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Johnson Controls Inc (JCI -0.86%)
Q1 2020 Earnings Call
Jan 31, 2020, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, welcome to the Johnson Controls First Quarter 2020 Earnings Call. Your lines have been placed on listen-only until the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] This conference is being recorded. If you have any objections, you may disconnect at this time.

I will now turn the call over to Antonella Franzen, Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer. Ma'am, you may begin.

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

Good morning and thank you for joining our conference call to discuss Johnson Controls first quarter fiscal 2020 results. The press release and all related tables issued earlier this morning as well as the conference call slide presentation can be found on the Investor Relations portion of our website at johnsoncontrols.com.

With me today are Johnson Controls Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, George Oliver; and our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, Brian Stief.

Before we begin, I like to remind you that during the course of today's call, we will be providing certain forward-looking information. We ask that you review today's press release and read through the forward-looking cautionary informational statements that we've included there. In addition, we will use certain non-GAAP measures in our discussions, and we ask that you read through the sections of our press release that address the use of these items.

In discussing our results during the call, references to adjusted EBITA, adjusted EBIT margins exclude restructuring and integration costs as well as other special items. These metrics are non-GAAP measures and are reconciled in the schedules attached to our press release and in the appendix to the presentation posted on our website.

Additionally, all comparisons to the prior year are on a continuing ops basis, excluding the results of Power Solutions.

GAAP earnings per share from continuing operations attributable to Johnson Controls ordinary shareholders was $0.21 for the quarter and included a net charge of $0.19 related to special items, which Brian will address in his comments. Excluding these special items, non-GAAP adjusted diluted earnings per share from continuing operations was $0.40 per share compared to $0.26 in the prior year quarter.

Now let me turn the call over to George.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Antonella, and good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us on today's call. Before we get into the details of the quarter, I would like to provide a few thoughts as we look ahead to the rest of fiscal 2020.

Starting on Slide 3, we continue to see good momentum across the majority of our key performance metrics, with Q1 providing a strong start to the year. We saw 70 basis points of margin expansion this quarter, this resulted from a reduction in structural costs, improved project execution, accelerated service growth, expansion in gross margins, and driving innovation. All of these initiatives will remain key focal point for us as we go forward. We've also made significant progress in improving our cash generation profile, with important steps toward better management of our trade working capital and continued discipline around capex spending. We sure have more work to do to bring free cash conversion up to 100% on a sustainable basis, but I am extremely pleased with the progress we have made to date.

As we will discuss on the next slide, orders were flat in the quarter, but I am confident given the continued strength we see in our pipeline, we will see acceleration in Q2. Our primary end markets, commercial HVAC, building controls, fire and security, remain healthy and we are well positioned as leaders in each market. We have significantly strengthened our balance sheet over the course of the last nine months with ample flexibility when it comes to future capital deployment opportunities.

Finally, as I've said many times on these calls over the last couple of years, we remain intently focused on execution in building a strong performance culture to drive sustained performance and maximize shareholder value.

Turning to some of the details for the quarter, starting with orders on Slide 4. Orders for our field businesses were flat, in aggregate in Q1, as we faced tough prior-year comparisons given the timing of announced price increases. Last year our announced price increases were effective in January, which resulted in a pull forward into Q1 fiscal '19. This year, we accelerated our announced price increases to be effective in October, which resulted in a pull forward into late fiscal '19. Looking forward, our order pipeline remains robust with an attractive mix of service and a balanced profile of small and large projects. We expect order growth in Q2 to be in the mid-single digit range and we remain very confident in our low to mid single-digit growth target for the full year. Backlog ended the quarter at $9 billion, up 6% organically versus the prior year and up 2% on a quarter sequential basis, which provides high visibility through 2020.

Turning now to Slide 5, for a quick recap of the financial results in the quarter. Sales of $5.6 billion, increased 3% on an organic basis. Within the field businesses, total service revenues grew 3% in the quarter on top of mid single-digit growth in the prior year. Our service business represents over $6 billion in revenues or a little more than 40% of our field revenue base and provides us with a very profitable resilient revenue stream. As growing and expanding our service offering has been a key priority, we recently appointed a dedicated Global Service [Indecipherable], Ganesh Ramaswamy joined the team from Danaher and will drive improved consistency of fundamentals across our global direct channel, leverage our infrastructure and investments and work closely with regional leaders to execute on our strategic priorities. With the strength and depth of our portfolio, we have a tremendous opportunity to strengthen our core service business, while building and deploying new service solutions, leveraging our digital capabilities.

Adjusted EBIT of $448 million, grew 13% on an organic basis driven by solid 7% growth in segment profit and a continued focus on reducing corporate expense. Overall, underlying EBIT margins expanded 80 basis points year-over-year, excluding a 10 basis point headwind from FX.

Adjusted EPS of $0.40, increased 54% over the prior year with solid operational performance and a significant contribution from the deployment of proceeds related to the Power Solutions sale. Adjusted free cash was an outflow of under $100 million in the quarter, in line with our normal seasonal pattern, but a significant improvement over the last two years.

With that, I will turn it over to Brian to discuss our performance in more detail.

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks George, and good morning everyone. So let's get started with a look at our year-over-year EPS bridge on Slide 6. You can see that operational performance, including synergies and productivity save contributed $0.06 [Phonetic], deployment of the Power Solutions proceeds benefit both our year-over-year share count and net financing charges, which added $0.06 for the $0.03 respectively. Other net items in the first quarter were roughly $0.01. This results in our first quarter adjusted EPS of $0.40, up 54% year-on-year.

So let's move to Slide 7 and look at our segment results on a consolidated basis. Sales of $5.6 billion, increased 3% organically, led by 4% growth in our field businesses and 2% in Global Products. Segment EBITA of $625 million, grew 7% organically, driven by volume leverage from the field, strong price cost realization in our products businesses and continued productivity save and cost synergies. Lastly, Q1 segment EBITA margin expanded 40 basis points to 11.2%. If you look at the margin waterfall, underlying operational improvement contributed 50 basis points and this included a 10 basis point headwind related to our retail business in North America. This was partially offset by 10 bps for other items in the quarter.

Now let's take a look at each segment in more detail. So starting on Slide 8, North America. North America sales grew 3% organically, with balanced growth in both install and service activity. Growth was led by Fire & Security, which grew mid-single digits in the quarter led by higher install activity. Our applied HVAC and Control businesses, increased low-single digits in the quarter given the double-digit growth in equipment last year. Performance Solutions declined low double digits this quarter, due primarily to a tough prior year compare of over 30%.

As we expected, adjusted EBITA increased 2% and EBITA margin was in line with the prior year at 12%. Favorable volume leverage and benefits from synergy and productivity save were offset by a 30 basis point headwind related to our retail business. And as we mentioned on our Q4 call, we expected to see continued margin headwind in retail, given the change in mix to increased project revenue.

Orders declined in the quarter, as George mentioned. This was primarily due to the timing of price increases in our applied HVAC business, which did provide a 3 percentage point headwind. We expected to start the year off a bit slower in North America, but we're confident that orders will accelerate to mid-single digit range in Q2, given current pipeline activity. Backlog in North America remained strong at $5.8 billion, up 7% year-over-year.

Turning to EMEA/LA on Slide 9. Sales grew 7% organically with install up 10% and service up 5%. Growth was positive across all regions and across HVAC & Controls, Fire & Security and Industrial Refrigeration. Our HVAC & Controls business grew high single-digits, helped in part by easier prior year compare, but also benefiting from order strength in the back half of 2019 for shorter cycle Controls business. Growth was particularly strong in Europe, which increased low-double digits and in the Middle East, which was a soft spot through fiscal '19, we saw mid-single digit growth. Fire & Security grew mid-single digit, with solid growth across both Install and Service activity and in all regions, led by mid teens growth in our subscriber business in Latin America. Industrial Refrigeration, which was predominantly in Europe, remains a bright spot in the region. It was up high teens in the quarter with solid growth in both Install and Service.

Adjusted EBITA increased 21% and EBITA margin expanded 120 basis points to 9.7%. We continue to benefit from favorable volume leverage, as well as our continued efforts around reducing structural costs and improving project execution [Indecipherable] our orders in EMEA/LA increased 4%, this was led by continued strength in our Controls platform, particularly in Latin America. Orders in Europe were up slightly on a tough prior year compare and backlog ended the quarter at $1.7 billion, up 8% year-on-year.

Let's move to Slide 10 on APAC. APAC sales grew 3% organically, led by higher demand for project installations, which grew 5% in the quarter. Fire & Security, which as you know, represents about 30% of APAC sales, saw continued strength of low single digits overall. HVAC & Controls, which represents remaining 70% of APAC sales was relatively flat year-over-year.

Adjusted EBITA increased 8%, with margins up 60 basis points to 11.4%. Favorable volume leverage productivity and synergy save and improved execution were partially offset by higher mix of install versus service in the quarter. Asia-Pac orders were up 1% against the tough 9% prior year compare, consistent with the trend we've seen over the last several quarters. Backlog in APAC, increased 2% year-over-year to $1.6 billion.

I just point out that the environment in APAC remains competitive and economic conditions in some areas remain uncertain. We continue to experience macro related headwinds in some of our key markets in Asia, including the ongoing trade dispute and now the Coronavirus, which are overhangs in China as well as the ongoing unrest in Hong Kong. That being said, we are seeing nice improvement in the underlying fundamentals in our APAC businesses, but we are monitoring the situations very closely.

So let's turn to Slide 11, Global Products. Global Products sales in the quarter increased 2% organically, driven primarily by strong price realization. We saw BMS sales grow high-single-digits in this quarter, despite a low double-digit compare in the prior year. And this was led by strength in our security products business. HVAC and Refrigeration equivalent was flat, with mixed performance across the individual platforms.

I'd also point out that we have recently restructured our distribution channels in Canada to allow us to better serve the residential and light commercial markets and to accelerate our growth. Total resi HVAC declined low single digits, driven by a high single-digit decline in our APAC residential business as well as a mid single-digit decline in our North American business. Let me go through that in a bit more detail. So as we detailed for you last quarter, we expected continued pressure in our APAC residential business, primarily due to the softer market conditions in Japan. Our North American business was negatively impacted in the quarter by the Canadian distribution restructuring I mentioned previously as well as the lower than expected shipments in our furnace business, due to lower heating degree days in the quarter. Given the low double digit prior year compare, we expect this weakness to continue into the second quarter.

Light commercial unitary grew low single-digits on low teens prior year compare, with sales in North America flat due to weakness in our national accounts business. Our VRF business continues to outperform, growing mid-single digits while our applied HVAC equipment declined mid single-digits, primarily due to the pressures in APAC. We continue to see very strong demand for replacement chillers in North America. IR equipment grew mid-single digits in the quarter, helped by a relatively easy prior year compare. Finally, specialty products grew low single-digits on solid demand for fire suppression products, particularly in North America.

Product segments EBITA increased 6% and the EBITA margin expanded 40 basis points, as the underabsorption on lower volumes was more than offset by positive price/cost and the ongoing benefit of cost synergies and productivity.

So let's move to Slide 12 and corporate expense. Corporate expense was down 13% year-over-year to $81 million, driven primarily by the continued benefits of synergy and productivity save as well as our ongoing actions to reduce our cost structure, given the Power Solutions divestiture.

On Slide 13, free cash flow. Reported Q1 free cash flow was just under $400 million, excluding a little more than $100 million in one-time cash outflows related to integration and the $600 million tax refund that we received in the quarter, adjusted free cash was an outflow of less than $100 million, which is a $100 million improvement versus last year. This was primarily due to continued improvement in working capital management as we saw trade working capital as a percentage of sales decline 60 basis points. We continue to expect adjusted free cash flow conversion of 95%, excluding the $300 million in one-time cash outflows related primarily integration and the $600 million tax refund.

So let me turn to the balance sheet on Slide 14. Net debt was up slightly as we continue to deploy cash toward share repurchases despite Q1 being our seasonally weak cash generation quarter. You can see share repurchases in the quarter were $650 million, roughly in line with the cadence that we expect for the full year.

Before I turn it back to George for his closing remarks, I'd want to briefly mention a couple of items on Slide 15. First, during the quarter we recorded restructuring impairment charge of $111 million, about half of that is cash and about half of that is non-cash. And the cash impact of that, we'll expect to see in the current year and is included in our guidance. The cash restructuring charge reflects costs associated with the final year of the JCI, Tyco merger integration activities as well as the ongoing reduction in costs related to the Power Solutions divestiture. Secondly, in the quarter we recorded a non-cash charge of $30 million related to Swiss tax reform and this will not impact our 13.5% rate for the year. And then lastly, we also adopted a new accounting standard related to operating leases, which results in a gross-up of other non-current assets and other current and non-current liabilities in our balance sheet.

So overall, we're off to a great start in fiscal '20, with strong earnings and cash flow, and improving margins.

And with that, I'll turn it back over to George.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Brian. Before we open up the line for questions, I just want to reiterate that we continue to expect our fiscal 2020 earnings per share before special items to be in the range of $2.50 to $2.60, which represents earnings growth of 28% to 33%. We have included the full details of our guidance as previously provided in the appendix to the slides.

Our first quarter reflects -- results reflect a strong start to the fiscal year and a continued commitment to solid execution and to improving the underlying fundamentals of our business. I'm confident that we are well positioned to deliver continued long term shareholder value.

With that operator, please open up the lines for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you sir. At this time we will begin our Q&A session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Nigel Coe with Wolfe Research. Mr. Coe, your line is open.

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Thanks. Good morning guys.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning Nigel.

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Just -- obviously nice margin trends in the Asia-Pac and EMEA, Latin America segments. You've had some challenges, especially in Asia Pacific, do you feel like you are now in a better position going forward and based on the backlog and the mix kind of outlook, do you expect to continue to see sort of margin leadership from those two segments.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah Nigel, we've -- we've made really nice progress as Brian talked about within the margin structure within Asia-Pac. With the growth being low single digits, we worked -- this quarter we delivered 60 basis points year-on-year and that's also with unfavorable mix, with our installed growth growing faster than service. But I think the fundamentals, the way that we're pricing, the way that we're selling value, all of that is playing out within the structure and we believe that now with the fundamentals we're going to continue to improve on a go-forward basis.

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

I would just add to that, in 2018 Nigel, as you probably recall, we took a restructuring charge and some of that related to our European businesses. And I think we're really seeing the benefit in '19 and now into '20 of the results of some of those actions that were taken in 2018.

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Great, thank you. And then my follow up is your comments on the residential HVAC markets, we all know it's quite a warm winter, but very warm winter, but the comments on continued challenges in 2Q, is that more a function of the some of the restructuring you're doing in Canada or is that a friction more of the market.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Nigel, what I would say, it's both. When you look at our performance here in Q1, it's been mainly -- globally you know we're down a bit and a lot of that's driven by our performance or the market in Japan, which we're down in line with the margin -- market in Japan. In North America, it's been -- it's been too. When you look at the overall furnace market, we're extremely strong in that space and that market is down kind of high single digits. And right now that's continuing, and when you look at our restructuring of our Canadian distribution channels, what we've done is we've taken multiple channels, we've consolidated that and now we're going to be expanding our points of distribution to be able to effectively now be much better position to accelerate growth in that that region. That is all playing out here in the first and second quarter and will be positioned in the second half to be able to pick up from a growth standpoint from there.

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Thanks George, thanks Brian.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question is from Jeff Sprague with Vertical Research. Mr. Sprague, your line is open.

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

Thank you, good morning everyone. And thanks for pulling your call up to kind of accommodate all of us, I appreciate that. On -- George on the price kind of pull forward on orders, we normally think of that being potentially kind of a residential phenomenon, but not something that would kind of impact the larger company given the nature of kind of applied and commercial projects. So you just kind of speak to how broadly the timing of orders, might have been affected by pricing and your kind of visibility on Q2 orders?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I mean we've -- historically we've had our price increases in January. And as we've been working on price cost over the last couple of years, we've made a lot of progress. And so as we have been planning for 2020, we made a decision to pull forward. And with that, with the announcements there is a behavior that goes along with those announcements. And when you look at last year in, for instance in North America, we had high teens growth in our -- in our product last year in North America because of price being effective in January. When we announced the increase in coming -- being pulled into October, certainly we benefited in the fourth quarter of last year because of the same -- the same phenomenon. So there is -- there is a behavior around our price increases. What I would tell you Jeff is that the underlying activity is very strong across the board. Our pipelines pretty much across the board are high-single digits, mid to high single-digits and so my confidence in being able to deliver low to mid single-digit order growth in the second quarter and be positioned here for the year is very strong and that ultimately correlates to the revenue that we're projecting for the total year.

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

And Jeff, just to quantify the impact of that for you. When you look at our overall field orders they would be up low-single digits on an underlying basis.

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

Okay, thank you for that. And just on investment spend, not called out in the bridge, has this now kind of normalized and it will just kind of track with revenue growth from here or should we expect kind of other initiatives, maybe to pop up and be part of the earnings equation?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, as we've committed over the last couple of years, our reinvestment in the sales channels as well as the reinvestment in products now as a percent of revenue is flattening out in 2020 and beyond. And so what's happening Jeff is that we're continuing to add sales in line with what we see with the market activity to be. So we're continuing to add sales, but we're getting productivity with all of the, the expansion that we done last couple of years.

In engineering and R&D, we're continuing to obviously increase the dollars with the reinvestment, but maintaining that now as a percent of the overall revenue that's being achieved. And so we feel good and we're also similarly -- we're doing combining the footprint, we're making sure that we're getting good productivity on the dollars that we're spending and ultimately tracking that to the new product introductions that we're bringing to market to make sure that we're getting the appropriate volumes and returns on those investments.

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

Right, thank you. Appreciate it.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question is from Deane Dray with RBC Capital Market. Your line is open sir.

Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Thank you. Good morning.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning Deane.

Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

I just want to follow-up on Jeff's questions on pricing, and George, so just so we're clear, will price increases be more of a dynamic decision based upon material costs or will there be a strategy around anticipating customer behavior, just address the timing of price increases going forward?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. What I'd say Deane, if you go back two years ago, we had negative price cost and the market -- with the market changes we weren't positioned to be able to move quickly to stay ahead of that. We've made significant improvement now building out our strategic pricing capability across our businesses. So it is more dynamic, we're tracking the markets, we're tracking our win/loss, we're making sure that we're -- we're selling value and bringing value propositions to our customers instead of just annual price increase. Now there is historically that's what's happened within the industry we're in, but I believe that now we're much more dynamic relative to what's happening in the markets that we're serving. And as a result of that you saw nice progress with our, with our price cost last year, we actually turned the headwind that we had in '18 to a tailwind in '19 and that's continuing now in 2020, with probably -- I estimate over a point of our topline will be driven by continued very positive price cost.

Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Thank you. And then just as a follow-up, now that they've declared the Coronavirus, a global health emergency, I know your 2020 guidance does not anticipate impacts, but it's likely happening given all the shutdowns going on, any sense of where and how you're tracking, steps you're taking internally, just anything you could share will be helpful? Thanks.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, what I would start by saying about 6% of our revenue is achieved in China. So overall it is -- it is significant, but in the grand scheme relatively small. We've been working very well across all of our teams that are positioned in China. We've got not only all of the business units totally aligned, but we've got full support of our EHS professionals, our facilities leaders, and security where we get a daily update from our Asia-Pac leader. Certainly a top priority for us to -- to make sure that all of our people [Phonetic] are safe and protecting them. As you know, most provinces have mandatory holiday extension now through February 10. And that most of the travel within China now has been curbed or curbed significantly.

And so what we -- we are also assessing the supply side to have a pulse on what's happening with our supply. There could be some supply changes disruptions to date, it's been minimal. What I would say it is a fluid situation and that we're monitoring it very closely. At this stage Deane, it's hard to assess, difficult to assess but -- but could have some deferral of activity. I mean certainly we'll have to keep everyone updated.

Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Understood. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question is from Scott Davis with Melius Research. Your line is open sir.

Scott Davis -- Melius Research -- Analyst

Hi, good morning guys.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning Scott.

Scott Davis -- Melius Research -- Analyst

I don't fixate too much in the price, thinks it's been beaten to death, but it's pretty interesting that after all these years, pulling it forward to October, did -- where the competitors been -- did they do the same thing or are you out there for a whole quarter with higher prices generally than your competitors and that would have had some negative volume impact perhaps?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I believe that given the way the price increases occur within the industry. We're now ahead and so far we had the issue that last year we had a very strong first quarter with our HVAC equipment. And then this year because we had pulled it forward we had seen some of that benefit Scott, in the fourth quarter of last year and then what I would tell you is that when you look at the underlying pipeline and how the pipeline converts, we have a very strong pipeline, it's high single-digits, we usually there is pretty good predictability of how we convert in the percent. And so I have confidence that we're going to get back to, like I said kind of low to mid single-digit order growth in the second quarter and for the year. Very strong pipeline to deliver the mid single-digit so, I mean overall we're -- we're in line with where we thought we'd be.

Scott Davis -- Melius Research -- Analyst

Okay. Yeah, it's just the mechanics are interesting. My follow-up is just on the replacement show, the North America replacement chiller market, is there a sense of -- never seen the data out there on kind of each of the installed base, when you're talking about the bigger the bigger chillers, is there a sense that the installed base is old. And there is a long tail that there is a greater sense of upgrading, replacement for energy efficiency. Any -- just some of that is a little bit obvious, but just trying to get a sense of how long that tail of demand is?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I mean it's all of the above. I think given the value proposition with our new chillers and the ability to be able to reduce energy consumption and drive efficiency, certainly a big value proposition there. And so it's looked at in total value. So when you look at what their current cost is to maintain and what the energy consumption is, we typically will go in and create a value proposition that not only we can improve their operating cost, but also reduce energy. So you got to look at it as in total cost. And so I think as we know launch new products, we bring our digital capabilities and how we optimize the operation of the equipment, how that integrates with the overall building systems I think there's is a real attractive value proposition for our customers. So we've seen a nice pick up there.

Scott Davis -- Melius Research -- Analyst

Okay, thanks. Helpful, thanks. Good luck, guys and good job this year. Thank you.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Scott.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question is from John Walsh with Credit Suisse. Your line is open sir.

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Hi, good morning.

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

Good morning.

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

I guess a question around the retail business, you know, you've kind of called it out the last couple of quarters. It's now in the -- in the bridge, just wondering it can be lumpy, how long should we expect to kind of hear you calling out the retail headwind as it relates to the North America business?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, John our retail business when you size the business, it's roughly about $900 million. We have a presence globally, we are the industry leader. I mean loss prevention, inventory intelligence, traffic insights, it's a very profitable business because there is a high value proposition for our retail customers. And now that all being said, there's been lots of change in the industry given the proliferation of online shopping, requiring as we look at our overall offering toward digital solutions, a lot more installations that occurred during the quarter, but I believe that with the value proposition, the way that we are aligned, we're going to continue to see -- see the business perform, but there's going to be a different mix within the business. So it's something that we're watching carefully. We're working very closely with each one of our retail customers and laying out what the year looks like, and how we're going to be positioned to be able to support -- support their year, but it is given -- given what's happening within the retail space, there is a lot of change that's happening. And we're going to make sure that we're positioned to be able to capitalize on that change and support the customers through that.

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Great, thank you for that. Then I guess, you know in the past you've talked about the impact around PFAS and the AFFF, wondering if you can just provide us any kind of update there?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

John, there is no change in our position. You have to keep this in perspective. Tyco and Chemguard make lifesaving firefighting foam, not PFAS chemicals. And Tyco and Chemguard purchase compounds that contain trace amounts of PFAS, which they blend to make the foam. And their firefighting foam is made to exactly military standards. So majority of the foam at issue is specified and used by the US government and military and therefore subject to the government contractors' defense. And so Tyco fire products and Chemguard have always acted responsibly in producing these firefighting foams, and therefore we feel very confident in our ability to defend these clients.

But I also would like to share a few other facts. PFAS chemicals have been used by other companies since the 1940s, in many, many products and applications and we didn't start producing firefighting foam until the mid 1970s, which was over 30 years later and these foams are used only intimately and predominantly at very specific sites such as military bases. And then last is when you look at third-party scientific studies that also recognize that firefighting foam accounts for only a very small percentage of PFAS that has historically been used in the country.

So overall position hasn't changed. We feel very good. Given what we've done for our government, military customers and certainly there's really no additional updates.

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Great. Good quarter and thanks for the update.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next call or question, I'm sorry, is from Steve Tusa with JPMorgan. Your line is open sir.

Stephen Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Hey guys, good morning.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning Steve.

Stephen Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

What's going on in the -- so I think one of your businesses in North America, I think was down, it was the Solutions business or something. Is that like the performance contracting business, you guys still do that stuff?

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I mean our Solutions business are the large performance contract Steve. And as we've always talked the order intake on that can be pretty choppy, given the size of the contracts and then the flow of those contracts can give you some pretty significant variations quarter-to-quarter, but it's not a huge part of our business, but it can impact when we talk about that particular business, you can have some big swings quarter-to-quarter.

Stephen Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Okay. And then any -- just to kind of level set people, any color on whether the second quarter, any stand out as far as abnormal seasonality anywhere -- you know you mentioned orders, do you expect the orders to pick up a bit? Anything on free cash or the underlying business results that we need to kind of keep in mind for second quarter?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Steve, I'll take that. On the organic growth we're looking at low-single digits and that's again against a prior year compare of 6%. When you break that out, the field businesses will be low to mid single-digit and that's to a compare of 5% and products will continue low single digits and that's to a compare of 7 so overall continued performance on the top line, there will be, as Brian mentioned within products, some additional pressure here in Q2 on North America resi, but as we go through the year, we still feel very good in the second half of the year. The EBITDA margins expanding in line with the guidance for the year, 40 basis points to 60 basis points and we see expansion across all segments. And as you know, the normal seasonality to our year is typically [Indecipherable] in the first half, 17% in the second half. But because of the share repo this year, it's a little bit more skewed to the first half.

And then when you look at the overall consensus, it is in line with our guidance for the year. And the guidance that I reiterated earlier was EPS range of $2.50 to $2.60, and that would be an increase Steve of 28% to 33%.

Stephen Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Great.

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

I would just add to that Steve I think from a corporate expense standpoint, we had a pretty low quarter as is probably seen in the past, the second quarter tends to be a little bit higher. So I think we're -- our guidance that's out there for corporate expense is still pretty solid as we sit here today. And then when it looked -- when you look at cash flow, I think cash flow we would continue to see some improvement like we saw in the first quarter. So I think all in all, we feel real good about the second quarter.

Stephen Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

George, just one more quick follow-up on the -- on just the general strategic question, I don't think anybody's asked it yet, but obviously a lot of these companies progressing on their splits, how do you guys view -- any change in your view on kind of the strategic imperative to grow the residential business structurally.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I mean we've been focused, when you look at our strategy Steve, we've been focused on executing and getting the fundamentals in place, delivering on our commitments and ultimately driving results. That's the focus for us here in 2020, we've been returning in line with what we committed a significant amount of capital to our -- capital to our shareholders and we have a lot of underlying momentum across the organization. Whether it'd be the margin fundamentals on how we're launching new products, we're upgrading our leadership and ultimately now deploying our digital strategy.

So I think when you look at our positions, that's one that we've been investing heavily -- the residential space is we've been investing heavily with new, new products and technology. We are seeing progress because it is a critical element of our line card and how we ultimately support our customers and so we're going to continue to stay focused on executing, on delivering on the commitments, and certainly keeping a pulse on what's happening within the industry as far as any type of consolidation.

Stephen Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Great. Thanks for the detail as always. I appreciate it.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question is from Julian Mitchell with Barclays. Your line is open.

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. May be --.

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

Good morning Julian.

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Good morning. Maybe just a question around the EMEA/LA region. The Middle East, Africa piece for you and a lot of your competitors that's been pretty soft for much of the past sort of 12 months to 18 months, albeit lumpy, I think you sounded better, Brian in the prepared remarks on trends in Middle East Africa. So maybe just help us understand how you're looking at the applied markets there and also just remind us of the scale of that piece today?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, so I'll -- Julian I'll give you the overview of EMEA/LA. We've made a tremendous amount of progress in EMEA/LA over the last couple of years, not only in expanding our footprint from a sales, from a service standpoint, pretty much across the region. And when you look at our performance in the first quarter, organic growth 7%, it was both install and service, HVAC & Controls up high-single digit, Fire & Security up mid-single digit, and Industrial Refrigeration, as Brian said to an easy compare, but up high teens, we've made tremendous progress. And with that, we've seen good leverage on the margin rate with the volume. Good productivity savings and cost synergies and so overall, we are executing extremely well. Even within the current environment, we're seeing a pipeline continue to expand and we're converting orders kind of mid-single digit, with the backlog up 8%. So overall we've done -- over the last couple of years of restructuring as Brian talked about, the work we've done from a go-to-market is really beginning to play out.

Now that all being said in the Middle East, certainly part of that it does represent about 10% or 12% of the overall EMEA/LA revenue. Last year was a tough year, 2019 was a tough year for us, but we're beginning to see obviously with easier comps the work that we're doing around service and seeing some of the project installations come back, but -- overall, I'd say, when you look at the whole region, we made a lot of -- lot of good progress in the last couple of years and competitively I think we're positioned in an extremely strong -- strong position. I don't know Brian, you want to --.

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

No, I think you summarized it well. I think we had a pretty easy comp in the fourth quarter or the first quarter of fiscal '19 and so that benefited certainly in the current year, but I think we're better positioned today than we were a year ago for sure.

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Thanks. And then my second question just around corporate cost, heard the color on second quarter versus first quarter, but for the year as a whole, maybe just highlight the confidence in that range for corporate cost that you've given on Slide 21, particularly in light of a very good performance in Q1? And also where do we stand today in terms of realized stranded cost reduction since the Power divestment and how much stranded cost is still left to come out from that and whether that view has changed in the past nine months?

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

So our corporate expense guide for the year is $330 million to $340 million and we ended up at $81 million in the first quarter. That tends to be a lower quarter for us. And so I think there is going to be a tick up in the second and third quarter. So I think that guide of $330 million to $340 million is still a pretty good number, may be on the lower end of that, but I think that's probably a good number to use for now.

As it relates to the Power Solutions stranded cost takeout, I think we had communicated that we were going to have about a $10 million benefit that we saw in '19, it was going to be about $30 million in 2020. And then the full run rate $50 million benefit, we would see in '21 forward. We saw probably about what you would expect a pro rata portion of that $30 million here in the first quarter and we would expect that $30 million to be delivered throughout the course of the year.

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Great, thank you.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question is from Andrew Kaplowitz with Citi. Sir, your line is open.

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citi Research -- Analyst

Good morning, guys.

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

Good morning.

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citi Research -- Analyst

George or Brian, obviously is nice to see the tax helping your GAAP cash, but adjusted cash maybe slightly better than your normal seasonal weakness. When you look at 2020, the issues that we're going to give cash conversion down to 95% such as equity income from your JVs versus dividend and pension, do you see more improvement in trade working capital versus your expectation that can help you in 2020? And how you are thinking about ability to collect dividends from your JVs in 2020?

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

So the trade working capital as a percentage of sales, as I mentioned did improve by 60 basis points quarter-over-quarter. We saw a day improvement in DSO, day improvement in DPO, we saw a five day improvement in days on hand in the inventory side. So all in all, we made progress, really across the three key metrics. As we look at the 95% for the year, that type of improvement was contemplated when we gave the 95% guidance. I would tell you that as you know, this is the first year that we are going to end up in the situation where we've got reported cash flow in excess of adjusted cash flow because of that $600 million tax refund we got in the first quarter.

We still tend to be a little bit short of 100% converted because of the level of our capex, the fact that we don't get the entire amount of our equity income out in terms of dividends from our -- from our JVs and then we still have this pension income that doesn't come with any cash. Now that's offset with some amortization benefits. So I think longer term, we're going to get to that 100% level. But sitting here today, the headwinds are still a little bit more than the tailwinds we've got. So our target is 100%, but I think 95% is a good number for this year.

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citi Research -- Analyst

Thanks for that Brian. And then George, can you give us more color into the inventory destock situation that you had last quarter in Japan and Taiwan. Resi HVAC was still down in Q1 there, but it wasn't -- it didn't seem embedded last quarter, I know you talked about the headwinds in North America impacting Q2, but do you still see APAC situation not being a headwind as we go into Q2?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

So specially on the unitary commercial is that what you asked, Andrew?

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citi Research -- Analyst

Yeah. And because you said Japan might sort of be an overhang as you go through at least in the Q1, it looks like that may be getting a little better, but just your comment on Japan and Taiwan as we sit here over the next couple of quarters?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, so when you look at the -- we talked a little bit about the softness we had in our furnace business, which the market itself was down about 9%. We have a strong presence in that market and certainly that hit us. And then Brian had talked a little bit about the restructuring that we're doing in our Canadian distribution with short-term, we did see a little bit of a headwind. I think as we get through this first and second quarter, that's going to turn into a tailwind on a go forward basis. And we're going to significantly increase our points of distribution.

And so you see a little bit where you got a lot of different factors playing -- playing together here. We think that Q2 will continue to be a little bit soft, but as we get through the year, we're going to be positioned to get back to above market growth within the -- within our business. So does that get at what you --.

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

And Andy, just specifically related to Taiwan and Japan, as we said last quarter, we expected the destocking to be complete in Taiwan, in Q4 and it was. So our Taiwan business was fine. On the APAC side and as expected, we did continue to have some pressure in Japan in our APAC residential business. We do expect that to start flattening out as we get into the second quarter.

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citi Research -- Analyst

That's helpful guys, thank you.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question is from Gautam Khanna with Cowen. Your line is open sir.

Gautam Khanna -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Yeah, thanks, good morning guys. Couple of questions. First, I was wondering George, could you comment on the M&A pipeline? I know you talked about $1 billion sort of set aside for potential acquisitions, where do we stand there?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, we're -- we're constantly looking at bolt-ons. Gautam, we're continuing to reinvest organically. We've got a pipeline across our businesses where we have gaps, technology or products looking at bolt-ons. So at this stage there's nothing, nothing significant, but we are continuing to strengthen our regional footprint and continuing to look at our product portfolio to make sure that we're making the appropriate plays in line with the organic investments we're making.

Gautam Khanna -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Okay. And just -- as you look at the portfolio, do you see any incremental potential for divestments as we move forward?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

We've been continuing to review the portfolio across the board. And we've been making small divestitures with businesses that are non-core and businesses that we don't want to continue to reinvest in, but again there has been nothing significant there. But that's a process that we continue, we're constantly looking at the portfolio, Gautam.

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

Gautam, I would just say to that I think when you look at the activity in the current year you know, we've got our [Indecipherable] business as held for sale. Right now, we would expect that to close in the current year. And there are some other investments that will probably make, but I think you can almost look at our M&A activity in the current year that the inflows and the outflows will be relatively the same. I don't think there's going to be anything significant in fiscal '20.

Gautam Khanna -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

That's helpful Brian. One last one for me, just -- as we look at the fiscal '21, what do you think the lingering integration [Indecipherable].

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Let me -- let me just frame '21. We gave a framework that when we gave guidance for '20 and what that ultimately would look like in 2021 as it relates to the deployment of capital with the buybacks and the like. In addition to that, I'm very confident that when you look at the fundamentals of what we're building across these businesses from a margin standpoint, on a go forward basis that we're going to be positioned, we have a pipeline of productivity and savings that ultimately is going to position us to sustain margin improvement year-on-year, similar to what we've seen here over the last couple of years. So I want everyone to understand that, that's going to continue.

Now with that there is some restructuring as it relates to some of the take out of -- some of the structure that we have in place across the globe. And normally that would probably be in the 50 -- maybe the 50 million, maybe a little bit more range on an annual basis, but with very strong payback within the year relative to the margin rate that we can -- we can achieve. So I feel very confident that with the -- the framework that we provided relative to the buybacks and how that's going to play out as we position for 2021 the work that we've done in reducing the debt cost and then now with the margin rates that we're achieving, that we're going to be positioned to deliver what I would say is incrementals that are 30 plus on our incrementals. And so that will position us extremely well to continue margin expansion and be able to deliver longer term on the margin rate that we originally said we could get to which is somewhere 15% to 16%.

Gautam Khanna -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Thank you very much guys.

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

Thanks Gautam.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question is from Noah Kaye with Oppenheimer. Your line is open sir.

Noah Kaye -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

Thanks, good morning. If we could look at North America, we're seeing some improving indicators, both indicators ABI, Dodge Momentum, can you maybe just talk about the pace of quoting activity on the longer cycle project business? And what kind of confidence that gives you in sustainability of growing the backlog?

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

When you look at North America and if you look at the quarter, organic growth was 3%, a mix pretty much across all of the domains capabilities, margins were flat. But overall the margin rate we did operationally deliver not only with the volume and the productivity 40 basis points, but that was offset with the -- with the retail mix and some of the cost pressure there.

When you look at orders, we did talk about the order down 1%. A lot of that was timed because of the price increases, but when you look at the backlog, backlog was -- backlog year-on-year was up 7% to $5.8 billion. So when you look at the mix of that backlog that is both short and long-term projects. And as we project the year, we are positioned here for kind of mid -- low to mid single-digit top line growth. We are positioned here to continue to deliver orders that are kind of mid-single digit, low to mid for the year, mid-single digits in the second quarter. And then within the mix of those orders we'll be positioned to be able to convert those orders. Similar to what we're doing this year as we position for 2021. So the cadence that we have and how we look at backlog, how we look at turn, absolutely supports what we're going to achieve for this year and as we build the backlog as we plan for 2021, we feel confident that with the pipeline that we're currently working to convert that will position us well for 2021.

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

And operator, with that I'm going to pass it over to George for some closing comments.

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

So, thanks everyone for joining our call this morning. Again as we discussed, we're off to a strong start for the year, positioned well to deliver on our full-year commitments. As it relates to orders, I feel very confident in mid single-digit order growth in Q2, which then tied to the overall guidance of low to mid single digit growth for the full year. And with all of the sessions that are coming up, I do look forward to seeing many of you soon.

So on that Operator, that concludes our call.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 59 minutes

Call participants:

Antonella Franzen -- Vice President and Chief Investor Relations and Communications Officer

George R. Oliver -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Brian J. Stief -- Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer

Nigel Coe -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst

Jeff Sprague -- Vertical Research -- Analyst

Deane Dray -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Scott Davis -- Melius Research -- Analyst

John Walsh -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Stephen Tusa -- JPMorgan -- Analyst

Julian Mitchell -- Barclays -- Analyst

Andrew Kaplowitz -- Citi Research -- Analyst

Gautam Khanna -- Cowen & Co -- Analyst

Noah Kaye -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

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