NYSE:CCK Crown Q3 2024 Earnings Report $84.32 -0.47 (-0.55%) As of 03:58 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Crown EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.99Consensus EPS $1.81Beat/MissBeat by +$0.18One Year Ago EPSN/ACrown Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$3.07 billionExpected Revenue$3.07 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$7.80 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ACrown Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date10/17/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateFriday, October 18, 2024Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsCrown's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Monday, April 28, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, April 29, 2025 at 9:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Crown Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrOctober 18, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 14 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to Crown Holdings Third Quarter 2024 Conference Call. Your lines have been placed on a listen only mode until the question and answer session. Please be advised that this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Kevin Clouthiere, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Operator00:00:17Sir, you may begin. Speaker 100:00:19Thank you, Elle, and good morning. With me on today's call is Tim Donahue, President and Chief Executive Officer. If you do not already have the earnings release, it is available on our website at crowncorp.com. On this call, as in the earnings release, we will be making a number of forward looking statements. Actual results could vary materially from such statements. Speaker 100:00:43Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to vary is contained in the press release and in our SEC filings, including our Form 10 ks for 2023 and subsequent filings. Net sales in the quarter were level with prior year at $3,100,000,000 reflecting increases in global beverage can volumes and North American food can volumes, offset by lower volumes in most other businesses. Segment income was $472,000,000 in the quarter compared to $430,000,000 in the prior year, reflecting volume gains in both Americas and European Beverage and the benefits of cost reduction initiatives in Asia Pacific, partially offset by demand softness across most other businesses. The company recorded a GAAP loss of $1.47 per share in the quarter, mainly due to a non cash pension settlement charge of $4.33 per share compared to earnings of $1.33 per share, excuse me, in the prior year quarter. Adjusted earnings per diluted share were $1.99 up 15% compared to the $1.73 in the prior quarter. Speaker 100:02:00Free cash flow remained strong at $668,000,000 through 9 months driven by excellent operational performance and reduced capital spending. We took steps in the quarter to strengthen our balance sheet by transferring approximately $860,000,000 of assets and liabilities of our Canadian and U. S. Pension plans to highly rated insurance companies, which will reduce future cash flow and earnings risk. With this action, combined with the previous buyout in the U. Speaker 100:02:28K, the company has annuitized approximately $4,000,000,000 of pension liabilities since 2021. As part of the settlement, the company contributed $100,000,000 into the U. S. Pension plan. As announced during the quarter, Crown's Board of Directors authorized the repurchase of an aggregate amount of up to $2,000,000,000 of common stock through the end of 2027. Speaker 100:02:53During the quarter, we repurchased $110,000,000 of common stock. We will continue to opportunistically pursue share repurchases through a disciplined approach. We are proactively managing our debt maturities with the issuance of $600,000,000 of euro notes due 2023 and the repayment of $600,000,000 of outstanding notes due that were due in September. We finished the quarter with $1,700,000,000 of cash after taking the actions above and net leverage was 3 times compared to 3.5 times for the same period last year. Before turning the call over to Tim, I want to discuss our expectations for the Q4 and full year. Speaker 100:03:39Our 4th quarter adjusted earnings per diluted share are projected to be in the range of $1.45 to $1.55 per share. In view of the strong performance, year to date, we are increasing our full year guidance to $6.25 to $6.35 per share compared to the previous guidance range of $6 to $6.25 per diluted share. Key assumptions supporting the updated earnings guidance include interest expense is $380,000,000 average common shares outstanding of $120,000,000 and exchange rates at current levels full year tax rate of approximately 25 percent depreciation of approximately 300,000,000 dollars non controlling interest between $140,000,000 $150,000,000 and dividends to non controlling interest of $125,000,000 We project 2024 full year adjusted free cash flow to be at least $750,000,000 after making the previously mentioned $100,000,000 pension contribution and no more than $450,000,000 of capital spending. With the combination of free cash flow and the $300,000,000 in proceeds from the previously announced Deviosa sale, we expect to end the year with net leverage below 3 times. As discussed in July, we are committed to our new long term leverage target net leverage target, excuse me, of 2.5 times, which is expected to be achieved through the combination of debt reduction and EBITDA growth, while returning capital to shareholders through dividends and opportunistic share repurchases. Speaker 100:05:21With that, I'll turn the call over to Tim. Speaker 200:05:24Thank you, Kevin, and good morning to everyone. I'll be brief and then we'll open the call to questions. As reflected in last night's earnings release and as Kevin just summarized, 3rd quarter operating results were strong and ahead of earlier expectations. As has been the case throughout 2024, global beverage operations performed exceptionally well with combined global beverage segment income of 23% on the back of 5% global volume growth. Manufacturing performance including higher efficiencies and lower spoilage was excellent. Speaker 200:06:02Additionally, a great effort by the Asian team to embrace and execute the capacity reduction program announced late last year, leading to the full realization of those benefits earlier than expected. Consolidated segment income margin advanced 140 basis points over the prior quarter. Importantly through 9 months, free cash flow is $450,000,000 ahead of the prior year 9 month period due to lower capital expenditures and better working capital management. Net leverage at the end of September after giving effect to the pension contribution and share buyback was 3 times, a full half turn lower than at this time last year. And as Kevin just noted, we expect year end net leverage to be below 3 times. Speaker 200:06:46Americas Beverage reported a 21% increase in segment income on the back of 10% volume growth including 5% increase in North America. Our full year volume growth estimates remain at 5% to 6% for North America and mid to high single digits in Brazil. Income performance in European Beverage advanced 18% over the prior year, primarily due to 6% shipment growth combined with the continuing benefits of our margin recovery program. Income through 9 months this year has now equaled the full year 2021 level in the segment. Income in Asia Pacific advanced 50% in the quarter as the combined benefits from actions to reduce capacity and improve revenue quality offset an 11% decline in unit volume sales. Speaker 200:07:36While demand weakness was noted throughout the segment, we remain well positioned to benefit from our new lower cost structure when regional volume demand returns. As expected, Transit Packaging income was down to the prior year. Shipment volumes and results continue to be impacted by weakening global manufacturing conditions with activity likely to stay in contraction at least through year end leading to our cautious outlook at this time. The business continues to tightly control costs while generating significant cash. North American tinplate operations performed well in the quarter with 5% higher food can volumes while can making equipment had lower activity as expected. Speaker 200:08:21And in summary and as we said earlier, a strong quarter where the benefits of higher volumes and the efforts of a world class manufacturing team were evident. Global beverage operations have been strong for 9 months and are expected to remain so through year end. Global manufacturing conditions remain in contraction, but the transit business is well positioned to grow when industrial market demand returns. A solid performance so far this year with margins and income up, EBITDA expected to exceed the record level posted last year, strong cash flow with leverage down and expected to go lower. And with that, Elle, I think we are ready to take questions. Operator00:09:02Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Ghansham Panjabi of Baird. Your line is now open. Speaker 300:09:28Hey, guys. Good morning. Speaker 200:09:29Good morning, Ghansham. Good morning. Speaker 300:09:31Good morning. Yes, I guess on the Americas segment, obviously very, very strong margin conversion, much higher than our forecast and much better than the trend line for the 1st two quarters. Just give us some more color in terms of what drove that? And is there any benefit unique to 2024 price cost or whatever else that may not repeat in 2025 for that segment? Speaker 200:09:55Well, Ghansham, I'll deal with the second part of the question first. As we said earlier this year, we would expect the growth in the business that we've had this year I. E. The market share gains that we've had this year or our growth ahead of the market growth this year to not recur that is our growth next year will be in line with the market. So we're looking at a market in North America so far this year where we believe the market's up 1% to 1.5%. Speaker 200:10:28And I think in North America year to date, we're probably up 6% to 7%. If the market's up 2% next year, we think we'll be up 2% next year. So that's number 1. We had an exceptionally strong performance in Brazil, Brazil bouncing back nicely through the summer. You've heard our view on Brazil. Speaker 200:10:52Over the years, we remain very bullish on the Brazilian market despite hiccups along the way. We always believe it's a market that over any period of time if you measure it, it's a continuing trend line up. And then we had a very strong performance in Mexico this year. So obviously margin is very high. Some of that to do with lower aluminum although aluminum the cost of aluminum is starting to trend up. Speaker 200:11:23So that will have an impact on percentage margins but not on absolute margins. But all in all, it was much better than we forecasted as well. It could to be honest with you Ghansham, it could be $15,000,000 better than we had forecasted in the Q3. And the manufacturing team doing exceptionally well. I would say we're going to have manufacturing improvements from better efficiency and spoilage and asset utilization this year upwards of $20,000,000 to $25,000,000 benefit this year. Speaker 200:12:00And where you really get the benefit of that is in a high volume quarter like the Q3. Speaker 300:12:05Okay. And so just to clarify on that, so price cost in terms of PPI adjusters etcetera at this point looking out to 2025, do you see any headwinds associated with that year over year? Speaker 200:12:16I think PPI could be a small headwind next year although I don't have the numbers in front of me. I think obviously inflation has been coming down and the contracts are organized in such a way that you pass on those savings to customers if and when you have them. Now PPI is not a perfect proxy for the costs in our business. And we've talked previously about PPI does not seem to reflect what happens in the coating space for example. Labor always goes up. Speaker 200:12:55Labor never comes down. The labor content may come down, but the rate never comes down. So there are a lot of things that move around in our cost base that aren't perfectly reflected in PPI, but I would expect PPI as we sit here today to be an adjustment in the favor of the customers next year. Speaker 300:13:16Okay. I'll just turn it over there. Congrats on the progress. Speaker 200:13:19Thank you. Operator00:13:21Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Chris Parkinson of Wolfe Company Research. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:13:28Hey, guys. Good morning. Good morning, Chris. You hit on this Speaker 500:13:31a little good morning. Thank you. Speaker 400:13:34You hit on this a little just in your last response. I just want to dig a little deeper just given the progress that's been made operationally, not only in the Americas, but also Asia. Can you just kind of comment on your efforts there? You mentioned you were ahead in Asia, but if you could just dig a little bit deeper, kind of comment on where you are in terms of your ultimate progression on where you wanted to be, where you are, and as well as your conviction in terms of the sustainability of that progress into 2025 and 2026? Thank you. Speaker 200:14:04So when I remark about being ahead of expected progress, I was specifically referring to the capacity reduction program that we had undertaken. So just think about it. It's a division that's on the other side of the world. They're a long way from headquarters. We see them several times a year. Speaker 200:14:26Having said that, they've enjoyed being part of a high growth business for the last 20 years and then they've got a little growth hiccup and the plan is that we're going to remove capacity. So we were always a bit concerned as to how readily how ready they were to accept cost reduction as opposed to continuing growth. And as I said, we're really pleasantly pleased with their embracing of the need to right size their capacity. I think we now have a business that is on the order of each quarter now earning somewhere between $45,000,000 $50,000,000 of segment income which is in the absence of volume growth returning to the region, I think that's the kind of range we expect in that business going forward. Obviously, the real benefit in that region will be when volume returns when the consumer has more confidence and off a lower cost base we look to really benefit from that. Speaker 400:15:38Got it. And just as a quick follow-up, getting below 3 times leverage, obviously, shows a lot of progress. Can we just hit on just any preliminary thoughts on how we should be thinking about not only trending into the year end, but perhaps just into 2025? How the Street should be thinking about working capital, cash interest expense, if there's an update there? And just how we should be thinking about cash conversion as we progress and just any quick thoughts on capital allocation as a core layer of that? Speaker 400:16:07Thank you so much. Speaker 200:16:09Thanks, Chris. Speaker 100:16:10So in terms of working capital, look, we've done a great job in terms of driving down working capital this year. We expect it to be at least $100,000,000 benefit for us. I don't think there's much more to get out of working capital. So I think we're probably where we're going to be. I think when you look at interest expense, we have clearly have an opportunity to have lower interest costs with interest rates coming down. Speaker 100:16:36I think it will be determined by how much the Fed decides to reduce rates. But interest expense at down from $3.80 to $3.50 is definitely possible and probably kind of the baseline of where we would look at. And then as we think about capital allocation to buy back stock, we're I would fully expect us to be in the market next year to buy back stock. I think that our leverage target, we're committed to 2.5x times getting to it. And I think as Tim had said on the previous call, we could be there by the end of next year if we want to be. Speaker 100:17:13I think we want to stay below 3 times, but we are committed to also returning capital to shareholders through share repurchases. So I would expect us to be in the market next year buying back shares. Speaker 600:17:28Thanks for the color. Thank you. Speaker 200:17:30Thanks, Chris. Operator00:17:32Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of George Staphos from Bank of America. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:17:39Thanks so much. Hope you guys can hear me okay. Congratulations on the progress. Thank you, George. How are you? Speaker 500:17:46My two questions. First of all, assuming that you grow with the market, recognizing the market growth is going to vary from year to year and you can't necessarily predict that, how much runway do you have in terms of capacity across beverage cans? And if there's a way to shade that or discuss the color by region in terms of how much runway you might have between North America, Europe and the like, that's question number 1. Question number 2, given our analysis, your EVA, your return on capital have all been trending up well, and congratulations on that. As we think about the next 2 years, not trying to get into an earnings forecast quarter by quarter, what do you think is going to be the biggest driver of your operating profit improvement assuming the next couple of years? Speaker 500:18:38Will that be just pure volume? Will it be the improvement say in Signode or your non beverage can operations? What are the headwinds? And do you think invested capital, what you invest between work capital CapEx will grow in tandem with operating profit? Or do you think you can actually keep that constrained relative to your operating profit growth? Speaker 500:19:00Thanks guys. Good luck in the quarters. Speaker 200:19:02That's a lot. So let me George don't go anywhere because you might have to repeat some of that. I think that in our business and you know the business very well George, growth is income growth let's say is largely dependent over time on volume growth. We need volume. We have an industrial platform that's sitting there and it doesn't do well if it's not running. Speaker 200:19:27It needs to run all the time. That is 20 fourseven. So you always need volume and the more volume you have and the more growth you have the better your profits are. The platforms that we have I would say that I can't as I sit here today I think given what we expect market growth to be for the next at least 2 years, we don't anticipate having to install any new capacity to achieve expected market growth. Now if there's movement among suppliers and or we want to modernize a specific facility, okay, there's a little capital to be spent. Speaker 200:20:08But there's no necessary capital to achieve what we think markets will grow over the next several years in all the markets. I don't know if Kevin mentioned it. We said no more than $450,000,000 this year and I think if we wanted to give you a number for next year we'd say the same thing no more than $450,000,000 for next year. Now in addition to that's beverage what I largely just talked about. The other part of your question George was how will the non beverage businesses do. Speaker 200:20:40I think largely until we see the next inflection on global beverage can growth across the industry, we would expect the equipment business to be more or less in line with where it is this year. I don't see any really large moves in the aerosol business. I think that's largely going to be as we look to next year where it is this year. And food cans in North America could be a little bit better. But it's all modest. Speaker 200:21:10I think in total, if you were to look at food cans, aerosol cans, equipment making, it's roughly 5% of our EBITDA on a consolidated basis. So if it's up a little bit, it doesn't move the needle a whole lot there. I think on the transit side, the cost base is in really good shape. Competitively, we're in very good shape. For those of you who follow global manufacturing or purchasing manufacturing Purchasing Managers Indices around the world, you'll know that they're in deep contraction in certain countries. Speaker 200:21:42For example, if 50 is considered the dividing line between expansion and contraction, Germany is currently at 40%. So globally the manufacturing sector not looking very strong. But having said that, there are some signs of life at least in North America. And the construction industry looking like they could be an opportunity to turn the corner. We'll see. Speaker 200:22:15But obviously a lot of upside in the transit business when and if or if and when industrial markets return. I think I got it all George. Speaker 500:22:26No, Tim, you got it. Whatever the market is going to grow out that's what's going to be the biggest driver and if you get optionality with Cigna that's incremental and CapEx. Speaker 200:22:37Just touching on your last point which you rightly point out off a much lower levered balance sheet and from an EVA perspective an investment capital base that shouldn't expand so much, right. Speaker 500:22:52Thank you so much, Tim. Speaker 700:22:54Thank you. Speaker 500:22:55All the best. Operator00:22:57Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mike Leithead of Barclays. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:23:03Great. Thanks. Good morning, guys. Good morning, Mike. Good morning. Speaker 800:23:07Tim, you said it a few times already about global beverage can this year continuing to exceed expectations. I guess bigger picture, when you go through the numbers internally, what do you think has been the biggest driver of the outperformance versus perhaps where you budgeted to start this year? Speaker 200:23:26I think number 1 is volume has been a little better and it's held up. So you always have a there's always a concern when you look at a forecast and you see large volume gains, especially in a market where you're asking yourself how strong is the consumer. There's been a lot of inflation in the product line as well as inflation across everything else the consumer is having to deal with. And the market you participate in is up 1% to 2%, do you really believe these volume numbers? So I think volume is number 1. Speaker 200:24:03It's been strong and it's been steadily strong which is always nice to see. And then our manufacturing performance both in the United States and Europe has been it's always I got to stop for a second, it's always exceptional in Brazil. But if I looked at the United States and Europe making great strides to the levels of exceptionalism this year as well. So a lot of money that we've gained this year from manufacturing performance. Speaker 800:24:35Great. That's super helpful. And then Kevin on the pensions, just following the settlement and funding in 3Q, how does that change your go forward pension expense and say the cash you need to fund it over the next 1 to 2 years? Speaker 100:24:49Yes. So from a cash funding perspective, we would not expect any U. S. Pension funding over the next year or probably the following, maybe some minor amount. Newer Canadian. Speaker 100:25:03Newer Canadian pension plan. We still have we have various other pension plans that are still outstanding, so there will be some pension funding. I'm sorry, did you have another question there, Mike? Speaker 800:25:17Yes. It was just around the cash funding and then also just the pension expense that flows through your P and L. Is there any change to that? Speaker 100:25:24Yes. So look, I would expect the pension actions probably give us about a $0.05 uptick after you consider the interest cost on the $100,000,000 pension contribution that we had. So call it roughly $15,000,000 of lower pension expense, dollars 6,000,000 of interest expense on the $100,000,000 tax effective probably give you right around $0.05 Speaker 800:25:57Great. Thanks, guys. Speaker 900:25:59You're welcome. Operator00:26:01Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Phil Ng of Jefferies. Your line is now open. Speaker 1000:26:07Hey guys. Tim, you talked about the consumer making sure it's strong and healthy. I'm most curious about Europe, right? You guys put out a solid quarter again, certainly some restocking at Eurocup. So how are trends kind of shaping up and what you're seeing on that front? Speaker 1000:26:23Because some of the European packing companies have actually talked about perhaps the consumer being a little softer. Speaker 200:26:28Yes. I mean that doesn't surprise me. I think the consumer is I think the European consumer is much weaker than the U. S. Consumer as a just as a not to make a political statement, but I think they have far less disposable income in Europe than we do in the United States and that's all around policy and other things. Speaker 200:26:47But we agree with that sentiment that the European consumer is perhaps weaker. There are a number of things as you started to point out. We've got some restocking this year. We've had a couple events the Olympics and the Euro Cup and a fairly good tourism season if you follow the airlines. I think the tourism season was pretty strong and it's generally strong in the regions where we're strongest that is Southern Europe. Speaker 200:27:19We had a very weak Q4 last year in Europe, principally due to the destocking we've discussed. We're not anticipating that happening again. And the large part of our outperformance in Q4 this year compared to Q4 last year will be related to European recovery, So large majority of that. So I think it's one of the things that helped Phil, we're in a business that's it's a small pleasure business, right? It's You've got a weak consumer in a lot of places and they're struggling and despite that, the beverage can is holding up really well. Speaker 200:28:02You would tell yourself it's holding up exceptionally well in the face of a consumer that stretched. So we're benefiting from that not only in North America, but also in Europe as well as some substrate shift in Europe which is continuing to happen. So all in all despite the weaker consumer feel pretty fortunate to be in the can business. Speaker 1000:28:24Okay, super. When I look at the progress you guys have made on the margin front, whether it's Asia cost coming out and then recouping inflation in Europe, it's been pretty incredible. Margins have been up nicely. Appreciating loan prices are going up. That will swing percent margins. Speaker 1000:28:40But do you still have much to go here in terms of driving margins higher? You talked about some of the good things you're doing on the manufacturing side. So when we think about 2025 and perhaps even 2026, how should we think about the margin profile and profitability going forward? Speaker 200:28:56Yes. So there shouldn't be a limit to the margin, right? But obviously you've got customers and suppliers and they have margin aspirations as well. So I like in it to golf if you're a golfer or those of you who are golfers, it's pretty easy to go from a 25 handicap down to a 10. To try to go from a 10 to a scratch or to a plus is it's the law of diminishing returns. Speaker 200:29:26It's really difficult. The low hanging fruit is largely gone and now you're really looking at sharpening the edges and there's always improvement we can make. One of the things that happened here in the Q3, we didn't say it yet, but why did we outperform so much in the Q3 and Kevin and I were talking about it last couple of days and you kind of look at each other and you say, you know what, everything went right. I mean it wasn't perfect, right. Transit's down, but everything else went right. Speaker 200:29:55Even the food guys had a good volume quarter. And there's always the question in your mind, you know you're going to have a have a time in the future when everything doesn't go right. So I think we're really pleased with the operations. We're really pleased with the business folks. They're driving exceptional margins. Speaker 200:30:20I don't know if we have leading packaging industry margins. Perhaps we have leading can margins. But it's how much higher can they go? I don't know. We're going to try to do the best we can to keep them where they're at and grow them. Speaker 200:30:36But we're going to need some volume to do that Phil, right? We're going to need the market. Now that I think that as we discussed earlier that it looks like business has largely settled in North America over the next couple of years. So we're going to need the market to grow. And then obviously it would be nice to have a bounce back industrially for the transit business as well. Speaker 1000:30:57Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Speaker 400:30:59Appreciate it. Thank you. Operator00:31:01Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Zekauskas of JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Speaker 1100:31:08Thanks very much. When I look at the transit margins by quarter, the decremental margins seem to be getting worse. Maybe they were 22% in the 1st quarter, 38% in the 2nd, 68% in the 3rd. Is that because volume continues to fall? Or why does the margin progression seem to get more severely negative? Speaker 200:31:40I'm not following you because I don't have I'm not looking at all the data you're looking at. But you're going to have to come offline and ask the guys explain it to the guys a little better because you just said our margins were down 60%. I don't understand what you're saying. Speaker 1100:31:59They're incrementals. In other words, if you look at the change in sales and you look at the change in operating profits, it seems that there's a greater percentage decrement as you go through the year. But we can take it offline. Speaker 200:32:14Yes. Listen, if I look at we can do all that. If I was to look at our Q3 margins compared to our 9 month margins, the Q3 margins look like they're all better than the 9 month margins. So the way we would look at the business is that with the benefit of expanding volume, you get even more you get more margin. Now we had a the 3rd quarter is a bigger quarter. Speaker 200:32:42So to move the needle on a bigger number is always harder to do than move the needle on a smaller number. But you're going to have to take this offline. Speaker 1100:32:48Sure. Speaker 200:32:49This is a day of school I missed. So I'm not following it. Speaker 1100:32:54Also in terms of your beverage can volumes in the Q3, overall, were they very different than they were in the Q2? That is sequentially, how much did your volumes change in beverage cans? Speaker 200:33:10Absolute level of volume? Speaker 1000:33:12Yes. Speaker 200:33:14I got to believe the absolute level of volume is higher in Q3 than it is in Q2. I don't have the Q2 in front of me. I do know I looked at one thing that happened Jeff and I do know that specifically to North America we were up 5% in the Q3 which is a little bit lower than we had been up earlier in the year. But I do know the Q3 of 2023 was up like 12% or 13% over the Q3 of 2022. So yes, I'm looking at no I mean volumes were higher in Q3 than they were in Q2. Speaker 200:33:58And the absolute level of volume pretty much the same. I'm talking global. I'm only looking at a global number here. The differential or the delta on the absolute Q3 to Q3 versus Q2 to Q2 about the same. But Q3 volumes in absolute terms up in Q3 versus Q2 both in 2023 and 2024. Speaker 1100:34:23Okay, great. Thank you so much. Speaker 200:34:25Thank you. Operator00:34:27Thank you. Our next question comes from Anthony Pettinari of Citigroup. Your line is now open. Speaker 1200:34:34Good morning. Good morning. Just following up on Europe, I think you closed the Helvetia acquisition about a year ago. And I'm just wondering, did that contribute at all or meaningfully to the kind of mid single digit growth you've seen in Europe? And can you just talk maybe about how that asset is operating or maybe kind of longer term goals for Germany and that plant? Speaker 200:35:00Yes. So I will say this and you're going to give me a platform to my fellow competitors, my fellow global competitors are going to appreciate this as well. So bought the business about a year ago. It's probably responsible for about 1.5% to 2% of our growth this year, 1% to 1.5% something in that range. We have been spending a lot of time retraining the workforce and a lot of time fine tuning the equipment is the wrong term. Speaker 200:35:34We're doing a lot more than fine tuning the equipment. And what we knew when we bought it and what we found out when we got inside very similar to what we hear others saying when they look at some of these smaller one line operations around the world. They're set up poorly. The people aren't trained very well and they're never going to be successful as one line operations. So you do have some one line operations in the U. Speaker 200:36:00S. Right now. One guy is I think he's basically moved he sold the equipment to somebody else. There's another guy that I don't know how he's going to survive. Now there is a one line operation in Texas. Speaker 200:36:12It's run by a high quality can company out of Mexico. They're going to be fine. They know how to make cans. But these new one liner guys that got into the business because they think can making is an easy venture. They found out that it's not so easy. Speaker 200:36:26But we're making improvements to the plant and we expect that should only be a further benefit to us as we go forward. We didn't pay a lot for the asset. You get a building. We got a can line and we got an end line for roughly $120,000,000 which is far less than we and some others in the industry would spend to build a proper plant. So we're spending a little bit of time here and effort to make it a proper plant with a properly trained workforce. Speaker 1200:36:59Okay. Okay. That's very helpful. And then just after kind of the pandemic boom and destocking, I mean, it seems like bev cans are in a pretty good place from a supply demand perspective. And I'm just wondering, have you seen any changes in pricing dynamics in any of your markets, either positive or negative? Speaker 1200:37:18Are customers trying to extend or shorten the length of contracts? Or are there any kind of larger than usual contract cliffs coming up in any of your markets? I'm just wondering if you talk about pricing to the extent you're able to and to the extent there's really you're seeing anything kind of notable in the markets? Speaker 200:37:36Well, I would say that there's always competition and perhaps some others see our margins and they believe they can under price us from time to time and where they see our performance and they're trying to understand how they can make their performance better. But listen markets are competitive and the customers the buying agents at the customers have a job to do and we have a job to do and their job is theirs and our job is ours, but it's always going to be competitive. I think to single out any 1 or few items, it's just business, right? You're always going Speaker 500:38:18to have Speaker 200:38:19competition whether it's from your natural competitors or whether it's margin competition from your customers and or your suppliers trying to grab from you one way or the other. I don't think there's any in the next 2 years there's no large clips of volume coming due. We do have in the North American market I do think we have some as an industry we have some larger contracts coming due heading into 20 27. But it's not unlike any other period in the past. So yes conditions are good. Speaker 200:38:54They could be better. Some of these as I mentioned some of these one line new entrants they're going to wash themselves out and we'll get back to a market where the customers understand if you want reliable quality cans you better go with a reliable quality supplier. And I think the large multinationals are quality and reliable. Speaker 1200:39:19Okay. That's very helpful. I'll turn it over. Speaker 200:39:22Thank you. Operator00:39:23Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Arun Viswanathan of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Speaker 1300:39:32Great. Thanks for taking my question. I hope you guys are well. I guess, first off, maybe I could just get your thoughts on some preliminary framework for 2025. I think you mentioned kind of your volumes following the market. Speaker 1300:39:48And but maybe the other businesses, you talked about low manufacturing activity, maybe that could weigh on Signode or Transit a little bit. So assuming maybe kind of low single digit top line growth, would you and some of the manufacturing efficiencies, would you be able to maybe see about mid single digit EBITDA growth? And then with some of the refinancings and some of the pension stuff, would you be able to see maybe mid to high single digit EPS growth? Or how should we think about kind of EBITDA and EPS growth in the 25? Speaker 200:40:26Think it's a little too early to say. The one item you left off of there is with the Ebeosas sale, we're going to lose a significant amount of equity earnings, which obviously accretes earnings as well. So but I think it's a little early to say. I don't want us to get ahead of our budget process. And I certainly I want us to do a better job this year of not allowing the differential to exist between your expectations and what we believe we can achieve. Speaker 200:40:57We kind of let that we as a company kind of let that get ahead of ourselves last year. So we don't want to do that again yet. I don't think we're ready to do that. Speaker 1300:41:07Okay. And then on the free cash flow, so CapEx is in the $450,000,000 range. Is that kind of how would you characterize that? I mean what part of that is say maintenance and sustaining growth? Would you find that as kind of the low levels here that we should kind of expect going forward? Speaker 1300:41:27Or is there other reasons why that could potentially go higher as you look into 2025? Speaker 200:41:33Well, I think the only way it goes higher is if there's a significant market shift somewhere in the world, which would require us to add capacity in a location that we're not currently in. Speaker 1300:41:54Okay. And then just one last one if I could ask. We talked a lot about promotional activity earlier this year. It seems like we haven't been thinking that much about it, but I know there has been some deflation. Do you think that the customers are appropriately promoting their product? Speaker 1300:42:15And I guess have there been any shift more away from towards favoring volume a little bit more? Or how do you think about the promotional activity levels? And are you guys encouraged maybe by the potential for some increase there? Thanks. Speaker 200:42:33Yes. I mean the first thing I would say is it's not for me to comment on what's appropriate that our customer set does with respect to their business. But listen they have a business model. We need to adapt to their business model and run our business as best we can to adapt to their business model. We're only successful if they're successful. Speaker 200:42:58And we need them to be successful long term. So we support their needs. We hope we support their needs as best we can with quality and service at all times. Now specifically on promotions in the North American marketplace, I would say we saw a little bit of an uptick in August. It looked like it backed off at the end of the quarter. Speaker 200:43:25It looks like it's a 1st couple of weeks of October things are going okay. So what I would describe if you're looking at promotions versus historical levels you would describe last year and this year is lackluster. But that may well be the new norm and as I said earlier we need to adjust our business to adjust to their new business. And they have a business model and we're only successful if they're successful. So we better find a way to be successful with their new business model if that indeed is it. Speaker 1300:44:01Great. Thanks a lot. Speaker 200:44:02Thank you. Operator00:44:04Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Joseph Spector of UBS. Your line is now open. Speaker 600:44:11Hi, good morning. A question on just free cash flow to clarify a couple things quickly is first, your guidance of greater than $750,000,000 when you talk about the pension. Is that excluding the pension? So on a reported basis or adjusted reported basis, it would be greater than $650,000,000 or does the $750,000,000 include that? And then if you could just comment on 3Q versus 4Q, it seems like free cash flow in 4Q is pretty minimal when normally that's a pretty highly cash generative quarter. Speaker 600:44:38So if you could explain what's going on there? Thanks. Speaker 100:44:42Sure. So in terms of the free cash flow of $750,000,000 that includes the deduction for the $100,000,000 of pension contribution we made. So not $650,000,000 plus $100,000,000 it's $750,000,000 plus $100,000,000 if you wanted to add it back. So that should resolve that. In terms of the Q4, if you look at it, we say at least $750,000,000 We're at $6,000,000 Let's call it just under $670,000,000 right now. Speaker 100:45:17You're going to have some earnings growth. You're going to have some working capital improvement, but you're also going to pay interest expense of probably close to $100,000,000 You're going to pay taxes equals to about $100,000,000 You're going to have CapEx of around $200,000,000 If you do the math, it gets you a little better than $750,000,000 Working capital is always the number that we drive to get as low as possible. So we'll see. That'll be the number that gets us really the delta to see how much better we do than at least $750,000,000 number. Speaker 600:45:56Thanks. And just kind of more philosophy follow-up here. Just how you guys approach guidance? So you guys have done quite a deal better versus your guidance the last couple of quarters. I think everyone likes to see some conservatism. Speaker 600:46:09But I guess when you're talking about the beats, it's a little bit of the cost savings maybe surprise, the volume surprised. So as you think about Q4 and maybe as you think about framing next year, are you trying to be conservative versus expectations? Or are you actually versus your plan seeing things coming in a lot better, which was I guess a surprise versus what you hope to achieve, if that hopefully makes sense to answer that? Speaker 200:46:38Yes. So I think if you look at where we've outperformed this year, it's been in the beverage businesses Americas, Europe and Asia. If you looked at the Q4 of last year, Asia had income of $47,000,000 which is kind of what the average has been for the 1st 3 quarters of this year. So you wouldn't expect a large increase in Asia year on year. And last year in Q4 in America's beverage, we actually had higher segment income in the Q4 last year than we had in the Q2 this year, which is a remarkable number because the second and third quarter if we were to rank the quarters, you'd go 3, 2, 4, 1 and for the Q4 to be bigger than the Q2. Speaker 200:47:30So I think the opportunity for the Americas Beverage business to have a quarter that's significantly better than the prior year quarter is far less this year in Q4 than it has been in the 1st 3 quarters of this year. I think the one business that we firmly believe we're going to do better year on year in the Q4 this year is European Beverage. And that's basically because the massive destocking that occurred in Q4 last year, we don't foresee that. So I think the range we gave you is a I appreciate the question because we knew it was coming, because we have when you beat a number by 10%, it's it begs the question for the next quarter. But I think the range we've given you is a fair range. Speaker 700:48:26Okay. Thank you. Speaker 600:48:27Thank you. Operator00:48:30Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Diaz of Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:48:37Hello, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. And I hope everybody is okay with the hurricane down in Florida. Thank you. So one of your global customers mentioned a consumer preference shift into cans, specifically in Mexico. Speaker 700:48:55And I think they also mentioned not necessarily having all the capacity needed to meet the can demand in the short term. Maybe Speaker 500:49:04just what are you Speaker 700:49:05seeing in Mexico? And do you potentially see the need to expand capacity within the region, maybe not a new line, but add some efficiencies within the region, etcetera? Speaker 200:49:18Yes. So I'm aware of what you're describing. As I said earlier, we've had a really strong performance volume wise in Mexican cans this year. Glass business has been firm. I don't necessarily see us needing to expand capacity as I said anywhere in the world right now unless there's a new customer award in a region of the world where we're not located. Speaker 200:49:51But I don't and that would apply to Mexico as well. So I think we have or the footprint we have currently, the capacity we have now, there's a little bit open. Where we see the market going for the next couple of years, I think we're okay. Speaker 700:50:10Great. Thanks for that color. And I know you're expecting down volumes within Asia due to your footprint actions in the region and the related profit benefits. That said, can you give some color on what you saw in the market in 3Q and what you're expecting in the region into the end of the year? And maybe just a quick follow on to that Asia question. Speaker 700:50:35During the summer, there was also a Chinese competitor that announced the construction of an additional line in Vietnam. Just given your bullish view on the region into the medium term, how do you assess the risk of potential new entrants into the region as well? Thanks. Speaker 200:50:50Yes. So it is a country specific region. The expansion by the Chinese competitor into Vietnam is specific to a multinational filler, not specific to a Vietnamese filler. I'll leave it at that. Volume I got year to date volumes here. Speaker 200:51:19I could tell you year to date we think Southeast Asia is up 5%. For the full year we're estimating they're going to be up about 5% and we forecast will be down about 8%. So I some of that's due to our capacity reduction. Some of that frankly is due to customer pruning, right? We walked away from a fairly significant chunk of business at 2 customers where the margins were not worth the risk. Speaker 200:51:52And you always we're not here to make cans for practice or just to pad volume statistics. We need to get a fair compensation for the risk we undertake and we didn't believe that business did. But that was on the order those two customers probably 75% of the volume decline we're experiencing came from those 2 customers. Having said that, I would not describe the capacity reductions we took as related to those 2 customer walkaways. So I think all in all we feel we have a very good customer set. Speaker 200:52:31We have pretty good balance with capacity. And like any region of the world, like any business, you need growth and we look forward to growth in the future. Speaker 700:52:45Great. Thank you. Speaker 200:52:47You're welcome. Operator00:52:48Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Edlain Rodriguez of Mizuho. Your line is now open. Speaker 900:52:55Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Tim, quick question for you on capital deployment and share buyback. So how do you balance the timing of any share buyback against an increasing share price? Or is the answer what I suspect you will say that the stock is still undervalued and you'll continue to be aggressive buyers as you go forward regardless of the share price? Speaker 200:53:22Well, I would say that the share price is undervalued. But the market doesn't say that. And so I think we will continue to use the term opportunistically buy back shares. I don't think we're going to be overly aggressive at any one point in time in the year because we're trying to prove a point that we're undervalued. If I look at our operating statistics, I look at our growth, I look at the businesses we operate and the portfolio, the percentage of the businesses within the portfolio, yes, I think we're undervalued. Speaker 200:53:56It doesn't matter what I think the market's spoken. So we're going to be opportunistic with share repurchases. Speaker 900:54:02Okay. And as a follow-up to CapEx spending, you keep taking it down. I mean last quarter it was no more than $500,000,000 this quarter is like no more than $450,000,000 Like is there anything that's being deferred? Like why are you able to watch it down like that just on quarter to quarter basis or year to year? What's going on there? Speaker 200:54:29Well, we keep saying no and eventually they accept no. I know you're chuckling, but that's frankly that's you're always asking the teams to do more with less and you're always trying to make sure they perfectly understand why they need to spend money and if there's no payback, why are we spending money. So it's really a question of refining it's a constant refinement of a process where they need to prove why you need to spend money. I don't think we're deferring anything. We spent a lot of money over the last several years and now is the time to get a payback on it. Speaker 900:55:10Okay. Perfect. Thank you. Speaker 400:55:12Thank you. Operator00:55:16Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Gabe Hajde of Wells Fargo Securities. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:55:22Tim, Kevin, Tom, good morning. Speaker 900:55:24Good morning, Katy. Speaker 500:55:27I want to try to revisit Anthony's question a little bit and just framework for thinking about volumes. You teased us a little bit with market growth of 2%, which I appreciate we don't know. But short term Speaker 200:55:41Gabe, it could be 0, it could be 1, it could be 3. I just picked a number, right? It's just Speaker 500:55:47a No, I understand. But short term, are there any, I guess, disruptions from weather in the Southeast for the U. S? But more importantly, what is informing sort of how you're thinking about the business? I mean, we all know that you guys go through medium term planning. Speaker 500:56:07And when I walk through a convenience store, I'm seeing more options to pick up a single serve can. And so whether it's innovation, whether it's channel in which cans are being sold, maybe dialogue with customers and what's informing your view for an expectation of low single digit growth in maybe North America? And then in Europe, as we do lap some of these sporting events, etcetera, restock this year thinking about next year, I think sustainability has been a pretty big driver for growth. Are there other things that we should be thinking about in our models and our forecast for growth? Speaker 200:56:49Okay. Let's I'll start with the hurricanes in the Southeast. We did have some storms in the upper Midwest in August, which delayed some of the fresh pack, but we'll get that back in early October on the food side. The hurricanes in the Southeast, no discernible impact to our beverage can business that I feel right now. We did have our we have an aerosol can plant in South Carolina that we shut down for a few days. Speaker 200:57:19So some sales loss there. But that will be made up. Nothing notable to discuss or to warn you about. No impact to any of our facilities other than power loss for a few days. Certainly some of our corporate employees dealing with some real devastation to their homes and belongings and we're helping them as best we can. Speaker 200:57:48Start with Europe first. I think that sustainability as you rightly point out is a big driver for the continued growth of the European can market as well as whether it's from sustainability or just cost or convenience or better for the fillers the continuing conversion from glass to can specifically soft drinks but also beer over time and we'll benefit from that in Europe. We believe we're going to continue to benefit from that in Europe. So whether that's sustainability or not or cost, there's continuing conversion. The one thing that I do think the upside in Europe that Europe hasn't had yet that we've seen to have had much more of in the United States is the proliferation of non beer alcoholic beverages. Speaker 200:58:43So as the other alcoholic ready to drink or other alcoholic beverages in cans become more readily available and embraced by Europeans to replace beer over time potentially replace beer over time that will favor the can. United States or North America if you will, you're right to point out that if you go to a convenience store, you see a variety of all kinds of products now being offered in cans. Some of that has to do with changing demographics, meaning the younger generation is not as loyal to the brands they drink. Their willingness to explore and experiment and try new products. And just because they like product day to day doesn't mean they're going to like it 2 weeks from now. Speaker 200:59:34So but all of that does bode well for the can because as you know the can is the perfect billboard to market and advertise your product with a variety of colors and graphic feels and other things like that. So we do think there's continued opportunity there. I don't want to say that we're going to continue to see cannibalization of beer. At some point beer will find its footing, but there has been a bit of cannibalization in beer from these non alcoholic drinks. And so we'll see where that settles. Speaker 201:00:15But one thing I think we do believe that in the Q3 in North America, we do believe that the alcohol segment grew faster than the non alcohol segment. And some of that could be a bounce back of some of the mass beer declines we've experienced over the last 7 or 8 quarters. We'll see where that falls out. But I think specific to your question Gabe, you look at new consumer behavior and the new consumers are the younger consumers and they generally consume more than older consumers and they are less loyal, more willing to try new things and that generally will bode well for the can. So but again whether it's 1%, 2% or 3%, we're the only reason I put that number out there was to tell you that if the market was up to next year, we'd be up to next year. Speaker 201:01:08We're not going to we're not as we sit here today we don't believe we outperform or underperform the market. We're going to be in line with the market. Speaker 501:01:16Understood. I appreciate it. Two quick ones hopefully. Maybe to re ask the share repurchase question a little bit differently. I mean you served time as CFO. Speaker 501:01:27I suspect there's a framework behind your decisions to repurchase shares or at what value you think intrinsic is and you'll be more or less aggressive in and around that. Maybe confirming that for us, and then thinking about other alternatives that you may have for capital. I mean, I see almost $1,800,000,000 sitting on the balance sheet and I appreciate we're talking about net debt versus gross debt and those types of targets. But just help us with that. And then really quickly, hopefully, any expectation for or early read for tinplate pricing? Speaker 501:02:02It's been a little bit volatile. I know it tends to track normal steel prices but just sometimes it impacts a little bit of volatility or impose a little bit of volatility on your non reportable segment? Speaker 201:02:14Yes. So on tinplate had you asked me 3 months ago I'd have said it was going to be up 5% to 10%. A month ago, I would have told you it looks like it's going to be down. Now it looks like it's going to be up a couple percent. I don't know and we won't know till January. Speaker 201:02:30A little bit of volatility in the tinplate businesses. But as I said, in total the non reportables Gabe now making up about 5% of our EBITDA. So I wouldn't that should not be any narrative that we need to discuss to really understand or describe the Crown story at this point. Kevin's got a lot of cash on the balance sheet. 2 things I want to say. Speaker 201:02:53That's not all going to be used for share buybacks and it's not going to be used for acquisition. It's principally going to be used for debt reduction. We have a number of maturities coming due. And we generally earn as much interest or more than we pay. So we feel better about holding the cash, earning more interest than we're paying on the debt we have yet to pay down. Speaker 201:03:18So but most of that cash is waiting to be applied to bonds that come due and or some term loan that will pay off in the future. And lastly on share buybacks, yes listen I spent a lot of time in the finance sector of the company. Your views of the world are always shaped by your past. And the one thing I would tell you is that one thing you do know is that when you pay down debt it is certain. And there is a nice feeling behind certainty. Speaker 201:03:58So I would describe to you that there will be a healthy mix of debt pay down along with share buyback over the next couple of years on our journey to 2.5. As I said, we don't feel the need to get there quickly. It was only 2 or 3 years ago and perhaps not you Gabe, but many of the analysts and others were not very concerned about companies that were levered 3.5 to 4.5 times in our space just given the consistent large cash flows we do generate. And that's changed a little with the size of interest expense or interest rates right now. But we're pretty comfortable where we're at. Speaker 201:04:41We'd like to reduce the interest expense. So more of the operating leverage we have accretes to the bottom line. We agree with that. But as I said paying down debt is certain and but there'll be a healthy mix. Speaker 501:04:54Thank you sir. Speaker 201:04:57Thank you. Speaker 301:04:58Thank you. Operator01:04:59That is all the time we have today for your question. Speaker 201:05:01I you. Thank you. That is all the time we have today for questions. I think you told me that was the last question. So thank you very much, Al. Speaker 201:05:04And thank you everybody for joining us. That concludes the call today. And we'll speak to you again in February. Bye now. Operator01:05:12Again, that concludes today's conference. Thank you everyone for joining. You may now disconnect and have a great day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCrown Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Crown Earnings HeadlinesPack Your Bags - and Your Plus One: Crowne Plaza launches new 'Bring Your Bestie' promotion, ...April 16 at 2:56 PM | gurufocus.comPack Your Bags - and Your Plus One: Crowne Plaza launches new 'Bring Your Bestie' promotion, ...April 16 at 2:56 PM | gurufocus.comCrypto’s crashing…but we’re still profitingMost traders are panicking right now. Bitcoin’s dropping. Altcoins are bleeding. The stock market’s a mess. The news is screaming fear. But while most traders watch their portfolios tank…April 16, 2025 | Crypto Swap Profits (Ad)Crown Holdings price target lowered to $105 from $110 at MizuhoApril 16 at 5:53 AM | markets.businessinsider.comCrown Holdings (CCK) Gets a Buy from Bank of America SecuritiesApril 16 at 5:53 AM | markets.businessinsider.comAlbion Crown VCT PLC Adjusts Share Capital and Voting RightsApril 15 at 12:36 PM | tipranks.comSee More Crown Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Crown? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Crown and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About CrownCrown (NYSE:CCK), together with its subsidiaries, engages in the packaging business in the United States and internationally. It operates through Americas Beverage, European Beverage, Asia Pacific, and Transit Packaging segments. The company manufactures and sells recyclable aluminum beverage cans and ends, glass bottles, steel crowns, aluminum caps, non-beverage cans, and aerosol cans and closures. It also provides manual, semi-automatic, and automatic equipment and tools to apply and remove consumables, such as straps and films; protective solutions, including airbags, edge protectors, and honeycomb products; and steel and plastic consumables include steel strap, plastic strap, industrial film, and other related products. The company serves food industries, including pet food, personal care, household, and industrial products. 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There are 14 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to Crown Holdings Third Quarter 2024 Conference Call. Your lines have been placed on a listen only mode until the question and answer session. Please be advised that this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Kevin Clouthiere, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Operator00:00:17Sir, you may begin. Speaker 100:00:19Thank you, Elle, and good morning. With me on today's call is Tim Donahue, President and Chief Executive Officer. If you do not already have the earnings release, it is available on our website at crowncorp.com. On this call, as in the earnings release, we will be making a number of forward looking statements. Actual results could vary materially from such statements. Speaker 100:00:43Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual results to vary is contained in the press release and in our SEC filings, including our Form 10 ks for 2023 and subsequent filings. Net sales in the quarter were level with prior year at $3,100,000,000 reflecting increases in global beverage can volumes and North American food can volumes, offset by lower volumes in most other businesses. Segment income was $472,000,000 in the quarter compared to $430,000,000 in the prior year, reflecting volume gains in both Americas and European Beverage and the benefits of cost reduction initiatives in Asia Pacific, partially offset by demand softness across most other businesses. The company recorded a GAAP loss of $1.47 per share in the quarter, mainly due to a non cash pension settlement charge of $4.33 per share compared to earnings of $1.33 per share, excuse me, in the prior year quarter. Adjusted earnings per diluted share were $1.99 up 15% compared to the $1.73 in the prior quarter. Speaker 100:02:00Free cash flow remained strong at $668,000,000 through 9 months driven by excellent operational performance and reduced capital spending. We took steps in the quarter to strengthen our balance sheet by transferring approximately $860,000,000 of assets and liabilities of our Canadian and U. S. Pension plans to highly rated insurance companies, which will reduce future cash flow and earnings risk. With this action, combined with the previous buyout in the U. Speaker 100:02:28K, the company has annuitized approximately $4,000,000,000 of pension liabilities since 2021. As part of the settlement, the company contributed $100,000,000 into the U. S. Pension plan. As announced during the quarter, Crown's Board of Directors authorized the repurchase of an aggregate amount of up to $2,000,000,000 of common stock through the end of 2027. Speaker 100:02:53During the quarter, we repurchased $110,000,000 of common stock. We will continue to opportunistically pursue share repurchases through a disciplined approach. We are proactively managing our debt maturities with the issuance of $600,000,000 of euro notes due 2023 and the repayment of $600,000,000 of outstanding notes due that were due in September. We finished the quarter with $1,700,000,000 of cash after taking the actions above and net leverage was 3 times compared to 3.5 times for the same period last year. Before turning the call over to Tim, I want to discuss our expectations for the Q4 and full year. Speaker 100:03:39Our 4th quarter adjusted earnings per diluted share are projected to be in the range of $1.45 to $1.55 per share. In view of the strong performance, year to date, we are increasing our full year guidance to $6.25 to $6.35 per share compared to the previous guidance range of $6 to $6.25 per diluted share. Key assumptions supporting the updated earnings guidance include interest expense is $380,000,000 average common shares outstanding of $120,000,000 and exchange rates at current levels full year tax rate of approximately 25 percent depreciation of approximately 300,000,000 dollars non controlling interest between $140,000,000 $150,000,000 and dividends to non controlling interest of $125,000,000 We project 2024 full year adjusted free cash flow to be at least $750,000,000 after making the previously mentioned $100,000,000 pension contribution and no more than $450,000,000 of capital spending. With the combination of free cash flow and the $300,000,000 in proceeds from the previously announced Deviosa sale, we expect to end the year with net leverage below 3 times. As discussed in July, we are committed to our new long term leverage target net leverage target, excuse me, of 2.5 times, which is expected to be achieved through the combination of debt reduction and EBITDA growth, while returning capital to shareholders through dividends and opportunistic share repurchases. Speaker 100:05:21With that, I'll turn the call over to Tim. Speaker 200:05:24Thank you, Kevin, and good morning to everyone. I'll be brief and then we'll open the call to questions. As reflected in last night's earnings release and as Kevin just summarized, 3rd quarter operating results were strong and ahead of earlier expectations. As has been the case throughout 2024, global beverage operations performed exceptionally well with combined global beverage segment income of 23% on the back of 5% global volume growth. Manufacturing performance including higher efficiencies and lower spoilage was excellent. Speaker 200:06:02Additionally, a great effort by the Asian team to embrace and execute the capacity reduction program announced late last year, leading to the full realization of those benefits earlier than expected. Consolidated segment income margin advanced 140 basis points over the prior quarter. Importantly through 9 months, free cash flow is $450,000,000 ahead of the prior year 9 month period due to lower capital expenditures and better working capital management. Net leverage at the end of September after giving effect to the pension contribution and share buyback was 3 times, a full half turn lower than at this time last year. And as Kevin just noted, we expect year end net leverage to be below 3 times. Speaker 200:06:46Americas Beverage reported a 21% increase in segment income on the back of 10% volume growth including 5% increase in North America. Our full year volume growth estimates remain at 5% to 6% for North America and mid to high single digits in Brazil. Income performance in European Beverage advanced 18% over the prior year, primarily due to 6% shipment growth combined with the continuing benefits of our margin recovery program. Income through 9 months this year has now equaled the full year 2021 level in the segment. Income in Asia Pacific advanced 50% in the quarter as the combined benefits from actions to reduce capacity and improve revenue quality offset an 11% decline in unit volume sales. Speaker 200:07:36While demand weakness was noted throughout the segment, we remain well positioned to benefit from our new lower cost structure when regional volume demand returns. As expected, Transit Packaging income was down to the prior year. Shipment volumes and results continue to be impacted by weakening global manufacturing conditions with activity likely to stay in contraction at least through year end leading to our cautious outlook at this time. The business continues to tightly control costs while generating significant cash. North American tinplate operations performed well in the quarter with 5% higher food can volumes while can making equipment had lower activity as expected. Speaker 200:08:21And in summary and as we said earlier, a strong quarter where the benefits of higher volumes and the efforts of a world class manufacturing team were evident. Global beverage operations have been strong for 9 months and are expected to remain so through year end. Global manufacturing conditions remain in contraction, but the transit business is well positioned to grow when industrial market demand returns. A solid performance so far this year with margins and income up, EBITDA expected to exceed the record level posted last year, strong cash flow with leverage down and expected to go lower. And with that, Elle, I think we are ready to take questions. Operator00:09:02Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Ghansham Panjabi of Baird. Your line is now open. Speaker 300:09:28Hey, guys. Good morning. Speaker 200:09:29Good morning, Ghansham. Good morning. Speaker 300:09:31Good morning. Yes, I guess on the Americas segment, obviously very, very strong margin conversion, much higher than our forecast and much better than the trend line for the 1st two quarters. Just give us some more color in terms of what drove that? And is there any benefit unique to 2024 price cost or whatever else that may not repeat in 2025 for that segment? Speaker 200:09:55Well, Ghansham, I'll deal with the second part of the question first. As we said earlier this year, we would expect the growth in the business that we've had this year I. E. The market share gains that we've had this year or our growth ahead of the market growth this year to not recur that is our growth next year will be in line with the market. So we're looking at a market in North America so far this year where we believe the market's up 1% to 1.5%. Speaker 200:10:28And I think in North America year to date, we're probably up 6% to 7%. If the market's up 2% next year, we think we'll be up 2% next year. So that's number 1. We had an exceptionally strong performance in Brazil, Brazil bouncing back nicely through the summer. You've heard our view on Brazil. Speaker 200:10:52Over the years, we remain very bullish on the Brazilian market despite hiccups along the way. We always believe it's a market that over any period of time if you measure it, it's a continuing trend line up. And then we had a very strong performance in Mexico this year. So obviously margin is very high. Some of that to do with lower aluminum although aluminum the cost of aluminum is starting to trend up. Speaker 200:11:23So that will have an impact on percentage margins but not on absolute margins. But all in all, it was much better than we forecasted as well. It could to be honest with you Ghansham, it could be $15,000,000 better than we had forecasted in the Q3. And the manufacturing team doing exceptionally well. I would say we're going to have manufacturing improvements from better efficiency and spoilage and asset utilization this year upwards of $20,000,000 to $25,000,000 benefit this year. Speaker 200:12:00And where you really get the benefit of that is in a high volume quarter like the Q3. Speaker 300:12:05Okay. And so just to clarify on that, so price cost in terms of PPI adjusters etcetera at this point looking out to 2025, do you see any headwinds associated with that year over year? Speaker 200:12:16I think PPI could be a small headwind next year although I don't have the numbers in front of me. I think obviously inflation has been coming down and the contracts are organized in such a way that you pass on those savings to customers if and when you have them. Now PPI is not a perfect proxy for the costs in our business. And we've talked previously about PPI does not seem to reflect what happens in the coating space for example. Labor always goes up. Speaker 200:12:55Labor never comes down. The labor content may come down, but the rate never comes down. So there are a lot of things that move around in our cost base that aren't perfectly reflected in PPI, but I would expect PPI as we sit here today to be an adjustment in the favor of the customers next year. Speaker 300:13:16Okay. I'll just turn it over there. Congrats on the progress. Speaker 200:13:19Thank you. Operator00:13:21Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Chris Parkinson of Wolfe Company Research. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:13:28Hey, guys. Good morning. Good morning, Chris. You hit on this Speaker 500:13:31a little good morning. Thank you. Speaker 400:13:34You hit on this a little just in your last response. I just want to dig a little deeper just given the progress that's been made operationally, not only in the Americas, but also Asia. Can you just kind of comment on your efforts there? You mentioned you were ahead in Asia, but if you could just dig a little bit deeper, kind of comment on where you are in terms of your ultimate progression on where you wanted to be, where you are, and as well as your conviction in terms of the sustainability of that progress into 2025 and 2026? Thank you. Speaker 200:14:04So when I remark about being ahead of expected progress, I was specifically referring to the capacity reduction program that we had undertaken. So just think about it. It's a division that's on the other side of the world. They're a long way from headquarters. We see them several times a year. Speaker 200:14:26Having said that, they've enjoyed being part of a high growth business for the last 20 years and then they've got a little growth hiccup and the plan is that we're going to remove capacity. So we were always a bit concerned as to how readily how ready they were to accept cost reduction as opposed to continuing growth. And as I said, we're really pleasantly pleased with their embracing of the need to right size their capacity. I think we now have a business that is on the order of each quarter now earning somewhere between $45,000,000 $50,000,000 of segment income which is in the absence of volume growth returning to the region, I think that's the kind of range we expect in that business going forward. Obviously, the real benefit in that region will be when volume returns when the consumer has more confidence and off a lower cost base we look to really benefit from that. Speaker 400:15:38Got it. And just as a quick follow-up, getting below 3 times leverage, obviously, shows a lot of progress. Can we just hit on just any preliminary thoughts on how we should be thinking about not only trending into the year end, but perhaps just into 2025? How the Street should be thinking about working capital, cash interest expense, if there's an update there? And just how we should be thinking about cash conversion as we progress and just any quick thoughts on capital allocation as a core layer of that? Speaker 400:16:07Thank you so much. Speaker 200:16:09Thanks, Chris. Speaker 100:16:10So in terms of working capital, look, we've done a great job in terms of driving down working capital this year. We expect it to be at least $100,000,000 benefit for us. I don't think there's much more to get out of working capital. So I think we're probably where we're going to be. I think when you look at interest expense, we have clearly have an opportunity to have lower interest costs with interest rates coming down. Speaker 100:16:36I think it will be determined by how much the Fed decides to reduce rates. But interest expense at down from $3.80 to $3.50 is definitely possible and probably kind of the baseline of where we would look at. And then as we think about capital allocation to buy back stock, we're I would fully expect us to be in the market next year to buy back stock. I think that our leverage target, we're committed to 2.5x times getting to it. And I think as Tim had said on the previous call, we could be there by the end of next year if we want to be. Speaker 100:17:13I think we want to stay below 3 times, but we are committed to also returning capital to shareholders through share repurchases. So I would expect us to be in the market next year buying back shares. Speaker 600:17:28Thanks for the color. Thank you. Speaker 200:17:30Thanks, Chris. Operator00:17:32Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of George Staphos from Bank of America. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:17:39Thanks so much. Hope you guys can hear me okay. Congratulations on the progress. Thank you, George. How are you? Speaker 500:17:46My two questions. First of all, assuming that you grow with the market, recognizing the market growth is going to vary from year to year and you can't necessarily predict that, how much runway do you have in terms of capacity across beverage cans? And if there's a way to shade that or discuss the color by region in terms of how much runway you might have between North America, Europe and the like, that's question number 1. Question number 2, given our analysis, your EVA, your return on capital have all been trending up well, and congratulations on that. As we think about the next 2 years, not trying to get into an earnings forecast quarter by quarter, what do you think is going to be the biggest driver of your operating profit improvement assuming the next couple of years? Speaker 500:18:38Will that be just pure volume? Will it be the improvement say in Signode or your non beverage can operations? What are the headwinds? And do you think invested capital, what you invest between work capital CapEx will grow in tandem with operating profit? Or do you think you can actually keep that constrained relative to your operating profit growth? Speaker 500:19:00Thanks guys. Good luck in the quarters. Speaker 200:19:02That's a lot. So let me George don't go anywhere because you might have to repeat some of that. I think that in our business and you know the business very well George, growth is income growth let's say is largely dependent over time on volume growth. We need volume. We have an industrial platform that's sitting there and it doesn't do well if it's not running. Speaker 200:19:27It needs to run all the time. That is 20 fourseven. So you always need volume and the more volume you have and the more growth you have the better your profits are. The platforms that we have I would say that I can't as I sit here today I think given what we expect market growth to be for the next at least 2 years, we don't anticipate having to install any new capacity to achieve expected market growth. Now if there's movement among suppliers and or we want to modernize a specific facility, okay, there's a little capital to be spent. Speaker 200:20:08But there's no necessary capital to achieve what we think markets will grow over the next several years in all the markets. I don't know if Kevin mentioned it. We said no more than $450,000,000 this year and I think if we wanted to give you a number for next year we'd say the same thing no more than $450,000,000 for next year. Now in addition to that's beverage what I largely just talked about. The other part of your question George was how will the non beverage businesses do. Speaker 200:20:40I think largely until we see the next inflection on global beverage can growth across the industry, we would expect the equipment business to be more or less in line with where it is this year. I don't see any really large moves in the aerosol business. I think that's largely going to be as we look to next year where it is this year. And food cans in North America could be a little bit better. But it's all modest. Speaker 200:21:10I think in total, if you were to look at food cans, aerosol cans, equipment making, it's roughly 5% of our EBITDA on a consolidated basis. So if it's up a little bit, it doesn't move the needle a whole lot there. I think on the transit side, the cost base is in really good shape. Competitively, we're in very good shape. For those of you who follow global manufacturing or purchasing manufacturing Purchasing Managers Indices around the world, you'll know that they're in deep contraction in certain countries. Speaker 200:21:42For example, if 50 is considered the dividing line between expansion and contraction, Germany is currently at 40%. So globally the manufacturing sector not looking very strong. But having said that, there are some signs of life at least in North America. And the construction industry looking like they could be an opportunity to turn the corner. We'll see. Speaker 200:22:15But obviously a lot of upside in the transit business when and if or if and when industrial markets return. I think I got it all George. Speaker 500:22:26No, Tim, you got it. Whatever the market is going to grow out that's what's going to be the biggest driver and if you get optionality with Cigna that's incremental and CapEx. Speaker 200:22:37Just touching on your last point which you rightly point out off a much lower levered balance sheet and from an EVA perspective an investment capital base that shouldn't expand so much, right. Speaker 500:22:52Thank you so much, Tim. Speaker 700:22:54Thank you. Speaker 500:22:55All the best. Operator00:22:57Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mike Leithead of Barclays. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:23:03Great. Thanks. Good morning, guys. Good morning, Mike. Good morning. Speaker 800:23:07Tim, you said it a few times already about global beverage can this year continuing to exceed expectations. I guess bigger picture, when you go through the numbers internally, what do you think has been the biggest driver of the outperformance versus perhaps where you budgeted to start this year? Speaker 200:23:26I think number 1 is volume has been a little better and it's held up. So you always have a there's always a concern when you look at a forecast and you see large volume gains, especially in a market where you're asking yourself how strong is the consumer. There's been a lot of inflation in the product line as well as inflation across everything else the consumer is having to deal with. And the market you participate in is up 1% to 2%, do you really believe these volume numbers? So I think volume is number 1. Speaker 200:24:03It's been strong and it's been steadily strong which is always nice to see. And then our manufacturing performance both in the United States and Europe has been it's always I got to stop for a second, it's always exceptional in Brazil. But if I looked at the United States and Europe making great strides to the levels of exceptionalism this year as well. So a lot of money that we've gained this year from manufacturing performance. Speaker 800:24:35Great. That's super helpful. And then Kevin on the pensions, just following the settlement and funding in 3Q, how does that change your go forward pension expense and say the cash you need to fund it over the next 1 to 2 years? Speaker 100:24:49Yes. So from a cash funding perspective, we would not expect any U. S. Pension funding over the next year or probably the following, maybe some minor amount. Newer Canadian. Speaker 100:25:03Newer Canadian pension plan. We still have we have various other pension plans that are still outstanding, so there will be some pension funding. I'm sorry, did you have another question there, Mike? Speaker 800:25:17Yes. It was just around the cash funding and then also just the pension expense that flows through your P and L. Is there any change to that? Speaker 100:25:24Yes. So look, I would expect the pension actions probably give us about a $0.05 uptick after you consider the interest cost on the $100,000,000 pension contribution that we had. So call it roughly $15,000,000 of lower pension expense, dollars 6,000,000 of interest expense on the $100,000,000 tax effective probably give you right around $0.05 Speaker 800:25:57Great. Thanks, guys. Speaker 900:25:59You're welcome. Operator00:26:01Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Phil Ng of Jefferies. Your line is now open. Speaker 1000:26:07Hey guys. Tim, you talked about the consumer making sure it's strong and healthy. I'm most curious about Europe, right? You guys put out a solid quarter again, certainly some restocking at Eurocup. So how are trends kind of shaping up and what you're seeing on that front? Speaker 1000:26:23Because some of the European packing companies have actually talked about perhaps the consumer being a little softer. Speaker 200:26:28Yes. I mean that doesn't surprise me. I think the consumer is I think the European consumer is much weaker than the U. S. Consumer as a just as a not to make a political statement, but I think they have far less disposable income in Europe than we do in the United States and that's all around policy and other things. Speaker 200:26:47But we agree with that sentiment that the European consumer is perhaps weaker. There are a number of things as you started to point out. We've got some restocking this year. We've had a couple events the Olympics and the Euro Cup and a fairly good tourism season if you follow the airlines. I think the tourism season was pretty strong and it's generally strong in the regions where we're strongest that is Southern Europe. Speaker 200:27:19We had a very weak Q4 last year in Europe, principally due to the destocking we've discussed. We're not anticipating that happening again. And the large part of our outperformance in Q4 this year compared to Q4 last year will be related to European recovery, So large majority of that. So I think it's one of the things that helped Phil, we're in a business that's it's a small pleasure business, right? It's You've got a weak consumer in a lot of places and they're struggling and despite that, the beverage can is holding up really well. Speaker 200:28:02You would tell yourself it's holding up exceptionally well in the face of a consumer that stretched. So we're benefiting from that not only in North America, but also in Europe as well as some substrate shift in Europe which is continuing to happen. So all in all despite the weaker consumer feel pretty fortunate to be in the can business. Speaker 1000:28:24Okay, super. When I look at the progress you guys have made on the margin front, whether it's Asia cost coming out and then recouping inflation in Europe, it's been pretty incredible. Margins have been up nicely. Appreciating loan prices are going up. That will swing percent margins. Speaker 1000:28:40But do you still have much to go here in terms of driving margins higher? You talked about some of the good things you're doing on the manufacturing side. So when we think about 2025 and perhaps even 2026, how should we think about the margin profile and profitability going forward? Speaker 200:28:56Yes. So there shouldn't be a limit to the margin, right? But obviously you've got customers and suppliers and they have margin aspirations as well. So I like in it to golf if you're a golfer or those of you who are golfers, it's pretty easy to go from a 25 handicap down to a 10. To try to go from a 10 to a scratch or to a plus is it's the law of diminishing returns. Speaker 200:29:26It's really difficult. The low hanging fruit is largely gone and now you're really looking at sharpening the edges and there's always improvement we can make. One of the things that happened here in the Q3, we didn't say it yet, but why did we outperform so much in the Q3 and Kevin and I were talking about it last couple of days and you kind of look at each other and you say, you know what, everything went right. I mean it wasn't perfect, right. Transit's down, but everything else went right. Speaker 200:29:55Even the food guys had a good volume quarter. And there's always the question in your mind, you know you're going to have a have a time in the future when everything doesn't go right. So I think we're really pleased with the operations. We're really pleased with the business folks. They're driving exceptional margins. Speaker 200:30:20I don't know if we have leading packaging industry margins. Perhaps we have leading can margins. But it's how much higher can they go? I don't know. We're going to try to do the best we can to keep them where they're at and grow them. Speaker 200:30:36But we're going to need some volume to do that Phil, right? We're going to need the market. Now that I think that as we discussed earlier that it looks like business has largely settled in North America over the next couple of years. So we're going to need the market to grow. And then obviously it would be nice to have a bounce back industrially for the transit business as well. Speaker 1000:30:57Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Speaker 400:30:59Appreciate it. Thank you. Operator00:31:01Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Zekauskas of JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Speaker 1100:31:08Thanks very much. When I look at the transit margins by quarter, the decremental margins seem to be getting worse. Maybe they were 22% in the 1st quarter, 38% in the 2nd, 68% in the 3rd. Is that because volume continues to fall? Or why does the margin progression seem to get more severely negative? Speaker 200:31:40I'm not following you because I don't have I'm not looking at all the data you're looking at. But you're going to have to come offline and ask the guys explain it to the guys a little better because you just said our margins were down 60%. I don't understand what you're saying. Speaker 1100:31:59They're incrementals. In other words, if you look at the change in sales and you look at the change in operating profits, it seems that there's a greater percentage decrement as you go through the year. But we can take it offline. Speaker 200:32:14Yes. Listen, if I look at we can do all that. If I was to look at our Q3 margins compared to our 9 month margins, the Q3 margins look like they're all better than the 9 month margins. So the way we would look at the business is that with the benefit of expanding volume, you get even more you get more margin. Now we had a the 3rd quarter is a bigger quarter. Speaker 200:32:42So to move the needle on a bigger number is always harder to do than move the needle on a smaller number. But you're going to have to take this offline. Speaker 1100:32:48Sure. Speaker 200:32:49This is a day of school I missed. So I'm not following it. Speaker 1100:32:54Also in terms of your beverage can volumes in the Q3, overall, were they very different than they were in the Q2? That is sequentially, how much did your volumes change in beverage cans? Speaker 200:33:10Absolute level of volume? Speaker 1000:33:12Yes. Speaker 200:33:14I got to believe the absolute level of volume is higher in Q3 than it is in Q2. I don't have the Q2 in front of me. I do know I looked at one thing that happened Jeff and I do know that specifically to North America we were up 5% in the Q3 which is a little bit lower than we had been up earlier in the year. But I do know the Q3 of 2023 was up like 12% or 13% over the Q3 of 2022. So yes, I'm looking at no I mean volumes were higher in Q3 than they were in Q2. Speaker 200:33:58And the absolute level of volume pretty much the same. I'm talking global. I'm only looking at a global number here. The differential or the delta on the absolute Q3 to Q3 versus Q2 to Q2 about the same. But Q3 volumes in absolute terms up in Q3 versus Q2 both in 2023 and 2024. Speaker 1100:34:23Okay, great. Thank you so much. Speaker 200:34:25Thank you. Operator00:34:27Thank you. Our next question comes from Anthony Pettinari of Citigroup. Your line is now open. Speaker 1200:34:34Good morning. Good morning. Just following up on Europe, I think you closed the Helvetia acquisition about a year ago. And I'm just wondering, did that contribute at all or meaningfully to the kind of mid single digit growth you've seen in Europe? And can you just talk maybe about how that asset is operating or maybe kind of longer term goals for Germany and that plant? Speaker 200:35:00Yes. So I will say this and you're going to give me a platform to my fellow competitors, my fellow global competitors are going to appreciate this as well. So bought the business about a year ago. It's probably responsible for about 1.5% to 2% of our growth this year, 1% to 1.5% something in that range. We have been spending a lot of time retraining the workforce and a lot of time fine tuning the equipment is the wrong term. Speaker 200:35:34We're doing a lot more than fine tuning the equipment. And what we knew when we bought it and what we found out when we got inside very similar to what we hear others saying when they look at some of these smaller one line operations around the world. They're set up poorly. The people aren't trained very well and they're never going to be successful as one line operations. So you do have some one line operations in the U. Speaker 200:36:00S. Right now. One guy is I think he's basically moved he sold the equipment to somebody else. There's another guy that I don't know how he's going to survive. Now there is a one line operation in Texas. Speaker 200:36:12It's run by a high quality can company out of Mexico. They're going to be fine. They know how to make cans. But these new one liner guys that got into the business because they think can making is an easy venture. They found out that it's not so easy. Speaker 200:36:26But we're making improvements to the plant and we expect that should only be a further benefit to us as we go forward. We didn't pay a lot for the asset. You get a building. We got a can line and we got an end line for roughly $120,000,000 which is far less than we and some others in the industry would spend to build a proper plant. So we're spending a little bit of time here and effort to make it a proper plant with a properly trained workforce. Speaker 1200:36:59Okay. Okay. That's very helpful. And then just after kind of the pandemic boom and destocking, I mean, it seems like bev cans are in a pretty good place from a supply demand perspective. And I'm just wondering, have you seen any changes in pricing dynamics in any of your markets, either positive or negative? Speaker 1200:37:18Are customers trying to extend or shorten the length of contracts? Or are there any kind of larger than usual contract cliffs coming up in any of your markets? I'm just wondering if you talk about pricing to the extent you're able to and to the extent there's really you're seeing anything kind of notable in the markets? Speaker 200:37:36Well, I would say that there's always competition and perhaps some others see our margins and they believe they can under price us from time to time and where they see our performance and they're trying to understand how they can make their performance better. But listen markets are competitive and the customers the buying agents at the customers have a job to do and we have a job to do and their job is theirs and our job is ours, but it's always going to be competitive. I think to single out any 1 or few items, it's just business, right? You're always going Speaker 500:38:18to have Speaker 200:38:19competition whether it's from your natural competitors or whether it's margin competition from your customers and or your suppliers trying to grab from you one way or the other. I don't think there's any in the next 2 years there's no large clips of volume coming due. We do have in the North American market I do think we have some as an industry we have some larger contracts coming due heading into 20 27. But it's not unlike any other period in the past. So yes conditions are good. Speaker 200:38:54They could be better. Some of these as I mentioned some of these one line new entrants they're going to wash themselves out and we'll get back to a market where the customers understand if you want reliable quality cans you better go with a reliable quality supplier. And I think the large multinationals are quality and reliable. Speaker 1200:39:19Okay. That's very helpful. I'll turn it over. Speaker 200:39:22Thank you. Operator00:39:23Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Arun Viswanathan of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Speaker 1300:39:32Great. Thanks for taking my question. I hope you guys are well. I guess, first off, maybe I could just get your thoughts on some preliminary framework for 2025. I think you mentioned kind of your volumes following the market. Speaker 1300:39:48And but maybe the other businesses, you talked about low manufacturing activity, maybe that could weigh on Signode or Transit a little bit. So assuming maybe kind of low single digit top line growth, would you and some of the manufacturing efficiencies, would you be able to maybe see about mid single digit EBITDA growth? And then with some of the refinancings and some of the pension stuff, would you be able to see maybe mid to high single digit EPS growth? Or how should we think about kind of EBITDA and EPS growth in the 25? Speaker 200:40:26Think it's a little too early to say. The one item you left off of there is with the Ebeosas sale, we're going to lose a significant amount of equity earnings, which obviously accretes earnings as well. So but I think it's a little early to say. I don't want us to get ahead of our budget process. And I certainly I want us to do a better job this year of not allowing the differential to exist between your expectations and what we believe we can achieve. Speaker 200:40:57We kind of let that we as a company kind of let that get ahead of ourselves last year. So we don't want to do that again yet. I don't think we're ready to do that. Speaker 1300:41:07Okay. And then on the free cash flow, so CapEx is in the $450,000,000 range. Is that kind of how would you characterize that? I mean what part of that is say maintenance and sustaining growth? Would you find that as kind of the low levels here that we should kind of expect going forward? Speaker 1300:41:27Or is there other reasons why that could potentially go higher as you look into 2025? Speaker 200:41:33Well, I think the only way it goes higher is if there's a significant market shift somewhere in the world, which would require us to add capacity in a location that we're not currently in. Speaker 1300:41:54Okay. And then just one last one if I could ask. We talked a lot about promotional activity earlier this year. It seems like we haven't been thinking that much about it, but I know there has been some deflation. Do you think that the customers are appropriately promoting their product? Speaker 1300:42:15And I guess have there been any shift more away from towards favoring volume a little bit more? Or how do you think about the promotional activity levels? And are you guys encouraged maybe by the potential for some increase there? Thanks. Speaker 200:42:33Yes. I mean the first thing I would say is it's not for me to comment on what's appropriate that our customer set does with respect to their business. But listen they have a business model. We need to adapt to their business model and run our business as best we can to adapt to their business model. We're only successful if they're successful. Speaker 200:42:58And we need them to be successful long term. So we support their needs. We hope we support their needs as best we can with quality and service at all times. Now specifically on promotions in the North American marketplace, I would say we saw a little bit of an uptick in August. It looked like it backed off at the end of the quarter. Speaker 200:43:25It looks like it's a 1st couple of weeks of October things are going okay. So what I would describe if you're looking at promotions versus historical levels you would describe last year and this year is lackluster. But that may well be the new norm and as I said earlier we need to adjust our business to adjust to their new business. And they have a business model and we're only successful if they're successful. So we better find a way to be successful with their new business model if that indeed is it. Speaker 1300:44:01Great. Thanks a lot. Speaker 200:44:02Thank you. Operator00:44:04Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Joseph Spector of UBS. Your line is now open. Speaker 600:44:11Hi, good morning. A question on just free cash flow to clarify a couple things quickly is first, your guidance of greater than $750,000,000 when you talk about the pension. Is that excluding the pension? So on a reported basis or adjusted reported basis, it would be greater than $650,000,000 or does the $750,000,000 include that? And then if you could just comment on 3Q versus 4Q, it seems like free cash flow in 4Q is pretty minimal when normally that's a pretty highly cash generative quarter. Speaker 600:44:38So if you could explain what's going on there? Thanks. Speaker 100:44:42Sure. So in terms of the free cash flow of $750,000,000 that includes the deduction for the $100,000,000 of pension contribution we made. So not $650,000,000 plus $100,000,000 it's $750,000,000 plus $100,000,000 if you wanted to add it back. So that should resolve that. In terms of the Q4, if you look at it, we say at least $750,000,000 We're at $6,000,000 Let's call it just under $670,000,000 right now. Speaker 100:45:17You're going to have some earnings growth. You're going to have some working capital improvement, but you're also going to pay interest expense of probably close to $100,000,000 You're going to pay taxes equals to about $100,000,000 You're going to have CapEx of around $200,000,000 If you do the math, it gets you a little better than $750,000,000 Working capital is always the number that we drive to get as low as possible. So we'll see. That'll be the number that gets us really the delta to see how much better we do than at least $750,000,000 number. Speaker 600:45:56Thanks. And just kind of more philosophy follow-up here. Just how you guys approach guidance? So you guys have done quite a deal better versus your guidance the last couple of quarters. I think everyone likes to see some conservatism. Speaker 600:46:09But I guess when you're talking about the beats, it's a little bit of the cost savings maybe surprise, the volume surprised. So as you think about Q4 and maybe as you think about framing next year, are you trying to be conservative versus expectations? Or are you actually versus your plan seeing things coming in a lot better, which was I guess a surprise versus what you hope to achieve, if that hopefully makes sense to answer that? Speaker 200:46:38Yes. So I think if you look at where we've outperformed this year, it's been in the beverage businesses Americas, Europe and Asia. If you looked at the Q4 of last year, Asia had income of $47,000,000 which is kind of what the average has been for the 1st 3 quarters of this year. So you wouldn't expect a large increase in Asia year on year. And last year in Q4 in America's beverage, we actually had higher segment income in the Q4 last year than we had in the Q2 this year, which is a remarkable number because the second and third quarter if we were to rank the quarters, you'd go 3, 2, 4, 1 and for the Q4 to be bigger than the Q2. Speaker 200:47:30So I think the opportunity for the Americas Beverage business to have a quarter that's significantly better than the prior year quarter is far less this year in Q4 than it has been in the 1st 3 quarters of this year. I think the one business that we firmly believe we're going to do better year on year in the Q4 this year is European Beverage. And that's basically because the massive destocking that occurred in Q4 last year, we don't foresee that. So I think the range we gave you is a I appreciate the question because we knew it was coming, because we have when you beat a number by 10%, it's it begs the question for the next quarter. But I think the range we've given you is a fair range. Speaker 700:48:26Okay. Thank you. Speaker 600:48:27Thank you. Operator00:48:30Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Diaz of Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:48:37Hello, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. And I hope everybody is okay with the hurricane down in Florida. Thank you. So one of your global customers mentioned a consumer preference shift into cans, specifically in Mexico. Speaker 700:48:55And I think they also mentioned not necessarily having all the capacity needed to meet the can demand in the short term. Maybe Speaker 500:49:04just what are you Speaker 700:49:05seeing in Mexico? And do you potentially see the need to expand capacity within the region, maybe not a new line, but add some efficiencies within the region, etcetera? Speaker 200:49:18Yes. So I'm aware of what you're describing. As I said earlier, we've had a really strong performance volume wise in Mexican cans this year. Glass business has been firm. I don't necessarily see us needing to expand capacity as I said anywhere in the world right now unless there's a new customer award in a region of the world where we're not located. Speaker 200:49:51But I don't and that would apply to Mexico as well. So I think we have or the footprint we have currently, the capacity we have now, there's a little bit open. Where we see the market going for the next couple of years, I think we're okay. Speaker 700:50:10Great. Thanks for that color. And I know you're expecting down volumes within Asia due to your footprint actions in the region and the related profit benefits. That said, can you give some color on what you saw in the market in 3Q and what you're expecting in the region into the end of the year? And maybe just a quick follow on to that Asia question. Speaker 700:50:35During the summer, there was also a Chinese competitor that announced the construction of an additional line in Vietnam. Just given your bullish view on the region into the medium term, how do you assess the risk of potential new entrants into the region as well? Thanks. Speaker 200:50:50Yes. So it is a country specific region. The expansion by the Chinese competitor into Vietnam is specific to a multinational filler, not specific to a Vietnamese filler. I'll leave it at that. Volume I got year to date volumes here. Speaker 200:51:19I could tell you year to date we think Southeast Asia is up 5%. For the full year we're estimating they're going to be up about 5% and we forecast will be down about 8%. So I some of that's due to our capacity reduction. Some of that frankly is due to customer pruning, right? We walked away from a fairly significant chunk of business at 2 customers where the margins were not worth the risk. Speaker 200:51:52And you always we're not here to make cans for practice or just to pad volume statistics. We need to get a fair compensation for the risk we undertake and we didn't believe that business did. But that was on the order those two customers probably 75% of the volume decline we're experiencing came from those 2 customers. Having said that, I would not describe the capacity reductions we took as related to those 2 customer walkaways. So I think all in all we feel we have a very good customer set. Speaker 200:52:31We have pretty good balance with capacity. And like any region of the world, like any business, you need growth and we look forward to growth in the future. Speaker 700:52:45Great. Thank you. Speaker 200:52:47You're welcome. Operator00:52:48Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Edlain Rodriguez of Mizuho. Your line is now open. Speaker 900:52:55Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Tim, quick question for you on capital deployment and share buyback. So how do you balance the timing of any share buyback against an increasing share price? Or is the answer what I suspect you will say that the stock is still undervalued and you'll continue to be aggressive buyers as you go forward regardless of the share price? Speaker 200:53:22Well, I would say that the share price is undervalued. But the market doesn't say that. And so I think we will continue to use the term opportunistically buy back shares. I don't think we're going to be overly aggressive at any one point in time in the year because we're trying to prove a point that we're undervalued. If I look at our operating statistics, I look at our growth, I look at the businesses we operate and the portfolio, the percentage of the businesses within the portfolio, yes, I think we're undervalued. Speaker 200:53:56It doesn't matter what I think the market's spoken. So we're going to be opportunistic with share repurchases. Speaker 900:54:02Okay. And as a follow-up to CapEx spending, you keep taking it down. I mean last quarter it was no more than $500,000,000 this quarter is like no more than $450,000,000 Like is there anything that's being deferred? Like why are you able to watch it down like that just on quarter to quarter basis or year to year? What's going on there? Speaker 200:54:29Well, we keep saying no and eventually they accept no. I know you're chuckling, but that's frankly that's you're always asking the teams to do more with less and you're always trying to make sure they perfectly understand why they need to spend money and if there's no payback, why are we spending money. So it's really a question of refining it's a constant refinement of a process where they need to prove why you need to spend money. I don't think we're deferring anything. We spent a lot of money over the last several years and now is the time to get a payback on it. Speaker 900:55:10Okay. Perfect. Thank you. Speaker 400:55:12Thank you. Operator00:55:16Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Gabe Hajde of Wells Fargo Securities. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:55:22Tim, Kevin, Tom, good morning. Speaker 900:55:24Good morning, Katy. Speaker 500:55:27I want to try to revisit Anthony's question a little bit and just framework for thinking about volumes. You teased us a little bit with market growth of 2%, which I appreciate we don't know. But short term Speaker 200:55:41Gabe, it could be 0, it could be 1, it could be 3. I just picked a number, right? It's just Speaker 500:55:47a No, I understand. But short term, are there any, I guess, disruptions from weather in the Southeast for the U. S? But more importantly, what is informing sort of how you're thinking about the business? I mean, we all know that you guys go through medium term planning. Speaker 500:56:07And when I walk through a convenience store, I'm seeing more options to pick up a single serve can. And so whether it's innovation, whether it's channel in which cans are being sold, maybe dialogue with customers and what's informing your view for an expectation of low single digit growth in maybe North America? And then in Europe, as we do lap some of these sporting events, etcetera, restock this year thinking about next year, I think sustainability has been a pretty big driver for growth. Are there other things that we should be thinking about in our models and our forecast for growth? Speaker 200:56:49Okay. Let's I'll start with the hurricanes in the Southeast. We did have some storms in the upper Midwest in August, which delayed some of the fresh pack, but we'll get that back in early October on the food side. The hurricanes in the Southeast, no discernible impact to our beverage can business that I feel right now. We did have our we have an aerosol can plant in South Carolina that we shut down for a few days. Speaker 200:57:19So some sales loss there. But that will be made up. Nothing notable to discuss or to warn you about. No impact to any of our facilities other than power loss for a few days. Certainly some of our corporate employees dealing with some real devastation to their homes and belongings and we're helping them as best we can. Speaker 200:57:48Start with Europe first. I think that sustainability as you rightly point out is a big driver for the continued growth of the European can market as well as whether it's from sustainability or just cost or convenience or better for the fillers the continuing conversion from glass to can specifically soft drinks but also beer over time and we'll benefit from that in Europe. We believe we're going to continue to benefit from that in Europe. So whether that's sustainability or not or cost, there's continuing conversion. The one thing that I do think the upside in Europe that Europe hasn't had yet that we've seen to have had much more of in the United States is the proliferation of non beer alcoholic beverages. Speaker 200:58:43So as the other alcoholic ready to drink or other alcoholic beverages in cans become more readily available and embraced by Europeans to replace beer over time potentially replace beer over time that will favor the can. United States or North America if you will, you're right to point out that if you go to a convenience store, you see a variety of all kinds of products now being offered in cans. Some of that has to do with changing demographics, meaning the younger generation is not as loyal to the brands they drink. Their willingness to explore and experiment and try new products. And just because they like product day to day doesn't mean they're going to like it 2 weeks from now. Speaker 200:59:34So but all of that does bode well for the can because as you know the can is the perfect billboard to market and advertise your product with a variety of colors and graphic feels and other things like that. So we do think there's continued opportunity there. I don't want to say that we're going to continue to see cannibalization of beer. At some point beer will find its footing, but there has been a bit of cannibalization in beer from these non alcoholic drinks. And so we'll see where that settles. Speaker 201:00:15But one thing I think we do believe that in the Q3 in North America, we do believe that the alcohol segment grew faster than the non alcohol segment. And some of that could be a bounce back of some of the mass beer declines we've experienced over the last 7 or 8 quarters. We'll see where that falls out. But I think specific to your question Gabe, you look at new consumer behavior and the new consumers are the younger consumers and they generally consume more than older consumers and they are less loyal, more willing to try new things and that generally will bode well for the can. So but again whether it's 1%, 2% or 3%, we're the only reason I put that number out there was to tell you that if the market was up to next year, we'd be up to next year. Speaker 201:01:08We're not going to we're not as we sit here today we don't believe we outperform or underperform the market. We're going to be in line with the market. Speaker 501:01:16Understood. I appreciate it. Two quick ones hopefully. Maybe to re ask the share repurchase question a little bit differently. I mean you served time as CFO. Speaker 501:01:27I suspect there's a framework behind your decisions to repurchase shares or at what value you think intrinsic is and you'll be more or less aggressive in and around that. Maybe confirming that for us, and then thinking about other alternatives that you may have for capital. I mean, I see almost $1,800,000,000 sitting on the balance sheet and I appreciate we're talking about net debt versus gross debt and those types of targets. But just help us with that. And then really quickly, hopefully, any expectation for or early read for tinplate pricing? Speaker 501:02:02It's been a little bit volatile. I know it tends to track normal steel prices but just sometimes it impacts a little bit of volatility or impose a little bit of volatility on your non reportable segment? Speaker 201:02:14Yes. So on tinplate had you asked me 3 months ago I'd have said it was going to be up 5% to 10%. A month ago, I would have told you it looks like it's going to be down. Now it looks like it's going to be up a couple percent. I don't know and we won't know till January. Speaker 201:02:30A little bit of volatility in the tinplate businesses. But as I said, in total the non reportables Gabe now making up about 5% of our EBITDA. So I wouldn't that should not be any narrative that we need to discuss to really understand or describe the Crown story at this point. Kevin's got a lot of cash on the balance sheet. 2 things I want to say. Speaker 201:02:53That's not all going to be used for share buybacks and it's not going to be used for acquisition. It's principally going to be used for debt reduction. We have a number of maturities coming due. And we generally earn as much interest or more than we pay. So we feel better about holding the cash, earning more interest than we're paying on the debt we have yet to pay down. Speaker 201:03:18So but most of that cash is waiting to be applied to bonds that come due and or some term loan that will pay off in the future. And lastly on share buybacks, yes listen I spent a lot of time in the finance sector of the company. Your views of the world are always shaped by your past. And the one thing I would tell you is that one thing you do know is that when you pay down debt it is certain. And there is a nice feeling behind certainty. Speaker 201:03:58So I would describe to you that there will be a healthy mix of debt pay down along with share buyback over the next couple of years on our journey to 2.5. As I said, we don't feel the need to get there quickly. It was only 2 or 3 years ago and perhaps not you Gabe, but many of the analysts and others were not very concerned about companies that were levered 3.5 to 4.5 times in our space just given the consistent large cash flows we do generate. And that's changed a little with the size of interest expense or interest rates right now. But we're pretty comfortable where we're at. Speaker 201:04:41We'd like to reduce the interest expense. So more of the operating leverage we have accretes to the bottom line. We agree with that. But as I said paying down debt is certain and but there'll be a healthy mix. Speaker 501:04:54Thank you sir. Speaker 201:04:57Thank you. Speaker 301:04:58Thank you. Operator01:04:59That is all the time we have today for your question. Speaker 201:05:01I you. Thank you. That is all the time we have today for questions. I think you told me that was the last question. So thank you very much, Al. Speaker 201:05:04And thank you everybody for joining us. That concludes the call today. And we'll speak to you again in February. Bye now. Operator01:05:12Again, that concludes today's conference. Thank you everyone for joining. You may now disconnect and have a great day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by