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FMC Corp (FMC -0.02%)
Q3 2020 Earnings Call
Nov 3, 2020, 9:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the Third Quarter 2020 Earnings Call for FMC Corporation. [Operator Instructions] After today's prepared remarks, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Michael Wherley, Director of Investor Relations for FMC Corporation. Please go ahead, sir.

Michael Wherley -- Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to FMC Corporation's third quarter earnings call. Joining me today are Mark Douglas, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Andrew Sandifer, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Mark will review our third quarter performance, followed by a review of our business in Asia and the outlook for the rest of the year. Andrew will provide an overview of select financial results. Following the prepared remarks, we will take questions. Our earnings release and today's slide presentation are available on our website, and the prepared remarks from today's discussion will be made available after the call.

Let me remind you that today's presentation and discussion will include forward-looking statements that are subject to various risks and uncertainties, concerning specific factors, including but not limited to those factors identified in our earnings release and in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Information presented represents our best judgment based on today's understanding. Actual results may vary based upon these risks and uncertainties. Today's discussion and the supporting materials will include references to adjusted EPS, adjusted EBITDA, adjusted cash from operations, free cash flow and organic revenue growth, all of which are non-GAAP financial measures. Please note that as used in today's discussion, earnings means adjusted earnings and EBITDA means adjusted EBITDA. A reconciliation and definition of these terms as well as other non-GAAP financial terms to which we may refer during today's conference call are provided on our website.

With that, I will now turn the call over to Mark.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Michael and good morning, everyone. The third quarter was an exceptional quarter for our company. Even in the face of persistent challenges posed by COVID-19 and severe headwinds from foreign currencies, we grew our revenue by 15% organically, EBITDA by 20% and EPS by 30%. This performance highlights our portfolio strength, balanced geographic and crop exposure as well as a sharp focus on execution and costs. On the latter point, as we progressed through the quarter, we saw the Brazilian season was getting off to a very slow start due to hot dry weather, which in turn made it difficult to get the pricing we had planned to offset the FX headwinds. To counter this situation, we aggressively manage costs in the quarter, and we're able to achieve the strong overall performance.

Let me now turn to the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on our business. As we said last quarter, all our manufacturing facilities and distribution warehouses remain operational and fully staffed. The majority of FMC's other employees continue working from home, but some have returned to certain offices and laboratories where permitted by local authorities. We have had zero COVID-19 transmissions in our facilities and continue using a variety of best practices to address risks. While we saw very strong demand for our products in all four regions of the world in the quarter, there were pockets of demand reduction related to the pandemic. This impacted certain cotton and fruit and vegetable markets. We expect this level of localized disruption to continue in the fourth quarter and potentially into 2021.

Following the outperformance in Q3, with our outlook for Q4, we are raising the midpoints of our EBITDA, EPS and free cash flow guidance and tightening these ranges. Underlying demand for our products remains healthy supplemented by market access expansion, new registrations and an increasing impact from our pricing actions as we enter Q4.

Turning to our Q3 results on slide three. We reported nearly $1.1 billion in the third quarter revenue, which reflects a 7% increase on a reported basis and 15% organic growth. After removing the FX impact, our business saw double-digit growth in India, Australia, Pakistan, Brazil, Germany, Italy and Canada.

Adjusted EBITDA was $263 million, an increase of 20% compared to the prior year period. EBITDA margins were 24.2%, an increase of 260 basis points compared to the prior year, driven primarily by cost control measures. Adjusted EPS was $1.22 in the quarter, an increase of 30% versus Q3 2019. This year-over-year performance was driven mostly by the increase in EBITDA, while much smaller impacts from D&A, interest expense, tax rate, non-controlling interest and share count, largely offset each other. Similarly, relative to our Q3 guidance, the $0.12 beat was driven most in -- almost entirely by our $18 million EBITDA outperformance versus the midpoint.

Moving now to slide four. Q3 revenue increased by 7% versus prior year, despite an 8% FX headwind, as higher volumes contributed 12% to growth and pricing another 3%. In Asia, revenue increased 16% year-over-year and 19% excluding FX, partially due to favorable weather conditions in both India and Australia. Sales in India grew over 20% organically, as the good monsoon drove demand from growers of rice, soybeans, pulses, sugarcane and fruit and vegetables in the South and Central markets. Herbicide sales in Australia were up over 50%, led by cereals and canola. Pakistan, also grew in double digits, driven primarily by insecticides in rice and cotton.

The North America sales increased 8% year-over-year, driven by increased planted areas in soybean, corn and rice, as well as continued market expansion of our fungicide Lucento and Rhyme. Sales in Canada were robust driven by cereal herbicide blends from our patented PrecisionPac technology as well as insecticides. We broke a record in Canada this year for acres using PrecisionPac products. Elevest, the formulation based on Rynaxypyr insect control and by centering is doing very well in its first launch year.

Heading into the winter, our US channel inventories are in better position compared to a year ago, which should lead to good restocking later in the fourth quarter. Sales in EMEA increased 10% year-over-year and there was no FX impact. We saw a strong demand for Rynaxypyr insect control applications for specialty crops as well as Battle Delta herbicide for cereals, particularly in France and Germany. Latin America sales grew 1% year-over-year and 18%, excluding FX. Grower sentiment is strong, but the season started very slowly due to hot and dry weather in Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay. Pricing actions across the region offset some of the currency headwind, although we expect pricing to have a larger positive impact in Q4 than it did in Q3.

In Brazil, sales grew double-digits organically, led by our growth in the soybean market. Due to the late start in Brazil, channel inventories are higher than normal for this point of the year for us and the industry. We fully expect this will be worked down as planting catches up now that the rains have returned. Mexico sales grew organically, but we're still impacted somewhat by COVID-19 related pressures on the growers that export fruit and vegetables. Sales in the Andean zone grew significantly as conditions in that submarket improved.

Turning now to the third quarter EBITDA bridge on slide seven. We had very strong operational performance as a $70 million contribution from volume, a $34 million contribution from lower costs and a $26 million benefit from higher pricing more than offset an $86 million FX headwind. The volume contribution was double what we had forecast partially due to the robust market growth in India and Australia. In addition, stronger than anticipated volume growth in Brazil was also a key driver. However, this did drive an increase in the FX headwind in the quarter. We had significant cost savings in the quarter, well above guidance given on our last call. Approximately $8 million of the $34 million cost savings you see on this bridge, our costs that were delayed into Q4, we had excellent cost discipline, including additional accelerated SAP synergies.

Taking a step back now, we'll turn to slide six. As we did for Latin America last year, I'm going to highlight a region where we are seeing significant growth. Asia may be the most diverse of our four regions and therefore it is the most complicated to understand. We are currently the fourth largest crop protection chemical provider in the region with sales of $1.1 billion in a $16 billion market, for about 7% market share. This region is the most seasonally balanced at the floor, mainly because it has significant markets in both the northern and southern hemispheres.

We managed the Asia business in five sub regions, with India and North Asia significantly larger than the other three, but we do have aggressive goals to grow in all of them. Not surprisingly, rice makes up about 35% of our sales in the region. In addition, fruits and vegetables are a large and diverse set of crops spread across all countries. Our crop diversity in Asia provides numerous opportunities to grow and it also mitigates the risk of our results being overly impacted by a poor season in any single crop. Similarly, our geographic mix in the region is also very diverse.

Moving to slide seven for a look at how our Asia business has expanded since 2014. We have made two large acquisitions since then coming over in 2015 and the DuPont Crop Protection Business in 2017. Through these acquisitions, we added a large active ingredient manufacturing plant in India and two active ingredient manufacturing plants in China, along with several formulation plants, R&D labs and field trial sites across the region. Total sales were about $350 million in 2014, while this year we expect to be about $1.1 billion. This is in part due to a fundamental restructuring of our India business, which we implemented in 2018 that enabled to increased market penetration and efficiencies that improved profitability significantly.

I'll walk through some of the sub-region highlights to provide color on the crop diversity, country exposure and recent commercial activities we have in the region. The five sub regions include Australia-New Zealand, South West Asia, North Asia, ASEAN and India. In the Australia-New Zealand sub region, our annual revenue is about $100 million to $130 million in a $2 billion market. Our market access model is via large distribution and retail companies supported by our own sales groups. Australia is predominantly a cereals market. We are, therefore, very excited to be preparing for our launch of Isoflex, Overwatch herbicide in 2021 crop season. Earlier this year, we began engaging retailers with a large scale demonstration plot program. Isoflex is a new mode of action in cereals and it delivers high performance on weeds that are developing resistance to the other herbicides in the marketplace.

The Southwest Asia sub region encompassing Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar is the smallest market of the five, but our annual revenue of approximately $110 million to $140 million equates to a market share of approximately 30%. In Pakistan, we have a unique market access model comprised of FMC-owned retail outlets selling our full range of products. This model has facilitated our growth to be the market leader. We see rapid Rynaxypyr insect control expansions for sugarcane and corn applications.

Moving to the North Asia sub-region, which includes China, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan, we have annual revenue of approximately $290 million to $320 million in a $9 billion market. In Korea, we successfully launched Accudo biostimulant in 2019 for use in fruits and vegetables, and we are preparing to launch two new microbial biopesticides later this year. In Japan, we've seen strong demand for diamides, particularly in the Rice Nursery Box segment. In China, the market is highly fragmented. Our business is focused on rice and fruits and vegetables. Due to the customer fragmentation, we go to market by a local distribution and retail companies.

The ASEAN sub region includes Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Malaysia and Singapore. In all these countries, we work through local distribution and retail companies. This is especially important in the large Indonesian market given it's fragmented geographical nature. In 2020, we also expanded our market access to additional parts of Indonesia, similar to what we have done in India. In the sub-region, we have an annual revenue of about $110 million to $140 million in a $2 billion market. We see strong Rynaxypyr insect control sales for rice, as well as growth of Cyazypyr on fruit and vegetables, driven by label extensions.

Moving finally to the India sub region, which generates approximately $370 million to $400 million in annual revenue for us. On slide eight, we take a deeper dive into this $3 billion market, which has significant structural opportunities for agricultural growth. To start, it has more arable land than any other country in the world. In fact, India has 30% more arable land than China and nearly twice as much as Brazil. This presents incredible growth opportunities for FMC with our very strong footprint and market penetration. You can see in the center of this slide that yields are very low in India, driven by low usage of crop inputs. On rice for example, India's yield per acre is half of that of Brazil and less than a third of the yield in China. On corn, India's yield is half of that of Brazil and less than 20% of the yield seen in the US. The market is dominated by small growers who do not have the scale to mechanize their operations. That being said, there are meaningful growth opportunities as these small growers recognize the benefits of investing more in crop inputs.

Moving to slide nine. India today is about a $3 billion market for crop protection and we see market growth of 6% through 2025, taking the market to nearly $4 billion by that time. Insecticides make up about 45% of the market today, with herbicides and fungicides about 20% each, and plant health and biologicals, making up the remaining 15%. As you can see on the right side of this slide, the crop mix is similar to that of the Asia region, with rice and fruit and vegetables making up nearly 60% of the market. In a market that is highly fragmented by both geography and a multitude of crops, we are -- there are, as we said, significant opportunities to grow.

In India, we have a unique market access model. We have exclusive distribution with five major companies that are supported by sales and marketing resources to drive geographical and portfolio growth. This model is currently under expansion as we look to service all of the Indian market. FMC has developed commercial initiatives in India to expand our market share. This includes crop and geographic expansion of our diamide brands such as Coragen and Ferterra as well as the eight new herbicide and fungicide launches since 2018, that are expected to drive sales of $70 million by 2023.

And with that, I'll now turn the call over to Andrew.

Andrew D. Sandifer -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

All right. Thanks, Mark. Let me start this morning with a few highlights from the income statement. FX was a larger than anticipated headwind to revenue growth in Q3, at 8% versus our expectations of the 6% headwind. The Brazilian real with the vast majority of this headwind, followed by the Indian rupee, Argentinean peso, Pakistan rupee and Turkish lira. We took substantial pricing actions and were able to recover about one-third of the FX headwind in the quarter. We continue to expect FX headwinds to remain at an elevated level throughout 2020, with pricing covering about half of the FX headwind at revenue in the year.

Interest expense for the third quarter was $35.5 million, down $6.1 million from the prior year period, benefiting from lower term loan balance outstanding, lower LIBOR rates and lower foreign debt balances. These were partially offset by higher bonds outstanding following the debt offering we completed in the prior year quarter. We now anticipate interest expense between $150 million and $155 million for the full year. Our effective tax rate on adjusted earnings for the third quarter was 13.5%. We now expect our full-year tax rate to be in the range of 13% to 14%, with the midpoint consistent with the tax rate through the first three quarters of the year.

Moving next to the balance sheet and liquidity. Gross debt at quarter-end was $3.2 billion, down $300 million from the prior quarter, with strong free cash flow leading to lower short-term financing needs. We continue to carry some excess cash due to heightened uncertainty caused by the COVID pandemic. Gross debt to trailing 12 month EBITDA was 2.5 times at the end of the third quarter or 2.4 times if you consider the nearly $175 million of surplus cash on the balance sheet. This is consistent with our targeted annual average leverage of 2.5 times or less.

Moving on to slide 10 to cover cash flow and cash deployment. Free cash flow for the third quarter was $315 million, up more than 50% from the prior year period. Adjusted cash from operations was up $75 million, with growth in trade working capital more than offset by higher EBITDA, lower change in other assets and liabilities and lower cash interest. Collections continue to be strong in the quarter, surpassing our expectations. Capital additions were down $27 million, consistent with our updated expectations for full year investment. Legacy and transformation spending was down $15 million due to timing of expenses and ramp down of our transformation efforts.

For the nine months ended September 30th, free cash flow of $148 million is nearly $230 million higher than the prior year period. Change in other assets and liabilities, lower cash interest and taxes, lower capital investment as well as growth in EBITDA above growth in trade working capital, all contributed to the year-on-year improvement. As we look to year-end, we are raising our full-year free cash flow guidance to a range of $475 million to $525 million, an increase of nearly $200 million at the midpoint versus the prior year period. We anticipate deploying more than $170 million of free cash flow in the fourth quarter. We paid $57 million in dividends on October 15th, closed on the $65 million acquisition of the remaining rights to the fungicide Fluindapyr in early October, and expect to repurchase $50 million of FMC shares.

We resume share repurchases at the beginning of October and have completed $20 million of repurchases today. By year-end, we will have deployed nearly $350 million of free cash flow, while maintaining excess liquidity throughout the pandemic. This includes the $115 million being deployed in Q4 on the acquisition and share repurchases, as well as the nearly $230 million that will be returned to shareholders this year via dividend.

Moving next to slide 11. FMC is making good progress in both improving our free cash flow conversion from earnings as well as growing the absolute amount of free cash flow we generate. As you can see on the left hand side of this slide, at the midpoint of our increased guidance range, we now expect to improve cash conversion by 21 percentage points compared to last year, while growing cash flow by nearly $200 million. We continue to believe that we have substantial headroom to improve further on both free cash conversion and the absolute free cash flow we generate, particularly as we complete our SAP implementation in the period of high cash spending on transformation efforts this year.

On the right hand side of this page, you can also see the breakdown of free cash flow generation by semester for last year and this year. Note that the seasonality is similar in both years with negative free cash flow in the first half of the year and strongly positive free cash flow in the second half, so with improvement in both semesters in 2020 versus 2019.

Finally, a quick update on progress in implementing our new SAP system. Our final go live is under way as we speak with the remaining 40% of FMC moving on to the new system this month. Following this go live, we'll have a single modern system across the entire company for the first time in our history, which will enable significant efficiencies in our back office processes. As we prepared for this final go live, we've accelerated more synergies that were planned for 2021 into 2020. We continue to expect total synergies of $60 million to $80 million from implementing the new system. But we now expect to capture $50 million in synergies in 2020, with the remaining $10 million to $30 million to be achieved largely in 2021.

And with that, I'll turn the call back over to Mark.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Andrew. Turning now to overall market conditions. With only a couple of months left to go in 2020, we continue to expect the global crop protection market will be flat to down slightly on a US dollars basis, although our view on the regions has changed slightly. The outlook for Europe continues to worsen, following a hot dry summer and we now believe that market will be down low-single digits year-over-year versus flat in our prior forecast. Offsetting this, we expect the Asian market to be up low-single digits versus our prior forecast have been down slightly due to much better weather conditions in India, Australia and ASEAN. Our forecast for Latin America and North American markets are unchanged down to low mid single-digits and up low single-digits, respectively. All these forecasts are for the market not FMC and are in US dollars.

Moving to slide 12 and the review of FMC's full-year 2020 and Q4 earnings outlook. As I said earlier, we are raising our guidance for the full-year. We are still facing significant FX headwinds and impacts on both cost and demand from the global pandemic. But the underlying demand for our products and our ability to control costs led to our improved outlook.

FMC full-year 2020 earnings are now expected to be in the range of $6.45 to $6.57 per diluted share, a year-over-year increase of 7% at the midpoint and $0.06 above prior guidance. The $50 million in share repurchases plan for the fourth quarter will not impact our full-year share count as the buybacks are too late in the year to alter the math for the EPS calculation.

2020 revenue is forecasted to be in the range of $4.72 billion to $4.78 billion, an increase of 3% at the midpoint versus 2019% and 9% organic growth. We believe the strength of our portfolio will allow us to deliver a high single-digit organic growth continuing a multi-year trend of above-market performance. EBITDA is now expected to be in the range of $1.295 billion to $1.315 billion, which represents a 7% year-over-year growth at the midpoint.

Guidance for Q4 implies a year-over-year sales growth of 5% at the midpoint on a reported basis and 10% organically, led by continued strength in Asia, in addition to the global strength of our diamides business. We are forecasting EBITDA growth of 8% year-over-year at the midpoint. EPS growth is forecasted to be flat year-over-year, limited by the large positive tax adjustment in Q4 2019.

Turning to slide 13 and full-year EBITDA and revenue drivers. Revenue is expected to benefit from 6% volume growth with the largest growth in Asia and Latin America, and a 3% contribution from higher prices. FX is forecasted to be a 6% top line headwind. We have raised our EBITDA guidance by $10 million at the midpoint, reflecting the outperformance in Q3 while recognizing the delay of $8 million of costs into Q4. We now expect a higher contribution from volume growth and we are also generating higher cost savings as well as early realization of some SAP synergies. We now forecast an FX headwind of $247 million for the full-year versus $230 million in our prior forecast. On an EBITDA basis, we are now expecting pricing to cover over 55% of the FX impact in the year and pricing will come from all regions, led by Latin America.

Moving to slide 14, where you see the Q4 drivers. On the revenue line, pricing and volume are expected to drive the top line strength, and regarding EBITDA drivers, pricing will have a larger impact in Q4 than it did in Q3. To wrap up, we executed very well in the quarter, both from an external perspective in driving demand across all regions, but also importantly internally by focusing on cost control and delivering critical activities that will drive our future performance. This includes preparing our Go Live of SAP, continuing to drive our R&D pipeline forward and keeping priority capital projects on track. Q4 is an important quarter for cash and we are focused on cash generation as well as demand generation. We remain confident in our ability to drive-above market performance once again.

And with that, I'll now turn the call back to operator for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] And the first question today will be from Christopher Parkinson with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.

Christopher Parkinson -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Great. Thank you very much. So on the free cash flow conversion fronts, there's still few moving parts, but they are definitely moving in the right direction, just given that your more stringent definition, can you just give us an update on some of the key initiatives you were mentioning as well as some low hanging fruit, which still exists for '21 and even '22, just anything that could further assist us in the pathway to over 80% conversion eventually? Thank you.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure. Yeah, let me just give a couple of high-level comments before Andrew jumps in on the details. One of the reasons you're seeing us move our free cash flow conversion and ultimately the dollars is, the reason -- I think one of the primary reasons is the focus we've placed on cash as an organization. I think it's important to note that all the executives and senior managers now have a free cash flow component in the long-term incentive rewards for the company. And I do believe that that has helped change our view of free cash flow and how we go about delivering that for the company. So that's an important backdrop for everybody on the call of how you think about it is driving not only earnings but also free cash flow. Andrew, do you want to talk about a couple of the drivers there?

Andrew D. Sandifer -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. I think -- thanks, Mark. I think, certainly strong quarter and year-to-date on cash flow for us this year and that very strong focus as Mark is talking to you. You see that in the way we've been able to manage the growth of working capital in particular also have been benefited by some deferral of cash tax items under the CARES Act and lower cash interest based on the refinancing in lower rates that we've seen. As I think about free cash flow from a big picture perspective, I think, Chris, to your opening comment, I mean, certainly just at the level set, when FMC is talking about the free cash flow, we're literally talking about the cash is leftover to either pay dividends, buyback shares or make small acquisitions like the Fluindapyr fungicide acquisition that we closed in October. Everything else is built into that number. All of the legacy liabilities. All of the investments that's required to continue growing the business. So we really are driving toward what we have in terms of free cash flow that can be deployed.

As we looked at 2021, certainly, we fully intend to take advantage of the new SAP system, which will give us some new tools and a much better visibility into working capital -- continue to drive working capital improvement. But structurally speaking and certainly we're spending over $100 million this year in cash to finish out the SAP implementation and finalize all of our transformation efforts resulting from the acquisition of the DuPont business. That $100 million is a tailwind to the cash flow going into 2021. Now there's always other moving parts. CapEx is a bit lower this year, so that might be -- certainly should expect a bit of a tick-up in CapEx next year. The legacy portion should be relatively stable. And then the other remainder will be driven by our effectiveness in organic growth and driving that increase in growth in the cash flow. So I think people should continue to expect that we show progress on that trajectory. And we think this business should be in the 70% to 80% in the mid term and above that in the long term for a free cash flow conversion. Certainly, I just also not to steal too much thunder, I'm going to grab a few minutes at our upcoming Investor Day in two weeks, though it's largely focused on R&D, I'll spend a few minutes to talk about cash flow, cash conversion and capital deployment policies in that event as well.

Christopher Parkinson -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question will be from P.J. Juvekar with Citi. Please go ahead.

P.J. Juvekar -- Citi Research -- Analyst

Yes. Hi, good morning, Mark and Andrew.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Good morning.

Andrew D. Sandifer -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Good morning.

P.J. Juvekar -- Citi Research -- Analyst

You had a big impact of FX in Latin America, there was negative 17%. Can you go back to your hedging strategy, I know that you have elaborated and well thought out hedging strategy, your hedges orders come in. I mean, you just kind of describe that? Are you trying to hedge revenues, net income and just talk us through that and what happened in the quarter? Thank you.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, sure P.J. I'll let Andrew talk about the details of the hedging policy, which we've talked about on a couple of calls previously. I do think that overall, when you have these types of movements, whether it's short-term volatility or a long-term movement in the currency prices, the most effective weapon for closing that FX gap. I mean, hedging obviously helps. It is important for us to understand what we believe the performance of the company will be and hedging allows us to do that. It is complicated. Make no mistake. But I think we do a pretty good job of managing that exposure. But it really comes down to the commercial groups to manage the price lists and how they move price in any one jurisdiction. Andrew, do you want to talk about the hedging policy?

Andrew D. Sandifer -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sure. Thanks, Mark. I think that our hedging policy, our hedging program is all designed around increasing the probability of being able to deliver against our guidance from the expectations that we set. There is no hedging program that can protect you fully from year-on-year changes in currency at any kind of economic basis. So we're not trying to go to zero FX impact. We're trying to maintain an FX impact within a range that we can manage through the rest of the P&L through the pricing actions in business that we have. Our hedging approach has been pretty well in place for several years now. We start from anticipation of sales with time to get guidance through entering in commercial terms with customers, through the time we actually issue an invoice and create a receivable. And while the specific tools and levels that we hedge out there at each part of that lifecycle, we have a very high coverage all the way up to 100% once we have a receivable on the books.

Looking at Q3 specifically, when you look at what we guided at coming into the quarter, we'd expected at EBITDA about a $60 million headwind from FX, it ended up being about a $86 million headwind from FX. Part of that is it, again, no hedging program covers 100% of the movements and there were some movements beyond from what we anticipated. But the real driver was we ended up seeing some opportunities to grab more business and the mix of business in Latin America being more heavily denominated in BRL than what we had forecasted. So with that higher volume of BRL denominated sales, each one of those sales brings with it an increased amount of FX headwind. So the real delta in the quarter was the impact of higher volumes. And again, I think we are happy with the way the hedge program is performing. Again, doesn't take all the risk off the table. Never can. But it does help us increase our ability to manage the performance of the company to meet the expectations that we're setting.

Operator

And the next question will come from Laurent Favre with Exane BNP. Please go ahead.

Laurent Favre -- Exane BNP Paribas -- Analyst

Yes. Good morning all. My question is on pricing. I guess two parts. The first one, maybe could you talk about the, I guess, same to the points earlier around the bridge. What do you think you came out a bit lately to this as guidance [Phonetic] on Q3 pricing plus 3 versus plus 6? But more importantly, how do you feel about pricing going into Q4 and 2021 in terms of inventories, especially in the Northern Hemisphere? Thank you.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, thanks, Laurent. Let's take the first one, first the Q3 pricing. I said it in the script and we certainly saw this. As we rolled through Q3 into Q4, the Brazilian market was extremely stressed. We probably think that market was delayed by about 30 days in terms of planting, it was just so hot and dry unprecedented weather that causes all sorts of frictions in the channel, as you can imagine. And our ability to move price to the degree that we thought, it was just not as we had planned when we gave guidance in early August. So we responded to that. We had opportunities in the marketplace especially in the soy complex to go and move volumes, which we did very successfully. But we didn't get as much price. Now, what does that mean going forward? Well, certainly the price lists going forward for Q4, we are at a higher level because that's already been negotiated. So we do have confidence in the price that's going forward. But we covered about 55% of the total impact of FX in the year. It's going to take us through part of next year and all the way into the next beginning of the next season in Brazil to recover the rest of that, assuming that FX stays where it is today. You just don't recover those sort of increases in one season. It is just too much. And you can't expect the grower to absorb that we will continue in Latin America to push price as we go through the season. And also we're looking at price and we'll be looking at price in the other regions as they come into their new season in 2021. So expect us to be -- expect us to be on this all the way through next year and then we'll wait and see where we get to in Q3 next year for the 2021-'22 season in Latin America.

On the other part of your question, Laurent, was channel inventories. I'll give a quick run around the world because I'm sure there are other people have that same question in mind. In North America, particularly in the US, we feel we're in much better shape than we were a year ago. We were very explicit as we went through this year. The fact that we felt following the very poor year in 2019 in terms of weather, that we had more pre-emergent herbicide channel inventory than we would like. And that was the case. We've been very diligent in drawing that down this year and we feel very confident that the levels we're at now. Our average levels where we can compete from a channel inventory perspective and it should bode very well for a good restocking at the end of this year, getting ready for the US season in Q1.

In Europe, I believe channel inventories are high, not everywhere, but just given the weather conditions especially in Northern Europe. I expect that herbicides -- some herbicides, some insecticides and certainly fungicides will be high in Europe, it's something we're going to have to watch out for as we go into the next season starting in Q1. In Asia, I think India is in good shape, monsoon was very, very good. So a lot of drawdown of inventories there, not that they were particularly high. ASEAN has improved a lot. Indonesia is looking much better now, more average for us. Australia is really got back on track. Excellent season given the drought we've seen the last two or three years. So Australia is good. I would say more inventory than we would like in China. For those of you that watch the situation, there was significant flooding during this season, which did reduced demand. So we think China is a little heavy on inventory.

And then moving down to Latin America, obviously, Brazil is the major focus there. Right now inventories are high, but that's got nothing to do with how we feel about the market. Grower sentiment is very strong. We expect acreage to increase. Once again, local prices are strong. So the market is very buoyant. It is just purely a delay in the usage of products at this point. Put it in perspective for you, I can tell you we always look at how much we are selling and what the market can take, and we have not sold more than the market can take in Brazil. So we feel very confident that once the pricing really gets going, which is now the rains have arrived, that Brazil will be in much better shape as we end the season.

Laurent Favre -- Exane BNP Paribas -- Analyst

Perfect. Thank you.

Operator

And the next question is from Stephen Byrne with Bank of America Securities. Please go ahead.

Stephen Byrne -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Yes, you did guide in India was very interesting, and it seemed that the Indian government was pretty supportive of Ag, they subsidized crop prices and fertilizers. I was curious to your view as to whether there is any kind of a structural reason why crop chemical use is as low as you highlight. The distributors that you use there, do they provide any agronomic advice similar to what Syngenta is rolling out in China or might you consider expanding your retail network that you have in neighboring Bangladesh or India, is that a possibility?

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, I think -- Steve, thanks for the question. Listen, I think it is such a fragmented market that that whole complex of offering advice and developing the market itself has been slow to uptake. I think the value of the goods now are getting to a point where the growers see the impetus for improving both the fertilizer usage, crop protection, the seed quality. They're exporting more from that market. So therefore, there is more of an incentive to invest. We certainly from an agronomic advice given the fact that our four distributor partners, plus the sales and marketing force that we have there do gave agronomic advice to the growers to help them improve their yields and educate the growers on what is happening. I don't see us going to a model where we have FMC stores in India. There's a difference between the Pakistan market and the Indian market. The Indian market is just so much bigger and more fragmented. We did a lot of business prior to the DuPont acquisition through small retailers and I can tell you, a lot of people focus on the P&L for the business, but when you're going direct to retailers in places like India, you have to have a large balance sheet to support that. And we felt that was not the right way to go. So we took the five distributor model and expanded it. But I don't see us going to FMC stores in India. I don't think that's the right model for us in that country.

Stephen Byrne -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

And the next question is from Adam Samuelson with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Adam Samuelson -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Yes, thanks. Good morning, everyone. So I was hoping Mark, Andrew, this year's reflection a little bit year-to-date and what was implied in the guidance is pretty clear across the FMC continuing versus the global crop protection market. Just to get your kind of view on kind of the key drivers and the sustainability, whether it's just product, it's geographic exposure, and of your channel inventory and business units. How do you think about your [Phonetic] growth versus the market this year and kind of the sustainability of that?

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, thanks. So a couple of things. First of all, just the way you think about our business, and I know we talk about this a lot, but that geographic balance and the crop balance is very important. Plus the fact that, if you think about the size of our business, we're roughly almost $5 billion in a $58 billion market. We have a 9% market share, 8% to 9%. There is plenty of room for FMC to grow. We don't need the market to be growing mid single-digits for us to grow at mid single-digits. I think the whole area of how we're expanding our franchise and I'm not just talking about the diamides, I'm talking about the pipeline of products that is coming, the crops that we have. I've talked before about the number of registrations that we continue to add to our portfolio, which drives that future growth. You think about products this year, we have about $70 million of new revenue from products that were launched this year. So, that's what, 1.5%, almost 2% of revenue growth just from products that we're launching without the rest of the portfolio moving into new crops. So, that geographic expansion is very important. Not only are we seeing that in India as we've been very deliberate in moving out to certain parts of the country where we've not had presence, we're doing it in Indonesia, we're looking at our China business in terms of which provinces we need to expand into. And then, surprisingly enough, we're still doing it in Brazil. We are looking at market access in different parts of Brazil, how do we take more share with the quality of the portfolio. So it's not one silver bullet. There are a number of components that we have to keep working on to continue to drive this outperformance of the market. And we strongly believe we can continue to do that.

Adam Samuelson -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Great. Thank you so much.

Operator

The next question is from Mark Connelly with Stephens. Please go ahead.

Mark Connelly -- Stephens -- Analyst

Thank you. I was hoping we could come back to the pricing question for a moment. You've obviously got a pretty amazing record of offsetting FX costs in Brazil over time, and it doesn't look difficult this time with how strong farmers are. But with your discussion of Asia, I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about how pricing is evolving in that market given that so much of that market has a historical bias toward generics and pricing has been difficult there in the past?

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, thanks Mark. You could see when we talked about the FX impact, Andrew highlighted the BRL was one of the major impact, but there were a number of other currencies there, most of them in Asia. We do move price and have moved price in Asia this year, not as robustly as Brazil, given the size of that market. But we do get price. I think what you got to think about in terms of the generic side of this business, you look at our business today. If you think about third party products, which for us are essentially how you think about the generic -- how we think about generics. That's probably only about 5% of our total portfolio. So competing with generics is one thing, when you compete with the same technology, competing with what we call value in use. So the value that the grower gets from using your products through either removing a pest to improve yield or productivity, that's where the real core of the business is. It is that value that the growers wish to protect. And think about it, generally prices are looking better. I know people always focus on soy and corn in the US markets or in the Brazilian market. But where we are around the world, rice prices are not particularly bad. Sugar prices are not particularly bad. Fruit and vegetable prices are moving all over the place, given the demand has changed due to COVID. But generally speaking, growers in Asia now are looking at being more profitable and therefore are willing to spend on the higher quality inputs that drive that yield and profitability. So we think of it that way rather than the generic market itself.

Mark Connelly -- Stephens -- Analyst

Super. Thank you.

Operator

And the next question will be from Vincent Andrews of Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Vincent Andrews -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

Thank you very much. Good morning, everyone. Maybe just to get back to the Asia or India discussion a little bit, just wondering, sort of as you look at the growth plan there, how much of it is just going to come down to continuing to penetrate your existing molecules versus is there going to be -- and I don't want to front run your R&D day either but, is there going to be a story about some new products that are going to have good applicability there? Or is there also, maybe an M&A role up opportunity in the region that might make sense or is it a bit of all three? Thank you.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, it's a bit of the first two, not necessarily the last one I think, Vincent. Yes, we do have geographic expansion and also crop expansion in India. Those fruit and vegetable markets themselves are highly fragmented. So, we've talked before, as I said about the registration profile and how we're increasing that. India plays a significant role in getting our products onto more crops in different parts of the country. Certainly, I'm not going to go into all the details of the pipeline. I'm going to do that in two weeks. But yes, the pipeline has applicability in India. I also think there are some agronomic changes going on that we see that are benefiting us. I'll give you an example. In Brazil, the sugarcane business is highly mechanized. In India, it is not, yet there are labor shortages. So in Brazil, where we are a leading provider of herbicides for the sugarcane market. We're now building a pre-emergent herbicide business in sugarcane in India, which is a brand new market. It used to be manually controlled and now they're using -- starting to use pre-emergent herbicide. That's a great example of the market that didn't exist a few years ago that is now growing rapidly and we can transfer technology and knowhow from Brazil to India. And in fact, in the past -- in the past few years, we have had India sugarcane growers go to Brazil to see the difference between the agronomic practices. That's all investment that allows us to continue to expand our market share and our market growth.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question will be from John Roberts with UBS. Please go ahead.

John Roberts -- UBS Research -- Analyst

Thank you. Maybe just to give us a little bit of preview of your technology day. It sounds like you're having good success in the combinations of the diamides, maybe you could comment what percent of that diamide sales are currently in combinations and what would you think that will be a few years from now?

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, John, we don't actually break out what are straight products versus what are formulated products, but certainly we are having success. We talk about the Elevest we just launched. We've got a couple of others coming this year. I don't think it will ever make up the vast majority of ourselves into this space. But certainly as we fragment the market and some of the partners that we're working with, as they look at the sales, they are also likely to have a mixture of products that they will do. So it may not be that FMC has those mixture partners, all those formulated products, but our partner companies will have. So you will see a growth in that type of -- part of the market but we might not necessarily have that ourselves. We will have some, obviously, because we're working on that but I think the general market itself will continue to fragment with more formulated type products.

John Roberts -- UBS Research -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

And the next question is from Frank Mitsch with Fermium Research. Please go ahead.

Frank Mitsch -- Fermium Research -- Analyst

Yeah, good morning folks and an impressive results here in the third quarter. So as I look at your results for this year and the guidance for the fourth quarter, it really looks like things are accelerating in the back half of the year. So that naturally gets my mind thinking about the first half of next year and some of this accelerated growth in your results in the back half of this year, on a run rate basis probably implies a pretty good first half of 2021. Am I thinking about that correctly, how would you handicap kind of the run rate heading into next year?

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, you can't -- Frank, you can't necessarily say that the first half of next year is the same as the second half of this year purely because you look at our growth rates in Q3 and especially in Q4, Latin America and Asia are in particular play a significant role. Well, that Asia business is not necessarily as big in Q1 or Q2, it's not far off but certainly Latin America is much lower in Q1 and Q2 than Q3 and Q4. So I think you got to be careful in that. We never look at the business sequentially. It's not something we do, because we look at it from a seasonality perspective. Now, do we have traction? Yes, obviously we do, given the market growth rates. But we're right in the middle of our budgeting process at this point.

Just to give you sort of a broad view of the market itself, because I don't have FMC's internal numbers yet. But broadly speaking, the market this year is down low single-digits. I would expect the market next year to be sort of flattish. I think Europe should improve if the season is anywhere near normal and everywhere else is kind of looking a little stronger. Latin America looking a little stronger. I expect Asia will too. The US market, with prices for soft commodities where they are today, China continues to buy, the US market should look a little better next year, we'll see. And then you've got -- our long range plan, we pegged top line growth of 5% to 7%. Here we are through our second year, we're right in the middle of that range from a two-year growth rate perspective. People should be thinking of FMC delivering in that 5% to 7% range and 7% to 9% for EBITDA going into next year. I don't have the exact number, but certainly our long range plan through 2023 is on track. That's how you should be thinking about it.

Operator

Thank you. And the next question is from Aleksey Yefremov with KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Aleksey Yefremov -- KeyBanc -- Analyst

Hi. Yes, thank you. Good morning, everyone. I just wanted to size the pricing versus a tax opportunity into next year. From your 2020 bridge, it looks like you're under recovering about $100 million of EBITDA, is that roughly equivalent to what you expect to catch up next year?

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Difficult to say at this point, Aleksey. We are certainly working with Latin America, Asia to look at where we're going to be on pricing. We haven't built that model out yet. But you're right, we are -- we have recovered about 55%. We got about $100 million of pricing to go. It all depends on what happens to FX, does FX stay where it is given where the election is, does the dollar strengthen or weaken after the election, all those things come into play. So I think it's a little early to say there is a $100 million tailwind in pricing going into next year.

Operator

The next question is from Joel Jackson with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Joel Jackson -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. Mark, you and your team have been engaging with investors more on ESG the last few months, maybe you can share some of the feedback you've heard, maybe some of the changes you might make and things you might do or your outlook or your strategy from these conversations externally and internally? Thanks.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Joel. Yeah listen, it's a subject that is very close to my heart. I passionately believe in sustainability and a company like ours where the marketplace that we operate in, I think there are tremendous opportunities for us to position FMC as a sustainable company and a leader in this space. You will have seen we made an announcement in October. We've now put in place a Chief Sustainability Officer. We are restructuring parts of the company to put that under our sustainability office. For me, it ties so closely into the technology platform that we have and we'll talk about that in two weeks time at the Technology Investor Day.

I think the feedback we're getting is there is an appetite and a discussion around the types of chemistries that get used, the latest technologies, the more targeted technologies that are softer in chemistry. The biological approach to crop protection is also gaining a lot of traction and the combination of the two types of chemistries together. And then there is the whole the carbon footprint of companies that come into play, how we think about our waste and our utilities, they're all part of managing the company and with the expectations of the various stakeholders that we have. So I do see it as an important aspect. You will see more from us. And we're putting out some pretty ambitious goals for sustainability for the company that we will be reporting on a regular basis. So more to come from this area.

Operator

Thank you. And our final question will come from Chris Kapsch with Loop Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Christopher Kapsch -- Loop Capital Markets -- Analyst

Yeah, good morning. Fairly straightforward one and sorry if you have touched on this already. But there's been some incremental costs associated with these disruptions from COVID supply chain expediting getting, I guess, your product closer to your customers ahead of time to maybe even some working capital drag. So I'm just wondering, if you see that normalizing into the 2021 season and if so what kind of opportunity from either a cost saving standpoint year-over-year or squeeze a little cash out of working capital? Thanks.

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, you're right. We have had that drag on costs. I think we said earlier on in the year it was about $20 million of drag. Frankly, I don't see that going away in the near-term. When you look at what is happening in Europe today in terms of sort of the second wave, we have already been extremely proactive ahead of the next season of moving material to local warehouses distributed throughout Europe rather than the lower cost model where you use centralized warehousing. We are very cognizant of the fact that things are changing in Europe. So we've been very proactive in putting those products out into the marketplace where we know they're going to be needed and we have more of an opportunity to move them around, that entails cost. Now, that cost was built into this year so I do -- I just expect it to kind of roll forward. I don't think you'll see a tailwind from that. Given where we are certainly Q1 is going to look very similar to Q4, I think. And if we see that wave growing elsewhere, we'll do the same thing in terms of logistics costs, moving products around, et cetera. So we're very much at the forefront of this. We're very proactive. We learned a lot over the last couple of years and we're applying those learnings. But they do come with an added cost.

Michael Wherley -- Director of Investor Relations

Thanks for all the questions. I'd like to remind you about our Investor Technology Update Call on November 17th to provide an update on our R&D pipeline. That's all the time we have for the call today. Thank you and have a good day.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 60 minutes

Call participants:

Michael Wherley -- Director of Investor Relations

Mark A. Douglas -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Andrew D. Sandifer -- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Christopher Parkinson -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

P.J. Juvekar -- Citi Research -- Analyst

Laurent Favre -- Exane BNP Paribas -- Analyst

Stephen Byrne -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Adam Samuelson -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Mark Connelly -- Stephens -- Analyst

Vincent Andrews -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst

John Roberts -- UBS Research -- Analyst

Frank Mitsch -- Fermium Research -- Analyst

Aleksey Yefremov -- KeyBanc -- Analyst

Joel Jackson -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Christopher Kapsch -- Loop Capital Markets -- Analyst

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