Fortive Corporation (FTV)
Q3Â 2019 Earnings Call
Oct 24, 2019, 5:30 p.m. ET
Contents:
- Prepared Remarks
- Questions and Answers
- Call Participants
Prepared Remarks:
Operator
My name is Phillip, and I will be your conference facilitator this afternoon. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Fortive Corporation's Third Quarter 2019 Earnings Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]
I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Griffin Whitney, Vice President of Investor Relations, Mr Whitney, you may begin your conference.
Griffin Whitney -- Vice President of Investor Relations
Thank you, Phillip. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us on the call. With us today are Jim Lico, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Chuck McLaughlin, our Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
We present certain non-GAAP financial measures on today's call. Information required by SEC Regulation G relating to these non-GAAP financial measures are available on the Investors section of our website www.fortive.com under the heading Financial Information. We completed the divestiture of the Automation & Specialty business on October 1, 2018, and accordingly have included the results of the A&S business as discontinued operations for current and historical periods. The results presented on this call are based on continuing operations.
During the presentation, we will describe certain of the more significant factors that impacted year-over-year performance. All references to period-to-period increases or decreases and financial metrics are year-over-year on a continuing operations basis.
During the call, we will make forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including statements regarding events or developments that we expect or anticipate will or may occur in the future. These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties and actual results might differ materially from any forward-looking statements that we make today. Information regarding these factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements is available in our SEC filings including our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2018. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and we do not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements.
With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Jim.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks. Griffin, and good afternoon, everyone. Today, we reported adjusted diluted earnings per share of $0.87 for the third quarter of 2019, representing an increase of 18% year-over-year despite short cycle slowing that intensified over the course of the quarter. While these challenges impacted growth in certain parts of our Professional Instrumentation segment, a double-digit increase in earnings and strong cash flow performance demonstrated both the contribution from our recent acquisitions and the strength of the Fortive Business System to provide resilience to our portfolio.
As we navigate the slowing in the short term, we continue to invest in our businesses to drive organic innovation, fuel further compounding and execute our capital allocation strategy to strengthen our long-term competitive advantage across the portfolio. We've completed a significant amount of deal activity over the past three years, and the execution of our capital allocation strategy continues. We have owned Advanced Sterilization Products for a little more than two quarters and we're pleased with its performance thus far and continue to make substantial progress with its integration.
In the coming weeks, we will close on China, representing a significant step forward as we bring the remainder of ASP's geographies under our direct control. As we roll off the transition service agreements and install key elements of the Fortive Business System in the coming quarters, we will lay the groundwork for accelerating innovation and growth in the years ahead. We also continue to make progress with respect to the intended separation of NewCo, which we announced on September 4. Utilizing FBS, we have taken substantial steps forward with respect to our preparations and we remain on track toward completing the transaction in the second half of 2020.
We look forward to providing additional details on the transaction and updates on further milestones for NewCo in the coming weeks and months.
With that, I'd like to turn to the details of the quarter.
Adjusted net earnings were $311 million, up 13% over the prior year and adjusted diluted net earnings per share were $0.87. Sales grew 16.2% to $1.9 billion, reflecting a core revenue increase of 2.1% and the contribution from recent acquisitions. Core revenue growth was highlighted by strong performance at Gilbarco Veeder-Root and PacSci EMC, which was partially offset by declines in the short cycle businesses within Professional Instrumentation including Fluke, Tektronix and some parts of sensing technologies.
Unfavorable foreign currency exchange rates reduced growth by 120 basis points. Geographically developed markets' core revenue grew low-single digits reflecting the slowing macro conditions across both North America and Western Europe. Core revenue growth in North America was low-single digits, led by GVR, EMC and Industrial Scientific while Western Europe grew slightly. High-growth markets' core revenue decreased low-single digits due to the loss of Huawei-related revenue at Tektronix and weaker market conditions in the Middle East.
China posted slightly positive growth as strong performance at Fluke and Qualitrol was largely offset by a decline at Tektronix due to the Huawei impact and flat performance of GVR. India was flat as growth at Fluke and Qualitrol was offset by timing delays for certain large project rollouts at GVR which are now expected to start in the fourth quarter.
Adjusted operating profit margin was 21.3% representing a year-over-year decrease of 80 basis points, including 55 basis points of dilutive operating margin associated with acquisitions. Core operating margins decreased 25 basis points as the continued slowing within Professional Instrumentation more than offset strength at GVR and another solid quarter of operating margin expansion in Matco.
During the third quarter, we generated $348 million of free cash flow for a sequential increase of $111 million from the second quarter. This free cash flow performance represented a conversion ratio of 168%.
Turning to our segments. Professional Instrumentation posted sales growth of 24.8% despite a low-single digit decrease in core revenue. The significant contribution of recent acquisitions, most notably ASP, continue to drive overall growth within Professional Instrumentation. Unfavorable foreign currency exchange rates reduced growth by 110 basis points.
Segment level adjusted operating margin was 22.2%, representing a year-over-year decrease of 300 basis points, including 120 basis points of dilutive operating margin associated with acquisitions. Core operating margins decreased 180 basis points, reflecting a combination of slower revenue performance, the impact of tariffs and unfavorable foreign currency exchange.
Advanced Instrumentation and Solutions' core revenue decreased low-single digits as strong performance at EMC was more than offset by continued slowing across Fluke and Tektronix. Field Solutions' core revenue decreased low-single digits, including a low-single digit decline in developed markets, driven primarily by slowing at Fluke in North America.
High-growth markets increased low-single digits, driven by growth at Fluke and strong performance from Qualitrol in China. Fluke's core revenue declined mid-single digits, due to a high-single digit decrease at Fluke Industrial. Fluke Digital Systems grew greater than 20% led by strong growth in EMEA, which generated 10% increase in net new customers and a greater than 20% increase in annual recurring revenue.
From a geographic perspective, the slowing that emerged at the end of the second quarter became more pronounced in the third quarter, particularly in North America, which saw high-single digit decrease in revenue with slowing point-of-sale trends.
Fluke generated mid-single digit growth in China, driven by strong performance across Fluke Industrial, Process Instruments and Food Networks. Fluke Health won a multi-million dollar order for Radwatch, a product developed in collaboration with the US Army to monitor and measure radiation dosage. The acquisition of Pruftechnik closed at the beginning of the quarter and has gotten off to a solid start. We are excited about the integration of Pruftechnik, how the integration of Pruftechnik enhances Fluke's offering and capabilities with respect to asset reliability and condition monitoring.
ISC delivered low-single digit core growth as decreases in Western Europe and China partially offset stronger performance in North America. ISC's lower core growth in the quarter reflected a decline in instrument sales, which tend to be more sensitive to broader macro slowing. ISC's iNet offering had another strong quarter, generating mid-teens growth as ISC continues to increase its share of subscription-based recurring revenue. ISC also recently launched the WiFi enabled Ventis Pro5 multi-gas monitor, ISC's first direct-to-cloud product and a key step forward for ISC's emerging connected worker safety initiative. The integrations of both Intelex and Safer Systems are progressing well positioning ISC to significantly advance its safety-as-a-service strategy, aimed at providing real-time solutions for its customers' environmental, health, and safety-related workflows.
Qualitrol's core revenue declined low-single digits as the continued challenges in North America, Western Europe and the Middle East were partially offset by greater than 20% growth in China and greater than 30% growth in Latin America. Qualitrol saw mid-teens growth in their basic sensors product line driven by share gains and they start to see early signs of more positive bookings momentum heading into the fourth quarter.
Our facilities and asset management businesses, Gordian and Accruent, both rolled core during the third quarter, but had a relatively small effect on the core performance of Professional Instrumentation given the partial period. These businesses continue to perform well, generating high-single digit core growth. Gordian's procurement platform in particular continues to drive strong growth paced by increased construction volume with large enterprise customers, including the New York City Department of Education. Gordian also recently closed its largest facility planning deal to- date with Common Spirit Health Systems to complete a facility condition assessment across its entire network.
Accruent saw slower growth in the quarter due to softer licensing revenue as it transitions customers away from certain legacy products toward its higher growth SaaS offerings. Company continues to generate strong SaaS bookings with its sales team increasingly driving enterprise customers toward longer term subscription-based contracts with higher total contract value. Accruent added more than 70 customers in the third quarter, while significantly expanding its existing contract with Cushman & Wakefield to cover a broader range of offerings across the current software platform.
Product Realization core revenue decreased slightly as strong growth at both EMC and Invetech was offset by continued weakness at Tektronix. EMC generated another quarter of broad-based double-digit sales growth across both its core defense product lines and its commercial satellite offering. EMC continues to maintain a very strong backlog with large recent customer wins and increasing momentum among commercial satellite operators, providing the company with excellent revenue visibility into next year.
Tektronix registered high-single digit decrease in core revenue. Tektronix continue to be negatively impacted by slowing at Keithley, broad-based weakness in Western Europe and the loss of its Huawei business due to US government imposed trade restrictions earlier this year. While Tektronix registered strong growth from its high-performance oscilloscopes, driven by the 5G build-out in China, it also saw further slowing in North America, including a low-double digit decline for its core mid range scopes. Negative point-of-sale trends present an ongoing challenge heading into the fourth quarter. Despite the macro challenges, which we expect to persist into next year, Tektronix continues to focus on business execution, driving gains in its strategic growth segments including key data center and automotive wins during the quarter.
Core revenue for Sensing Technologies decreased low-single digits as growth in North America and China was more than offset by weakness in Western Europe. Anderson-Negele had a strong quarter using FBS commercial tools to drive continued share gains in adjacent segments of the food and beverage end market. Building on the momentum in its environmental monitoring offering, Setra recently launched its Setra Lite product line, providing a simple cost effective and highly visible solution to address pressure monitoring requirements in hospital rooms, which has been very well received by the market.
Turning to Advanced Sterilization Products, the company grew low-single digits, in line with our expectations as we continue to work our way through the completion of the transition service agreements. ASP's growth was led by strong performance in China and Japan. We saw continued momentum in terminal sterilization as well as strong growth in high level disinfection tied to the recent launch of its new automatic endoscope reprocessor product line for the Japanese market.
ASP also landed some key wins in North America, expanding its footprint in overall portfolio and strategic integrated delivery networks in both Texas and Illinois. The ASP team has begun to apply the Fortive Business System to streamline its innovation efforts and accelerate the introduction of a series of new products targeted for launch in 2020. Consistent with our strategy to build strong positions in connected workflows, we recently signed an agreement to acquire Censis, a leading provider of instrument tracking software as a key addition to our sterilization offering. Censis provides central sterilization departments with frontline air prevention tools and analytics, which help improve efficiency and productivity and sterilization workflows, optimize compliance reporting and reduce the risk of hospital-acquired infections. We expect the acquisition to close before the end of the year.
Moving to Industrial Technologies. Revenue grew 5.2% including core revenue growth of 6.5%, acquisitions had contributed 10 basis points of growth, while unfavorable foreign exchange rates reduced growth by 140 basis points. Segment level adjusted operating margin was 23% including a core operating margin increase of 190 basis points, driven by the continued strong volume at GVR and solid performance at Matco.
Our Transportation Technologies platform core revenue grew high-single digits, led by mid-teens growth in North America. GVR delivered low-double digit core revenue growth highlighted by a mid-teens increase in developed markets. GVR's performance in North America is paced by sustained momentum from EMV-related sales while growth in Western Europe reflected a combination of continued share gains and significant service rollouts at Costco during the quarter. GVR posted flat growth across high-growth markets as strong performance in Latin America was offset by continued delays from automation project rollouts in India as well as a large dispenser tender, which expected delivery has been shifted into the fourth quarter.
Despite these short-term dynamics, GVR continues to build on the strong position within high-growth markets, and India in particular, a strong order momentum and a healthy backlog provide good visibility into the region's sustained growth in the coming quarters. GVR recently launched Passport Express Lane adding a self-checkout system optimized for convenience stores to its Passport suite of solutions. GVR also launched a new family of products for Insite360 called HALO which provide significant upgrades to the systems fuel logistics functionality.
During the third quarter, we made a follow-on investment in Tritium as we continue to support the company's rapid growth. GVR also recently announced the integration of a credit card reader in the Tritium high-speed EV charging stations enhancing payment functionality to include credit card, debit card and contactless payment methods.
Teletrac Navman performed in line with expectations, generating a low-teens core revenue decrease in the third quarter, as continued strong growth across Asia Pacific was more than offset by the company's performance across North America and Western Europe. The key priority for the Teletrac Navman team remains the stabilization of its business in North America as it addresses the high level of customer churn over the past 12 months and returns the company to sustainable growth trajectory. We continue to see improvements in our customer-related metrics, including the level of customer churn.
Moving to franchise distribution. The platform's core revenue grew low-single digits during the third quarter as low-single digit growth at Matco was partially offset by a low-single digit decline at Hennessy. Matco was led by another strong quarter of growth in hardline tools offset by some slowing in tool storage. Matco continues to see good traction with new product introductions, highlighted by the recent launch of a new half-inch air impact wrench with a market-leading combination of power control and a lightweight design that makes it significantly easier for the technician to handle.
Before turning to the guide, as we look ahead to 2020, we are mindful of the challenging macroeconomic environment and are therefore planning to increase our spending on a range of strategic productivity initiatives by approximately $45 million in the fourth quarter. These initiatives will better position us to deliver sustained earnings growth while maintaining investments to drive future growth and innovation.
We are updating our full-year 2019 adjusted diluted net EPS guidance to $3.42 to $3.47, representing a year-over-year growth of 12% to 13% on a continuing operations basis. The revised annual guide reflects the headwinds faced by our Professional Instrumentation segment due to the short cycle slowing dynamics that became more pronounced in the third quarter and which we expect to persist through the end of the year. The revised guidance assumes 1% to 2% core revenue growth and an effective tax rate of approximately 15%. We are also initiating our fourth quarter adjusted diluted net EPS guidance of $0.96 to $1.01, representing year-over-year growth of 5% to 11%. This includes assumptions of flat core revenue growth, flat core OMX and an effective tax rate of approximately 15%.
To wrap up, during the third quarter, we delivered high-teens earnings growth with strong free cash flow even as the macroeconomic backdrop became more challenging. The quarter demonstrated the powerful earnings contribution from the acquisitions we have added over the past few years, which are also increasing the resilience of our portfolio as they become -- as they compound and become a larger share of our total revenue. Despite short cycle slowing and the headwinds we expect to persist into next year, we continue to execute our capital allocation strategy to drive further portfolio transformation, build a better stronger Fortive and create greater long-term value for employees, customers and shareholders.
With that, I'd like to turn -- I'd like to turn it over to Griffin.
Griffin Whitney -- Vice President of Investor Relations
Thanks, Jim. That concludes our formal comments. So, we're now ready for questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Your first question is from the line of Steve Tusa with JPMorgan.
Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
Hey guys, good afternoon.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi Steve, how are you?
Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
Doing right. So can you just help us a little bit with parking out the acquisitions, how much of an impact on margin and then may be easier just like what was the negative earnings impact from stuff that ran through from the deals that you closed in the third quarter, if there was any?
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
In the third quarter, the deal expenses, we've -- on our adjusted earnings, there is nothing in there that ran through there, and there really wasn't any headwinds related to the acquisitions, and the headwinds we faced were largely about the slowing of the top line as we progressed through the quarter.
Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
Okay, And then -- and then when it comes to the deals that you were planning to contribute this year like Gordian, Accruent, I think ASP is kind of a bit of a standout, that seemed to be on track, just remind us what you said they were going to contribute at the beginning of the year? And is that still the case here that they're going to contribute the same amount? Or is the Accruent comment that you made I think was -- currently you made a comment around, is that slowing having an impact on what those are ultimately going to contribute?
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
So I think that the ASP is -- continues to be right on track on that at $0.20. And I think the -- what we said in the beginning there is, I have to go back and look, but $0.24 to $0.28 for the year and I think when we get there, they are largely intact. Keep in mind that probably a third of the OP from those things are in the fourth quarter. So I think that we're large -- we continue to be in that range.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Deane Dray with RBC Capital Markets.
Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst
Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey, Deane.
Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst
Hey, maybe we could start with the market conditions, and I know you picked your words carefully in the prepared remarks, but you said the short cycle slowing intensified. And then if I heard you correctly, did you say that you expect some of the slowness to persist into next year? So take us through the cadence of the quarter and then what this means in terms of outlook for 2020? I know you're not giving specific guidance, but just in terms of how long this persists?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, sure. Thanks, Deane. So I would say, it's Jim, by the way. I would say that a couple of things, one, it just takes us back to where we're at in July . What we saw in July was mostly what we thought to be inventory correction in our point-of-sale in places like Fluke and Tek where we have the best visibility, point-of-sale was still holding in there pretty well in June. But our sales into those channel partners was generally slower. So we saw it is destocking mostly. As we progressed through the quarter, we increasingly saw the degradation in point-of-sale. And I think that's what led us to what we believe to be true now, is this will continue to persist and so our guide for the year really reflects what we've seen in terms of degradation on the point-of-sale side. I'd also say that we're starting to see it in our direct business as well in some places. So it's not just a channel situation. And typically, and I think this is probably more a Fluke comment, Deane, because of knowing the history there is that the smaller channel partners tend to be down more than the bigger ones too. So that's a dynamic that we typically see in a maybe a more protracted slowdown than just a quarter or two.
To your question about how does -- what's our view of next year? I think you step back and you look at we really took a significant look at where we're at in the productivity initiatives that we announced, the $45 million. I think really have a construct in which we think a number of these things continue into next year. So I don't have a crystal ball for the full year right now nor would I want to try to provide that. I think it's fair to say that when we snap the line on the calendar, things aren't probably likely to change all that much, and then it's least likely that the first quarter and probably end of the second quarter a number of these things continue and that's sort of our thought process at this point.
Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst
Great. I appreciate that -- that color in terms of the expectations. And could you flesh out a bit on this restructuring initiative, this is right out of the Danaher playbook year-end restructuring, set yourself up for stronger leaner coming year, $45 million, what in terms of cash might that be, how much is headcount, is there rooftops and just some color there would be helpful. Thanks.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Hi Deane, this is Chuck. I think the returns we'd expect on that would be under a year on that $45 million. I think that it's -- there is a number of different places as we saw slowing in the quarter, initiatives across the businesses, primarily where we're seeing slowing. So, more focus in the PI. Beyond that, given that we're just getting rolling those things out at the operating companies, I think we'll leave the details for another day.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Julian Mitchell with Barclays.
Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst
Hi, good afternoon. Maybe just -- hey, just a question around the sort of the Q3 performance and the Q4 guidance. So in the third quarter, you had I think 2% core growth, and a slight decline in core margins. Q4, you're guiding for flat core sales and a flat core margin. So I just wondered, will that slowdown in the top line that you've talked about, why don't we see that core margin pressure increase in Q4? Is it something to do with mix within the two segments or something around the tariff timing impact a year ago? Maybe just help us understand that margin dynamic and maybe to put a point on it, the adjusted margin in Q3 was 21.3%. Just to clarify, if you can, what's the number for Q4?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. First, I'll take the adjusted margin percentage in Q4 raises to 22.1% for the full company. I think the main thing -- mix plays certainly a part of it and can give you some variations and on the flat OMX. But I think when you look back to last year in Q4, we had some one-time things that aren't repeating and so that gets us to a little bit better than what we saw in Q3, but if you look back over Q2 to Q3, it's been flat.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Julian, I think it also reflects what you saw in the third quarter was this sort of slowdown through the quarter. We're much more prepared from a fourth quarter standpoint for that slowdown and so which you also see as us taking action and the impact of those actions actually really having more impact in the quarter. So, it's what -- it's certainly -- we got some -- it looks slightly easier comps and the tariffs too as you point -- accurately pointed out, but it's also the stability for us get after. The free cash flow in the third quarter was so strong, we were certainly prepared on the working capital side, and I think we're better prepared on the P&L side in the fourth than say we were in the third.
Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst
Understood. And then maybe just my follow up around capital deployment. You've announced the split, which will happen 9 months to 12 months from now, you've also got some restructuring under way today because of the slowing top line. Given those two aspects, do you think it's plausible that you would have much M&A activity in the coming two quarters or three quarters or the view is you have a lot on your plate and so maybe M&A takes a backseat for a while?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I would say, first, we certainly would agree with the point that we have a focus on a number of things that are really important. We mentioned in the prepared remarks both the ASP integration and the separation into NewCo are going well and that certainly takes time and resources and energy. So, we would certainly vehemently agree that has a prioritization those things are top of mind and things that Chuck and I and the rest of the management team are certainly focused on -- really on a daily basis. We announced, we've done three, really if you think about from the second quarter, in the second quarter, we closed ASP, we've done Safer, we've done Intelex, we've done Pruftechnik, and of course is today, we announced the Censis deal, so four deals in the better part of 90 days.
So, we've been pretty active, and we're certainly very focused on the integration of those things. So I think Censis is a good example, as I mentioned that we have had a couple of the conferences recently. We'd be more likely to be focused on anything if we did something to be bolt-on-ish and/or maybe adjacents -- adjacent that's within the real strategic side, and I think Censis represents that in many respects, it's adjacent to exactly what we do in sterilization, it's sort of like how Intelex is akin to ISC, it's very much akin to what we do at ASP.
So I think we'll be focused on those kinds of transactions if they're right down the middle of the fairway we would be acting out, but we do have a focus on a number of these things. And while I wouldn't say we're not focused on M&A, I think it's safe to say that the M&A we've done is pretty considerable here recently
Operator
Your next question is from the line -- I'm sorry, from the line of Andrew Obin with Bank of America.
Andrew Obin -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst
Yes, good evening. Hi, how are you guys? Can you hear me?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Yep.
Andrew Obin -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst
Excellent. So you did highlight North American slowdown in PI. And I was just wondering what specific end markets would you attribute the slowdown to?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I would say, well , first, in terms of location, we said it was, I would say, we certainly saw where we were -- if I think about Fluke, Fluke was -- Fluke Industrial in particular, our Fluke Networks business as well, those are two places in North America. So that was relatively broad based. But you could certainly see where industrial customers were slower. We don't have a lot of automotive exposure, but we have manufacturing certainly in those numbers. And you'd see some of those places are just some examples of where you might see a little bit more end market slowing. Certainly, electronics would be the other place where we saw it. So whether that's anyone assembling or designing electronics, we saw a little bit slower markets and that's a channel dynamic as much as anything.
So those are some end markets. I think where we stood up, where we had innovation, we continue to do pretty well from a product perspective, the ii900, the Sonic imager we announced last quarter at Fluke did exceptionally well in the quarter, our thermal imaging product line did pretty well in the quarter. So where we have some innovation, we still saw some opportunity. So I think the key for us is to continue to find those places where there's opportunity and really utilize prioritization in what we call dynamic resource allocation to put our resources in some of those end markets.
I would say that when we look at places like where we have software conversion to SaaS, things are really well. So EMEA is a great example, as while the end market might be similar to some of the places that are slowing from an instrument standpoint, we're still seeing a lot of SaaS conversion in those end markets with maintenance software. We mentioned EMEA grew over 20% for another quarter in a row and their performance was outstanding. So where we have those SaaS conversions, Andrew, I would say the end market almost doesn't matter, we're still doing pretty well.
Andrew Obin -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst
And just a follow-up question on Tektronix, there has been some headlines that we're seeing stabilization sort of semiconductor market specifically, is that a -- has your view changed on that into fourth quarter or next year, are you seeing any signs of stabilization? Does it matter for Tektronix where we are right now?
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
I think it's still a little early for us to call stabilization. I would say on the capital front, the onesie, twosie stuff might might be something that continues, but some of the bigger projects like our Keithley businesses as a decent (Technical Difficulty) I've heard some of the same things but I think we're definitely not planning for any of that in the rest of the year.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Andy Kaplowitz with Citi.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey Andy.
Andy Kaplowitz -- Citi -- Analyst
Good evening guys. Jim or Chuck, you said you had 150 basis points of price this quarter which seems like a good deal on price, but could you talk about the trade-off between price versus cost across the company? I know you lapped tariffs in Q3, but did you have positive price versus cost in Fluke and Tektronix in particular? And if you didn't, how quickly can pricing catch up with costs in those segments and what should it look like for the company moving forward?
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I think you know at both at Fluke and at Tek in the quarter we beat the corporate average from price standpoint. I think we're still a little behind on the price cost dynamic at both those places. We've got some cost reductions that have offset some of those, but from just a pure price tariff, Andy, we're still lagging a little bit relative to that.
And I think as we go into the year, that obviously tapers a little bit because we sort of start to sunset some of the tariffs in the fourth quarter because even though the tariffs were announced last year in the third, they really hit in the fourth and in the first. So we'll start to see a little bit of that, that could be a better, but unfortunately the volume reductions sort of wipe out a lot of that as well. So on the one hand, we've got the right price cost, but that's sort of a static metric, it doesn't really have a volume dynamic to it. If you were kind of look at it on a volume basis, we probably lost a little bit more on the gross margin front from just the volume reduction.
Andy Kaplowitz -- Citi -- Analyst
That's helpful and sorry go ahead.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
No, I was just saying, and so if volume comes back, then we start to see things maybe ramp a little bit better. But right now, we're not anticipating any big volume come back here and at least through rest of the year.
Andy Kaplowitz -- Citi -- Analyst
Got it. That's helpful and then in Western Europe, I think you said grew slightly, which is better than last quarter's low-single digit decline. You're watching Western Europe pretty carefully. So some of your peers have mentioned and maybe you some stabilization in Europe as the quarter went on. Is this just GVR doing well in Europe for you guys, and we should still kind of watch the PI businesses there, the short-cycle businesses there? Or did you see any stabilization?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, it is -- Andy, see, I think we did see some stabilization across the businesses, it's beyond just GVR. But I think that we remain watchful of everything that's going on in Europe and this was a slightly better quarter than maybe we thought coming in, but we're still watching it pretty carefully.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Josh Pokrzywinski with Morgan Stanley.
Josh Pokrzywinski -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Yeah, hi, good evening, guys.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Good evening, Josh.
Josh Pokrzywinski -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Could you just remind us Jim on Gordian and Accruent, just because these are kind of going organic more recently. I guess specifically for Gordian on some of these larger projects, is that revenue cycle tied more toward when these projects kick off or when they ramp up? And I guess where the question is going is, if some of that underlying activity slows a little bit more, is there still kind of an extensive backlog where projects wrap up and they still get paid or is that more of kind of the leading edge of the project cycle?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I mean there is certainly a component to it, you sign -- the way -- you got to get the cost structure going through the job order contracting mechanism. So -- so you're right, there is a point where at the start, It's not as great as it is maybe through, the first third probably isn't as great as the -- there is a ramp to that as more costs come through and you probably get more at the end than you do at the beginning.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
The one thing about it though is, and one of the interesting dynamics about the businesses is that because we don't really play in the massive construction cycle, it's really more about the rebuilds and the redos and the maintenance stuff, it doesn't really have a big component to it of large scale construction, and in fact, when things slow a little bit, people tend to fix stuff more and then actually is a pretty good dynamic for the business.
So the combination of that and it being underpenetrated means that I think we still have a lot more opportunity in the business going forward despite what the economic cycle might look like.
Josh Pokrzywinski -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Understood. And then I guess just second question on GVR obviously heading into a tougher comp here into the fourth quarter, EMV though is, it's kind of reaching its time to shine in that whole adoption cycle. Can you help us kind of calibrate what the push and pull of those two dynamics are, the tough comp versus closer to the transition period?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, well, we had a -- we had a really good third quarter there, as we said, I think in North America. I would -- because of a slightly tougher -- we certainly have a tougher comp in the fourth quarter. So it's probably closer to high-single digit -- we probably see India -- as we mentioned in the prepared remarks that India would we had a number of projects push into the fourth quarter. So I suspect, our high-growth market numbers will be better in the fourth quarter there and our North American number will be a little bit different just because of -- in part because of the tougher comp, but not because of the overall demand, which we see continue to be good.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of John Walsh with Credit Suisse.
John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst
Hi, good afternoon.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, John.
John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst
Maybe just following up on that last question, could you actually help us with the organics you're expecting in Q4? Obviously, you gave us the total company, but there is that comp and the India dynamic. I mean maybe asked differently, I mean can IT actually grow in Q4 '19?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, IT will grow in -- probably in the mid-single digit range-ish, if we were to sort of think about that and I think what we'll see in PI is probably still down a little bit, so pretty close, maybe because of the tougher comp, a little bit lower than what we've seen in the third quarter.
John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst
Great, thank you. And then going back to the prepared remarks, I think for Accruent you made this comment that you had signed up 70 new customers in the quarter. I was wondering if you could help provide some context around that number and how to think about it? And maybe building off of Josh's question, when things slow, I think there is a penetration rate story here particularly for both Accruent and Gordian. I mean maybe how does -- where do you see the penetration rates of those solutions in the market? And then how to think about signing up 70 customers? I'm just not sure how to actually think about the terms of business.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, that makes sense. You know, John, I would say couple of things, one, maybe talk about the Gordian thing first to sort of tie that off. I think we're very -- the market is very under-penetrated. Again, that's not a SaaS business, it's really more a new business model in terms of job order contracting. So there is a lot of growth. We have to invest in that growth by adding salespeople and building capability and we put some additional investments in the business this year in order to do that we're seeing the business grow and getting good returns of those investments. Accruent today has a larger installed base and is also more of -- has a more of a license revenues model that they're converting to SaaS. So while SaaS is a still a large proportion of the sales today, they still have a conversion going on. So part of the little bit of the noise in the quarter with Accruent that we don't have in some of our other software businesses is this change transition to SaaS. And so the 70 new customers is a good number because it demonstrates that we're adding customers and that's a good thing, but I think the other thing in the prepared remarks was the average contract value going up and that average contract value going up or what we would call ACV is really a demonstration that we're converting people to SaaS and they're doing that over a longer term contract.
And so that -- those are both positive signs for the long-term growth of the business. Of course, when you make that conversion of SaaS in a particular quarter or with a few months left in the year, it's not going to be as beneficial as getting a big subscription, or excuse me, getting a big license contract. But, over time, it's remarkably better and certainly from a margin perspective. So that's really the dynamics going on in the business and overall, where we're seeing good progress and I think the 70 number, I think if there are over 50 new customers a quarter, we're feeling pretty good about that number. Now of course, as the customer base gets bigger, we'll have to raise expectations on that, but I suspect the team there will be raising it before we are.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Richard Eastman with Baird.
Richard Eastman -- Baird -- Analyst
Good afternoon, Jim and Chuck.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi Rick.
Richard Eastman -- Baird -- Analyst
Can you just -- a question. The reference has been made frequently to the PI businesses, the short-cycle, short turns businesses, if I try to hang a number on those, I mean how much revenue is there? I mean, I'd say, is it close to $2 billion between Tek and Fluke Industrial? I know you use different definitions there. But I'm just curious what that looks like? And the point that you make about the POS kind of slowing here through the quarter, do you have a good read on the channel there in those two businesses?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So I think, two questions there. If you took Fluke and Fluke and Fluke all off which Fluke Health, Fluke Networks that remains there, Fluke Industrial, all of the Fluke Calibration, all of those, you're in the -- and combine that with Tektronix, you're roughly a little over $2 billion in revenue. So that's a decent number, $2 billion, $2.1 billion I think probably is a good number there. Relative to -- I think we have the best visibility, we get point-of-sale data in the US, Europe and China for both businesses. I think we have better granularity in North America and increasingly as you get farther from the US, the numbers become less of the total sales and they become maybe a little bit more less perfect, but North America, it's pretty good. Fluke, we get better, we probably get the best data because we get multiple, we get a multiple industry look, it's often we can call the canary in the coal mine. And so I think we get decent visibility and that's why we said, in June, the point-of-sale data actually looked decent, it was really the third quarter where we progressively saw that we saw more of a destocking activity going on in June. What we saw in the third quarter was we still saw some destocking, but we also saw really actual demand going down.
Richard Eastman -- Baird -- Analyst
Okay and then just a follow-up question is around ASP, you did reference some of the investments there, and some of that going into new products and product launch for 2020. But given the timing there, I don't know if you need 510k for any of that. Probably not, but just my question is, do you have a pipeline of new products and given the timing that can move the needle on growth in ASP as soon as 2020?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, first of all, whenever we would talk about a new product launches with ASP, we would be including the FDA approval that would be required, so. So when we talk about 2020, we're talking about the actual launch of products. So whether it's the FDA or the -- there the organization -- the appropriate organization elsewhere in the world, we would always be talking about launching a product with those approvals. So we won't talk about a launch before we would assume that when we give you a date that we've got those kinds of approvals already in hand. So -- so that's first and foremost. And we have been able to accelerate some things, we started doing some work even before. Not necessarily helping them with product launches, but educating them around some of our tools of new product development, but they've also had their own innovation funnel and they're doing their own things too, so. So we think we're accelerating some of those things and we'll start to see those in the next year.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Nigel Coe with Wolfe Research.
Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst
Hey, thanks, thanks for the question.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey Nigel.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Hey Nigel.
Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst
Hey, I would like to better understand the pathway to PI margin stability, I guess. Chuck, I think you called out FX and tariffs as two headwinds, and of course, we've got some pretty big decremental margins out at Tektronix and Fluke. The tariffs, you mentioned that they're kind of lapping 4Q. So are these largely list 2 tariffs, list 3, is that important? But seems like FX is starting to stabilize, right? So perhaps some good news there. I'm just curious how do we sort of bend the curve on margins at PI in the absence of any good news on volumes and maybe kind of like one kind of get out to hear is most of the restructuring you're doing is centered around PI.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I think there is a couple of quiet things there, you have to keep in mind the tariffs, they ramped through last year, as they were implemented. So when even though we're lapping the start of tariffs, I think the lapping starts around the first of the year when it's so like for like amount. So that will give us some stabilization. I agree that there is still a little bit of FX headwind in the year, but that's starting, hopefully that would remain stable. But I do think that some of the restructuring that we're doing that we just announced is primarily focused in PI. And not all because we have slowing in a number of places, but I think that's going to be helpful there. And don't forget that ASP is sitting in Professional Instrumentation as well and that should give us some lift there as well.
Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst
Okay. That brings me next on to next question, which is the TSA roll-off at ASP. Can you maybe quantify, kind of, to what extent that's a problem right now? What impact is that to margin? I've got a number of nearly $15 million to $20 million per quarter in my head. Is that a good number going forward?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
I think when we get down the road and we're entirely off the TSAs, yeah, I think that that will be a quarter a number. I don't -- I wouldn't actually call it a problem in that it's playing out as we expected, but I think it's an opportunity that we expect to move forward with. And so I feel pretty good about it.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of John Inch of Gordon Haskett.
John Inch -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst
Thanks very much. Afternoon, everyone.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, John.
John Inch -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst
I think you folks said Tektronix and Fluke Industrial were down high-single digits and obviously the shift has been much more at the point-of-sale. I'm not sure if you know -- kind of granularly or more granularly comment on the degree of destock, like is destock getting better? And do you guys think that Tek and Fluke are [Indecipherable] sort of low watermarks in terms of their core growth degradation or based on sort of the cadence of end markets. It seems like this is just kind of beginning to hit in North America, things potentially going to get worse here in the short run.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Well, I think, we said North America Fluke Industrial was high-single digits in the quarter. So that's a pretty -- you've got to -- you can come up with a lot of different scenarios around what the economic situation looks like, but I think given what we saw progress through the quarter, that idea that it will progress, that it will continue for a period of time is really the basis by which we took the productivity initiatives. So I think we don't expect anything to come back and return, and the sales in are sort of equating to the sales out now. So you know at some point in time, we'll see some inventory lift, but we're not planning any inventory lift and I wouldn't expect that well into next year or so.
So I think we're prudent where we're at right now, John. Certainly we could come up with a scenario where maybe it gets worse, but I think right now from everything we're seeing having this idea that it progresses or continues and certainly into next year is, I think is the most accurate thing and it seems as we've learned -- listened to other peers, it seems similar from an end market perspective, we're seeing some similar things. So we'll try to -- we try to triangulate off of that as well.
John Inch -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst
Now, that makes sense. And then could we also just -- could you guys maybe I don't know if there's any sort of an update you can give us with respect to the timeline of events for separation, so I'm thinking you were going to talk about maybe at some point the expected capital structure, both of the companies, at some point we're going to get a management for NewCo etc, then there is a road show. What -- are there any milestones that we should be looking for coming up in the next few months?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I think, yeah, I mean it's very early days, but I like -- as we said in the prepared remarks, I think we made some really good progress. I would say we filed registration statements, we've gotten commentary from the SEC. We responded to that feedback so when -- having done a few of these in my life now what I call the real work, the groundwork you got to do from a filing perspective, from a subsidiary standpoint, from a pre-tax work, we've made a lot of progress in the last several months.
Obviously, we just announced it five weeks or six weeks ago. But I think those comments would suggest we've been hard at work for much longer than that. And we're certainly building the management team, we're building a Board, we're doing a number of those things and they really all need to come at one time, if you will. So I don't want to put a predictive time on that, but certainly, I wouldn't think -- I would think, we'll certainly be talking about that by the end of the year, early part of next year, I think with pretty good specificity. We've announced a location, we're going to put the headquarters in Charlotte, North Carolina -- or Raleigh, Durham, North Carolina. Sorry about that.
So we've got a location and that's something we're doing. So we've made a number of -- we've made progress on a number of fronts and we feel good about where we're at. And as we bring everything else along, we'll have an opportunity to continue to share things as they come out, but I think that's really probably the early part of next year where we come up with some of the -- where we can come out with, maybe that's the next major milestone and maybe that's tied to our earnings announcement or somewhere in around there too.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Andrew Buscaglia with Berenberg.
Andrew Buscaglia -- Berenberg -- Analyst
Yes, thanks for taking my question.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey Andrew.
Andrew Buscaglia -- Berenberg -- Analyst
Hey, can you talk a little bit more about ASP. So, I know it's been in your numbers for a couple of quarters now. Can you talk about where you are with regards to FBS initiatives first off , kind of what inning you're there? And with regards to the margin contribution, can you talk to -- can you try to quantify that in -- within the quarter and then potentially how that progresses through next year?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. So Andrew, we'll -- Chuck and I can tag team that. I think we're very pleased with the work that's been done on the Fortive Business System with the team there. We've made good progress, we've done a number of things, I mentioned in the prepared remarks some of the innovation efforts we've had. We've also had a number of value selling and funnel management workshops with them. We've taught them daily management, we've done some Kaizen's in the factory as well.
So we made some nice progress with adoption of FBS and it's really early days. I was -- couple of weeks ago I was with the teams in China and in Japan, and those teams are really integrating, well, we mentioned in China is going to come onto our direct control here in a few weeks. So we're making good progress and the teams are very thirsty for adopting FBS. The work that's been done I think suggested having their hands on a continuous improvement system and a set of tools has been something that they've been looking forward to. And so far, adoption is -- it's very early days as we know this is a multi, multi-year journey. But having done this a number of times, I think we're off to a pretty good start.
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
And Andrew, this is Chuck. With regards to the margins, adjusted operating margins I think at this point are nominally accretive, but as we were off in the TSAs, you will see a significant lift in benefit from us over the next year from ASP for the total Fortive.
Andrew Buscaglia -- Berenberg -- Analyst
Right, OK. And is there any incentive to -- we can move some of those FBS stuff forward pre spin?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
I think -- you are you talking about at ASP or just more --
Andrew Buscaglia -- Berenberg -- Analyst
Yes , ASP, specifically, I guess, is there --
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
I think the roadmaps for what we need to do in both businesses, both the separation and the ASP integration, they really have independent paths and we're working super hard and super well to to get those done as quickly as possible, but the reality is they're both on separate paths and they'll find their -- the fact that we talk about one at the end of the first half and the other one in the second half. That's just sort of just happens to be that way. We're very much running pretty hard. I don't anticipate opportunities to do much sooner on either one of those, because of the work that we have ahead of us. The good news is, we're making good progress along those paths now.
Operator
Your next question is from the line of Joe Giordano with Cowen.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, Joe.
Joe Giordano -- Cowen -- Analyst
Hey guys, thanks for taking my question here. Do you have any color on net core OMX growth by segment next quarter?
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Well, I think in general it's going to look an awful lot like what we saw this quarter for core OMX. I think that when you look at our adjusting operating margins, I think both PI and IT will be around 23% with the overall company at 20%, 22%.
Joe Giordano -- Cowen -- Analyst
Okay. And then on the SaaS transition for Accruent, how long does something like that generally take? I know it's a good development, long term, but sometimes it could be a tough transition as it happens. So how long does that business take to transition over?
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I think we'll continue to do -- I think what we really built out our return model was that it would occur over a couple two years to three years, not every customer -- we're not forcing a transition by any stretch of imagination. There's certain value that's created, particularly as people move to the cloud and have different thoughts around how they want to handle their IT transitions in some of these markets. So it's certainly a continued two-year to three-year transition and I don't think there's anything that will precipitate a massive change to that. It's certainly -- well, it might move around -- the core growth rate might move around a little bit quarter-to-quarter here, but we still sit in that the mid to high single-digit growth rates that we'll see in those -- the combined business here certainly through -- certainly over the next few years with having those transitions.
Operator
And there are no further questions at this time.
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, thanks everybody. And Phillip, thank you. Thanks everybody for taking the time. I know it's an incredibly busy day. I understand there were some challenges with EDGAR even today, so I'm getting some documents. So our information is on the web and on our website if you weren't able to do that. I'm sure you could all figure out what they have going, but thanks so much for the time. We obviously feel that we've taken a number of steps. I know this is a volatile environment with a lot of change going on relative to the end markets, but we feel very good about what we've done from a free cash flow perspective, an earnings perspective in the quarter, and we really are working hard to make sure that we can implement some of the things to not only protect our earnings for next year, but also to make sure that we do what we call dynamic resource allocation, which is to make sure we can continue to prioritize the investments that are going to have the most dramatic impact on our core growth and our margin expansion in the years to come.
So we look forward to continue to talk to all of you there. Obviously, Griffin and Chuck and Ross are available for questions, will be available when needed to answer any follow-ups. Thanks for the time and good luck in the remaining days and weeks of earnings. Thanks everybody. Have a great night.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]
Duration: 60 minutes
Call participants:
Griffin Whitney -- Vice President of Investor Relations
Jim Lico -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Chuck McLaughlin -- , Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Steve Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst
Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst
Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst
Andrew Obin -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst
Andy Kaplowitz -- Citi -- Analyst
Josh Pokrzywinski -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst
Richard Eastman -- Baird -- Analyst
Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst
John Inch -- Gordon Haskett -- Analyst
Andrew Buscaglia -- Berenberg -- Analyst
Joe Giordano -- Cowen -- Analyst