutical, fresh produce, snack food, personal care, and other industries. The Rigid Packaging segment offers rigid containers for various beverage and food products, including carbonated soft drinks, water, juices, sports drinks, milk-based beverages, spirits and beer, sauces, dressings, spreads, and personal care items; and plastic caps for various applications. The company sells its products through its direct sales force. 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There are 15 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day. Speaker 100:00:00My name is Savannah, and I will be your conference operator for today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Amcor Third Quarter 2022 Results. Today's conference is being recorded. Thank you. And I would now like to turn the conference over to Tracy Whitehead, Global Head of Investor Relations. Speaker 100:00:30Please go ahead. Speaker 200:00:32Thank you, operator, and welcome, everyone, to our March quarter earnings call for fiscal 'twenty two. Joining today is Ron DeLeeuw, Chief Executive Officer and Michael Cascimento, Chief Financial Officer. Before I hand over to them, let me note a few items. On our website, amkor.com, under the Investors section, you'll find today's press release and presentation, which will be discussed on the call. Please be aware that we'll discuss non GAAP financial measures and related reconciliations can be found in the press release and the presentation. Speaker 200:01:03Remarks will also include forward looking statements that are based on management's current views and assumptions. The During the question and answer session, we request that participants ask their question and then rejoin the queue for any additional questions. With that, I'll hand over to Ron. Speaker 300:01:35Thanks, Tracy, and thanks, everyone, for joining Michael and myself today to discuss Amkor's financial performance at the end of the 3rd quarter. We'll begin with some prepared remarks before opening for Q and A. And since safety is our first and most important value, we'll I'll start on Slide 3 with safety as we do in every meeting at Amkor. And we believe our ultimate goal of 0 injuries is absolutely possible, and we continue to make good progress. So far in fiscal 'twenty two, we've reduced the number of injuries across the company by 5% compared to the prior year, and more than half of our Sites have been injury free for at least 12 months. Speaker 300:02:11Now of course, this quarter, our attention has turned to the tragic and devastating war in the Ukraine. We moved quickly to close our Ukraine site in Kharkiv before the start of the invasion to protect our local team, and we continue to support those coworkers and their families in any way we can, including through direct financial support and by assisting those who've been displaced. All up, we've contributed more than $1,000,000 to vital humanitarian relief efforts. We also announced our decision to scale down our operations in our 3 Russian sites and to explore all strategic options for those plants. As always, our path forward will continue to be guided by our values and by our responsibilities to all of our stakeholders. Speaker 300:02:52I'd like to publicly thank all of my Amkor colleagues who are contributing from near and far to this challenging and upsetting situation. Your commitment, Caring and generosity has been an inspiration. Turning to our key messages for the quarter on Slide 4. First, the business delivered another strong result with the March quarter representing our strongest period of sales and earnings growth for the fiscal year so far. 2nd, our teams have continued to demonstrate an exceptional ability to remain focused on managing sales mix and inflation while delivering for our customers. Speaker 300:03:283rd, given the strong execution and consistently strong earnings growth through the year, we've raised our guidance for fiscal 2022 EPS growth. And finally, Amkor has established a strong foundation for growth and value creation over the last several years, and we're increasing capital investments in priority segments and geographies as well as in our innovation capabilities. Turning to the financial highlights on Slide 5. March quarter performance was strong across the board, and I'll start with a few highlights. Net sales grew 16% in the 3rd quarter, including more than $450,000,000 of incremental price increases related to the pass through of higher raw material costs. Speaker 300:04:09Excluding this pass through, organic sales growth was 5% in both the Flexibles and Rigid Packaging segments. Consistent with the first half, we continue to benefit from favorable mix as well as actions to anticipate and recover higher levels of inflation than we've seen for many years. This top line growth converted into adjusted EBIT growth of 9% in the quarter. The Flexibles segment delivered EBIT growth of 10% And in line with our expectations, Rigid Packaging returned to earnings growth after experiencing a unique set of supply chain challenges in the first half. As you see on the bottom of the slide, this strong March quarter builds on a solid first half so that on a year to date basis, net sales have increased 13%, Adjusted EBIT has increased 6% and adjusted EPS is up 11%. Speaker 300:04:59And our financial profile remains strong and we We expect to repurchase $600,000,000 of shares this year, which when combined with our annual dividend, means we anticipate returning around $1,300,000,000 of cash to shareholders in fiscal 'twenty 2. Before I hand over to Michael, I want to come back to a slide we presented last quarter, which touches on our priority segments. Amkor has a leading position in each of these categories, which collectively generate over $4,000,000,000 in annual sales and share a few common features, including large adjustable markets, higher than average growth rates and significant room for Amkor to grow and differentiate. By making deliberate choices to focus on these high value, higher growth categories, over time they'll represent a higher proportion of our sales mix, Contribute to consistent margin expansion and become an increasingly relevant driver of earnings growth for Amkor. And we've seen this trend so far this year in both Flexibles and Rigid Packaging, including in the March quarter, and we expect this will continue as we allocate more capital and resources to these segments. Speaker 300:06:08You'll hear more about these mix benefits from Michael as he provides some more detail on our financial performance. Speaker 400:06:16Thanks, Ron. So I'll begin with the Flexible segment on Slide 7. The businesses continue to perform very well through the year, executing to recover higher raw material costs, Manage general inflation, improve cost performance and deliver increasing mix benefits. Reported year to date sales grew 11% and 14% in the March quarter. This includes significant recoveries of higher raw material costs, which increased to $330,000,000 in the March quarter, representing 13% of growth and $1,300,000,000 on an annualized basis. Speaker 400:06:49The overall price cost impact has remained a manageable Headwind through this inflationary cycle, given the diversity of materials we buy, the multiple regions in which we consume those materials and the implementation of a range of pricing actions across the business. Excluding this raw material impact, sales grew 3% year to date and 5% in the March quarter. And as Ron mentioned, this performance reflects our continued focus on managing mix to drive growth, particularly in priority segments like healthcare, Pet Food and Premium Coffee, where we have seen mid single digit growth year to date. Supply chain disruptions have had a dampening effect on our volumes in certain high value categories through the year and in parts of the business we have taken action to direct constrained materials to their highest value use, which further enhances mix. As a result, year to date and March quarter volumes across the Flexibles business were in line with last year. Speaker 400:07:44In terms of earnings, adjusted EBIT growth of 8% on a year to date basis and 10% for the March quarter reflects strong price mix benefits and favorable cost performance. Margins also remained strong at 13.1% despite an adverse impact of 140 basis points from the mathematical impact of pass through pricing for higher raw material costs. Turning to Rigid Packaging on Slide 8. The key messages today are that underlying demand remains elevated and the business returned to earnings growth in the March quarter, in line with our expectations. Year to date sales grew by 19%, which includes favorable pricing to recover higher raw material costs of 14% And organic sales growth reflects 3% higher volumes and price mix benefits of 2%. Speaker 400:08:33In North America, year to date beverage volumes were up 2%. Hot fill container volumes increased 6% in the March quarter and 2% on a year to date basis, which reflects continued growth in key categories like isotonics and juice. Hot Fill Containers is a high value priority segment for Amcor, where we see significant opportunities to differentiate. And over a multiyear period, our ability to leverage technology, design and PCR handling capabilities has enabled us to deliver compound volume growth of 4 And consistently improved mix. Specialty container volumes improved sequentially in the quarter, but remained below last year on a year to date basis with the prior year benefiting from a strong first half in the Home and Personal Care category. Speaker 400:09:17And in Latin America, The business delivered strong double digit volume growth on a year to date basis, reflecting strength in Argentina, Mexico, Colombia and Peru. In terms of earnings, the North America business was adversely impacted in the first half by inefficiencies and higher costs, resulting from industry wide supply chain complexity and disruptions as well as capacity constraints. However, operating conditions and financial performance improved in the March quarter, where the Rigid Packaging business delivered adjusted EBIT growth of 4%. We expect this improved performance to continue through the balance of fiscal year 'twenty two. Moving to cash and the balance sheet on Slide 9. Speaker 400:10:01Free cash flow in the March quarter was $75,000,000 higher than last year, was a pleasing outcome in the context of continued raw material inflation. On a year to date basis, cash flow of 263,000,000 It's below last year, primarily due to unfavorable working capital outflows relating to higher raw material costs, as well as some planned inventory increases across the business. We continue to maintain a strong focus on working capital performance, which is even more critical in an inflationary environment, And our rolling working capital to sales ratio remains below 8% and in line with last year. Notwithstanding current high working capital requirements, We have ample capacity to increase capital investment in strategic growth initiatives. Ron will provide some more color on this shortly, but for fiscal 'twenty two, We expect capital expenditure will be approximately 15% higher than the prior year and year to date we are tracking in line with that expectation. Speaker 400:10:56Our financial profile remains strong with leverage at 3 times on a trailing 12 month EBITDA basis, which is where we'd expect to be at this time of the year given the seasonality of cash flows. And we continue to increase our cash returns to shareholders. So far this year, we've repurchased 423,000,000 dollars worth of shares and expect this will reach $600,000,000 by year end and our quarterly dividend per share of $0.12 is also higher than last year's dividend. Taking us to the outlook on Slide 10. Given our strong March quarter and year to date performance, we are raising our outlook for adjusted EPS growth to 9.5% to 11% on a comparable constant currency basis. Speaker 400:11:37This represents an EPS guidance range of approximately 0.795 $0.81 to $0.81 per share on a reported basis, assuming current exchange rates prevailed for the balance of the year. We expect significant free cash flow for the year of approximately $1,100,000,000 which includes the adverse impact of higher raw material cost on working capital. It is also important to note our fiscal 'twenty two guidance assumes no further earnings from the business in Ukraine in the final quarter and takes into account a range of possible outcomes in Russia. As a reminder, the 4 sites in Ukraine and Russia combined represent approximately 2% to 3% of Amkor's annual sales, approximately 4% to 5% of annual EBIT and approximately $200,000,000 to $300,000,000 on the balance sheet. So in summary for me today, the business has delivered another strong result as we remain focused on driving value by delivering for our customers, managing mix and recovering general inflation and higher raw material costs. Speaker 400:12:37And this strong execution gives us the confidence to raise our guidance for the 2022 fiscal year. So with that, Speaker 300:12:43I'll hand back to Ron. Thanks, Michael. Before turning over to Q and A, I'd like to spend a few minutes on the longer term, starting with our investment case On Slide 11, we've maintained a consistent strategy that's guided how we've evolved our portfolio over the years so that we're the clear global leader in most of our chosen segments within the primary packaging space for fast moving consumer goods and healthcare products. We have absolute and relative scale advantages And a strong track record of earnings growth, margin expansion, significant and growing free cash flow of over $1,000,000,000 each year and maintaining a strong investment grade balance sheet. And that cash flow and balance sheet strength enable us to step up investments for growth to drive increased momentum in the business. Speaker 300:13:26At the same time, we have the capacity to return a significant amount of cash to shareholders in the form of regular share repurchases And a growing dividend, which currently yields around 4% or double the average of the S and P 500. We continue to see no shortage of high quality organic growth opportunities across the three areas that we've highlighted in previous quarters and which are shown on Slide 12. I already mentioned priority segments and Michael's comments highlighted the mix benefits that are important are an important driver of earnings growth. We also have a leading and well diversified emerging markets portfolio, which we expect will grow at mid single digit rates over the long term. And innovation is increasingly a clear differentiator and growth driver for Amkor, particularly as it relates to the development of more sustainable packaging, such as the groundbreaking global product platforms shown on this slide, including Amlite, AmSky and AmFiber. Speaker 300:14:22And Slide 13 is a double click on Amprima, another example of a global product platform that sets us up as the partner Choice for customers as we work together to meet our mutual sustainability goals. AmPrima is a family of packaging solutions that are designed to be recycled and deliver significant sustainability benefits without compromising critical performance features, including heat resistance, Hi, barrier, transparency and run speed. Over time, we've introduced 2nd and third generations of Amfrima, Expanding the number of end market applications and adding recycled content options for certain products and the material structure is now prequalified by the How to Recycle program in the United States. Volume growth is now increasing rapidly as some of the most recognizable global brands begin to move from qualification and trial into commercialization. And Amprem is also a great example of a revenue synergy unlocked by the Bemis acquisition. Speaker 300:15:20Capacity was first implemented in Oshkosh, Wisconsin with some capacity allocated to other regions to see demand. And as volume commitments have grown, we've scaled up, Adding capacity in Europe and soon in Latin America as well. Moving to Slide 14 and to dimension The increasing investment we've referred to a few times and to bring it to life with some more examples, we've been stepping up CapEx by around 15% per year, including in the current 2022 fiscal year, as Michael mentioned, and we expect this will take our CapEx to sales ratio from the 3% to 4% range historically to 4% to 5% on an ongoing basis. We have a number of projects already underway or nearing completion, which will generate attractive returns and drive organic growth going forward. And this slide showcases a few examples. Speaker 300:16:07In Brazil and in the United Kingdom, we're adding multilayer film capacity to serve Growth in the Priority Healthcare and Meat segments. In Ireland, we're adding new state of the art thermoforming capabilities to strengthen our leadership position in medical packaging. And in Italy, we're adding production capacity for 1 of our global product platforms, Amlite HeatFlex. And since launching this recycle ready pouch reportable applications. We've seen significant interest from a long list of customers and the majority of this new capacity is already sold out. Speaker 300:16:39Just a few words on our broader sustainability agenda on Slide 15. Better package design like Amlite and Prima, which takes into account the full product lifecycle is a critical element of responsible packaging, but achieving the type of lasting large scale impact we envision requires broad cooperation with expert partners from across the value chain. One way we've been most impactful is by bringing our capabilities to the table as Standards are developed to make circularity the norm. Through the Consumer Goods Forum, Amcor recently contributed to the development of principles for advanced recycling technologies, which can play a critical role in reducing the environmental impact of hard to recycle plastic waste. We're also actively contributing to the changes needed in waste management recycling infrastructure by creating demand. Speaker 300:17:28In April, we announced a partnership with ExxonMobil, providing us access to their advanced recycled materials, which can be used in healthcare and food packaging applications. We have similar agreements in place with multiple suppliers. And as we increase our use of recycled materials, the carbon footprint of our products is also reduced. And that reduction, Combined with ongoing efforts to make our own operations less energy intensive sets us up to achieve our net zero ambitions, which we announced earlier this year. To summarize on Slide 16, Amkor delivered another strong result with the March quarter representing the strongest period of sales and earnings growth for the year. Speaker 300:18:08We continue to manage well through inflation and improvements in our sales mix while delivering for our customers. With strong year to date performance and good momentum, we've raised our guidance for fiscal 2022 EPS Growth. And looking over the longer term, we've built a strong foundation for value creation and we're stepping up our investments to drive growth, margin expansion and long term value for shareholders. That concludes our opening remarks. Operator, we'll now open the line for questions. Speaker 100:18:45And we will pause for a moment to compile the Q and A roster. And our first question will come from Anthony Pettinari with Citi. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:18:57Hi. This is actually Brian Bergmeier sitting in for Anthony. So you raised the EPS guidance, But free cash flow guidance moves towards the lower end of your range. Is that delta driven by working capital impacts from resin costs? And is there anything else that we should be mindful of in regards to your updated free cash flow guidance such as CapEx or payables or receivables? Speaker 400:19:23Yes, I'll take that one. It's Michael here. Look, the bottom line is it's all working capital related. And the impact the reason we're at the lower end of the range there Still holding to the range, is really around the continued escalation in raw materials that we didn't At the beginning of the year. And so through the year, we've seen that continue. Speaker 400:19:44We're holding our working capital to ratio. So that's been really pleasing through the year as we're managing working capital in a great way, sub 8%. But just from a pure sales revenue increase And on an annualized basis, it's going to be like in that $1,500,000,000 range. That just means you've got $120,000,000 impact on working capital out From that raw material increase. Other than that, nothing else of note, everything else is in line as we expected. Speaker 100:20:18And our next question will come from Keith Cha with MSP. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:20:25Hi, Ron and Michael. Just a question with respect to guidance on the Russia Ukraine issue. Ron, you mentioned the range of outcomes For what could happen in Russia. Can you give us a bit more detail in that respect? And also if you could address some of your peers or at least customers are saying that they would forego profitability in the region given what's happened. Speaker 600:20:52Is that part of the range of outcomes that you're exploring at the moment for Russia? Thank you. Speaker 300:20:57Yes. Just to dimension the Ukrainian position in Russian business, as Michael alluded to, we've got 4 sites in that region, 1 in the Ukraine and 3 in Russia. We've got about 1,000 people working in those four sites. The Russian and Ukrainian businesses combined generate about 2% to 3% of sales, 4% to 5% of EBIT, and as Michael pointed out, dollars 200,000,000 to $300,000,000 of balance sheet. The Ukrainian site has been closed. Speaker 300:21:25Obviously, our first priority has been keeping our people safe as it always would be, you'd expect. And so we closed the site in the Ukraine just before the invasion started and we're able to get our people safely out of that area. The Russian plants are continuing to operate. We're well aware there's a number of public announcements that customers have made. And I would remind you that our business in Russia is focused exclusively on a very small number of multinational customers, all of whom despite whatever the public announcements have been continue to operate there. Speaker 300:21:59And so we continue to support them while we explore our own options. And Look, our options range from continuing to run the business to every other possible extreme that you can imagine. Our tendency in our history has never been to be overly prescriptive about strategic moves like that. So I think We'd ask you to wait and see and view our actions more so than anything that we might say in advance. And as far as the guidance impact, clearly, the Ukrainian site is not running. Speaker 300:22:30The Russian plants are running at different Degrees of utilization and that's all factored into the EPS range that Michael outlined. Speaker 100:22:42Our next question will come from George Tsakos with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:22:49Thanks very much. Hi, everyone. Good day. Thanks for the details and congratulations on the quarter. Speaker 800:22:55Ron, I was hoping you Speaker 700:22:56could talk a little bit about the Flexibles business and go through a bit more of the drivers in the quarter. Overall, I think you said Volumes were relatively flat even though it looks like European flexibles accelerated in the quarter, while North America stayed in a low single digit range. If I'm correct, what drove the European acceleration? And it looks like Asia decelerated to maybe a flatter down and LATAM remained down even though the mix was good. Can you say whether that was in fact the case and talk about the drivers into the end markets in those regions and countries as well? Speaker 700:23:32Thanks very much. Speaker 300:23:34Yes. Look, I think the business is performing really well. So we had 5% organic growth, sales growth across the business On relatively flat volumes and then converted that to 10% EBIT growth across the segment. So we're really pleased with the profit conversion. North American business continues to grow. Speaker 300:23:52The organic sales growth is mid single digits with some volume growth in the low single digit range. The European business in the quarter had a slightly higher organic sales number, still in the mid single digits though on volumes that were modestly down, which I'll come back to. And then the organic sales growth in the 2 emerging markets businesses was up. Now with regard to North America and Europe, we're particularly pleased with the performance of both of those businesses, the 2 larger businesses in the quarter. And in particular because of their management of mix. Speaker 300:24:26Mix, as you know, from a long period of time And Amkor has been a key driver of profit expansion over many, many years. And it's a function of orienting our portfolio more and more towards higher value segments and higher value products. And that's exactly what we've seen in the quarter. So in Europe, we saw a trade out of lower margin products that are more intermediate in nature into other converters, and we used constrained raw materials to support some of our higher margin Segments in Pharmaceuticals, Medical Device Packaging, Pet Food, Coffee and some of the segments that have been focal points for us for many years. That's really the story of the quarter, which is really very much about mix. Speaker 100:25:21And our next question will come from Jon Fertel with Macquarie. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:25:35Good day, Ron and Michael. How are you? Speaker 300:25:38Hi, John. Hi, John. Speaker 800:25:41Just in terms of Raw materials and any impacts on demand, we continue to do a good job of recovering high Raw material costs, and I think that's true of the sector as well. A lot of this has been passed on to the customer. And now we've got another up leg in commodities. So I'd just be interested And any demand destruction that you're seeing in end markets? And are you concerned about that type of event? Speaker 300:26:08Well, listen, John, we're concerned about inflation generally like everyone else. In our space, given that we're exposed to consumer staples and Healthcare Products. Historically, we've not seen a high degree of demand elasticity. And I think So far, if you take the comments from other public companies through this quarter, there hasn't been very much Demand impact from the prices that have been taken across the segments we're exposed to. I think most customers that have reported and have commented on the topic have said that they've seen less Demand elasticity than they expected and also less than they've seen historically. Speaker 300:26:45And so, so far, we've not seen a demand impact. Speaker 100:26:53And our next question will come from Adam Samuelson with Goldman Sachs. Speaker 900:26:58Yes, thank you. Good evening, everyone. Speaker 300:27:03I'm maybe hoping to take a bit more on the mix Benefits in Speaker 900:27:07the period. And Ron, you talked just kind of alluded to prioritizing certain customers in the healthcare segment in particular. And Just how do you think about the durability of those benefits and if raw material availability improves over the next years, do you think there's still Net margin benefits from the volume you'd be recapturing or how do we think about the margin tailwinds or headwinds that might present into fiscal 'twenty three because you Seemingly had a pretty notable shift in your product mix in the period. Speaker 300:27:41Yes. Look, Adam, it's a good question. If you go back and look over a long period of time at Amkor, the margin expansion Period on period has been very consistent. And this could I'm talking about a 5 or 10 year view. You'd see consistent margin expansion regardless of the raw material cycle, Anywhere from 10 to 30 basis points in a given period when we're in more steady state environment absent any major M and A. Speaker 300:28:06And a big part of that margin expansion story has been this strategy we've had in place for a long time to constantly optimize the mix, Both the product mix, the segment mix and the customer mix, that's been the focal point for our commercial teams for a long period of time, and that's going to continue going forward. As far as where to from here, we don't expect that mix improvement impact to slow. What we do hope is that raw materials become more plentiful and more available And we can satisfy all of the demand that we have. I mean, we're still in an environment where certain materials are constrained, and We still have probably foregone in the low single digits of volume growth for lack of raw materials. So If we look forward, we would hope that that normalizes and the mix improvements will continue as they have for a number of years now. Speaker 100:28:56And our next question will come from Larry Gammler with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:29:02Hi, thanks guys. My question is on the CapEx guidance, Ron. I think you said 3% to 4% for the Was it 4% to 5% for the foreseeable future? And I can understand at the current point, you're building quite a few factories there that 4 to 5 now. But I'm just wondering, are you thinking that philosophically, the business needs to invest more organically? Speaker 800:29:29And maybe you can rope into that perhaps the acquisition pipeline for quite some time might be something you're thinking won't be too active. Speaker 300:29:41Yes. Look, Larry, yes, just to be clear, we've pointed to the historical range of 3% to 4% of sales. And what we've said is That will be more in the 4% to 5% of sales range going forward. And it's a function of a couple of things. Firstly, the opportunity set is rich. Speaker 300:29:56As the portfolio has evolved and a lot of it is through what we picked up in the Bemis acquisition in flexibles and as the Rigids portfolio has evolved into the more specialty space. We just have more organic opportunities than we've probably ever had. So that's the starting point. And when I say good organic opportunities, I mean those where we could deploy capital and generate an attractive return for shareholders. So that's the starting point. Speaker 300:30:22Secondly, the business is generating more and more cash flow. It's increasing its cash generation capacity, especially as we come through the integration era, if you will. And as we look at alternative Uses to that capital, we have, we believe, an ability to balance funding the organic growth that we see, Continuing to pursue acquisitions, buying back shares in the absence of acquisitions and then obviously maintaining a pretty The attractive dividend. So we just feel like the cash generation is sufficient now to support all of those Potential drivers of shareholder returns and the organic growth opportunity set has just never been more robust. Speaker 100:31:11And our next question will come from Mike Rocklin with Truth Securities. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:31:17Thanks very much. Hi, Ron, Mike, Tracy, congrats on the quarter. Just one quick question regarding volume growth. Given the materials constraints, which obviously negatively impacted volume, can you comment on any potential reengineering or reformulation of your products to get The necessary finished products or revised finished products qualified into customers. Anything that you pursue to reformulated during the quarter Or have been doing through year to date to adjust for or to account for this material constraint? Speaker 300:31:49Yes. It's a great question, a great observation. I mean, you can rest assured we are doing everything we can to find viable alternatives when materials are just I think that we have an advantage in that we're a large scale buyer and we're buying materials in multiple regions. So The first thing we do when we run into any kind of a constraint is we look to source the material from another region. And so we've been able to Tap into our global network and our global footprint to, I think, navigate the situation quite well. Speaker 300:32:21But there are times when there's just no material available globally. And that's why in parallel, we're looking at reformulations wherever possible. Those typically do not happen quickly. And I think there's nothing I could point to in the quarter that's material enough, but There is plenty of activity in terms of qualifying alternative materials and looking to reformulate away from materials that have been more prone to outages. Speaker 100:32:53And our next question will come from Nathan Riney with UBS. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:32:59Yes. Thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 800:33:01I'm just interested, Ron, how much headroom have you got in terms of your plant The utilization at the moment, obviously appreciate you being somewhat volume constrained as well recently. But I'm also just curious to understand what type of volume uplift you'd be expecting Can you see from the increased investment in CapEx that you're flagging going forward? Speaker 300:33:23Look, Nathan, it's a broad network And the capacity utilization will vary across the business quite dramatically. So in the extreme, you have our rigid packaging business in the beverage space, which has been sold out for a long period of time now for several quarters, and we're adding capacity there, which is Just to satisfy the continued elevated demand we see in PET and in beverages. In the Flexibles segment, we see very high utilization for the assets that are directed to the more sustainable products that we make, some of the global product platforms that I alluded to and the prepared remarks. But we will be adding capacity and that capacity will help support the volume growth expectations that we have going forward, which have traditionally been in the low single digit range. Speaker 100:34:19And our next question will come from Ghansham Panjabi with Baird. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:34:25Thank you. Speaker 1100:34:25Good day, everybody. Just as a follow-up to some of the early questions, maybe you can give us a sense as to which specific Raw materials you're still short on and how do you see that sort of evolving over the next couple of quarters? And then just bigger picture, I mean, the current environment is obviously extraordinary for the entire Supply Chain and no one really knows how the consumer is ultimately going to react to all these inflationary inputs and so on. Just curious, Ron, terms of how you service your customers and how you go to market, is there anything that you noticed that's different in terms of what your customers are Sort of tasking you with now versus in years past, just given the nature of the current environment. Thanks. Speaker 300:35:06Yes. Look, on the materials that are short, I mean, it's been a bit of a whack a mole game, to be honest with you, in terms of where we're short, which material in which region, In which month or which week, I guess you could say. And more often than not, it's been some of the specialty Materials in Flexibles and Rigids, which are additives to the primary materials. So it's not been To a large extent, for quite some time now, it's not been the base polymers that we buy, the big commodities like polyethylene Or polypropylene. We did have some shortages in PET for a while, but those have abated. Speaker 300:35:43It's been more the specialty materials that are added to provide barrier or some other property that's required to deliver the full functionality of the package, which have really been Highly volatile. Aluminum to some extent, I guess, would be the other main commodity, which at times has been In short supply. Look, I think this too shall pass. I mean, there's no reason why we should expect indefinite Outages, but at the moment, it's just been continued volatility. Speaker 100:36:21And our next question will come from Richard Johnson with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:36:27Thanks very much. Thank you very much. Ron, my question is on rigid plastics. 1 of your major in fact, your major competitor in the U. S. Speaker 1200:36:35Talks But resin being something over 40% of the cost of sales, is that the same for you? And probably more pertinent, can you talk please about the 60% of non raw material costs and give and provide whatever detail you can on the inflationary pressures in that part of your cost basket, please. Speaker 300:36:55Yes. I'll talk about the COGS in rigid packaging and maybe Michael can talk about the inflation we've seen generally because we've talked a lot about raw materials, But inflation more generally is obviously front and center. Look, the rigid packaging business, I'm not sure who the competitor is, but The resin component of COGS is actually higher in rigid than it is in flexibles. And I would have said it's probably in the 60% to 70% range. And that's, as you know, a straight pass through that's linked to the commodity index, either PET or one of the olefins. Speaker 300:37:28But as far as general inflation goes, Mike, why don't you comment on what we're seeing? Speaker 400:37:31Yes. Look, I think general inflation across the globe, I mean, where we're seeing increases is predominantly in Energy and Freight. And it varies by region, but in we're seeing inflation there in They're in the range of kind of 15% to 20%. But the point to remember is that those elements of our COGS are quite small, low single digits. So we're out in front of that. Speaker 400:37:55Some of that we can pass through to customers. Other parts of that, we've got to take price, and we're out in front across the globe working our way through that To recover those increases that we're seeing in general inflation on those two items. In terms of labor, it's been more Supply then, I guess, labor wage rates for us. So we've had disruption in labor, particularly in North America and Europe around COVID and the like, which we've had to deal with. And we've seen some Elevated over time and other labor costs associated with that. Speaker 400:38:30But it's again been manageable and We haven't seen the rate increases, although we are expecting some of those to start to come through. Speaker 100:38:44And our next question will come from Kyle White with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Speaker 1300:38:52Hey, thanks for taking the question. I know your exposure to China is relatively limited, but just curious what impact you've seen from the lockdown situation there on your production And demand in that region and what did you assume in your outlook going forward from that situation? Speaker 300:39:08Yes. Look, China is a big important business for 5% of sales, it's a business, it's our largest emerging markets business. We operate the flexible packaging segment there. So there's not Rigid Packaging doesn't participate in China. And it's a business that's been growing at a pretty healthy rate for the last several years. Speaker 300:39:28First As well, we had kind of mid single digit top and bottom line growth. It's also a very profitable business. We have a national footprint there with 10 or 11 factories across the country. But importantly, it's essentially a China for China business. We do very little importing or exporting in and out of China. Speaker 300:39:48The Q3 was a little bit slower, I think primarily because We're cycling an incredibly strong Q3 last year, which probably had to do with the timing of Chinese New Year as much as anything else. But our business was Flat to modestly down in the Q3. April definitely slowed. And April, I would say, is where we started to see some impacts of the lockdowns And not so much on our operations, but in some of our customers' plants where they weren't able to operate for periods of time. We definitely saw a slowdown in April. Speaker 300:40:23And honestly, it's very difficult to tell what March or June So our guidance range from an EPS perspective includes a range of outcomes on China, Although we're bear in mind we're down to 2 months and we know the outcome for April. So I think we feel pretty comfortable with the range and The consideration we've given to the dynamics in China. Speaker 100:40:54Our next question will come from James Wilson with Jarden Australia. Please go ahead. Operator00:41:02Hi guys. Thanks for taking my question. It's James Wilson standing in for Jake DeCarnes from Chatham. If we back out the $120,000,000 of raw material impacts from your $100,000,000 working capital build over the quarter. Beyond seasonality, what's giving you confidence that this will unwind in the 4th quarter, Especially given that your guidance remains unchanged. Operator00:41:20And also just on that, are you able to tell us that this inventory spill up is declaring more enriched or inflexible? Speaker 400:41:28Yes. Hi, James. Thanks for the question. I'll take that one. Yes, look, what we've seen actually year to date in working capital is about a $200,000,000 outflow versus prior year and about half of that is price, the other half is building raw material and finished goods. Speaker 400:41:47This year, particularly, we've been able to build some inventory in the rigid packaging space, which we weren't able to do last year, and that's ahead The heavy season in Q4, which is typically what we would normally see. We would normally see inventories build, leading into Q4. So that's part of it. In addition to that, in the flexible space and across the board, we've also conservatively increased some inventory, particularly in some of the products we've had shortage of supply on. So we'd expect that, that is going to unwind. Speaker 400:42:18That component of The inventory increase is going to unwind in Q4 as we cycle through our busiest quarter of the year. So that's how we factored that into the full year guidance. Speaker 100:42:35And next, we have a follow-up from George Staphos with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:42:41Hi, guys. Thanks for thank you very much. Thanks for taking the follow on, guys. You had talked about Increasing your growth investments and you cited regionally where you're putting various projects. Ron, given some of that, Michael, some of the volatility that we've seen over the last couple of years, would that perhaps change where you'll put the next Growth investments and high value investments are really it doesn't really affect where you might put either a coffee line or a high barrier line or personal And are you at all raising the required rates of return given the volatility that we've seen in some of these markets, again, either for geopolitical or for macro reasons? Speaker 700:43:20Guys, and good luck in the quarter. Speaker 300:43:23Yes. Thanks, George. It's a really good question. I mean, you throw in intellectual property protection into the mix, And we've always had different criteria or differentiated criteria, I should say, for where we put capital and differentiated return expectations for any capital project. The good thing about our business is that the incremental capacity It's small as a percentage of the total capital that we'll deploy in a given year. Speaker 300:43:49So if you can imagine that our capital spend will be 500 something like that. A new even a new plant To produce one of the platforms that I've talked about might be in the $20,000,000 $30,000,000 range. So none of the Projects that I was alluding to earlier, with the exception of the new plant we built in China, which is a little bit more, none of them are a really substantial portion of our overall capital spend in any one year. And so what that does is creates a portfolio effect across the different investments that we make, which in and of itself is a risk Mitigation methodology, if you could think about it that way. Speaker 100:44:36And our next question will come from Larry Gammler with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:44:42Hi, Ron. Thanks, guys. I'll ask my obligatory ESG question. But Ron, the European Union is, I think reviewing the waste and packaging directive, looking to table a new bill into the European Parliament, And I think it's going to involve end producer or end user recycling schemes like container deposit, Yes, similar to that, but for flexibles. I'm just wondering if you guys are sort of reviewing that situation and what would those sort of Speaker 300:45:21Yes. There's a lot of legislation in play in Europe and in the United States and elsewhere in the world. We're across all of it, Larry, as you could expect. We provide comments. We're often consulted For perspectives which we provide both directly and through the various associations and affiliations that we have, Generally speaking, we see these regulations as innovation opportunities and ways to further differentiate and Adding great value to our customers. Speaker 300:45:53In many cases where there is an extended producer responsibility regime or plastics tax or something of that Nature, there's an ecomodulation component, which means the fee that the brand owner, ultimately the consumer will pay, can be reduced if the package or the product overall has a lower environmental footprint. So that creates an opportunity for us to add more value to our customers as they deal with these regulations. And generally speaking, if it's a well constructed EPR where the industry Has some control over the framework and where the funding goes back to the waste management infrastructure, we're supportive. We're certainly not supportive of general revenue raising taxes and things like that, but we're well structured. Frameworks are in place. Speaker 300:46:48We're certainly supportive. Speaker 100:46:53And our next Question will come from Andrew Scott with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 1400:46:59Thank you. Hi, Ron. Just a question with the flexibles business. You Talking about targeting or focusing your capacity towards your higher value customers, which obviously makes perfect sense. Just interested as we go forward and Do you see all of those customers coming back into the mix? Speaker 1400:47:18Or do you, for want of a better word, see yourselves doing some bottom slicing, which something you've done historically very Speaker 300:47:26well. Yes. Look, I think to the extent that we'll have better differentiated products, Then we'll be able to capture any portion of the market that we've not been able to satisfy more recently. There is an element of bottom slicing in the mix outcomes that you've seen even in the most recent result, albeit out of necessity for lack of raw materials. But look, I think we're in the business to sell and sell more units than rather than less. Speaker 300:47:55And at the moment, the limiting factor has been raw materials that will ease over time. Speaker 100:48:04And that will conclude today's question and answer session. And I would now like to turn the call back over to Ron Delia for closing remarks. Speaker 300:48:13Okay. Thank you, operator. Thanks, everyone, for joining today and for your interest in Amkor. We've had a strong quarter. We've had a strong 1st 9 months of the fiscal year and have increased our expectations for the run home to the finish. Speaker 300:48:26And again, thanks for your interest, and we'll speak to you all next Speaker 100:48:32And this will conclude today's conference. 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