Ingevity - Q2 2023
August 3, 2023
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Good morning or good afternoon all, welcome to the Ingevity Q2 2023 Earnings Call and Webcast. My name is Adam, and I'll be your operator for today. If you'd like to ask a question in the Q&A portion of today's call, you may do so by pressing star followed by 1 on your telephone keypad. I will now hand the floor over to John Nypaver to begin. John, please go ahead when you are ready.
John Nypaver (VP of Investor Relations)
Thank you, Adam. Good morning, and welcome to Ingevity's Q2 2023 earnings call. Early this morning, we posted a presentation on our investor site that you can use to follow today's discussion. It can be found on ir.ingevity.com under Events and Presentations. Throughout this call, we may refer to non-GAAP financial measures, which are intended to supplement, not substitute for, comparable GAAP measures. Definitions of these non-GAAP financial measures and reconciliations to comparable GAAP measures are included in our earnings release and are also in our Form 10-K. We may also make forward-looking statements regarding future events and future financial performance of the company during this call, and we caution you that these statements are just projections, and actual results or events may differ materially from those projections, as further described in our earnings release. Our agenda is on slide 3.
Our speakers today are John Fortson, our President and CEO, and Mary Hall, our CFO. Our business leads, Ed Woodcock, President of Performance Materials, and Rich White, President of Performance Chemicals, are available for questions and comments. Steve Hume, President of Advanced Polymer Technologies, is away on business travel, so John will field any APT questions. John will start us off with some highlights for the quarter. Mary will follow with a review of our consolidated financial performance and the business segment results for the Q2. John will then provide an update on guidance, followed by closing comments. With that, over to you, John.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Thanks, John. Hello, everyone. On slide 4, you can see our highlights for Q2. The team delivered double-digit revenue growth while maintaining mid-twenties EBITDA margins, a great outcome in this environment. Three of our four business lines performed well. Performance Materials had double-digit growth from last year, and we saw sequential growth as well. We were excited to see that Nexeon, the company in which we invested $60 million last year, has announced an agreement to supply silicon anode material to Panasonic, one of the world's leading battery companies. Additionally, overnight, Nexeon issued another press release announcing their intention to build a manufacturing plant in Korea, as well as a supply agreement with OCI. Nexeon's silicon-based anode solution can increase the energy density of lithium-ion cells by up to 50%, increasing vehicle range and reducing charging time.
This agreement validates the promise of Nexeons technology and its progress in development. We are continuing our joint development work with Nexeon to include our activated carbon in their solution. This is a great step forward in our multi-pronged approach to finding alternative uses for our carbon. The Advanced Polymer Technologies team continues to manage that business efficiently and effectively, increasing margins into the 20s, even with sluggish economies in Europe and China, APT's two largest markets. While volumes were down in lower margin areas like footwear, we saw volume growth in the strategic areas we identified at our Investor Day, bioplastics and automotive applications such as paint protective films. Increasing recognition for the sustainable nature of our technology is supporting growth in bioplastics.
Just recently, we added to our growing list of biodegradable certifications when our CAPA thermoplastic products were awarded the TÜV AUSTRIA Soil Certification for providing biodegradable solutions for agricultural and horticultural applications. Results in the Performance Chemicals segment reflect two very different business environments. Mary and I both will focus on walking you through what is transpiring. Our Pavement Technologies business delivered a record quarter. Even excluding the addition of Ozark Road Markings, our legacy pavement business had their highest sales quarter ever. The pavement team is executing the strategy we shared at Investor Day. The team is expanding our footprint globally and generating higher volumes in Europe and South America due to technology adoption. The UK is quickly converting to having one of the highest warm mix adoption rates in the world, which means less energy use and lower emissions when using our flagship product, Evotherm.
In Brazil, a Petrobras pavement plant is converting an entire refinery to include Evotherm. This is a terrific development, as only 12% of existing public roads in Brazil are made from asphalt today. We are also adding new products and technologies to keep expanding our portfolio, both in warm mix and pavement recycling, to meet the evolving needs of customers around the world. Our Industrial Specialties business and Performance Chemicals, however, had a challenging quarter and faces a tough environment. As we have discussed, crude tall oil, or CTO, is the key raw material for this business, and the cost of CTO remains near record highs. When we refine CTO, we get equal parts tall oil fatty acid, or TOFA, and rosin.
While TOFA demand remains solid, the headwinds we highlighted in our Q1 call remain, namely a tepid China recovery and continued destocking or very slow restocking by customers, particularly in our rosin-based products such as adhesives. We are also seeing some adhesives customers shift to lower-cost alternatives. As a result, we have slowed down plant run rates to manage the inventory build in rosin, which has negatively impacted plant throughput and the availability of TOFA for sale. If you have followed us for a while, you know this business is cyclical. The difference now is the step change in inflated CTO prices, which we expect to linger for some time. On an annual basis, we expect this to be a $200 million increase in the cost of CTO to what we paid last year.
We knew that these costs would increase over the course of the year and had built that into our initial forecast and guidance. However, at that time, we anticipated we would be able to offset this cost pressure to a large extent through price increases, as we expected end market demand to continue to be strong, following the trend we saw into late last year. As we all now know, industrial end market demand has weakened throughout this year, particularly in our rosin end markets, but also in many other markets. As a result, performance in Industrial Specialties has deteriorated, and we are not seeing the offsetting strength in APT and Performance Materials that we anticipated. To mitigate these pressures, we initiated significant cost reduction actions across the company at the end of Q2, which Mary will discuss in more detail.
In the current economic environment, we will only recover roughly $100 million of the increased cost structure during the year. Our alternate fatty acid, or AFA transition, is critical to offsetting higher CTO costs over the long term. It continues full bore. We continue to expand production and expect to surpass historic CTO run rates at the Crossett facility by this time next year. Our AFAs are currently being used in our existing products within Pavement Technologies and Oilfield business lines. In fact, we are building new storage tanks to utilize more AFA in our pavement production, and we are making inroads with potential customers on products that are new to Ingevity. We are also investing in talent to support this transition, adding a lead commercial officer to help accelerate our entry into these new markets.
Mary will provide more details on our quarterly performance, and I will cover the expected impacts for the remainder of the year and beyond when we discuss our guidance later in the call. With that, I'll turn it over to Mary.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
Thanks, John, and good morning, all. Please turn to slide five. Sales were up almost 15% as a result of stronger pricing across all segments and higher volumes in the Performance Materials segment and Pavement Technologies business line, and the addition of Ozark, which we acquired in Q4 of last year. If Ozark were excluded, sales were still up versus prior year. These positives more than offset the impact of volume declines in the Industrial Specialties business line and the APT segment. Gross profit was up slightly year-over-year, but adjusted gross margin was down about 440 basis points, due primarily to higher input costs, particularly CTO, and the impact on plant throughput of lower volumes, particularly in Industrial Specialties. SG&A, excluding depreciation and amortization, improved to 9.5% of sales, compared with 11.2% in the prior year.
Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $120.7 million, flat to last year, with an Adjusted EBITDA margin of 25.1%. A very solid result, given the challenges we faced in the quarter. Diluted adjusted EPS of $1.41 is lower than prior year, due primarily to higher interest expense and D&A associated with the Ozark acquisition, and a higher affected income tax rate, driven primarily by higher UK earnings and this year's increase in UK corporate tax rates from 19%-25%.
Turning to slide six, you'll see that our free cash flow of $27 million for the quarter was a bit lower than usual for a Q2, reflecting significant working capital increases in the quarter, particularly for inventory of rosin-based products and CTO, as demand for rosin-based products continued to be weak in the quarter, and in response, we dialed back processing of CTO. During the quarter, we repurchased about $59 million of shares, bringing our year-to-date total to about $92 million. While we continue to be opportunistic with share repurchases, we expect to focus on reducing leverage in the second half of the year, while remaining disciplined in our capital allocation decisions.
Also, as a result of WestRock's announcement in May that they will be closing the paper mill co-located with our Performance Chemicals North Charleston plant, we expect to incur some additional cash costs and expenses as we transition previously WestRock-managed shared services, such as utilities, to our sole use. For this year, we expect those costs to be between $15 million and $20 million, most of which will be incurred in the second half. We're continuing to evaluate the ongoing impact on our operating costs. As John mentioned in his comments, we are taking actions to reduce costs across the company to better align our cost structure with the business environment. We expect to see annualized savings from the actions we have already taken to be approximately $35 million, with $20 million expected to be realized in 2023. These actions include headcount reductions.
renegotiating supply contracts, and a tight rein on discretionary spending, including travel. If business trends do not improve in the second half of the year, we are prepared to take further actions. Turning to Performance Chemicals on slide 7, as John said, it was a tale of 2 business lines. Pavement had a strong quarter. A big piece of the year-over-year increase in sales is the addition of Ozark, but our legacy pavement business alone posted a record quarter, driven by growth not only in the U.S., but also in Europe and South America. This strong demand for our sustainable products gave the team pricing power across all regions. Industrial Specialties volume was down in the quarter, primarily as a result of macroeconomic trends seen throughout the industry, namely continued customer destocking, weak demand for rosin-based products in particular, and a slower China recovery.
We attribute roughly 20% of the drop in volume to customers moving to lower price substitutes, such as hydrocarbons. As John said, due to the higher cost of CTO, we are on track to spend roughly $200 million more on CTO this year versus last year. The team has done a good job of capturing price, but with market weakness continuing, unlike last year, when we covered the cost inflation, we now expect to cover only about half of this year's inflated CTO cost through increased price. We wanna emphasize that the major headwind for Industrial Specialties is on the rosin side, not TOFA. Rosin end markets are more susceptible to economic slowdowns, and those customers are more price sensitive since there are various substitute products available, as we're seeing with our packaging customers. Demand for TOFA is still strong.
However, we slowed down the refining of CTO in order to reduce the amount of rosin inventory we are building, and thus had less TOFA available for sale. As a reminder, the transition to non-CTO feedstocks, what we call our AFA initiative, addresses this challenge since other oleo feedstocks do not produce rosin. Turning to slide 8, sales for Advanced Polymer Technologies were flat year-over-year. However, the team did a great job increasing prices and improving profitability, more than tripling EBITDA year-over-year. Volumes in North America were up for the quarter, but overall volumes were down, primarily due to customers in Asia being reluctant to restock as a result of the uncertain demand outlook in the region, and Europe's ongoing industrial slowdown. Asia and Europe represent roughly 75% of APT's sales.
The pace of those regions' recoveries will impact the second half performance for this segment. Our profit improvement initiatives, including pricing actions and product mix management, along with lower input costs, more than offset the impact of lower volumes to generate 21.8% EBITDA margins. Product mix benefited from increased demand in bioplastics and automotive applications, particularly paint protection film, two key strategic growth markets that we discussed at Investor Day in May. We're seeing increased adoption of our CAPA products as customers shift toward materials that have a more sustainable footprint. Our new product and business development efforts are accelerating, and we are seeing tangible results with new customer additions, particularly in areas that support our growth strategy, such as bioplastics, apparel, and auto. On slide 9, you'll find results for Performance Materials.
We're pleased to see the continued volume growth in this segment, not only year-over-year, but also sequentially. The global auto industry appears to be improving, although more slowly than we had expected, and results vary by region. North America was our strongest region for the quarter, and China was up from last year's extended shutdowns, while Europe was flat. We're cautiously optimistic North America auto production rates will remain steady, but the outlook for Asia and Europe is less clear. Margins were down slightly versus last year, primarily due to a higher operating cost as we reduced plant run rates to manage inventory. In summary, most of our business lines posted strong results for the quarter, despite a cautious economic climate and a sluggish recovery in China.
Our Industrial Specialties business faces unique challenges as we transition away from CTO as a sole feedstock at the same time that a key product, rosin, is undergoing a cyclical downturn. We've implemented cost reduction actions to realign our cost structure, and we'll take further actions as needed. We remain focused on ramping up our AFA output and sales while maintaining strict cost discipline. Now I'll turn the call back over to you, John, for an update on guidance and closing comments.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Thanks, Mary. As you saw in our release, we are reducing our guidance for the remainder of the year. When we provided our original full-year guidance, we knew that elevated CTO prices would negatively impact the business. We expected a more robust recovery in China and a stabilizing Europe that would allow growth in our Pavement Technologies business, Performance Materials, and APT, to more than offset the shortfall. When we reported our Q1 results in May, it was clear the recovery in China was not going as planned, and Europe was facing an industrial slowdown. We were one of the first companies to say this. Remember, China, with the rest of Asia and Europe, represent roughly half of PM sales and nearly three-quarters of APT sales.
Therefore, when we didn't see the boost from those regions, we realized we would not be able to offset higher CTO prices, and we reduced our guidance. Which brings us to where we are now. We still have not seen significant improvement in China or Europe. General market weakness continues to suppress volumes in our Industrial Specialties business, and the historically high CTO prices we had expected to moderate have remained elevated. We don't expect to see relief from these prices until 2024, which is why we're, we are reducing guidance for the remainder of the year. We are taking actions to mitigate our CTO exposure longer term, consistent with the strategy that we laid out for you at our Investor Day. There are four variables we manage in the Performance Chemicals segment, two of which are in our direct control.
Our industrial end markets will improve as the economy improves. CTO costs should come down as the biofuels market matures and rationalizes. Our AFA strategy will reduce our risk exposure, and we will control our cost structure to ensure what we produce, we can sell profitably. The last two we control, and we are aggressively taking actions. Three of our businesses are performing well and will contribute to our overall performance. Auto production is improving, perhaps not at the rate we would like, and certainly not across all regions evenly, but it is improving. The adoption of hybrids, both here and in China, seems to be gaining steam, which is good for the PM segment. Our work on alternative carbon applications is progressing.
The pavement team continues to both expand their global footprint and to enhance the growth we will see from government infrastructure funding in the United States. Greater adoption of biodegradable materials in consumer packaging and apparel is a secular tailwind for APT that should provide significant increased demand. The AFA transition directly addresses the biggest headwind we have, which is relying on a single raw material, CTO, to support a business segment. As we continue to ramp up AFA capacity, the impact of higher CTO prices will abate, and we will have the flexibility to pivot to different raw materials to optimize cost, with the added benefit of not producing rosin. Finally, we will continue to constantly evaluate all options and adjust our business and cost structure to reflect the changes in our markets. By levering all these opportunities, we will cover the gap from the increase in CTO costs.
We remain confident that we will emerge a stronger, best-in-class performance chemical company that sustainably purifies, protects, and enhances the world around us. With that, I'll turn it over for questions.
Operator (participant)
As a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question today, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad to enter the queue. When preparing to ask a question, please ensure your headset is fully plugged in and unmuted locally. Our first question today comes from Vincent Anderson, from Stephens. Vincent, your line is open. Please go ahead.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Yeah, thanks, and good morning. Let's just kind of start with CTO, and here's what I think I know about CTO markets right now. Spot, as best we can tell, is down. There's no biofuel capacity that, you know, emerged out of the blue. US exports year-to-date through May are down 10%, generally falling for the last 2 years. Export prices there seem to have also peaked in March. We don't have a lot to go off of, but the only place that we're seeing prices stay elevated are the prices you pay and export prices to Sweden and Finland, which is a little different, given, you know, Kraton has assets there. I know your contracts are confidential, but is there anything you can unpack for us as to why we have this apparent disconnect?
What gives you confidence that, you know, this won't be a persistent risk?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Yeah. I'll, I'll kick it off, and if you want to add anything, Rich, please do. Listen, we, we have tried to ring-fence for you, Vincent, the impact, right? We've given you a number that hopefully will help navigate the market or let everyone understand exactly what, what the issue is for us, right? With extreme transparency. The, the problem that you're running into is this is not an efficient market. The data that you see, whether it's Argus or elsewhere, does not necessarily reflect exactly what's going on because, as you've identified, they sometimes include certain exports, don't include other exports, they sometimes include the biofuels market, sometimes don't include the biofuels market. They do not-- and just to be candid, we didn't even contribute our data to Argus until recently, right?
That is not, unfortunately, an efficient or effective way to look at it. Now, I will tell you that our pricing will tend to lag probably what you see by anywhere from 3-6 months, right? That works kind of against us when prices are coming down and works for us when prices are coming up, right? Even that, you have to be careful with. Right. We're aware of this problem from the market, because I know everyone wants to be able to sort of forward predict us, so we're trying to give you the scope of the issue for this year, right? I mean, it's a $200 million hole, for lack of a better term, that we were able to claw back or recover about $100 million so far.
We're gonna do the best we can to continue those efforts, but that's what we're up against. Longer term, I do think CTO prices will come down. I think that the market got ahead of itself on speculation for European biofuel inputs. The European biofuel market has not materialized at the rate that people were anticipating, and we went into a period of economic weakness. You will see some CTO relief, but I cannot tell you exactly what that level will come to. We have an idea of where it should land, but again, this is not a totally efficient market. I hope that gives you some more color, Vince.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Yeah, no, that's, that's helpful and, and very fair points. Turning over to the demand side, you know, on the margin side of the equation, could you give us a rough, just order of magnitude around what your mix impact looks like when you lose a rosin ester sale into something like an adhesive and have to instead, you know, drum that product and send it to the export spot market instead?
Rich White (President)
Well, This is Rich, Vince. Our merchant rosin sales-
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Thank you.
Rich White (President)
-have, for the most part, abated, which is why we're building so much rosin inventory at, at the moment. On an order of a magnitude, our, our rosin sales into the merchant market are significantly less, on the order of 50% less than what we're doing in the, in the derivatized market today. The merchant, the merchant rosin-
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Okay.
Rich White (President)
pricing, exactly. If I could add, compared to, compared to the alternatives, whether it's hydrocarbons or gum rosin, our merchant rosin pricing to date has been about 15% higher than the merchant rosin, I mean, the gum rosin area, and about 30% higher than the hydrocarbon market to date.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Okay, we're kind of past the negative mix impact of losing your higher value derivatives, and we're into really more just absolute volume demand when we think about.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
I think, yeah, and, and the way we-
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Demand in the back half of the year. Yeah.
Rich White (President)
That's correct.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
I think that's fair. Yeah.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Okay. Just a really quick one, and I'll, I'll turn it over. Do you have to requalify any of your pavement products based on a feedstock change, like moving from TOFA to AFA?
Rich White (President)
Yes. Primarily for North America, not for, not so much externally, not outside of the U.S., but yes.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Okay. Did I understand correctly in your prepared remarks that you've already begun that process in some respect?
Rich White (President)
We have. Yes, we have.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
It just takes time, though.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Okay. Yeah, I know. Of course. All right. Thank you. That's helpful. I'll hop back in the queue.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from John McNulty from BMO Capital Markets. John, your line is open. Please go ahead.
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
Yeah, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. The magnitude of the cut for the full year is, is admittedly pretty chunky, but it, it, it looks like there's just, there's a lot to kind of unpack here. I guess, can you, can you kind of bucket it out for us? How much is tied to the incremental cost around the WestRock transition, if you will? How much is tied to actual CTO costs, and then how much of it's tied to you just running at lower operating rates and kind of having to absorb that, that fixed cost absorption? I, I guess, can you, can you help us to, to maybe bucket these, these kind of bigger categories?
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
I'll start. The WestRock impact that I mentioned in my remarks, it really goes to cash costs and expenses. We will be kind of, I think of it as carving those out from from the GAAP results. Going forward, that impact would be excluded in our adjusted numbers, but it, it's still cash. If, if you note in the, in the release or in the deck that we provided, we also did reduce our guidance with respect to free cash flow coming down, and a lot of that, particularly second half of the year, is related to the cash costs associated with the WestRock transition.
With respect to the EBITDA decline, that's more, again, CTO related and the inability, both the inability to push enough price to recover those costs because their end markets are soft, but also the general economic slowdown, which is not permitting a robust recovery in PM or APT to offset or mitigate that, the costs in, in spec.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Right. I mean, John, it, it's difficult to separate CTO versus the end markets, right? I mean, you have seen us go through cycles before where we have built rosin. The, the last one, you know, really kind of occurred in 2018, right? The, the reason we're in this situation with the orders of magnitude is this, you know, large hit to CTO, right? Why we're trying to quantify for you, the number, so you can understand what the ramification is, right?
I mean, you know, when you look at the Performance Chemicals segment writ large, you know, you can do the math on the margins of the Pavement Technologies piece of that, and come to an annual number, 'cause it's really spread out mostly over, you know, Q2 and Q3, as you know, and then you can kind of impute what the ramifications are for Industrial Specialties. It's a large number. I mean, they're absorbing $200 million of incremental cost, of which we've been able to claw across the company about $100 million back. You know, would a better economic environment have helped that? Sure. Had we stayed. I mean, it's interesting because we've done a lot of internal analysis.
Had the market environment stayed as it was last year, we would've been able to bear this CTO inflation. I say that kind of across all of our businesses, right? Not just IS. We would've been able to absorb it. It's just the economic environment has weakened to the point where, you know, this is the put and take of those two, right?
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
Okay. Okay, no, that, that's helpful. I guess when you think about the reduction in the guide, because, look, CTO was high before, it seems like from a contractual side, you probably had a, a rough idea how those costs were gonna play out this year. Is it-
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Sure.
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
At least when you gave kind of the prior guide. I, I guess, how should we think about the incremental thing that changed that's causing you to pull down the guide? Is it just-
John Fortson (President and CEO)
The market-
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
that China's that much weaker?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
The markets are weaker, John. I mean, I don't... I wanna be very clear, 'cause I want everybody to understand, right? I mean, the CTO, it is true, and I think sometimes people have missed, that the cost of our CTO has been gradually escalating over the course of the year, right? We talked about this at Investor Day. I don't know, you know, Q2 is more expensive than Q1, Q3 is gonna be more expensive than Q2, Q4 is gonna be more expensive than Q3. It will level out going into 2024, okay? At that point, we will be more, what I would call at market, meaning that we will, you know, to the extent we get some relief in CTO, we're gonna really feel it, right? It'll help us quite dramatically next year.
What's causing the issue in the back part of the year is that the markets that we sell into have really, really weakened, with the exception of Pavement Technologies and Oilfield. In particular, these are rosin markets. It's very reminiscent to me of where we were back in 2018, where we are having to basically slow down rates cause we cannot move the rosin. The rosin is not selling. That's what's happening. We raised prices last year.
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
Okay, maybe I can just follow up.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
I know, John, before. We raised prices last year in the Industrial Specialties businesses, almost $250 million, actually, over $250 million, right? We were in position to absorb this, right? The challenge is that people are not buying, right? Hopefully, that's helpful.
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
Yeah, no, I think it is. Just to make sure I've got this right, is the weakness in the rosin market because the actual end customer, end product demand is soft, or is it just, look, they can't handle the price, and so they're just giving up on it?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
They're not buying
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
Going to something else? Just so-
John Fortson (President and CEO)
They're not buying, John. I mean, obviously, price moves up and down, and we will adjust price, and we can adjust price, and we obviously have a higher cost structure. Ultimately, they're not buying, and they have the ability to substitute into lower cost alternatives.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
I did mention, we, we estimate approximately 20% of our customers have shifted to lower cost alternatives. Maybe Rich-
John Fortson (President and CEO)
If you wanna add some more.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
add to that.
Rich White (President)
If I could, John, when we look at the overall demand in Industrial Specialties, particularly on the rosin products, and you're talking about adhesives, rubber, paper sizing, we know many mills are shutting down, and in printing inks. When we look at the demand that we've seen this year, Mary's correct, 20% is related to reformulation to hydrocarbons or some other type of gum rosin. 80%, 40% was related to destocking, and another 40% was related to demand destruction, and that's pretty much what we've seen across the entirety of our rosin offering.
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
Got it.
Rich White (President)
the demand-
John McNulty (Research Analyst)
Okay, no, that, that's helpful. Sorry, thanks for the call.
Operator (participant)
The next question comes from Jonathan Tanwanteng from CJS Securities. John, your line is open. Please go ahead.
Jonathan Tanwanteng (Research Analyst)
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Mary, just to, to jump on the back of that, one of the prior questions, you guys have explained that the CTO and, and rosin fits pretty well. What, what is the reduction in the guidance in the PM and the, and the APT businesses? What, what-- how much less is that expected to contribute this year compared to what you had thought maybe, you know, three months ago?
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
Yeah. I think, versus our last call, probably not too much change, but I think certainly when we set the initial guidance, we expected a more robust recovery in China, and again, solid underlying economic trends that we had seen heading into the year would continue. While we are seeing, while we did see volume, increases in PM, we're certainly not seeing the robust recovery in China that we had expected. It really is a tale of North America holding up and, and looking pretty good. Asia, you know, sluggish, and, and Europe, frankly, struggling. On the APT front, again, remember, 75% of their products are sold into Asia and into Europe.
The lack of a rebound in China and Europe showing essentially no pickup at all, have reduced our expectations for that business as well. Not, you know, not, certainly not to the extent of Industrial Specialties, but versus what we had expected.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
That having been said, John, I mean, the growth rates for those businesses, when you look at them on an annualized basis, are still pretty robust and healthy compared to other segments or other businesses, right, that we're looking at. I mean, whether you look at PM or you look at APT, or you look at Pavement, you know, they're, they're all growing pretty healthily in this environment, right? Not so much, you know, PM, not so much on the revenue side, but certainly on the profitability side. APT has really done a great job of moving their margins up. Again, not so much on the revenue, but more on the profit side from where they were last year. And Pavement's having a great year.
You know, to Mary's point, you know, it's certainly down from where we were last year, or, you know, at the start of the year, our expectations. From our last guide, I wouldn't say they've moved a whole lot. Maybe a little bit, but not a lot.
Jonathan Tanwanteng (Research Analyst)
Understood. Thank you. Then you, you started the call off with a, with a really nice, bright point, which is the Nexeon agreements to Panasonic and, and in Korea. Can you, help us understand kind of the, the, the quantity of commercial sales that Nexeon is expecting to be doing, and kind of when, when you expect to be in the supply chain supplying that material, and if that's any change from your private expectations?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
So look, we're very encouraged. We, we are big fans of Nexeon, right? We are really excited by their success, and it's validating a lot of, you know, the work that we did as we analyzed and assessed, you know, our opportunities in that market. You know, the reality is, one plant in, in, in our view, in Korea, is just the start, right? I mean, this will involve thousands and thousands of tons of product, as they ramp this up and move beyond just this initial contract that they've, you know, they've started with Panasonic. What they've done is what a lot of, you know, startup companies do. They've got a good contract. They're gonna build in the region. They're tying to a strategic partner.
They're doing all the right things to get in position to be successful and then grow this business, and we anticipate being a part of that. I, I don't want to, as we talked about in Investor Day, nothing's changed. We don't want to get ahead of ourselves because, you know, we're gonna be a part of that. You know, our view is that it's really something that we will play a bigger role in, in the middle of the decade and beyond, right? That's really what we want. We have lots of great opportunity in our core businesses, and we think that, you know, our, our position and our opportunity, where we're focused is as they generate next-generation or as they develop next-generation technologies. Ed, I don't know if you want to expand on that.
Jonathan Tanwanteng (Research Analyst)
Yeah, John, I, I would say that Nexeon put a press release out in the last 24 hours, and that should be able to answer a fair amount of your questions on, on their pathway.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Particularly in the near term.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
Yes.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Right.
Jonathan Tanwanteng (Research Analyst)
Okay, great. Thank you. Just last quick one from me. How is the AFA transition progressing from a demand perspective? Are you still in the capacity to bring online, kind of where do you expect to be by the end of the year there, especially.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Yeah, look, nothing's changed. John, I think it's an important point, right? Because, you know, while we've got these three businesses are doing well, we've got one business that has some, some secular or structural changes to it. AFA is a critical part of our strategy to go forward. CTO prices, you know, the economy will improve. We talked about that. You know, we have those four variables. CTO prices will abate, but they will come down. Over the long haul, the right answer is to offer our customers fatty acids that solve for their technology needs, right? The advantage of AFA is that it is an alternate, more reasonably sourced raw materials, and it does not produce rosin, right? We are very focused on it. It remains on track.
We mentioned in our prepared comments that the volumes we anticipate producing out of Crossett next year will equal the CTO volumes that we've traditionally run through that plant. We continue to work, and our customers are being receptive to the reformulations necessary. As I mentioned earlier, it just takes time. There are processes and testing, et cetera, that we have to go through. Ironically, high CTO prices, you know, help make that sale to the customer, because they need an alternate, right? We remain on track and very focused on this.
Jonathan Tanwanteng (Research Analyst)
Okay, great. Thanks, guys.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from Ian Zaffino from Oppenheimer. Ian, your line is open. Please go ahead.
Ian Zaffino (Analyst)
Hi, great. Thank you very much. You know, again, on this, this AFA, I guess as CTO prices, continue where you think they are, how much of your production do you think you'll actually shift to AFA versus CTO? How long will that actually take? Thanks.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Again, if you, if you kind of think backwards, back of the envelope, we've got a 3-plant network, right? One of those plants is gonna move to solely, well, it is moved to running solely AFA. We've said that next year we'll be producing volumes equivalent to what we have traditionally run. That gives you a sense of the volumes that we're talking about. Over the long haul, as we mentioned at Investor Day, we have the ability to actually double volumes in the segment if, in fact, we're able to produce all of our CTO and all of our AFA.
I don't know how that will play out, but our goal is to affect the transition and offer substitutes so that our customers can go, depending on the cost position of CTO, can move between those products, and then also to expand and enter new markets down the road. Right? Right now, our focus clearly is on substitution, and, you know, while we, while we ramp up new markets.
Ian Zaffino (Analyst)
Okay. As far as the questions about or the comments about being able to, you know, transition or toggle back and forth between different AFAs, CTO, you know, how quickly are you actually able to do that? How flexible-
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Well-
Ian Zaffino (Analyst)
would you be, let's say, if CTO prices come back down?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Listen, we've committed to roughly $70 million of revenue this year, coming from AFAs. That's on track. We've not, you know, laid out yet what our expectations are for next year. You can make some assumptions based on the volume comments that we made earlier, right? It is our intention, over the next 24 months, to have that plant fully moving on AFA, offering alternatives.
Ian Zaffino (Analyst)
Okay, thank you very much.
Operator (participant)
The next question is from Daniel Rizzo, from Jefferies. Daniel, your line is open. Please go ahead.
Daniel Rizzo (Analyst)
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Just to follow up on AFA, is there anything in the production process or is there an input that could cause the price of producing AFA prices to kind of spike similar to... I mean, a different product, but something similar to what we saw with CTO and the way and with rosins and things like that?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Well, to answer your question, look, this is the reason why we want to use multiple feedstocks, right? Because of the biofuel market and its it's, it's, it's not only affecting CTO, it's affecting a lot of the oleochems, right? Particularly those that are non-food based, right, or those that don't go into the food chain, right? They, you know, people who follow those commodities, who may be on the call, know that they kind of ran up in 2021, 2022, and then ran down. They are typically more cyclical, because they're tied to much broader sort of macroeconomic factors. All of these are being disrupted to some point, to some extent, by the biofuel market.
The biofuel market gets regulated because the European regulators really look at, you know, how much biofuel they put in and out of their mix based on the price that the end consumers in Europe might pay, right? That's gonna move around, too. It will eventually, we think over the next two years or so, stabilize out as that market matures and all the feedstocks sort of come into place. That's one of the reasons we think CTO will come down from a pricing perspective, right? If you, if you look at it, they're out ahead of that market, it will come down. We want what we like about multiple feedstocks is we can move between these. You see different spikes in different chemicals. Soy is a great example. Soy ran up, now it's ran down.
Soy is very attractive right now. Canola ran up, ran down, it's very attractive. We want that flexibility in our feedstocks.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
Let me, let me tag on to that. Soy, canola, for example, Dan, much, much bigger, more liquid markets than CTO. Unlike CTO, you know, remember, CTO, only made by paper mills, so their sales of CTO are episodic, if you will. You know, they're putting chunks into the market, so we're purchasing when they have product available, et cetera. Very different dynamic in a soy, canola, type of market, again, because of the size, the liquidity of the market. Our ability to control the timing of our purchases and perhaps hedge our purchases, because, again, there are cost curves, they're well established, the size of the market, et cetera, puts that purchasing dynamic in a very different framework than what we now have with CTO.
Daniel Rizzo (Analyst)
That, that's helpful. That, that's very helpful. Thank you. Then, is, is there any way-- I mean, are you thinking about... as you look at cutting costs, are you looking at any way to, I don't know, optimize your footprint, or reduce the plant or close a plant?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Let me put it this way, Dan. All options are on the table, right? As you know, there's, you know, lots of different levers that can be played when you're optimizing a footprint. All options are on the table.
Daniel Rizzo (Analyst)
Okay. All right, thank you.
Operator (participant)
Just a reminder that star one to ask a question today. The next question comes from Mike Sison from Wells Fargo. Mike, your line is open. Please go ahead.
Mike Sison (Research Analyst)
Hey, good morning. The, the $100 million gap that you have this year from CTO, how do you get that back next year? Is it just simply, you're gonna get more pricing, I assume, this year that flows into next year, or do you need demand to kind of, sort of come back, and then you get the pricing through?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
I, I think of the four levers, Mike, that we talked about, right? Our, our intention is to try and get it back through continued growth in our other businesses and through continued escalation of AFA sales and through reduced cost structure, right? Certainly, improvement in market conditions, or reduced CTO pricing would help us in that, right? We have to look at all of those influences or, or market factors to try and, and manage this. We control two of them, right? We will do what we can to control, but obviously, to the extent the market does improve or CTO pricing improves, that's gonna make our job easier.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
Certainly, as China, again, John's comment about industrial recovery, certainly China will pick up at some point. Certainly, I believe the economy will begin to pick up better than it has to date. Again, you know, even rosin, rosin markets have shown a history of taking a deep, digging a deep hole and then coming back quickly when they do turn. What John has discussed, though, is we're not waiting for all those things to happen. We believe they will, but we don't control the timing of those market dynamics. The actions that we're taking are to better position us so that in those products and, and feedstocks, where we're at, where we're at the mercy of, you know.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
The markets.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
the markets or, you know, certain, very, tightly controlled feedstocks, that we're taking actions to put ourselves in a better position long term.
Mike Sison (Research Analyst)
No, understood. But if you think about the price that these products are at now, if you do raise the price further, is that a problem relative to maybe an olefin-based product that you're kind of, sort of, tapped out in your ability to raise the price?
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
Yeah, I mean.
Mike Sison (Research Analyst)
if demand comes back, you can get the price. Yeah. Okay. Then how about the Performance Materials? A lot of.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
If demand comes, if demand comes back, Mike, we, we would expect to be able to at least hold prices. Now, with demand where it is, even with some pricing concessions, certain customers are able to find lower cost alternatives.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Well, and we, we believe that as we make this move, we will be able to offer lower priced alternatives.
Mary Hall (EVP and CFO)
Exactly
John Fortson (President and CEO)
while maintaining slash improving our profitability, because some of these other raw materials are not nearly as expensive on a relative basis to crude tall oil today.
Mike Sison (Research Analyst)
Got it. Got it. Okay. If I, if I kept Performance Materials, sort of my outlook, similar to last quarter, and it... You know, I think a lot of companies have sort of felt pretty good about the auto outlooks for the second half of the year. Then, sounds like APT will be maybe slightly lower. It kind of implies Performance Chemicals takes a pretty big dip, third quarter, fourth quarter.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
It is. If you think about it, Mike-
Mike Sison (Research Analyst)
Margin is gonna be online. Is that the right way to think about it? Okay, fourth quarter.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Yeah, if you think about it, it's, it's mostly fourth quarter, right? I mean, you think about Performance Chemicals, you've got this, you know, high profit, high performing business that's really generating in Q2, Q3, and those businesses really abate in Q1 and Q4, right? You know, we don't, we don't provide quarterly guidance. When you're calendarizing it, you, you need to understand that Q3, we will continue to benefit from, you know, asphalt and pavement sales. In Q4, those sales don't exist. Q4, Performance Chemicals is going to take a hit, be challenged.
Mike Sison (Research Analyst)
Okay. Last question. When you think about 2024 for Performance Chemicals, you know, we should get a portion of that $100 million back based on what you're doing on, you know, the things within your control.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Yeah.
Mike Sison (Research Analyst)
If CTO comes down, you could actually get the other remaining to be a +$100 million next year.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
It's possible. I mean, it just depends on... I mean, my own view, Mike, is I don't believe we're gonna get all $200 million of that CTO back. I just want to be completely clear to everyone.
Mike Sison (Research Analyst)
Yeah.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Right? I mean, if the gap is $100 million, right, what do we do? Well, we've got those four things at work. How much cost can we take out, right? How much AFA can we sell, right? What kind of market improvement do we get? Right? I mean, we, we actually feel like 2024, while, you know, IS's gonna be challenged, we've got levers, too, right? It's a little early for me to gauge where the market and the CTO is at. What we're working on are the other two, right? Because those we control.
Ian Zaffino (Analyst)
Right. Okay, great. Thank you.
Operator (participant)
We have a follow-up from Vincent Anderson `from Stephens. Vincent, please go ahead. Your line is open.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Yeah, thanks. John, I wanted to go back and clarify some of the AFA comments. Is your target volume for next year Crossett, you know, basically equivalent to the full phase I that you outlined, or are you implying more like, you know, two-thirds of that when you draw that CTO comparison?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Well, I, the way I would think about it, Vincent, is we should be by the, by this time next year, so the middle of the year, running at, you know, full run rates, which would be about 125,000 tons, give or take, right? When you, you know, when you weigh that over the course of the year, it won't be the full 125, right? Because we'll be ramping up in the first half of the year, right? We may do better than that-
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Sure.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
That's where we're sitting here right now, right.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Okay. You know, as much as you're willing to comment on it, would that alone be enough to cover fixed costs at the plant and maybe even potentially contribute positive standalone margins?
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Well, the goal, as you know, Vincent, the, the more we run it, the more we cover our fixed costs, right? Which is why we want that thing running as quickly as possible at those run rates, right? I just think realistically, when you think about product certifications and all the complexities we talked about, you know.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Time.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
It just takes time, right? You know, to the extent we're able to find a new market customer that doesn't need those certifications, we can accelerate that, and we've hired a person to help us do that, right? To the extent we can get our, you know, continue to accelerate customer certifications, that we can accelerate that. But that's where-- that's our planning today.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Okay. Then just last one, promise. You know, there's still a lot of actually dislocation, even within the vegetable oil and, and animal fat feedstock markets right now, because a lot of this new biodiesel capacity isn't really set up to take crude grade products. What is your ability to accept lower grade products, whether it's just base crude, vegetable oils, or even some of the dirtier stuff that you don't even really get pricing on?
Rich White (President)
Yeah, we have. This is Rich. Yes, we have the ability to, to take some of the lower grade stuff in our processes and that, and also are already sourcing some of that lower grade material today, in our process that they're using at the Crossett facility right now.
Vincent Anderson (Research Analyst)
Excellent. All right, thank you. That's all for me.
Operator (participant)
We have no further questions.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Yeah, I've got.
Operator (participant)
Go back to John Nypaver, please.
John Fortson (President and CEO)
Yeah, before you go, John, I, I've just been reflecting a little bit, Mike Sison, on your thinking through the quarters and, and how the rest of the year will unfold. Because like I said, we don't guide quarters, but I, I do think it's important to understand the timing and the sequence. When you think about our new guide, right? Or this revised guidance, you think about the earnings power that's coming out of it. I mean, Q3, we talked about, right? You know, we got all those businesses firing, right? PT, PM, APT, right? In the fourth quarter, you got three of the four, well, you got two of the, two of the four, right? Basically, you've got PM and APT.
Our guide really is all about PM, APT, and pavement continuing the trajectory that they're on, but we are de-risking from a guidance perspective what's happened with IS, right? When you think about this, I mean, you are correct. IS in Q3, and particularly in Q4, when you'll see it, the Performance Chemicals segment is going to underperform, but we're trying to de-risk that from the guidance, right? Going forward, the upside and the sort of downside, but we think hopefully more upside, is really tied to those three core businesses. Right.
That's it. Thank you, John. John Nypaver.
John Nypaver (VP of Investor Relations)
All right. Well, thanks, everyone. That concludes our call. Appreciate your interest in Ingevity. We'll talk with you again next quarter.
Operator (participant)
This concludes today's call. Thank you very much for your attendance. You may now disconnect your lines.