Categories Earnings Call Transcripts, Industrials
Dover Corp (DOV) Q2 2021 Earnings Call Transcript
DOV Earnings Call - Final Transcript
Dover Corp (NYSE: DOV) Q2 2021 earnings call dated Jul. 20, 2021
Corporate Participants:
Andrey Galiuk — Vice President, Corporate Development
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Andy Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
Steve Tusa — JPMorgan — Analyst
Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research — Analyst
Andrew Obin — Bank of America — Analyst
Scott Davis — Melius Research — Analyst
Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst
Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Mircea Dobre — Baird — Analyst
Deane Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good morning, and welcome to Dover’s Second Quarter 2021 Earnings Conference Call. Speakers today are Richard J. Tobin, President and Chief Executive Officer; Brad Cerepak, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Andrey Galiuk, Vice President of Corporate Development and Investor Relations. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer period. [Operator Instructions] Thank you.
I will now turn the call over to Mr. Andrey Galiuk. Please go ahead, sir.
Andrey Galiuk — Vice President, Corporate Development
Thank you, Crystal. Good morning, everyone and thank you for joining our call. This call will be available on our website for playback through August 3rd, and the audio portion will be archived for three months. Dover provides non-GAAP information and reconciliations between GAAP and adjusted measures are included in our investor supplement and presentation materials, which are available on our website.
Our comments today will include forward-looking statements that are subject to uncertainties and risks. We caution everyone to be guided in their analysis of Dover by referring to our Form 10-K and our most recent Form 10-Q for a list of factors that could cause our results to differ from those anticipated in any forward-looking statements. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements except as required by law.
With that, I will turn this call over to Rich.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Andrey. Good morning, everyone. Our second quarter results were strong across the board and we are especially pleased with the top-line performance considering the complicated operating environment. The demand environment in the quarter was robust and continued the momentum from the first quarter and despite posting a 30% organic top-line growth, we exit Q2 with a sequentially higher order backlog.
I’ll focus on the bigger picture here and highlight again what we believe is underappreciated aspect of our portfolio, it’s organic growth potential. Our revenue in the second quarter was above the pre-pandemic comparable quarter in 2019 and resulted in the highest revenue first half of the year in recent Dover history, meaning that the majority of our markets are not simply recovering but are operating in a growth environment.
New order bookings remain robust with all segments posting book-to-bill above one [Phonetic], resulting in sequential comparable growth in backlog as I mentioned earlier. Operating margin conversion was solid for the quarter as a result of good execution at the operating level on healthy mix of products delivered in the quarter. All of this is well and good, but make no mistake, the operating environment remains very challenging. It’s been 90 days since the last time we were asked the question about the duration of “transitory inflation”.
As we’ve discussed after the first quarter, we had some line of sight of raw materials cost trajectory coming into the year, which allowed us to get in front from a price cost perspective. We have also proactively given our operating companies some leeway on working capital decisions to build inventories based on the backlog trajectory. What we underestimated was the — was the total cost impacts of a strained logistics system and tight labor market that shows no signs of abating.
This has had two knock-on effects on our results. First, the absolute costs of inbound and outbound freight were materially higher, and second and more important, the costs associated with production line stoppages due to lack of labor and components caused by trends and time uncertainty and overall supply chain tightness. I’ll deal with the market dynamics and supply chain impact by business later in the presentation, but based on our experience so far, I’m concerned about the notion that the current economy needs to be further stimulated and second order implications of that line of thinking and I’ll leave it at that.
Our teams have done a commendable job navigating these choppy waters and continue shipping products and driving robust margin conversion and strong cash flow. Overall, we believe that our operating model has been an advantage to us as we are largely a localized producer and are not overly reliant on extended supply chains. This is clearly reflected in our top-line performance in the quarter.
As we look to the second half of the year, our order backlogs make us confident in our top-line trajectory. Our forecast do not incorporate much in the way of an improvement nor deterioration of the operating challenges that we’ve witnessed during the first half. We’re just going to have to power through and work with our suppliers and customers to adapt to the prevailing conditions. We are raising our annual revenue growth guidance to 15% to 17%, and our adjusted EPS guidance to $7.30 a share to $7.40 a share. We also expect stronger cash flow as a result of the improved margin performance.
Skip to Slide 4, which provides a more detailed overview of our results in the quarter. Engineered Products revenue was up 25% organically. Vehicle services which is strong across all geographies and product lines and had record bookings during the quarter. Industrial automation demand was strong across the automotive sector and in China. Aerospace and defense posted an all-time record revenue during the second quarter. Waste hauling was flat year-over-year as the business continues to wrestle with component and labor availability issues that are constraining product shipments.
Importantly, waste handling bookings were robust and the backlog was up nearly 75% versus the prior year. Engineered Products is our most exposed segment to input and logistics cost inflation due to materials intensity, contractual pricing dynamics and relatively higher share of international sourcing in vehicle services. You can see it in the margin — the segment’s margin was flat year-over-year as strong volume leverage and pricing increases were offset by input cost and freight inflation, as well as labor and component availability challenges.
Fueling Solutions was up 25% organically in the quarter on the strength of the above ground and below ground retail fueling globally, including some remaining tailwinds from the EMV opportunity in the U.S. following the April deadline. Vehicle wash has had — has been strong this year and our recent ICS acquisition integration and performance is ahead of plan. Activity in China in fuel transport remains subdued, but there are signs of Chinese operators reopening their tendering activity.
Order backlogs were up 29%, and we expect our software and service business hanging hardware, vehicle wash and compliance-driven underground product offerings to help offset the anticipated headwinds from the EMV roll-off. The segment posted another strong sequential margin performance on higher volumes, strategic pricing initiatives, productivity actions and mix. Sales in Imaging & ID improved 20% organically. The core marking & coding business grew well on strong printer demand across all geographies with China and India driving particularly strong performance.
Serialization software also grew ahead of expectations. The digital textile [Phonetic] printing business was up significantly against the comparable quarter when much of their operations were locked down in Northern Italy last year, but nevertheless, the business remains impacted though we are beginning to see growth in demand for large printers, particularly in Asia and continued growth in ink consumable volumes. Margins improved by 420 basis points on volume leverage, pricing and productivity initiatives. Pumps & Process Solution posted another banner quarter at 34% organic growth on improved volumes across all businesses except Precision Components.
Demand for biopharma connectors and pumps are intended to be — to be strong driven by vaccine and non-COVID related pharmaceutical tailwinds. Industrial pumps grew by over 20% on robust end customer demand with particular strength in China. Polymer processing shipments grew year-over-year and continued strength in Asia and is gaining momentum in the U.S. market. Precision Components was slightly down in the quarter though demand conditions have stabilized and are recovering well in some end markets and geography giving us confidence in the second half trajectory. Margins in the quarter expanded by 910 basis points on strong volumes, favorable mix and pricing. Top-line growth in Refrigeration & Food Equipment continued its impressive clip posting a 44% organic growth. Revenue in the beverage can making doubled in the quarter and bookings nearly doubled as well. The business is now booked into late 2022. Food retail saw broad-based growth across its product lines, door cases are now booking into 2022, and the demand for natural refrigerants is driving outside growth in our systems business in the U.S. and in Europe.
Backlog in food retail is now double where it was last year. The heat exchanger business grew on robust demand in all geographies with rebounding order rates and commercial HVAC in North America and record order intake in EMEA extending lead times for heat pumps and boilers. Foodservice equipment was up in the quarter on a tough comp, chain — no, actually on an easy comp, and chain restaurant demand is robust, but the institutional market is still recovering. Margins in the segment improved by 580 basis points, driven by strong volumes and productivity actions partially offset by availability issues with installation raw materials and labor and food retail operations, we expect — which we expect to subside in the second half.
And I’ll pass it on to Brad here.
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Rich. Good morning, everyone. I’m on Slide 6 of the presentation deck, on the top of the — on the top of the page is the revenue bridge. Our top-line organic revenue increased by 30% in the quarter with all five segments posting growth with particular strength in our Pumps & Process Solutions and Refrigeration & Food Equipment segments. FX benefited the top-line by about 5% or $68 million. Acquisitions added $19 million of revenue in the quarter. There were no year over impacts from dispositions. The revenue breakdown by geography reflect strong growth in North America, Europe and Asia, our three largest regions.
The U.S., our largest market posted 25% organic growth in the quarter on solid trading conditions in retail fueling, marking & coding, biopharma, food retail and can making. Europe grew by 30% on strong shipments in vehicle aftermarket, biopharma and industrial pumps and heat exchangers. All of Asia was up 38% organically on growth in biopharma, marking & coding, plastics and polymers, heat exchangers and retail fueling demand outside of China. China, which represents a little over half of our business in Asia was up 33% organically in the quarter.
Moving to the bottom of the page, bookings were up 61% organically, reflecting continued broad-based momentum across the portfolio. In the quarter, we saw organic growth across all five segments. Going to the earnings bridges now on Slide 7. On the top of the chart, adjusted EBIT was up $173 million and margin improved 400 basis points, as improved volumes, continued productivity initiatives and strategic pricing offset input cost inflation. Adjusted segment EBITDA was up 350 basis points.
Going to the bottom of the chart. Adjusted net earnings improved by $135 million as higher segment EBIT more than offset higher taxes, as well as higher corporate expenses primarily relating to compensation accruals and deal expenses. The effective tax rate excluding discrete tax benefits was approximately 21.7% for the quarter compared to 21.6% in the prior year. Discrete tax benefits were $11 million in the quarter or $9 million higher than 2020 for approximately $0.07 of a year-over-year EPS impact. Rightsizing and other costs were $11 million in the quarter or $8 million after-tax.
Now, on Slide 8. We are pleased with the cash performance thus far this year, with free cash flow of $364 million, a $96 million increase over last year. Free cash flow conversion stands at 9% of revenue for the first half of the year, 80 basis points higher than the comparable period last year, despite a significant investment in working capital and the impact of prior year tax deferrals that did not repeat this year. Also as we discussed last quarter, we remain focused on delivering against our customers’ strong order rates and build inventory to ensure we can meet the current demand in the second half of the year.
With that, I’m going to turn it back to Rich.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Okay, thanks, Brad. Let’s try to pause here for a moment, because this is a complicated slide, but I think it’s a transparent view of what we think is going to happen over the second half of the year and includes our current view of the outlook of the second half by segment provides context of how we are thinking about full-year guidance, which I’ll get to shortly.
Remember, the demand environment is strong across the portfolio, so let’s not try to get overexcited about headwinds or mix commentary. We managed it in H1 and we will do it again in H2, but this is the reality of the situation in terms of the dynamic of the business. We expect top-line growth — top-line in Engineered Products to remain robust through the remainder of the year based on solid backlog and good bookings trajectory. Momentum in the vehicle aftermarket, industrial automation should continue, while we expect the improved order rates and backlogs and solid waste handling and industrial winches to drive solid year-over-year growth in the second half.
Aerospace and defense is expected to be modestly down largely as a result of a difficult year-over-year comparison on — on project deliveries. Supply chain constraints and cost inflation are expected to continue to have a material impact on the segment. Waste handling and automotive aftermarket businesses are our largest business exposed to the trifecta of raw materials inflation, extended supply chains and a larger proportion of assembly labor.
Our management teams are winning in the marketplace considering the headwinds which is reflected in the growth rate and order books. But we are clearly at the point of having defend our market position at the expense of the price cost dynamic, which will be detrimental to near-term margins, but not material, slightly detrimental. And we expect Fueling Solutions to provide organic growth for the full-year above our initial expectations on the back of growth in systems and software, recovering underground demand and vehicle wash.
Recall that above ground business as a tough second half due to the North American EMV volumes. Margins in Fueling Solutions will be up for the full-year, though we expect modest margin compression in the second half relative to the first half on slightly lower volumes and negative product and geographic mix, which I think that we covered at the end of Q1 as with less North America volume due to EMV and more international volume that’s slightly dilutive.
Trading conditions in Imaging & ID are expected to continue their positive trajectory for the remainder of the year. Our core marking & coding business is expected to maintain its growth trajectory with services and serialization products positively impacting performance. Digital textile printing is recovering, and we expect the end of the year, we will well above 2020, but below its 2019 high watermark. We expect operating margins to remain stable in the second half.
Pumps & Process Solutions should see a solid second half. Demand for biopharma and hygienic applications remain robust with customers now placing orders into 2022. We are strategically investing an additional clean room capacity for this platform to support its growth. Trading conditions in industrial pumps are strong and driven by robust and customer demand as opposed to channel stocking. Plastics and polymers is expected to be steady though this business faces a difficult comparable period due to a strong performance last year.
Precision Components will return to growth in the second half as OEM new-builds will supplant increased activities at refineries and petrochemical plants. We expect margins to remain strong in the segment, but we may see some minor dilution due to mix on the back half as our Precision Components business recovers, but the absolute profit trajectory of this segment is in very good shape. With its large backlog and high sustained order rates, Refrigeration & Food Equipment will finish the year strong, with double-digit growth expected for all operating businesses.
New orders in core food retail business have been healthy across the product segments and the tailwinds from our leadership position and natural refrigerants are driving outside growth for our systems business. We expect to begin to significantly ramp up shipments of our new digital door product. Belvac continues to work through its record backlogs. They are now taking orders for late 2022 and even into 2023.
Heat exchanger business is positioned well as they are seeing strong order rates across all verticals and geographies. We have been investing in capacity and new capabilities in these two businesses and are well positioned to capture the growth. Foodservice equipment demand is normalized and returned to growth at restaurant chains and institutional business continues to improve. We expect this business to post solid growth in the second half albeit against a low comparable.
We expect margins to continue their seasonally adjusted upward trajectory for the remainder of the year. Improved volume leverage, productivity gains and positive product mix and business mix should more than offset operational challenges related to component and labor shortages, increased logistics costs and input cost inflation.
Moving to Slide 10. We remain on the front foot investing behind our business to support the growth, productivity and long-term portfolio enhancement. Organic high return on investment projects remain our top priority for capital allocation. On the left hand, you can see a sample of the current growth and productivity capex projects that we are working on, that add up to $75 million of spend. The project mix is balanced between growth and productivity with a skew towards new capacity and supporting long-term growth in key priority portions of our portfolio.
Our next priority in capital allocation is strategic bolt-on acquisitions and enhance the long-term growth profile and attractiveness of our portfolio. You can see that with that all four of our recent acquisitions were in either digital or high growth single use pumps markets. These are small additions, but we are very excited about scaling up these highly innovative technologies as part of our G&A [Phonetic] portfolio. We remain on the hunt for acquisitions, have a solid M&A pipeline as we enter the second half.
Our current dry powder on a full-year ’21 basis is approximately $3.3 billion. Our revised annual guidance is on Page 11. We are increasing our top-line forecast to reflect the durability and demand trends that we are seeing. We now expect to achieve 15% to 17% all-in revenue growth this year. Our $0.55 adjusted EPS guidance increase is mindful of the supply chain, and input challenges we summarized earlier in the presentation and we expect free cash flow generation to edge higher as well due to margin improvements. On the bottom of the page, we show our expected ’21 performance in a multi-year perspective. We remain on track to deliver strong returns through a combination of robust organic revenue growth, strong margin expansion and disciplined capital allocation. Before wrapping up, I want to thank everybody at Dover for their perseverance and accomplishments executing in today’s challenging environment.
And with that Andrey, we’ll open it up to Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Andy Kaplowitz with Citigroup.
Andy Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
Good morning, guys, Rich, nice quarter.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Andy.
Andy Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
Rich, can you give more color into what you’re seeing in terms of margin progression in Pumps & Process and Refrigeration. I know you just talked about it, but if you look at Pumps & Process, you’ve been sustaining that 30% level, can you keep doing that, and I know you talked about a little dilution there? And then on the refrigeration side, like how would you assess the sort of march toward that mid-teens margin goal that you’ve talked about?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
On the Pumps & Process Solutions side of the portfolio, nothing deteriorates in the second half, it’s just pure mix. So what I’m — what I was trying to make clear is one of the businesses that suffered greatly last year and is beginning to improve now is our Precision Components business that is slightly dilutive to margins, but in terms of absolute profit, it’s a positive, so I wouldn’t get overly chuffed about that.
On the refrigeration side, we expect third quarter margins to be the highest of the year just based on seasonality and the size of our backlog and everything else. Quite frankly, we’re a bit disappointed in the margin in Q2, but I don’t think that’s the fault of management, but we’ve had a really difficult time with freight costs and components and labor availability. So on one hand, I think the effort on their part to get the product out the door was excellent. The bottom line is we disappointed a bunch of customers in our ability to get the product out because of the supply chain issue. So the trajectory is good and as you can see from the backlogs, this is more of a 2022 story now more than a 2021 story.
Andy Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
That’s helpful. And then we know you want to be conservative given all the crosscurrents out there, but you’re obviously forecasting revenue to come off a bit from Q2 with a backlog up 70%, you talked about EMV coming down, supply chain, the virus is still out there, but you didn’t mention in your release that you have visibility already into ’22. So maybe you can just talk about that visibility, and obviously it’s in refrigeration, but is it across all the businesses, so that organic growth could actually be quite strong as you go into ’22?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, look, I mean, I’m not going to complain about the size of our backlog, and if you’d run the calc and — if you’d run the calcs on that we couldn’t get it out the door over the balance of the year if we wanted to. So it’s up to execution, number one. And with the exception of Belvac and Maag, most of our business is short cycle. So we’ll see at the end of Q2 [Phonetic]. I mean, look at the end of the day and it’s the same discussion we had at the end of Q1.
The demand is there, it’s up to us to get it out the door. I think that when all is said and done, I think that we probably are going to do better on average because of our — because I think that we’re advantaged from a supply chain point of view versus some of our competitors, and that’s what’s going to be winning in the marketplace. It’s not so much a pricing dynamic right now, it’s whether you can get the product out the door. So we — I think that right now I don’t in my tenure here, we’ve never had backlogs like this and it’s a good problem to have.
Andy Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
Thank you, Rich.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Steve Tusa with JPMorgan.
Steve Tusa — JPMorgan — Analyst
Hey, good morning, guys.
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Hi.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Steve.
Steve Tusa — JPMorgan — Analyst
Just kind of digging into Andy’s question a little bit of a different way. I think normally you guys convert your first half orders relatively close as a percentage into sales from first half to second half. Obviously, that suggests like a kind of a stupidly high revenue number for the year relative to your guidance like $700 million higher.
Obviously, there is supply constraints and things maybe getting pushed into ’22. Can you maybe just talk about like the mechanics of this backlog, what’s converting, what’s different when it comes to the conversion from orders into sales this cycle, if you will? I mean I’m sure it’s much more extended obviously, this cycle or maybe like just mechanically, is there double ordering going on, is there our guys pushing deliveries into ’22, just a little more of the mechanics around that?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. I think that we discussed it a little bit at the end of Q1. Clearly, based on our backlogs of exit in Q1 and then Q2 because of the demand function was going to be higher than kind of what a normal seasonality would be just because of where the demand was. So it’s just purely a function of where you could get it out the door or not at the end of the day. So that’s the good news. So I don’t think you can look at Q2 and just say, well, I’m going to go back and look at history and then Q3 is this much higher than Q2 and then that it’s going to spit out a number as you said, that’s just not realistic quite frankly.
So as point number one. So I’d be careful about calculating seasonality based on history just because of the strength of the first half just because of the recovery coming out of the pandemic. In terms of the backlog, yeah, we’d have to break it down because we’ve got some long cycle backlog, I mean we mentioned Belvac, which is booking into 2023 now is a piece of that, that we’ll just convert over time. We don’t believe that there’s double ordering going on right now.
From what we can tell, it looks like it’s just a recognition by the customer base of the constraints that are out in the system that in previous periods you just didn’t have to put the orders in, you want to get in line. So that is what is expanding the backlog. I mean, I think you asked the question at the end of Q1 about this whole issue of channel stocking, destocking, and we took a close look, I mean, we grew our industrial pumps business by 20% in the quarter. So we took a or over that actually, but so we took a close look at channel checks and we don’t see that inventory building up at our distributors, it’s just passing right through. So that’s good news at the end of the day, because it means it’s fundamental demand.
So I think it’s two issues. We’ve got some long cycle businesses that are booking out well further than historically they used to and then I think on our short cycle businesses, I think there is a recognition of the constraints in the supply chain that’s just making everybody get in line further out than they normally would have.
Steve Tusa — JPMorgan — Analyst
And I guess on that front on the working capital side, is there any unwind of this big inventory and receivables, I guess not receivables because your sales are going to continue to grow, but on the inventory side, I mean, any flush you see in the second half, I know you raised your free cash flow guidance, but if there is anything to nitpick at this quarter would be the working capital build was kind of sizable, any unwind there in the second half?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I mean, I think the working capital build has been to our advantage and we’ll see after everybody reports in terms of top-line, I mean, having the product available or having the components available that convert has been an advantage to us. I don’t see anything fundamentally deteriorating in our working capital.
We will see in the second half. I would expect to see some — to see liquidation in Q4. And if we don’t on the industrial working capital side, that means that the demand outlook for ’22 is robust and what we may carry it again, but I don’t think that just means higher earnings and the out — and the outside period. So right now sitting here, we would expect free cash flow to be up, no real deterioration in terms of the metrics of working capital. We’ll leave it at that to see how order rates progress over the balance of the year.
Steve Tusa — JPMorgan — Analyst
Great, thanks a lot.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Sprague with Vertical Research.
Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research — Analyst
Hey, thanks, good morning, everyone.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey, Jeff.
Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research — Analyst
Rich, maybe just touch a little bit more on M&A, right, I mean you’ve been doing some bolt-ons, but as you know, we’ve got a kind of multi-billion dollar capacity here, activity seems to be picking up in your neighborhood, right. I wonder if a, you see things kind of trading away from you that you are interested in or just kind of the action ability of what you might have in your pipeline?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, without getting into the specifics, I think that we lost out on one deal that we chased pretty hard due to valuation, some of the other ones that you’ve seen transact, we’re well aware of those assets and we’re not participating in them. Bottom line is, it’s a good news, bad news story. I mean, the bad news is, is valuations are what they are and I’ll leave it at that.
The good news is because valuations are what they are, then there is a lot building up that wants to come to market, because I think this is a recognition of, these are the salad days for multiples of not even earnings anymore, but of whatever you want to choose to be the multiple. So we’re looking at a lot of stuff right now and we’re going to remain disciplined. I mean, I think the things that we’ve got there are small, but we think that the network effect on the leverage of those small products is, our expectation, the returns are going to be very high in the deals that we did and we’ll see in the second half.
Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research — Analyst
And a unrelated different question, just back to kind of price and how you’re managing all this, what are you doing differently, I’m sure you can use the demand pulse to just extract price that people want the product bad enough, but are you able to on a drive deposits do other things to just kind of improve the commercial terms of how you’re transacting with folks?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
It depends, I think because demand is high and capacity is tight. You can manage profitability by customer probably a little bit more efficiently than in the past, but I think in certain of our businesses and I’ll go back to what I talked about at Engineered Products, when you get to the third price increase, do you actually go for the fourth price increase because the fact of the matter is, you run the risk of demand destruction in the short-term, and that’s not good.
So part of my comment about Engineered Products, especially around ESG and VSG is at a certain point if we go negative in terms of price cost, but the volume remains robust and the installed base goes up, that’s a better trade because we believe that some of these supply chain constraints and raw materials will roll off hopefully sooner than later. And you know what, do you really go back to your core customers and say sorry, but here comes another price increase. So I think that we’re managing differently across the portfolio, but we don’t want to force short-term demand destruction by trying to just be draconian.
Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research — Analyst
Great, makes sense, active management. Appreciate it. Thanks a lot.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Obin with Bank of America.
Andrew Obin — Bank of America — Analyst
Hi, yes, good morning.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Andrew.
Andrew Obin — Bank of America — Analyst
Hi, how are you. Just a question just to sort of to continue sort of to talk about capital allocation. You did sort of highlight over $3 billion in dry powder. How should we think, you sort of clearly have established yourself as one of the most consistent operators post COVID. So how do you think about sort of the pace that you would like, right, get assume that valuation stay where they are, but how do you see the pace of capital allocation per year in a normalized environment assuming that prices stay where they are?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
I don’t know how to answer that. I — look well, I’ll put it in this way, Andrew, where we realistically looking at right now is about two-thirds of our dry powder. Now do we execute on that or not, I’m not sure, but I just in terms of the amount of targets and a realistic view of what the value of those targets are is about two-thirds of our dry powder. So it’s quite a bit at the end of the day.
But it’s a realistic view and there are some deals that we just can’t get there. I mean, this notion that return on invested capital made a quantum leap from three years to five years over the last 12 months, I find an interesting dynamic. And I’m not here to criticize anybody’s deals, everybody has got their own strategy to a certain extent. So my — like I said before to Jeff’s question, the bad news is valuation, the good news is there’s a lot of assets that see valuations of transactions in the marketplace. So the amount of opportunities that are out there and ones that are rumored to come is actually proactive to capital deployment.
Andrew Obin — Bank of America — Analyst
That’s a great answer. Thank you. And then the other question maybe I missed it, but did you comment on what the price increase was in the second quarter and what are you modeling for second half of the year?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
The price to raw materials improves in the second half of the year versus the first half of the year. The outlier is logistics costs and line stoppages, which is really the negative headwind, but priced cost on a raw material side, it’s actually better in the second half than the first half.
Andrew Obin — Bank of America — Analyst
But what was the price component of organic growth in second quarter?
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
2 [Phonetic], less than 2 [Phonetic], around that number, not that significant.
Andrew Obin — Bank of America — Analyst
And then…
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
It really comes down to, Andrew, it comes down to the timing of when those price increases. Rich is saying there is multiple times that price is being put in. So it’s not one big bang at January 1, it kind of spreads across the year. So you get that effect.
Andrew Obin — Bank of America — Analyst
Now, now I got it. Looking at your price reaction today, I don’t think anybody is complaining about your execution. Thanks so much.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Scott Davis with Melius Research.
Scott Davis — Melius Research — Analyst
Good, good morning, guys.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, Scott.
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Hi, Scott.
Scott Davis — Melius Research — Analyst
Is there any way to kind of convert, Rich, you made the comment of disappointing customers, I mean, do you — can you convert that to kind of an on-time delivery number to us and kind of what’s normal and what you’re at now and or any way to kind of think about it other than subjectively?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I mean, there’s really two dynamics. I think that our lead times are disappointing to our customers, because you go for years where you can convert orders within with intra-month in some of our businesses where that’s just not possible. And that — and that’s where you get this function of now everybody seen it for six months and so it’s got a knock-on effect of backlogs because there is a recognition of this is — this — this is more durable than maybe everybody thought. So the positive is it builds your backlogs at the end of the day, the negative is our lead times have stretched out.
Now you couple that with in certain of our businesses where we’ve had some pretty difficult logistics constraints and in some cases labor availability and then you’ve got disappointment of we say we’re going to deliver the product on X date and we miss it and that’s happened. So we can quant — we quantify it more in dollars and cents. I’d have to go look up in terms of on-time delivery. I think across the board, it’s probably okay, but there is, as I mentioned before, a business like VSG that’s got probably our longest extended supply chain is suffering the most as opposed to Printing and ID that just doesn’t have to deal with the reality of that.
Scott Davis — Melius Research — Analyst
Okay, now that’s fair point. So just to follow-up, I mean, all the questions on M&A I think are appropriate just given where your leverage ratio is. But you could flip it over and just say well valuations are crazy, why not sell some assets here because you do have a fairly broad portfolio and some things seemed a bit better than others and is there any appetite to doing so?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
No, I think that — I think that’s a fair comment. I guess that’s all I can say about that, but you’re right, right, valuations inbound and outbound are what they are and you can manage that both ways.
Scott Davis — Melius Research — Analyst
Yeah, okay, I’ll pass it on. Thank you, guys.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Julian Mitchell with Barclays.
Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst
Hi, good morning. Just wanted to circle back maybe to Slide 9. So just to try and understand essentially is the point here that sort of this is largely relating to a half on half margin outlook and so sort of company-wide second half segment margins may be down slightly versus the first half, and then within that you’ve sort of got DEP and DFS maybe down a bit DRFE flattish, and then DII and DPPS flat to up half on half. Is that the right sort of summary of that slide, just to make sure it’s sort of half on half we’re looking at?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I think that if you overlay the, my comments on to the slide, they’re going to match, right. I think that we’re just giving you an honest assessment based on the prevailing market conditions of where we have headwinds operationally, price cost and then some commentary on mix, which is a commentary H1 to H2. So as I mentioned in my comments, I don’t think we have to be overly dramatic about it. We’ve managed it quite well in — in the first half and I don’t expect us to manage it differently in the second half, but we have to recognize that there are certain decisions that we’re making, like if you look at DEP in terms of price cost which whether from an absolute profit point of view may be in good shape with slightly dilutive margins because we’re just making a choice to chase the — to chase the volume, which I think is appropriate in that case.
Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst
That’s very clear. And then secondly looking at the cash flow, you’ve addressed the working capital point once or twice. Capital spending is up a decent amount this year, I think the sort of low double-digit type increase year-on-year. Just trying to think about sort of the outlook from here, how much does that reflect the sort of catch-up spend, you laid out some projects in the deck after a weaker capex number last year for obvious reasons, and how much is this sort of a sustainably higher level, just trying to understand how your capital intensity looks on the capex front beyond 2021, should we see capex normalize lower again or will be flat when we look at next year?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I mean, I think that ’20 we can just throw out, right. I mean, at the end of the day everybody reacted to the change in market conditions appropriately. So, like as a percent of revenue and we’ll see where we end up and I don’t want to do the calculations here, but as a percent of revenue, ’19 to ’21 is probably flattish and I would expect that to be the same going into ’22.
I mean, we — one of these days we’re going to do a presentation on our returns for organic investment and they absolutely blow away anything that we do inorganically. So to the extent that we find the projects going into ’22, we’ll spend it internally, but right now sitting here today, do I expect as a percent of our revenue to go up dramatically in ’22, no.
Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst
That’s helpful, because I think, yeah, there is a lot of sort of broader chats about capex super cycles and this and that, which I think is a bit odd. It doesn’t sound like from Dover’s sort of internal outlook that there is anything game changing in terms of capex intensity as we look out?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, you know, I think that there is an interesting argument and I would agree with it that to the extent that labor inflation is durable and that supply chains, the issues that we’re having supply chains will improve, but not dramatically. There is an argument to be made that the returns on automation are going to be better than they’ve been over the last five years to six years, and I would agree with that.
Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst
Interesting. Thanks very much.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Joe Ritchie with Goldman Sachs.
Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Thanks. Good morning, guys. Nice quarter.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Joe.
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Joe.
Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
So I’m going to — I’m going to ask Julian’s question maybe a little bit more explicitly on the margins for the second half of the year. And so it sounds like, Rich, you guys have done a great job managing those historically. When I look at Slide 9, it basically what I’m hearing from you is that incremental margins are probably going to be pretty comparable to the kind of 30% range that you just put up in the second quarter, maybe there is some slight pressure, but that’s kind of how you’re thinking about those in the second half, is that fair?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I think that we’re just trying to be transparent, Joe, right. It’s very — we could have put up the second quarter results and said everything is great and see at next quarter and then gotten away with it, but I think that we have to recognize that there are some issues that need to be overcome. To us, I don’t think that we should get overly excited about it. It’s just the facts are the facts we’ve dealt with them in H1, if anything, it becomes more of a mix issue in Q2 and that’s not problematic.
So as I mentioned before, DRFE is going to have its best quarter of the year from a revenue and an operating margin point of view. So that’s great in terms of absolute profit, but it is dilutive to overall Group margins. So am I going to tell them to slow down to protect the margin, no at the end of the day. And that’s the case — and there’s a couple of other, a couple of our businesses. I mean, if Precision Components on the back half revenue increases, but it’s slightly dilutive to a, let’s call it a very robust margin that we’re clocking at Pumps and Process Solutions, again, I don’t think it’s overly problematic, but we’re just trying to guide everybody of a look at the margin in Q2, but from a seasonality point of view, if I go back and look in history, Q3 is X percent higher than Q2. So let me just model that and run down the field. I think that would — would give you a number that we would like to get to, but I’m not entirely sure just because of the pull-forward in terms of the demand and the operating leverage that we’re getting in Q2.
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Right, right. We got to be a little bit careful with the conversion to the back half as well because price materials does impact conversion. So just keep that in mind is that, that has nothing to do with absolute profits per se as Rich has talked about, but the conversion rate is influenced by that.
Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Sure. Now that makes sense and fully appreciate all the color you guys are providing. I guess my one follow-up and maybe just kind of focus on the near-term for a second. When you think about third quarter from a pure revenue and EPS perspective, would you expect it to be up versus the second quarter or similar? I’m just curious like how you guys are thinking about it with the way that the backlog is kind of converting into your business?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Similar, I guess is the answer.
Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Okay, great, thanks guys.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Mig Dobre with Baird.
Mircea Dobre — Baird — Analyst
Yes, thank you for taking the question. I also want to ask a question about Slide 9. You’ve got…
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
That’s cool.
Mircea Dobre — Baird — Analyst
Yeah.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Next quarter, I’m going to look at slides. All right, go ahead.
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
You’re going to kill that slide, but let’s go ahead.
Mircea Dobre — Baird — Analyst
You’ve got a — you’ve got positive commentary on price cost for DII and DPPS, and just kind of looking through your disclosures in the queue, these were the segments with frankly the smallest pricing gains in the quarter, both of them a little over 1%. So I find that to be a little bit counter-intuitive right, you’ve got less of a pricing tailwind in these two yes you — yet you expect better price cost dynamic. Can you maybe put a finer point on this as to what’s happening with these two?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I think Brad addressed it in an earlier question. Everybody — we don’t do our pricing on January 1st, right. It’s done differently. There’s signaling effect to manage backlogs. So you basically in certain businesses will say, we’re going to do a price increase at the end of Q1, meaning so you lose that clocking period in Q1. So it actually ramps over the balance of the year on the comp. So again it is just a reflection of the timing of those price increases and the age kind of the H1, H2 effect of that.
Mircea Dobre — Baird — Analyst
Okay, got it. Sorry, I missed that. Then I guess my follow up just sort of looking at your order intake, right, in Refrigeration & Food Equipment, Pumps & Process Solutions, in both these segments, you’re running well ahead of what we saw pre-COVID. And I guess my question is, if we’re not talking about some kind of a capex super cycle here, what is really happening with these end markets, and is it fair for us to think that this is sustainable to some degree into 2022 or is there a hangover to be expected here as things normalize? Thank you.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
We see, I think I’ve tried to answer this about 15 different ways. I think that, that backlogs are building which is a reflection of constraints in the system. So I think when we get to next year, it’s going to be an interesting dynamic because as those constraints come down, then lead times are going to come down, which is going to be negative to backlogs to a certain extent. But that I think that Steve asked the question or maybe wrote it earlier today, I think we’re going to get — we got to be careful with absolute backlogs and doing math on it and trying to extrapolate revenues into the future.
I mean, the bottom line is that backlogs build and shrink based on lead times and market conditions and everything else. So could I envision a scenario where backlogs come down, yes. Do I think that’s overly problematic, no, because to a certain extent, that means the headwinds that we have on supply chain logistics are getting better, which is better for margins at the end of the day.
Mircea Dobre — Baird — Analyst
Yeah. So, Rich, to clarify I wasn’t talking about backlog because I totally agree with what you’re saying. I was wondering more about your bookings, right, which have been very, very strong year-to-date even relative to pre-COVID?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, well, look, I mean I think that we are executing really, really well in Pumps & Process Solutions. I mean we made a presentation on that on what we thought was coming at the end of ’20. And look and as I mentioned at the end of Q1, we think that we are in at minimum a three-year cycle of the demand function on DRFE which is positive. And it’s not just — it’s across the board, it’s not just door cases, it’s systems business, it’s SWEP on the heat exchangers and it’s Belvac, all of which we believe are in a multi-year cycle.
Mircea Dobre — Baird — Analyst
Great, thanks for the color.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks.
Operator
Your last question comes from the line of Deane Dray with RBC Capital Markets.
Deane Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Thank you. Good morning, everyone.
Brad M. Cerepak — Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Good morning.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning.
Deane Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Hey, I know we covered a lot of ground here. It came up multiple times about component and labor shortages. So Rich, if you could just take us through like where is it most acute today on the component side, is it semiconductors, printed circuit boards, are you qualifying new suppliers. So that’s the component side, and then on the labor side, any color there, unfilled positions are you expecting a significant step-up in labor costs as this needs to adjust. So take us through that if you could?
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hope boy, well, we’ve got a pretty wide portfolio, I’ll make some general comments about the components. They’re all tied. They are more problematic if they’re large and imported, because if you take a look at what’s going on when the logistics supply chain in the Port of Los Angeles and all that, it is a bloody mess right now, which only impacts a small portion of our portfolio, because as I mentioned in my comments at the end of the day, we think that we are winning in the marketplace because we don’t have a lot of instances of that.
If you’ve got very long supply chains and it’s containerized freight coming out of Asia back to North America to fulfill demand, you are suffering quite frankly. On the labor side, it’s purely in our operations that I have a higher propensity of assembly labor, and for all the reasons that we can understand that’s been difficult. I think it’s not getting worse as we move through the second quarter, which is a good news. So hopefully in September when some of these government influence in terms of the labor market begins to roll off that it will get better and everybody is going to go back to school in September. So our view right now is it’s probably going to remain difficult through August, and I think that we’re hopeful in September that the situation is fine.
Deane Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
That’s really helpful. And then last one for me, just you talked about this last quarter and how did it play out where you said you were going to give the business units more autonomy in managing their own working capital that you gave them the green light, go ahead and build inventory, and I know there were some surprise there because you hadn’t done that before, but how has that worked out, is that going to be a permanent, was that a one-time event just you needed to get in front of this demand, but just some color there would be helpful? Thanks.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
I mean, if the demand holds up then we’ll continue to kind of given that latitude because the absolute profit versus the carrying cost of the working capital, the math works, I guess the best way I can say it. I would expect if we get improvement in the logistics supply chain that it will come down naturally, because that’s what’s really driving it at the end of the day. We’re basically given the green light to everybody of, you’ve got the backlog, don’t be reticent of trying to get the sub components in because we want to convert.
Deane Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
That’s really helpful. Thank you.
Richard J. Tobin — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks. [Operator Closing Remarks]
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