Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Arrow Electronics, inc (ARW 2.05%)
Q3 2021 Earnings Call
Nov 4, 2021, 1:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Arrow Electronics Third Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to hand the conference call over to your speaker today, Mr. Steven O'Brien. Please go ahead, sir.

10 stocks we like better than Arrow Electronics
When our award-winning analyst team has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has tripled the market.* 

They just revealed what they believe are the ten best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Arrow Electronics wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys.

See the 10 stocks

*Stock Advisor returns as of October 20, 2021

Steven J. O'Brien -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Thank you, and good day, and welcome to Arrow Electronics third quarter earnings conference call. With us on the call today are Mike Long, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer; Sean Kerins, Chief Operating Officer; and Chris Stansbury, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. During this call, we will make forward-looking statements, including statements about our business outlook, strategies and future financial results, which are based on our predictions and expectations as of today. Our actual results could differ materially due to a number of risks and uncertainties, including the risk factors in our most recent 10-K and 10-Q filings with the SEC. We undertake no obligation to update publicly or revise any of the forward-looking statements.

As a reminder, some of the figures we will discuss on today's call are non-GAAP. We have reconciled those with the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures in our earnings release. These non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for our GAAP results. You can access our earnings release at investor.arrow.com along with the CFO commentary, the non-GAAP earnings reconciliation and a replay of this call. We will begin with a few minutes of prepared remarks, which will then be followed by a question-and-answer period.

I will now hand the call to our Chairman, President and CEO, Mike Long.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Steve, and thanks all of you for joining us today. Before I touch on the supply chain topic, specifically the current imbalance between supply and demand in the electronics component market, I'd like to focus on the theme we've been discussing over the last few years Arrows ability to create even in challenging market conditions. Our customers and suppliers recognize the value we bring as our team achieved all-time record in gross profit, operating income and earnings per share during the third quarter.

Arrow's investment in design, engineering and supply chain solutions have delivered the unmatched performance that makes us a leader in our industry. Though those investments, we have established a continuous cycle of growth that enables more customers to manage manufacturing and bring compelling new products to market sooner. It also helps our suppliers embed their design in the next generation of electronically rich products. This continuous cycle ultimately leads to new product innovation, closer ties with customers and suppliers and better outcomes for all.

Our emphasis on inventory and working capital investments, as well as our key competitive differentiators of industry knowledge media properties and experience have made us well positioned to help customers drive their business advantages. These low risk, near-term investments are helping our customers secure manufacturing continually and increasingly unpredictable conditions.

Moving to the financials. The trajectory of the global components business was positive during the third quarter. Our global components business capitalized on continued strong demand in all regions, with sales up 25% year-over-year. Sales were above the midpoint of our expectation for the six quarters in a row, just like last quarter with a struggle to secure additional inventory to meet strong demand. Based on the data we collect in our market intelligence, it's increasingly clear that supply will remain short of demand through the better part of 2022. Instances of severe supply chain bottlenecks have increased, leading to widely reported production slowdowns in certain industries.

During the quarter, we saw robust demand from such sectors as transportation, industrial, communications, computer, computing and data networking. Our demand strength across all regions and multiple end markets more than offset any one customers or set of customers challenges and as a result, our global component sales of $6.6 billion set an all-time record for Arrow and we were slightly ahead of last quarter.

In terms of profitability, we achieved significant growth along with exceptional operating leverage during the quarter. Notably, operating income from of global components increased by more than 3 times the rate of sales. We continue to provide customers with value-added supply chain services that utilize our global ERPs capability and unique level of inventory insight. Our digital platform is also helping customers manage component supply and safeguard their manufacturing processes. As a result, the revenue contribution from design and engineering activities increased within our mix during the third quarter.

Turning to enterprise computing Solutions. Sales were within the range of our expectation. However, supply chain issues limited our ability to capitalize on strong demand. We saw a project postpone and pushed out during the third quarter due to an inability to secure IT hardware product. This also led to a missed software sales that would have been associated with those specific hardware refreshes. It's not surprising that the same component shortages that are impacting global components and globally ECS right now, it's the supply, not a demand issue. It's important to know that near-term postponements due to product availability may not result in one-for-one catch up in future quarters. And customers have immediate needs to run mission-critical applications and workloads in a secure manner and limited ability to stretch existing infrastructure. Any bottlenecks are therefore accelerating the utilization of cloud-based compute and storage. That's good news for Arrow, is that we have the leading cloud enablement tool ArrowSphere ready and able to help our VAR in NSP customers meter monitor and bill cloud right away.

In closing, I'd like to acknowledge our team for consistently delivering our customers and suppliers that met some of the most acute and protracted product shortages and shortfalls we've ever seen. We are and our customers' trust in business during the tough times and that certainly includes time where demand outstrips supply by a wide margin. By delivering for customers right now, we're securing strong mutually beneficial multi-year relationships for the future.

With that, I'll now hand the call over to Chris to provide more details on our third quarter results and our expectations for the fourth quarter.

Chris Stansbury -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Mike. Third quarter sales increased 17% year-over-year on a non-GAAP basis and the average euro-dollar exchange rate for the quarter was a $1.18 to EUR1, which was roughly in line with our forecasted expectations. Changes in foreign currency benefited sales growth by approximately $55 million year-over-year. Third quarter gross margin of 12.6% returned to its highest level since Q2 2018. Gross margin improved year-over-year in global component in each of our operating regions. Operating expense increased slightly as a percentage of sales during the third quarter, but decreased as a percentage of gross profit.

As a reminder, many of our value-added services and solutions can be independent of the sale of electronic components and therefore contribute more meaningfully to profit of sales. Interest expense was in line with our prior expectations. And while the third quarter tax rate was slightly below our expectation, that was due primarily to the timing of a discrete tax item and we also saw some favorability in regional profit mix. As we have been saying on prior calls, for the full year 2021 we expect our effective tax rate to be near the low end of our long-term range of 23% to 25%.

Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, third quarter operating cash flow was $114 million. Compared to the second quarter, DSOs and inventory days lengthened, but we're naturally offset by an increase in our payable days. As a result, our cash cycle of approximately 51 days was effectively the same as last quarter. Our liquidity position is the best in the history of our company and continues to improve. Leverage as measured by total or net debt to EBITDA is at its lowest level in over 10 years. We returned approximately $250 million to shareholders during the third quarter through our share repurchase plan. This matched last quarter as being the largest single quarter of share repurchases in Arrows history, enabled by our strong profits and proactive working capital management.

We remain committed to returning cash to shareholders with approximately $413 million remaining under our share repurchase authorization plan. We're confident that we're repurchasing shares below their intrinsic value based on increasing return on invested capital and return on working capital. Please keep in mind that the information I've shared during this call is a high level summary of our financial results. For more detail regarding the business segment results, please refer to the CFO commentary that we published on our website this morning.

Sales and EPS guidance imply all time full-year records for 2021. Our forecast implies a strong seasonal increase in enterprise computing solutions sales and profits. However, both businesses continue to face supply constraints that are limiting our ability to make the most of strong customer demand. Our guidance reflects continued strong performance in operating leverage for global components on a year-over-year basis and for global enterprise computing solutions profitability levels to be substantially accretive to consolidated financial performance.

Finally, as we discussed last quarter, please note that CFO commentary includes information on our fiscal calendar closing dates for 2021. In 2021, the fourth quarter began in October 3rd compared to September 27 in 2020. This makes this year's fourth quarter about one week shorter than prior year fourth quarter's. Full-year comparisons are not affected as our fiscal full-year ends on December 31st as always.

With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for Q&A.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Matt Sheerin with Stifel.

Matt Sheerin -- Matt Sheerin -- Analyst

Yes, thank, you and good afternoon. Thanks for all the details so far. I just wanted ask about the nice margin upside that you saw in components. I think that was the highest number I can remember in quite some time at 5.9%. How much of that was driven by favorable pricing versus that mix? Obviously, you saw strength in Europe and in North America, so mix versus pricing versus the pickup in design and in demand creation that you talked about Mike.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Matt, thanks. By the way, thanks for noticing, I didn't have to bring up to 5% thing again this quarter. What we're seeing right now is probably about half of that profit increase, I'd say half to a third, somewhere in there of being structural. In other words, driven by services, some of the supply chain activities, those types of things, design, group that -- that we've been selling for some time as the mix goes to North America and Europe, that's largely where those services have been. The good news with that is they were growing before COVID, they grew during COVID, and they continue to grow right now, so that more customers for us.

The other two pieces are really mix as you suggested and then secondly pricing increases that we're seeing from the manufacturers. With some of that price increase is also why you see increased inventory, not necessarily more units, but increased price on the inventory that we have. By the way, the price increases are just really coming through. They're not done by any stretch of the imagination at this point in time. So we fully expect that to go on all the way through 2022 and possibly beyond. But right now, I'm prepared to say that it looks like next year is going to be healthy in all cases and possibly help out with a softer landing.

Matt Sheerin -- Matt Sheerin -- Analyst

Okay, thanks for that. And then on the computing side you talked about some of the challenges, especially the component constraints, but it looks like your growth rate, if you look at some of the large VARs in the infrastructure market and other areas, they looked like they're growing faster than your business. I know there's some netted down revenues, some moving parts there. But how do you think you're positioned to maybe start growing and reaccelerating growth in that business again?

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, so let me give you a little more clarity on that. Obviously, we saw growth in Europe, which was as expected. The other thing is we saw growth really in the core business as the VARs, everything you saw in North America, where it with notably soft with more in the public sector business and those deals came up shorter term. As a result, they're are harder to supply product too and that's really where the vast majority of the shortages were. And then if you remember, computing in fourth quarter is usually the governmental budget flush. So part of our guidance is based on what we think we'll get for supply. It is clearly not a demand problem. So the good news there is sort of the core customer base is growing, the notable slowdown for us within public sector, and by the way that was the majority of it.

Matt Sheerin -- Matt Sheerin -- Analyst

Okay, that's great. Could you just remind us what percentage of your revenue in ECS is public sector?

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

I'd love to, Matt, but I don't think today is the day.

Matt Sheerin -- Matt Sheerin -- Analyst

Okay, fair enough. Thanks very much.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah.

Operator

Thank you. Your next [Speech Overlap] William Stein of Truist Securities. Please go ahead.

William Stein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Hi, can you hear me.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes.

William Stein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Hi, great, thanks for taking my question, Mike. I'm wondering if you can talk to us about the effect of the things like the preferred supply program that one of your suppliers has installed. We learned last night that there is another vaguely similar supplier that's put one of these programs in where they're demanding very long non-cancelable, non-reschedulable orders. What sort of visibility is that dynamic introducing into your business and maybe you can touch on book-to-bill and lead times while you're at it? Thank you.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

I mean any time a customer will give you more visibility, I'll start with this, it's a good thing. Given the long-term nature of the supply demand imbalance here, the more information we have from a customer the better we can help them. So I'll put those two things out there first. This sort of contractual arrangements as to the supplier that you're serious of getting supply over the next three years, let's say. Yeah, then you're going to share your forecast and the supplier is going to commit to a percentage of your production capacity that you think you need. They're not going to allow you to stock it and put it on the shelves and not ship it or not manufacturer with it, but it opens a different type of dialog. So, personally I like these arrangements for that reason.

If you're sort of an old line customer that you've used to getting your shortages fixed by pounding your fist on the table or calling up and asking somebody for a favor and then yelling at them, those customers are not likely to get their products and it's really come down to, if you want to fix the supply chain it has to be better visibility, it has to be longer term commitment and you can't just continue to whipsaw the supply chain and think you're going to get products and you have seen that there is no real one industry anymore that we wields the power to come in and really push anybody around given the marketplace in electronics and so many different items today. So it really is going to have to be this more information, more visibility, and as a result there will be better results for everybody over the next couple of years because this is not really going to go away soon.

William Stein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Yes, the things clear. I appreciate that. One other, if I can. You know the pricing dynamics that you can deploy to perhaps enhance your margin are sometimes a bit mysterious because we know there is a big part of your business that's done on these ship and debit dynamics that are sort of built for a deflationary ASP sort of industry which it's not today. So when prices are rising, are you able to pass along more than the price increases or is that only in a relatively narrow set of cases where you're more purchasing component at arm's length transactions? Maybe you can help explain this dynamic to us to understand that part of the enhanced margins. Thank you.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, well, there is I believe a structural change going on in the industry. In the old days when you had, what we used to call allocation is because there was a temporary shortage of products and therefore you could raise your prices. But then when the market changed, they would come right back to where they were. There is no more year-over-year cost reduction on parts like there used to be. Raw materials are up for the suppliers, transportation is up for not only for the suppliers but for us too, handling and labor costs are up as you have seen those types of things. So there is a structural change in the business that really hasn't had an inflationary impact on it for probably 10 years, maybe a little longer. So these costs are real, these costs are permanent and these costs will be charged for, and that's I think a little different than what we've seen in the past. So I don't expect the pricing to reduce. In fact, we've got some suppliers telling us right now prices are yet to go up another 20%. And if that's the case, you'll see things happen again. So it's very important for us at Arrow to have our back office systems in order, having to be low cost for the customer, average transportation routes being the quickest, the fastest that they can be and frankly the shortest for the customers, and that will help them keep the prices down. But as far as the pricing going away, now there is a big change in technology and that's not going to come back.

William Stein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Thanks, Mike.

Operator

Thank you, your next response from the line of Toshiya Hari of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Toshiya Hari -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hi guys. Thank you so much for taking the question and congrats on the strong execution. I had two as well. My first question is on customer behavior in the marketplace. One of your -- one of your, one of the bigger analog companies on their earnings call talked about customers being a little bit more selective with their expedite -- expedites this quarter versus three months ago, six months ago. Three months ago, six months ago customers were pulling really hard across a very broad number of device types. But more recently they become a little bit more selective. Are you seeing similar behavior from your customers or is it pretty much pulling hard across everything at this point?

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So I'm not going to limit it to analog as analog is only a portion of the market and it doesn't -- it doesn't tell the story. The truth is, I had five a friends a year ago and I've got about 20,000 now. People I didn't even know of calling into the office. Now we are seeing increased number of expedites. But the truth is those expedites are being used more and how can we help the customer over the longer-term and just though one month shortage that occurs and how can we help them lay out a manufacturing schedule they can make sense for all the parts on their bill material. So these expedite calls are not for one part, they're really for all parts that we're supplying that customer so they can get into manufacturing. So they each take longer, there is better information with flows. But as I said, we probably saw more significant or what I would say emergency shortages over this quarter than we've seen since this started.

Toshiya Hari -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Interesting. Thank you. And then as my quick follow-up. Wanted to ask about market share in components. If we take sort of the midpoint of your December quarter revenue guide, I think your components business is going to be up 27%, 28% year-over-year in calendar 2021. You're clearly outperforming your nearest peer. Obviously, they had some unique idiosyncratic headwinds this year, but even ex that I feel like you guys are outperforming against them and also the broader -- broader industry you've got idiosyncratic tailwinds and then sort of ADI maximum dynamic going forward and just being the company you are, you probably have better access to supply vis-a-vis some of your smaller peers. So I guess the question is, how should we think about your ability to continue to outperform from a growth standpoint into '22 and beyond? Thank you.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, thanks for that. That's, those are --those are nice accolades, but we still have to get up and fight the battle every single day that we're here and show the customers that it's worth it for them to place their orders with Arrow. I would say that our ability will increase as customers continue to come to our engineering services and utilizes for some of the supply chain services that exist other than just the parts today. Selling parts is a -- is very important to Arrow, but you are expected to be low cost and gets parts from A and B on time, all of that. Those are table stakes today. But the ability to effect the customer and help a customer with their design to make sure they're getting their products out and that they are low cost and they're actually things we can manufacturer is becoming increasingly important to us and our profit levels. So as long as we continue to push that and stay in that end of the business, this cycle will be repetitive for us and we believe we've been fortunate. We believe our strategy has worked. It's taken a long time to get here, but now we just have to continue to drive these -- these new businesses that we brought in or built inside the company.

Toshiya Hari -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Great, thank you so much.

Operator

Thank you, your next responses from Jim Suva of Citigroup. Please go ahead.

Jim Suva -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Thank you. And I would be remiss if I simply don't congratulate you on a great profitability and that's just really remarkable. With that complement though, some people will say is this the new norm or are you getting some extra boost from some of the shortages and how should we think about that because the profitability is truly remarkable. I know you put a lot of effort into it. So maybe if you can just kind of talk about the sustainability of the profit margins? Thank you.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Thanks, Jim. We did not come out and raise our longer-term targets yet. We're still sorting through the benefit of our services, the sales that have a higher profit level at the bottom of the sale and also our supply chain solutions business which has a higher profit level at the bottom than components parts do and then of course, our our long-term engineering where we actually do engineering for customers, that continues to grow. What we're seeing is or what we believe is, those will continue to grow into the future even if products sort of abates. So we're becoming increasingly positive that we will pass the long term bottom line number we gave you guys of 5% in the components business in the future, but we're still doing the math because I would like to see it continue throughout 2022 and see what the growth looks like. But certainly I can tell you right now, 2022 is looking a lot like today. So hopefully that gives you enough information and we'll be looking at the rest of the business over the year and just being where the growth rates are panning out before we make that commitment.

Operator

Thank you. Your next response is from Ruplu Bhattacharya of Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Ruplu Bhattacharya -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Hi, thank you for taking my questions. My first question is on inventory. Some component companies have talked about some inventory, some level of inventory build, maybe an automotive at the OEMs and in industrial in the distribution channel. So when you look at the supply chain, are you seeing any level of inventory build? And specifically with respect to your inventory it looks like it was up 5% sequentially. So, Chris, are you happy? Do you think that this is a good level of inventory or would you like to -- do you think you need to build more inventory as we go forward, and how would that impact the free cash flow?

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, this is Mike. I'm going to take this and then let Chris have it. A portion of our inventory this quarter is from price increases, which has made the inventory a little bit more valuable. So that has a piece to it. Secondly, I think you brought up transportation or automotive. That would be fantastic if they could build some inventory because then they can build some cars. They are trying -- the automotive manufacturers are trying to build 10 million more cars next year than this year. So, clearly they need inventory to do that. They're not going to build a pull the trigger and start building cars until they can get to sort of an assured supply chain activity to where they know they're going to give the product. So that's what your sort of dealing with today. And the good news of that in my opinion is whatever they get, they're going to manufacture, so that's going to help. We are largely seeing that in most sectors that are growing this year. And if the industry is only supplying 80% of what the market wants, there is 20% extra growth rate in there, they can be utilized today, how sustainable those growth rates are over time. So I don't think that just looking at inventory is a viable indicator for what the future is going to hold because there is a lot of moving parts. And even with our inventory, some of that is when the inventory hit at the end of the quarter and it couldn't get out the door. So you know that is a trigger that should cause for some questions to be asked, but it is right now no means an indicator that the market is slowing because I can tell you our book-to-bill for the quarter was still off the charts, still high demand, and we are still being constrained by supply, and expect that all the way through 2022.

Chris Stansbury -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

And I would just weigh-in and say to the question on our inventory levels. Again, I wouldn't spend a lot of time looking at the dollar value of inventory. I'd really encourage you to focus on the cash conversion cycle. Inventory levels will rise as the business grows. Working capital levels will rise as the business grows. The key for us is being able to manage the days it takes to convert that into cash. The other thing that you'll see this quarter is we do have some -- some positive margin gains because of geographic mix and we know that inventory turns a little slower in the West than it does in Asia, and that's got a margin benefit to it as well. So you've got to take all those -- all those variables into play, but our key focus here in terms of how we're running the business day to day is laser-focused on the cash conversion cycle.

Ruplu Bhattacharya -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Got it. Thanks for the details there. I appreciate that. Just for my follow-up, Chris, if I can ask you. Can you remind us of your capital allocation priorities? In this environment is this -- are you looking at any potential M&A and how should we think about prioritizing debt reduction versus share buybacks? Thanks.

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, this is Mike. I'll answer it just so there is no question of anybody here or for you guys. Remember, our number one priority was invest in our business to grow, our number two was M&A and our number three was to return to shareholders. And as you can see right now, we're doing a fair amount of returning to shareholders through our buybacks and we would expect that to continue for a while.

Ruplu Bhattacharya -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Okay, great. Thanks for the details.

Operator

Thank you. Your next response is Joe Quatrochi of Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

Joe Quatrochi -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Yeah, thanks for taking the question. I was curious as we look into 22 and I take your comments, Mike, thinking about the components margin and the strong pricing that I guess is expected to continue next year, is there any reason that we should view this quarter's results from an operating margin perspective as an upper limit or could we continue to kind of increase that given the mix dynamic on a quarterly basis just -- or is there some level of fixed maybe investment that you need to make as certain run rate?

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, let me -- let me answer it sort of a way that I answer that internal of whatever it is not enough for me. So I'll start there. And this is sort of one quarter we're still sorting out. Remember, we had some mix changes, so mix does have an impact on it. Now not only mix by region has an impact, but sort of mix by our services sales, those types of things have an impact on it. So if all things stay equal, I would tell you would be equal, but we're one quarter in this and what I can tell you as I'm very positive about what the future looks like, but I'm not ready to tell you that we're going to be going way north of this number going into next year.

Joe Quatrochi -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. And then just as a follow-up. On the ECS side, you talked about supply availability impacting hardware and maybe driving some incremental cloud adoption. Can just remind us what's the difference in terms of the economics for Arrow there in terms of like the revenue opportunity and margin?

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Sean, you want to take that.

Sean J. Kerins -- Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, Joe, I think if you -- if you look at our business historically and I think it's still pretty true, its about a third hardware, about a third software and about a third services and that's kind of bounces around a little bit quarter-to-quarter, but year-by-year it kind of hold constant. So we make a whole variety of returns across the portfolio. Now I'd like to say not all hardware is bad and not all software is good, and as we pivot to all things cloud and all things IT as a service, you're going to see our mix change. But the supply chain constraints we're seeing right now are probably double the lead times that we saw at the start of the year. So that will be a headwind for a little bit of a time, and obviously that will create some downward pressure on the top line. But just to give you another way to think about that. I mean, I don't think the market has returned to pre-pandemic levels when you think about enterprise IT. But I can say we are seeing signs of renewed activity in the data center and the proof points for that are the strength of our storage business year-to-date it's up in the high single digits. And the second thing I would say as we've now seen our our backlog at record levels and a good piece of that is all associated with things that will land in the traditional data center, so all hardware will be a bit of a challenge in the short run. I don't think it will persist indefinitely.

Joe Quatrochi -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Your next response is from Nick Todorov with Longbow Research. Please go ahead.

Nikolay Todorov -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Yeah, thanks, and congrats from me on the results. Mike, you talked about half of the component margin increase this quarter being structural. My question is first versus what the anchor of margin is that upside structural? Is it based on the 5% that you're targeting? You kind of laid out a quarter or two ago. And also related to that, how much of the component margin upside is from the supply chain services agreement that you talked about that are earning higher margin than the [Speech Overlap]

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

I'm not going to break out the differences between the services and the supply chain services. But what I can tell you is, yes, the upside over 5% has been impacted significantly by those sales.

Nikolay Todorov -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Okay. And as a follow-up question, you touched upon price increases, we similarly in our work have heard about acceleration in price increases particularly in high-end SMEs. Can you talk about how much of your portfolio is experiencing price increases and what is the magnitude of realized price increases as I'm assuming you're referencing less price is also going up by 20%, which I think could be different from what the realized prices are?

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, actually I'm going to have the guy answer that that a little bit, so I'm going to ask David West give you an answer on that because he has been shepherding these price increases through the system and he didn't have much here to start with, you've got less now, so you'll get to hear it.

David West -- President, Global Components

Yeah. Thanks, Mike. We've seen price increases for more than 100 suppliers and we expect that to continue through 2022.

Nikolay Todorov -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Okay. Maybe one last question for Chris. If you continue to post positive free cash flow, how should investors think about the sustainability of the buyback pace from the last two quarters assuming the environment allows you to post positive free cash flow as the cycle continues?

Chris Stansbury -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Nik, I mean the key thing that impacts our view on buying back stock, obviously the starting point is it's value. And if you look at the way we're trading today, I think we're roughly 8 times forward. So the stock is cheap on that basis. And so it's a good buy versus the intrinsic value. So that's point one. Point two is, well cash flows an important variable there so is our leverage, and unquestionably we're getting to a point where the cash generation moderates somewhat because of the need to invest in working capital for growth. But given the state of the balance sheet, we've got a lot of room while maintaining our commitment to investment grade to buyback stock. So to Mike's point earlier, I think that's what you should expect from us.

Nikolay Todorov -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

Got it. Thanks, guys.

Operator

Thank you. There are no further questions in the queue at this time.

Steven J. O'Brien -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Thank you for joining us today. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to me, this is Steve O'Brien. And thank you for your interest in Arrow Electronics. Have a nice day.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

Duration: 41 minutes

Call participants:

Steven J. O'Brien -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Michael J. Long -- Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer

Chris Stansbury -- Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Sean J. Kerins -- Chief Operating Officer

David West -- President, Global Components

Matt Sheerin -- Matt Sheerin -- Analyst

William Stein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Toshiya Hari -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Jim Suva -- Citigroup -- Analyst

Ruplu Bhattacharya -- Bank of America -- Analyst

Joe Quatrochi -- Wells Fargo -- Analyst

Nikolay Todorov -- Longbow Research -- Analyst

More ARW analysis

All earnings call transcripts

AlphaStreet Logo