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Lennox International Inc. (LII) Q2 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Lennox International Inc. (NYSE: LII) Q2 2021 earnings call dated Jul. 26, 2021

Corporate Participants:

Steve Harrison — Vice President, Investor Relations

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Joseph W. Reitmeier — Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Jeff Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Ryan Merkel — William Blair — Analyst

Gautam Khanna — Cowen and Company — Analyst

Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst

Tommy Moll — Stephens — Analyst

Nicole DeBlase — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Stephen Volkmann — Jefferies — Analyst

John Walsh — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research Partners — Analyst

Josh Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

Presentation:

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Lennox International Second Quarter Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the conference over to Steve Harrison, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Steve Harrison — Vice President, Investor Relations

Good morning. Thank you for joining us for this review of Lennox International’s financial performance for the second quarter of 2021. I’m here today with Chairman and CEO, Todd Bluedorn; and CFO, Joe Reitmeier. Todd will review key points for the quarter and Joe will take you through the company’s financial performance and outlook for 2021. To give everyone time to ask questions during the Q&A, please limit yourself to a couple of questions or follow-ups and re-queue for any additional questions.

In the earnings release we issued this morning, we have included the necessary reconciliation of the non-GAAP financial measures that will be discussed to GAAP measures. All comparisons mentioned today are against the prior year period. You can find a direct link to the webcast of today’s conference call on our website at www.lennoxinternational.com. The webcast will be archived on the site for replay.

I would like to remind everyone that in the course of this call, to give you a better understanding of our operations, we will be making certain forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to numerous risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from such statements. For information concerning these risks and uncertainties, see Lennox International’s publicly available filings with the SEC. The company disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

Now let me turn the call over to Chairman and CEO, Todd Bluedorn.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Steve. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. In the second quarter, we continue to see strong momentum in our Residential business combined with continued rebound in Commercial and Refrigeration as the overall company set new record highs for revenue and profit. Company revenue was up 32% to new record of $1.24 billion. At constant currency revenue was up 30%. GAAP operating income was up 59% to a record $216 million. GAAP EPS from continuing operations, up 72% to a record $4.51. Total segment profit rose 45% to a record $222 million. Total segment margin expanded 160 basis points of 17.9%. And adjusted EPS from continuing operations rose 54% to a record $4.57.

Looking at the business segment highlights for the second quarter. In Residential, we set new highs for revenue, margin and profit. Residential revenue was up 30% as reported and up 29% at constant currency. Segment profit rose 49% and segment margin expanded 290 basis points to 22.6%. Residential had comparable revenue growth in both replacement and new construction of approximately 30%.

Lennox Brand revenue was up 30% as was our Allied and other brands combined. Broad strength across Residential in the second quarter. Year-over-year comparisons become tougher in the second half, actually started in June. As we previously mentioned, the fourth quarter of 2021 will have a headwind of 6% from fewer days in the prior year quarter, but market demand remains high entering the second half. Our Residential business continues to perform well — perform as well or better than anyone in the market. Looking beyond the second half of the year to 2022 and future years, we remain extremely bullish on the Residential market as we see the residential replacement cycle spinning faster due to shorter equipment life.

We analyzed the actual run time data on air conditioners last year with most — with many people at home due to the pandemic. Adjusted for weather, air conditioners ramped 30% more during the summer season last year. This summer, we may not be getting our run time impact of 30%, but there’s still lot of people working from home and many will continue to work from home full time or like here at Lennox on a flexible schedule a couple days a week. If the run time impact is 20%, that will reduce the medium life of an air conditioner from 15 years to around 12 years.

Another factor is weather and the impact of hotter summers. Our original analysis of air conditioner lifespan the years 2005 through 2015. Since then, for the years 2016 through 2020, weather as measured by average cooling degree days has been 5% hotter in the United States. For 2021, we are still in the middle of summer, but the second quarter was even hotter than last year. Where run time impacts equipment life on a linear basis, hot summers impact equipment life on an exponential basis.

Another reason we are bullish on the residential replacement cycle for the coming years is that there will be more complete HVAC system sales taking place as old R22 Refrigerant systems come into the replacement. For those not familiar with the history, the EPA banned the sale and distribution of equipment using the R22 Refrigerant effective January 1, 2010 and banned the production or import of the R22 Refrigerant effective January 1, 2020. While R22 Refrigerant is still available in the market is significantly more expensive than 410A. In many cases, it is cheaper to replace with the new 410A system, which is also more efficient and comes with the new warranty to repair the old R22 system. This also accelerates replacement cycle. We expect all these dynamics to lead to a strong residential market condition for years ahead. On top of this, Lennox and Allied will be running their proven playbooks for market share gains.

Moving on to our commercial business. Second quarter revenue was up 34% as reported and 33% at constant currency. Segment profit rose 27%. Segment margin was 17.9%, down 100 basis points on the timing of expenses and factory inefficiencies. At constant currency commercial equipment revenue was up more than 30% in the quarter. Within this, replacement revenue was up more than 40% with planned replacement up 50% and emergency replacement up more than 20%. New construction revenue was up high-teens.

Breaking out another way, regional and local business revenue was up more than 20%. National Account equipment revenue was up more than 50% as market continues to rebound and benefit from the pent-up demand created last year. Team won six new National Account equipment customers in the second quarter to a total nine in the first half. On the service side, Lennox National Accounts Services revenue was up more than 30%. VRF revenue was up more than 25%.

In Refrigeration, for the second quarter, revenue was up 37% as reported and 32% at constant currency. North America revenues up more than 30%. Europe Refrigeration revenue was up more than 30% at constant currency. And Europe HVAC revenue was up more than 25% at constant currency. Refrigeration segment margins expanded 90 basis points to 9.1% and segment profit rose 52%.

With a strong performance for the company overall in the second quarter, and outlook for the second half, we have raised 2021 guidance. We now expect the revenue growth of 12% to 16% on a reported basis or 11% to 15% at constant currency. We raised guidance for adjusted EPS from continuing operations to $12.10 to $12.70 for the year. We are raising free cash flow guidance to $400 million for the year and stock repurchase guidance to total $600 million for the year.

Joe will talk about the specifics, but inflationary pressures continue to ratchet up this year. We were seeing headwinds from commodities, components, LIFO adjustments and labor. We’re capturing a higher yield from our first two price increases this year, and now expect $110 million of price benefit from those. In addition, we just announced the third price increase of up to 8% from most of our businesses that is effective September 1. This will yield even more price benefit than the $110 million of guidance provided today. So third price increase is not in our current guidance. This is a special year. Demand is blistering and supply chains are tight at this level of high demand, but the company continues to execute as well or better than anyone in the industry.

One thing to note in regards to our public guidance this year. We have been incrementally moving the earnings outlook up one quarter at a time. Now after the first quarter and again after the second quarter. So our guidance is our guidance. Given the unique uncertainty this year, we are remaining balanced on future guidance.

Lastly, as I’m sure most of you saw, the company announced on July 14 that after 15 years I plan to step down as Chairman and CEO of Lennox International by mid-2022. There’s never a perfect time for transition like this. But with end market strong and the company well positioned for the future with an exceptional management team, hardworking and dedicated employees and the benefit of all the strategic investments we made in product technology and distribution, we think it’s a good time. The board has commenced the search for LII’s next CEO. And I will be here over the next year to ensure a smooth transition. In the interim managing day to day, be assured I’m in the rank punching until the final bell.

Now I’ll turn it over to Joe.

Joseph W. Reitmeier — Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Todd, and good morning, everyone. I’ll provide some additional comments and financial details on the business segments for the quarter, starting with Residential Heating & Cooling. In the second quarter, revenue from Residential Heating & Cooling was a record $838 million, up 30%. Volume was up 27%, price was up 3% and mix was down 1%. Foreign exchange had a positive 1% impact on revenue.

Residential segment profit was a record $190 million, up 49%. Segment margin expanded 290 basis points to a record 22.6%. Residential profit was primarily impacted by higher volume, favorable price, higher factory productivity, sourcing and engineering-led cost reductions, freight savings and favorable foreign exchange. Partial offsets included unfavorable mix, higher commodities, tariffs and warranty costs, distribution investments and higher SG&A, including research and development and information technology investments.

Now turning to our Commercial Heating & Cooling business. In the second quarter, Commercial revenue was $253 million, up 34%. Volume was up 29%, price was flat and mix was up 4%. Foreign exchange had a positive 1% impact to revenue. Commercial segment profit was $45 million, which was up 27%. Segment margin was 17.9%, down 100 basis points. Segment profit was primarily impacted by higher volume and favorable mix. Partial offsets included higher material, distribution, freight, tariffs and other product costs, factory inefficiencies and higher SG&A, including research and development and information technology investments.

In Refrigeration, revenue was $148 million, up 37%. Volume was up 30%, price was up 2% and mix was flat. Foreign exchange had a positive 5% impact to revenue. Refrigeration segment profit was $14 million, up 52% and segment margin was 9.1%, which was up 90 basis points. Segment profit was primarily impacted by higher volume, favorable price in sourcing and engineering-led cost reductions and partial offsets included higher commodity, freight and other product costs and higher SG&A, including research and development and information technology investments.

Regarding special items in the second quarter, the company had net after-tax charges of $2 million that included a charge of $1 million for restructuring activities, a net charge of $3.4 million for various other items in total and a benefit of $2.4 million for excess tax benefits from share-based compensation and other tax items.

Corporate expenses were $27 million in the second quarter compared to $19 million in the prior year quarter, primarily on higher incentive compensation. Overall, SG&A was $168 million compared to $130 million in the prior year quarter. SG&A was down as a percent of revenue to 13.5% from 13.8% in the prior year quarter.

In the second quarter, cash from operations was $192 million, up from $105 million in the prior year quarter. Capital expenditures were $21 million in the second quarter compared to approximately $19 million in the prior year quarter. We generated $170 million — $171 million of free cash flow in the second quarter, up from approximately $87 million in the prior year quarter. The company paid $29 million in dividends in the quarter and repurchased $200 million of stock. The total debt was $1.24 billion at the end of the second quarter, and we ended the quarter with a debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 1.7. Cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments were $47 million at the end of the second quarter.

Now before I turn it over to Q&A, I’ll review our current market assumptions and our updated guidance points for 2021. We now expect the industry to see low-double-digit shipment growth in Residential, Commercial Unitary and Refrigeration markets in North America for the full year, up from our prior assumptions of high-single-digit growth. This is an industry comment including competitors who ship primarily to independent distributors unlike our model.

As previously announced, on July 14, we raised guidance for 2021 revenue growth from 7% to 11% to a new range of 11% to 15% at constant currency. We now expect a one point benefit from foreign exchange for revenue growth of 12% to 16% for the year at actual currency. We raised guidance for 2021 GAAP EPS from continuing operations from $11.33 to $11.93 to a new range of $11.97 to $12.57. And we raised guidance for 2021 adjusted EPS from continuing operations from $11.40 to $12 to a new range of $12.10 to $12.70.

As we previously mentioned, the first quarter of 2021 had a 6% benefit for more days than in the prior year quarter. In the fourth quarter of 2021, we’ll have a headwind of 6% from fewer days than the prior year quarter, as Todd mentioned. For 2022, there are no days differences like this to highlight.

Let me now run through the key points in our guidance assumptions and the puts and takes for 2021. First, for the items that are changing. We now expect a benefit of $110 million from price for the year, up from our prior guidance of a $90 million benefit. The new $110 million price guidance reflects the additional yield we are capturing from our first two price increases this year. In addition, we have announced a third price increase for up to 8% that is effective September 1 for most of our businesses. This will yield a price benefit on top of $110 million we are currently guiding for full year price this year.

Foreign Exchange is now expected to be a $10 million benefit, up from neutral or our previous assumption. And we now expect an effective tax rate of approximately 20% on an adjusted basis for the full year compared to the previous guidance of approximately 21%.

Free cash flow is now targeted to be approximately $400 million for the full year, up from prior guidance of approximately $375 million on strong earnings performance in the first half and our current outlook. We are raising stock repurchase guidance for the year from $400 million, which we completed in the first half to $600 million. For the headwinds from prior guidance, commodities are now expected to be a headwind of $80 million, up from our prior guidance of $55 million. With inflation in components, we are reducing our net savings from sourcing and engineering-led cost reductions to a $5 million benefit, down from prior guidance to be a $15 million benefit.

The higher material costs from inflationary pressures in 2021 are leading to a LIFO accounting adjustment of approximately $15 million this year. Factory productivity is now expected to be a $10 million benefit, down from a $20 million benefit in our prior guidance. And we are now planning for corporate expenses to be $100 million, up from $95 million in our prior guidance, primarily due to higher incentive compensation.

Now for the guidance items that remain the same. We still expect residential mix to be a $10 million benefit. With 30 new Lennox stores planned for this year, our distribution investments are up from last year to a more traditional run rate level, freight is still expected to be a $5 million headwind and tariffs are expected to be a $5 million headwind. We are planning on SG&A to be approximately — up approximately 7% for the year or headwind of approximately $45 million. And within SG&A, we are making investments in R&D and IT for continued innovation and leadership in products, controls, e-commerce and factory automation and productivity.

Now for a few other final guidance points. We still expect net interest and pension expense to be approximately $35 million. We still expect capital expenditures to be approximately $135 million this year, about $30 million of which is for the third plant at our campus in Mexico. We expect construction to be completed by the end of 2021 and to have the plant fully operational by mid-2022, and we expect nearly $10 million in annual savings from the third plant. And finally, we still expect the weighted average diluted share count for the full year to be between 37 million to 38 million shares.

And with that, let’s now go to Q&A.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Jeff Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Hey, good morning, everyone. Todd, first of all, congrats. It’s been a good 15 years together.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I agree.

Jeff Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Just on price. It seems like the numbers you gave for 2Q are kind of low just given the higher yields. And I just wanted to understand how price — you expect price to flow in into the second half, particularly on Commercial?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I mean, I think you’re pulling on the right thread. It steps up when the second price increase in Residential has a bigger bite in the second half of the year than the first half of the year, just sort of the timing of things. But for Commercial and Refrigeration, we got some price in second quarter, but we’ll get significantly more second half of the year. And then as we’ve talked about in the script, there’s a third price increase that’s announced September 1 that won’t have much impact on Commercial and Refrigeration just given the lead times, but it will have a material impact for Residential. And that’s not currently in the guide, we’re still sort of framing exactly what that will look like and we’ll update it on after the third quarter call.

Jeff Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Okay. And then just your inventory levels look a little bit low for the season and the demand. Just talk about your ability to kind of keep up with demand and where you’d kind of frame inventory levels here as you go into this second half?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

We’ve been transparent about this from the beginning. I think the entire industry is facing challenges. I think all corporate America is facing challenges with integrated circuits, with steel, with lots of things that we’re buying. But when we talk to our customers and our suppliers to one thing that we’re confident on, and we see our own share position, so we know we’re gaining share. We’re doing as well or better than anyone in the industry. Look, we’d like to have more inventory right now. So you see that in the numbers, and that’s clear. We’d like to have more product. And if we did, we’d probably sell more.

Jeff Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst

Okay. Thanks a lot, Todd.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ryan Merkel with William Blair. Please go ahead.

Ryan Merkel — William Blair — Analyst

Hey, thanks. So first off, Todd, you mentioned the resi replacement cycle spinning faster and you gave us some nice data points. Can you just speak to how much this will increase HVAC demand annually? And what I’m trying to do is just trying to judge how impactful these changes are.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think the most important metric that I gave is if you think the unit life goes from on average 15 to 12. So in other words, the curve I always show, shifts to the left by three years. What that does is it all doesn’t come into the market in one year, but in essence, what you’re doing is creating all this demand that spreads out I think over a multi-year period. And I haven’t specifically called it out because from what — what I was trying to introduce is just a very explicit point that the traditional way you guys and us, not you personally, Ryan, but the analysts have viewed it and the industry has viewed it as a very traditional boom echo analysis when were the units put in place during the housing boom, how old are they and how long do they last. And so we’re introducing some new variables that are real, we’ve measured them.

And so when it spins and you take three years off the life or 30% off the life or 20% off the life, then all of a sudden you’re creating much more demand over a five or six year period is sort of our best guess of how it will play out. So that’s we are confident of what we’ve been publicly saying that this a mid-single-digit growth market for years and that we’re not afraid of a cliff.

Ryan Merkel — William Blair — Analyst

Got it. Okay. Makes sense. And then second question, you raised revenues all year, but EBIT margins for the second half have come down. Just what explains this if you were to rank order them? I think price cost may be first, but just clarify that if you would?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think it’s inflationary pressures from components and commodities. I think it is the tightness of the supply chain that leads itself to productivity issues in the factories. We’re running overtime and sort of mixing up shifts to be able to juggle things. And then I think the third thing is it doesn’t incorporate the third price increase yet. So I don’t think we get all the way back to 30% incrementals, but I think as the price increase spikes and timing of some SG&A, I think it will look better than what’s out there now.

Ryan Merkel — William Blair — Analyst

Got it. All right, thanks. I’ll pass it on.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Gautam Khanna with Cowen. Please go ahead.

Gautam Khanna — Cowen and Company — Analyst

Yeah. Hey, thank you, and congrats, Todd. I know you’re here for another year, but…

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Gautam Khanna — Cowen and Company — Analyst

It’s always been a pleasure to work with you. We’re going to miss you.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I feel like I’m Tom Sawyer at his funeral. I said I feel like I’m Tom Sawyer at his funeral, if you’ve ever read Tom Sawyer. But go ahead.

Gautam Khanna — Cowen and Company — Analyst

Yes. No, I totally get it. Hey, I was just going to ask on the National Account, business was up quite a bit. I was wondering if you had any updates to your thoughts on how quickly commercial deferred replacement picks up, catches up?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I stand by my current view. It’s a year and a half to two years. That’s what I saw after 9/11 when I was a carrier. That’s what I saw after the financial crisis that commercial companies or commercial buyers — National Accounts better stayed at deferred planned replacement. And for a year or 15 months and they’ve now turned it back on. And they don’t do it all immediately, they don’t even do it on a year to 18 months to two years. So I think we have a nice tailwind in commercial.

Gautam Khanna — Cowen and Company — Analyst

Okay. Thank you. And then just another one on resi. Last quarter we asked about competitors and their ability to supply and if that’s benefiting Lennox in terms of share pick up. Do you have an update on that? An updated view on weather some of your competitor — you’re hearing in the channel that some of the competitors are just not able to get product and that’s conferring them outsized benefit to LII?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think the answer is, all the major competitors have one issue or another because we’re all the same, same supply chain. Trane had an issue with their Tyler tire factory. Goodman’s had issues in Houston. So I think it’s all the challenge. What unfortunately happens in this type of environment if some of the sort of lower end brands, people like Nordyne, maybe people like Green have a little bit of advantage because they’re able to pick up share they hadn’t before. We’re gaining share. We’re quite frankly not gaining as much share as we could if we had more product, but we’re gaining share, and I don’t think it’s one competitor, I think it depends on the marketplace. And I think what competitors are doing are protecting certain marketplaces and certain distributors. So I assume Carrier is protecting Watsco as best as they can where some of their other distributors aren’t being protected as much.

Gautam Khanna — Cowen and Company — Analyst

Great. Thank you. And Todd, one last one. Just what are your current views on consolidation in the HVAC industry? The likelihood of it? And what might actually drive it if there is the catalyst? Because we’ve been talking about it for a long time, but not a whole lot has happened. Just curious if you have any views there?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I’ll answer the question more broadly, but I’ll directly narrow the question. I think there was. Why I read all the things you guys write, and some of the notes were talking about whether my announcement had any impact on consolidation or somebody suggested it might. I don’t think it matter one way or another what I’m doing on industry consolidation.

In terms of the pre-condition for industry consolidation, I think it’s either someone is willing to pay the Lennox premium to buy us, which I don’t think they will or need to or whatever. I think the other way would be if someone who is in the business decides to get out and it’s hard to imagine that happens when resi is going as well as it is. So I’ve been very adamant over the years that someone like JCI is a commercial player and isn’t getting the full value out of the residential business, but they feel differently. And so it’s up to them to make a decision or anyone else.

Gautam Khanna — Cowen and Company — Analyst

Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Julian Mitchell with Barclays. Please go ahead.

Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst

Thanks a lot. Good morning.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Hey, Julian.

Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst

Maybe one question around the margin outlook. So I just wanted to double check. You’re sort of dialing in a sort of mid-20s incremental margin for the year as a whole. And so if margins are down sort of 100 bps plus year-on-year in the back half, is that roughly the right way to think about it?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I was trying to be a little cuter than that. I think if you take our guide, it’s a hair lower than that. And then I was signaling that we had some additional upside versus the guide because of the price increase that it was south of 30, but north of low-20s. So I think you’re probably in the right zip code.

Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst

Perfect. Thank you. And then just on the Commercial business specifically, you had the margin headwind year-on-year in the second quarter. Just wondered, maybe some more background on what’s behind that? And what do you think happens to those Commercial margins in the back half?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

There was a couple of things that — well, three things that impacted Commercial. Two of them impacted all the businesses, but one was sort of unique. One was just the timing of expenses, incentive comp and some SG&A expenses of when they happened this year versus the prior year. And in a business that size, you have a couple of those happen, it can sort of hurt the margins. But the other sort of maybe more important points are the things I’ve spoken about, which is, inflationary pressures and their inability to get price during the quarter because they had a larger backlog what was already priced down, they’ll start to get priced second half of the year in a better way. And then the inefficiencies due to — in our factories due to shortage of supply and labor shortages at our Stuttgart facility. So those are sort of all the things that led to lower margins. I expect it to have a better performance for the — or we expect to have a performance for the balance of the year.

Julian Mitchell — Barclays — Analyst

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Tommy Moll with Stephens. Please go ahead.

Tommy Moll — Stephens — Analyst

Good morning, and thanks for taking my questions.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Of course, Tommy.

Tommy Moll — Stephens — Analyst

Todd, I wanted to start by following up on your commentary on the replacement cycle potentially bringing the asset life in three years give or take. You referenced some run time data that you come through, but I just was curious if there is any more detail you could offer there in terms of the method or any surprises you came across that seems pretty straightforward, but anything else you could offer there would be helpful?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I think we did it the way, Tommy, you might have thought we did, but I’ll say it for others. I mean, we have iComfort on a lot of our units and tens of thousands of units and we have access to the run times. So we were able to go in region-by-region. Not quite zip code by zip code, but region-by-region. Adjust for the weather. Make sort of other adjustments we thought were appropriate. And then we’re able to come up with the average run time of the units on a year-over-year basis. And that was sort of around at say 30%, it’s plus or minus 30%, but right around 30%. And then I did some Kentucky windage by just saying, it’s probably not going to be that on an ongoing basis because we won’t have as many people working from home as we did last year.

So I just said, say it’s 20% instead of 30%. And that should have fell at least from the world that I’m living in because we still have a lot of people working at home and we will continue to have people working at home even we get to the other side of this. And that’s where the 20% came from and then 20% times 15 gets you 3 — 15 minus 3 gets you 12. And then I just sort of rolled into it to say, the weather is 5% warmer the last three or four years than it was when we originally came up with a 15-year data point. And that 5% weather has a higher impact in just saying you reduced the life cycle by 5%. And so I didn’t even try and quantify it, but it’s sort of exponential in nature. So it’s sort of somewhere between 5% and 10%, maybe closer to 10% from having 5% warmer weather, and that’s sort of in the mix also.

So I wanted, as I repeating myself, just to introduce the concept of very traditional way of saying, okay, how many units were installed in 2006 and we’re 15 years forward, so that means it goes to zero. That’s not the way to look at this. And I think we all knew that there are other variables in play because it doesn’t explain what’s been happening in the market for the last couple of years. The Bears have been predicting resi turning for a while now and they’ve been wrong. And the reason they’re wrong we think are these new variables.

Tommy Moll — Stephens — Analyst

Thank you, Todd. That’s helpful. Wanted to follow-up on price. So you’ve pushed two increases through, you got another one announced for the fall. Just interested to hear you confirm, I think that you’ve yet to see any kind of gamesmanship across the industry, it seems pretty consistent across the group. There is no one trying to steal share with a little bit of price in this environment. And then if you think downstream, just in terms of customers, has there been any push back at all or does it feel like at least for your Lennox brands that your customers have been pretty easily pass it along ultimately to the homeowner?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, I think short answer is, they can absolutely pass it on right now. In fact, if we had more units, I think we get price of whatever we wanted and many people would pay. On the competitor side, Carrier announced up to 8% effective September 1; AAON 5% effective September 1; Trane 7% effective August 7; Daikin 4% to 5% effective August 1; JCI 6% to 13% effective July 19. So we’re all in the pool together.

And then I think the other point I would make — and we’re not talking about 2022 yet or 2023 yet. I remind everyone, and you know this Tommy, but the way this industry works is you this inflationary shock with commodities. And granted this is different than I think we’ve seen before, but you have inflationary shock with commodities. And then when the inflationary pressure abates, you never past a price back.

And so we’re sort of roughly keeping up this year, although a little bit of a lag in second quarter, but full year we’ll be roughly in line. But then in the out years, if you think cold-rolled steel which was $600 a ton 18 months ago and is now over $1,800 a ton, you think it’s going to pull back at some point. When that happens, we won’t give the price back or if you think copper is closer to 3 than the 450, we don’t get the price back. And so there’s going to be an out year whether it’s ’22 or ’23 where all that’s going to come back to us and we’ll still hang on to the price. And so, again, that’s why I feel good about the trajectory of the business and the business model.

Tommy Moll — Stephens — Analyst

Thanks, Todd. I’ll turn it back.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Tommy.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Volkmann with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Why don’t you go to someone else, operator?

Operator

Thank you. Next we’ll go to the line of Nicole DeBlase with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

Nicole DeBlase — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Hi. Thanks, guys. Good morning, and congrats to Todd.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Hi, Nicole, and thanks.

Nicole DeBlase — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

So I think you guys — you mentioned in the press release, Todd, there were some unfavorable mix dynamics in resi. Can you just talk about that a little bit and the expectation for mix over the next few quarters?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

The biggest mix issue on resi is just that we’ve been able to produce more product out of the Saltillo factory, which is more entry-level product. And so as we’ve been production constrained, we’ve been able to get more out of the Saltillo. And that’s quite frankly due to the supply base in Mexico being able to stay with us longer than the supply base in the U.S. has done. So that’s the major reason. And then the other reason is sort of the mix of the customers and just some of the customers that we were selling to had a slightly lower mix. But overall, good quarter for resi. And so I wouldn’t be concerned about the Mexico.

Nicole DeBlase — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Got it. Thanks, Todd. That’s really helpful. And then I don’t think you’d commented on this in the prepared remarks, but you typically do like order activity in Commercial and Refrigeration. And I’d be curious like how long the backlog goes out now? Like are you booking into 2022?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. We’re not quite booking into 2022. I mean, because if we did, we’d be in big, big trouble. I mean, typically what you do or typically what we’ve seen in this business and our Commercial businesses is, entering a quarter we’re about half the quarter in backlog and half we book and ship. And so if we were quoting into next year, we’d be like the integrated circuit guys, we’d have long lead times, but no one would buy from. So we don’t have that yet.

I didn’t get into the order rates and the backlog just because there is sort of silly high numbers because of where we were last year at this time. But the answer is, the momentum in Commercial and Refrigeration remained strong. And what I’ve said about Commercial having another year and a half to two years of strength is absolutely true. And to a lesser degree, but still the same directional point is true in Refrigeration. So order rates and backlogs are extremely strong in both businesses.

Nicole DeBlase — Deutsche Bank — Analyst

Got it. Thank you. I’ll pass it on.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from the line of Joe Ritchie with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Thank you. Good morning, guys, and then congratulations, Todd.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Joe.

Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

So Todd, maybe I want to focus just maybe one question on the announcement. I know that from my vantage point, I was a little surprised and a lot of folks that I spoke to were also surprised a little bit by the timing because there wasn’t necessarily a successor in place. So I guess, anything that you can kind of tell us around what influence your decision, whatever you’re comfortable disclosing? Just any thoughts around the timing would be helpful?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, in some ways it’s — and I don’t want to offend anyone who has elderly grandparents, but it’s sort of like I had a 93-year-old grandfather who died and I was shocked that he died. And what I mean by that is, I’ve been at LII for 15 years. That’s a long time. And I’m ready for a change. And I think the company — in fact, I know the company, the board wanted to me to stay. But in some ways, I think this shelf life want a CEO in 15 years maybe it. My hands are firmly on the wheel and I’m going to keep running the business like I do every day until the day I leave.

As we mentioned in the press release, I’m stepping down to create a better balance between my personal and professional life, but I’m not done with my career. I like to think of myself as young-ish, if not young, and have lots of energy. And I plan to do something more entrepreneurial, maybe private equity, maybe venture capital, but something. Now there’s never a perfect time to make this kind of transition, I get that. But this is a good time to begin the transition with a strong market condition and the company well positioned for growth and higher profitability. And now that I’ve announced that the board conduct — the board can conducted open search for the right person. And the year of transition that I’ve committed to ensures that the process is not rushed and that there will be a smooth transition.

Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Got it. No, that’s super helpful, and thanks for that detail. And I guess, maybe my follow on question and just focused on how you guys have now characterize what the resi replacement cycle looks like. The commentary around R22 is interesting, I’m curious when you guys did your in-depth analysis, how much is left from an installed base perspective on R22? I’m just trying to understand that opportunity as the potential upgrade cycle over the next few years.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

That’s a very good question, Joe. I don’t have it at my fingertips. We’ll get it out publicly. I think it’s in the HRI data, but we’ll pull it out. And again, those who have sort of been ingrained in the story for years may remember 2011, there was a huge dry run — excuse me, a dry charge phenomenon that had a huge impact on the year. Those are all R22 condensing units that were put in place. And so even past 2010 there were units being placed into the market that were R22. And again, the bell shaped curve of those units that were being put in place where 15 — ignoring the heat comments and the run time comments that I gave at the old 15 midpoint, the right side of that bell shaped curve is going to get cut off because not even we’d be able to do sort of traditional repairs because if you lose the chart, it’s prohibitively expensive. But I understand the question, Joe. We’ll get that data and put it out to you guys.

Joe Ritchie — Goldman Sachs — Analyst

Got it. That’s helpful. Thanks again.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Next we’ll go to the line of Stephen Volkmann with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Stephen Volkmann — Jefferies — Analyst

Great. We’ll try this again. Can you hear me?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, sure can.

Stephen Volkmann — Jefferies — Analyst

Sorry, I don’t know what happened last time. Just a couple of quick follow-ups, if you will. You talked about that replacement sort of spinning faster, Todd. Any similar thoughts or analysis you’ve done on the Commercial side?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

No, we haven’t. In part because emergency replacements in Commercial is 30%, 40% of the market. As important is the planned replacement, which really isn’t broadly impacted by that and then the new construction. And again, sort of the major driver of resi is people being at home. I don’t think there is a negative, — I’m maybe not answering your question better. I don’t think there is a negative reciprocal of that, if that’s right way to phrasing it for Commercial, waste unitary commercial. Maybe for high-rise office space, but we don’t play there. But retail has been running, restaurants have been running. And whether you have one person shopping or 1,000 people shopping, you’re still running the unit. So I don’t think there is a negative implication to Commercial.

Stephen Volkmann — Jefferies — Analyst

Okay, great. And then I’m curious about your commentary around heat and more degree days, etc. It seems like a lot of that’s been focused on the northern part of the U.S. recently where there may actually be still some penetration opportunity. Do you have any view on that?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think that’s true. I mean, that’s not worked into our point of view, but that’s quite frankly throwing another log on fire, right? I didn’t know this number so I’ll quote it from an article I read that said in the Northwest, it’s about 40% penetration of installed HVAC. They have many more 100 degree summer days. I think that’s going to head higher than 40%. So that’s clearly an opportunity for us moving forward also.

Stephen Volkmann — Jefferies — Analyst

Okay. I appreciate it. Thanks.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Next we’ll go to the line of John Walsh with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.

John Walsh — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Hi, good morning, everyone.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Hey, John.

John Walsh — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Maybe just a quick one on the unitary, right. I mean, if you look at peak K-12, unitary makes up a good amount of that installed base. We talked a lot about kind of the corporate accounts. But what are you seeing there on the education verticals? And is this stimulus we’ve all been reading about is that actually flowing through? And are you seeing it?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

We’re seeing some flow through, but it’s a long — in a normal case, that’s a long gestation period for schools. I mean, the decision making is slower and it’s obviously more of a board decision than an individual decision. And then lay on top of that the overlay of this money coming and what’s the money going to be spent on, who has decision rights on the money. That’s a little slower than we would like it to be. But I remain really confident that slightly less than 10% of our unitary business is K-12, and that’s going to be a growth market going forward.

John Walsh — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Great. And then a lot of discussion around the margins, and I appreciate you guys obviously don’t give quarterly guidance, but Q4 on the Residential business, the margin the last couple of years you haven’t kind of seen that normal step down sequentially from Q3 to Q4. I mean, one year you had the insurance recoveries, last year was really strong. I mean, I’m just curious, what do you — how are you thinking about it in your guidance that you gave us today? I mean, are you expecting a normal step down or how do we think about that, the seasonality in the back half? Just what’s in your guide?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, I don’t know if I’ll directly answer the question. But I think the one thing to sort of weight into any thinking is going to be, we have 6% fewer days in the quarter. And so that creates headwind, not only on revenue, but yeah, you cannot absorb all the cost, you have more factory fixed cost fall to the bottom line. And so having 6% less days in the fourth quarter, everything else speed equal, will have a negative impact on margins.

John Walsh — Credit Suisse — Analyst

Yeah. No, okay. Makes sense. Thank you for taking the questions.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Next we’ll go to the line of Jeff Sprague with Vertical Research. Please go ahead.

Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research Partners — Analyst

Hey, thanks. Good morning, everyone. Hey, Todd, just a couple from me. First on price. Understand with things so fluid you don’t really want to dial this in your guide. but maybe just give us a little bit more color on how the market responded to the first two price increases? Obviously, we’ve got the number for the year now, you gave us, but are you worried about us being accepted? There is some mix down that might result? Just want to understand why you actually don’t want to include it in the guide, because I assume you’re including the inflationary pressures in the guide?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think in part we didn’t — I’ll be very transparent is, we made the — we came out early with the earnings because of my announcement, and we came out with the guide. And then between that time — and we were finalizing the price increase, the third price increase, but we had made a decision. We made a decision shortly after the announcement. We announced it and we’re going to implement it September 1. And then I just thought it was a little cute to have a guide two weeks ago and then change it today. And so I just thought we’ll just leave it where it’s at. Being very transparent that it’s out there and that we’ll touch it up at the end of the third quarter.

The first part of your question is, just on the first two price increases, we had been guiding that we’re going to get 90. Now we’re guiding we’re going to get 110. So I think that answers the question how it’s being accepted. It’s being accepted and we’re able to pass it on, and it’s sticking. And again, the fact that our competitors have announced third price increases across the board. And quite frankly, actually struggled in econ, which I shouldn’t admit as a CEO. But the one thing I remember in the econ is, if demand is high and supply is down, I think price should go up, and that’s what the industry is doing.

Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research Partners — Analyst

Absolutely. On the replacement thing, yeah, we all know we can make this seamless more realistic in an Excel spreadsheet than it is in real life, for sure. But I’m just wondering how much of this pull forward do you think might have already happened, right? Because again, if we do go back to the Excel spreadsheet, one complication we have is 12 years ago was actually the ’09, ’10, ’11 trough when there weren’t many units being shipped. So just wonder if you could tell from that data, has this pull forward already happened? Is it in progress or do you think it’s still in front of us?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Well, I think it’s — I don’t think it’s already happened. I think it’s probably already started because last summer already started and the units running more has already started, but I think it’s a large part in front of us. And again, I’m not validating all these numbers, I’m just — I’m validating the 30% and I’m validating the 5% warmer. But sort of guessing a 20% reduction on an ongoing basis, that’s just a swag, use your own number. But if it goes from 15 to 12, a 20% reduction means a 20% of full year’s production sort of gets moved, and that’s not happening in one year. I mean, that’s not what this year is about. This year is about scarcity of demand and distributors buying a lot of units to protect themselves I think that’s what this year is about. And so I’m a broken record on this, Jeff, as you know, but now I’m putting some math around my opinion that I think we got multiple years of mid-single-digit growth in resi.

Jeff Sprague — Vertical Research Partners — Analyst

Right, understood. Thanks a lot.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Josh Pokrzywinski with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Josh, that wasn’t even the same zip code as your name. Are you there, Josh? Operator, he was offended on how you pronounced his name, he hung up. So can you bring someone else, please.

Operator

He’s here? Thank you.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

He’s here? Are you there, Josh.

Josh Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst

Can you hear me?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I can, Josh. Go ahead.

Josh Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst

Excellent. Yeah, I think we were a few eastern bloc countries off on the pronunciation there, but I’ve probably heard worse. So Todd, I guess, on the this whole kind of replacement cycle stuff, you know I have as much excel time in that as anyone new eyes have opinions on that over the years. But the — I just want to make sure I’m understanding this right. This is assuming like 20% kind of higher home usage for [Technical Issue] is the die already cast?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

No, I think it will be to sort of get the full benefit of going from 15 to 12 forever than it’s 20%. There was a year when they ran 30% warm. I know that is a fact. So that die is already cast. There have been four years that the weather is 5% hotter than what we built in the model, that’s already cast. And then other than Morgan Stanley and J.P. Morgan, I think most companies are letting people stay at home as we get through the pandemic. And so decide whether people are going to work 50% flex time at home or 60% flex time at home, at Lennox, it’s going to be 40% flex time at home for most of our employees. So it’s somewhere south of 30 greater than zero that the units are going to run more, and I think that’s here to stay.

Josh Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst

Got it. Yeah, I may need you to write me adopters note on that work from home policy. And then on the part side of the equation, yeah, I’m sure you saw Watsco had pretty healthy growth on the equipment side as well as parts. Do you guys clearly have a window into that as well with PartsPlus stores? Did you see kind of proportionate growth, any observations on repair versus replace? I would imagine there’s probably a bit more replace than usual, but I don’t want to make it sound like it’s overloaded to one side.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

No. I mean, equipment grew faster than parts did for us in the quarter, but we had strong growth rates in both.

Josh Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst

Got it. And then just last one, if you don’t mind. On the price cost equation, I mean, we can all sort of look at steel costs and copper and aluminum and sort of play the hedging game, which never really ever works, so I gave up on that. But there is a lot of inflation out there that kind of falls outside the commodities, whether it’s labor or logistics. How does that visibility look like? Is that getting worse or better? And then how do you think your ability to kind of price that into the marketplace versus other kind of material inflation trends over time?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. I mean, I would think about it this way. We typically get $25 million, $30 million of engineering sourcing-led cost reductions a year. And that’s always a net number, that’s after all the price increases we get. And this year we’re calling it out of $5 million. So what you should take from that is that we’re having $20 million or so more price increases on components that we bought from others along with the $80 million of steel along with the $15 million LIFO, and all that’s being offset by $110 million of price we’ve already gotten plus the third price increase that we’re going to have in fourth quarter.

So I think we’re offsetting it this year. We’re not offsetting it and still getting the margin percentage. But then as I said earlier, those things will turn. And when they turn, we won’t get the price back, but all of a sudden, we’ll have our engineering-led cost reduction instead of being a normal $25 million, $30 million because all the commodity price increases that we took for motors and compressors and everything else we have we’ll get those reduced. And so we’ll a year where we’ll have a blow out cost reduction year plus commodities will decline plus we’ll hang on the price. And so we’re sort of having lower margins in normal this year, but then there will be a year or two where margin percentage will be higher than the 30% because of the things I just said.

Josh Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst

Crystal clear. I appreciate it.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Steve Tusa with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

Hey, good morning.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Hey, Steve.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

Congrats on like really an epic run. Great grassroots turnaround, fantastic market outgrowth. And there is all the credit in the world to enjoy whatever you do next. So congrats.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks. I appreciate it.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

And you’re a good guy. I think you’re really a good guy.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

So I — but I think I kind of disagree on a lot of the numbers, and I just kind of wanted to dig in a little bit, I was a poli sci major. So Mark Twain and fancy macro econ stuff wasn’t my suit. But how do you — how did you validate the 30% again? You said on a few thousand Lennox units that you have visibility into.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, exactly. We can track the units. So we have — in our dealer portal when the homeowner signs up for it, we can track the run hours on units. So we’re able to go in on our installed base and do it region-by-region so that we can adjust for weather. So it wasn’t just sort of, okay, we have 20,000 units, how much did they run? We go region-by-region not quite zip code by zip code and understand how long the units were running. I got detailed analysis, detailed spreadsheets, we went through and looked at it. And then we’re able to say what we expected, which is people are at home more, they’re running the units more. And then we calibrated it and it came out a lower number. But we looked at how much energy usage went up at homes and that’s just a high level macro number. And for the full year, it was up about 10%, 15%. And so that’s sort of said, okay, we’re in the right zip code and we would expect air conditioners in the summer to run longer because people are at home. The furnaces, you’re going to still sort of have it at roughly the set point in the winter time because you don’t want it to go down. So again, my commentary is about air conditioners running 30% more, and we feel pretty good about it.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

What was the sample size of that again?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I don’t know off the top of my head.

Joseph W. Reitmeier — Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

It’s about 150,000, Todd.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So small number, only 150,000.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

And are those — what do you think the installed base is for the industry?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think you could figure that out on your own, right? So look at an annual number, multiply it times 15, that’s probably the installed base.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

And then I thought you guys had said it was 16 years, but obviously there was a kind of a curve around that. But I feel like in the last couple of years of the housing echo boom discussion that you guys — it was more of a 16 year number you threw out there.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think I was rounding because there is a mean — sometimes we talk mean, sometimes we talk mode, but say at 16. So it goes from 16 to 13.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

Okay. Got it. And just on the — I think the last thing you talked about was this has been — you try to figure out what’s been happening in the last couple of years. I mean, when I look at your data, you guys were down kind of coming into COVID. You guys really weren’t growing very much. I know that there was the 18 year that was kind of like messed up, but the industry was I think down kind of heading into COVID. It was at least weak, kind of in the low-single-digit range. So I mean, isn’t the strength just really the last 12 months? Like how are you so confident that like what happened during COVID is really something that we kind of like need to dig into and figure out like how this has changed kind of a decade plus long type of discussion we’ve been having for the last few years?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I’m not a poli sci major, I’m electrical engineer and I look at the data. And everything I know about the data tells me two things. How long you run the unit impacts, how long it lasts and how hot the weather is because in a spike up in temperature it’s an exponential impact on how long the unit last. And so the question that we asked — been asking ourselves is there has to be an impact of people staying at home. We’ve been talking about that for a year and a half. And I think it’s — I think you have to take the new facts into consideration. We all are — and as things are changing.

And so we looked at the data and the data said 150,000 units are being run longer, and that fits with all my anecdotal evidence. We talked to dealers, talked to my family members, my own freaking home. So it made sense they’re running longer. And if they’re running longer, they’re going to break sooner. And then I step back. I know J.P. Morgan is coming back to work, but they’re not going to change 100% and neither is Apple and neither is Dell and neither is a lot of other companies. And so it’s pretty clear to me that the phenomenon is going change. Now it may change back in five years, but it’s there and it’s going to have an impact.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

But I guess my point is — sorry, last point on this because I think it’s a really interesting discussion obviously. It’s really been only the last 12 months. So like I just struggled to kind of read into something that’s happened in a pretty abnormal time period over the last 12 months, and you said, look, it’s 20% or whatever it is. I mean, your average sales have been up 20% for the last 12 months. So like why haven’t we just kind of experienced that and why are we making this out to be something that’s been a trend for two or three years that we have to figure out? I mean, again, I haven’t really been as bearish on the market in the last three to four years, but the math.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

I think you’re misstating what I’m saying. I’m saying two things. I think the weather has been warmer over the last three or four years. I think the units over the last 18 months because the pandemic started in March of 2021 — excuse me, 2020. Units for the last 18 months have been running, pick your number, 20%, 30% longer, and that’s going to have an impact on the life cycle of the product. And then you ask yourself, is that going to continue. And the answer is yes.

I mean, I sort of extrapolated. If we work — if we were talking about Buick’s, and we said, the entire country moved 20% further from their workplace, I’m going to put 20% more miles on the Buick, would the units break faster, we’d say of course they would, and that’s what we’re seeing in HVAC. I mean, and again, we can — it’s been 18 months I’m trying to get the answers what’s going on. The world is changing quickly, Steve. And so we can wait another three years to come out with numbers, but I’m telling you what’s happening now.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

Right, right. Very, very helpful. Just one last one. Any color on — you gave us kind of the day’s impact in 4Q. Any color on just high level what you expect the industry to grow in 3Q? Maybe what you’re seeing so far in the first few days of July?

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

We continue to do well. Demand is strong. The industry call, we call this full year, which is up — low-double-digits, and let’s see how it plays out. Again, I think the variable that’s unaccounted for in my mind is those who are selling exclusively to independent distribution, as I’ve said, are going to hit a cliff before we do. And so I don’t know what they see that will impact the industry more than what we do because we’re a little less than 20% of it. Question is what’s the other 80% who are selling to independent distribution do, because they’re going to hit a cliff before we do.

Steve Tusa — J.P. Morgan Securities — Analyst

Great. Thanks for all the color. I appreciate it, Todd. Congrats again.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, thanks.

Operator

Thank you. There are no further questions in the queue. I’ll turn it back to the speaker for closing comments.

Todd M. Bluedorn — Chairman & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, operator. To wrap up, we raised guidance for revenue, profit, free cash flow and stock repurchases for this year. Demand remains extremely strong and the company is doing as well or better than anyone in the market. We look forward to the second half and continued strong market conditions in 2022 and beyond. Thanks everyone for joining us.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

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