Pentair PLC (PNR) Q1 2020 earnings call dated Apr. 30, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Jim Lucas — Senior Vice President, Treasurer and Investor Relations
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Mark C. Borin — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Joshua Charles Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Jeffrey David Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
Brian K. Lee — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Joseph Craig Giordano — Cowen and Company — Analyst
Andrew Alec Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
Saree Emily Boroditsky — Jefferies — Analyst
Deane Michael Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Nathan Hardie Jones — Stifel — Analyst
Scott Graham — Rosenblatt Securities — Analyst
Julian C.H. Mitchell — Barclays Bank — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to Pentair’s First Quarter Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to hand the conference over to Mr. Jim Lucas. Please go ahead, sir.
Jim Lucas — Senior Vice President, Treasurer and Investor Relations
Thanks, Shelby, and welcome to Pentair’s First Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. We’re glad you can join us today. I’m Jim Lucas, Senior Vice President, Treasurer and Investor Relations. And with me today is John Stauch, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Mark Borin, our Chief Financial Officer. On today’s call, we will provide details on our first quarter 2020 performance as outlined in this morning’s press release. Before we begin, let me remind you that any statements made about the company’s anticipated financial results are forward-looking statements subject to future risks and uncertainties, such as the risks outlined in Pentair’s most recent Form 10-Q, Form 10-K and today’s press release. Forward-looking statements included herein are made as today, and the company undertakes no obligation to update publicly such statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances. Actual results could differ materially from anticipated results. Today’s webcast is accompanied by a presentation, which can be found in the Investor Relations section of Pentair’s website. We will reference these slides throughout our prepared remarks. Any reference to non-GAAP financials are reconciled in the appendix of the presentation. We will be sure to reserve time for questions and answers after our prepared remarks. I would like to request that you limit your questions to one and a follow-up in order to ensure everyone an opportunity to ask their questions. I will now turn the call over to John.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Jim, and good morning, everyone. Please turn to slide number four titled Executive Summary. This is certainly a historic time that we are experiencing in the last few months have tried the patients in the entire world and Pentair. I would like to extend my sincerest sympathies to all that have suffered lost during this horrific global pandemic. I want to also thank all of our employees, their continued efforts to stay safe and protect each other. We’re taking care of our customers, and we continue to focus on delivering the best financial results possible. I also want to take a moment to thank our COVID-19 crisis response team for all of their efforts to respond to this global challenge and a very special thank you to all of our manufacturing employees for their tremendous commitment to our customers and to Pentair. They truly represent the spirit of our culture, and I appreciate their dedication, their courage and their contributions to the first quarter results. We were very pleased to deliver adjusted EPS for the quarter that was above the high end of our prior guidance range. Inclusive of the challenges from COVID-19 that initially impacted our business in China earlier in the quarter and then globally toward the end of the quarter.
We also recently announced that key hires for CFO and for our previously announced segment structure. First, I would like to welcome Bob Fishman, who will become CFO tomorrow, May 1, as part of an orderly transition from Mark Borin, who previously announced he would be leaving Pentair for another opportunity. Bob joins Pentair after a long successful career at NCR, where he was essential part of the company’s transformation from a hardware and systems manufacturer into a software and services provider. We also announced the hiring of Mario D’Ovidio to lead our Consumer Solutions segment. Mario joins us most recently from Electrolux and brings a strong background from several consumer-influenced businesses focused on multiple channels. Mario will bring a growth mindset and a sense of urgency to our Consumer Solutions businesses. Jerome Pedretti, who has been with Pentair for nearly 15 years, will lead our Industrial & Flow Technologies segment. Jerome has held experiences at Pentair and has proven himself as a developer of talent. He also embraces our PIMS processes and culture and will utilize his experiences to improve the operating capabilities of the Industrial & Flow Technologies businesses.
Finally, we announced the elimination of the COO role, and that Karl Frykman will help oversee an orderly transition with Mario, and will also work with me through the end of the year as a special adviser. I would like to personally thank Karl for his leadership and partnership over the years. Turning back to market demands. While we formally withdrew our quarter and annual guidance at the end of March due to a lack of visibility, we are planning for significantly reduced demand throughout the remainder of 2020. We do not have clarity at this time around the potential impacts to each of our lines of business or when the markets will recover. Because of lack of clarity, we are taking appropriate actions to adjust our cost structure while still keeping a focus on the longer term as we expect that demand will eventually return for most of our businesses. Finally, we are focused on maintaining a strong liquidity position. Pentair has a long track record of being a strong cash flow generator, and our balance sheet is in a solid position. We understand that the remainder of the year will be a challenge to bring uncertainty. However, we believe that our strong operating culture and well-positioned businesses will eventually prevail over this pandemic and its impacts on the economy. Please turn to slide five labeled COVID-19 Update and Focus. Our focus has been and will continue to be on the safety and well-being of our employees while also being mindful of serving customer demand to the best of our abilities. Our business in China and Southeast Asia saw considerable negative impact in the first quarter, but we did not see much impact in Europe or the U.S. until later in the quarter.
While we have seen our operations in China return to more normalized levels, demand still has not returned to China and Southeast Asia to levels before the pandemic. Outside of China, we have seen softening demand at start of April, and we took actions to reduce the bottom line impact of expected revenue declines. In the short term, we are focused on cost reductions in line with lower revenue levels. We feel good about our balance sheet, cash flow and liquidity and believe that we are well prepared to survive the storm. We remain focused on our long-term goals and strategy, and we will continue to prepare to take advantage of opportunities when business recovers. Please turn to slide six labeled Consumer Solutions. I wanted to spend a few moments on our portfolio exposure and what demand trends we are currently experiencing. Consumer Solutions is a $1.6 billion segment comprised of our pool and our water solutions businesses. As you can see on this slide, Consumer Solutions is approximately 75% residential, and approximately 75% of the revenue serves the installed aftermarket base. Our pool business is a leader in the North American pool equipment business. There are approximately 5.5 million pools installed in the ground. Our dealers continue to operate in most geographies. And we expect the aftermarket business, which represents roughly 80% of our pool business, to see some short term softness, but not to the extent that we might expect will occur in the new pool construction and remodeling parts of the business. While we had a solid start to the season in March, we have seen some softness to start April. We believe that inventory levels in the channel are in line with historic levels, but we will be monitoring demand throughout the season. Our Water Solutions business is made up of components, residential systems and commercial systems. Within our components business, we have not yet seen many changes within the important wholesale channel. Residential Systems, which includes the Aquion and Pelican businesses we acquired last year, are somewhat dependent on in-home visits and retail traffic. While we have not yet seen a material drop-off in demand, there are concerns over consumer behavior in the short term. Finally, our Commercial Systems business has large exposure to restaurants and hospitality and have seen significant slowing of demand, as expected, with the closures of businesses in these industries. While we expect some short-term disruptions for our Consumer Solutions segment, we continue to believe that water quality will remain a key focus for consumers and other commercial businesses, and we anticipate this business will be well positioned when markets eventually recover.
Please turn to slide seven labeled Industrial & Flow Technologies. Industrial & Flow Technologies, or IFT, is a $1.3 billion segment comprised of our residential and irrigation flow, commercial and infrastructure flow and industrial filtration businesses. As you can see, IFT is a more diverse segment than Consumer Solutions with approximately half of sales tied to various industrial markets. IFT does, however, generate approximately 65% of sales from the installed aftermarket base. Within residential and irrigation flow, we have seen some slowing among our distributors, but this is more in the retail than professional channel. This business is where we have some exposure to agriculture. And while the OEM exposed business is down, our aftermarket business is performing better than it did a year ago. It is important to note that the majority of the residential and irrigation flow portfolio consists of products that are break and fix in nature and tend to be less discretionary purchases. Our Commercial & Infrastructure Flow business manufactures larger engineered pumps, and it tends to be a backlog-driven business.
Our commercial businesses have seen some slowing of orders, but backlog has not yet been impacted. Within infrastructure, which is the smaller piece of this business, we are seeing strong backlog, but we’ll be watching orders for any signs of slowing, given this is a long-cycle business. Our Industrial Filtration business is comprised of a number of product lines that serve a wide variety of applications. For instance, we have a strong niche in beer membrane filtration and other components to the beer industry. We also have a sustainable gas business that recycles CO2. We continue to feel comfortable about our overall portfolio given our large installed base and limited industrial manufacturing exposure. Our products are solutions that help customers solve needs, and we’ll be prepared to serve demand when it returns. I would now like to turn the call over to Mark Borin to discuss our financial position and our results in more detail.
Mark C. Borin — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, John. Before discussing the business, I want to first welcome Bob to the team, and I feel proud to be leaving a strong finance and IT team as I move on to the next chapter of my career. It is hard to leave after 12 years with Pentair, but I believe the company is well positioned and will emerge from this current situation stronger as a leading water treatment company. Please turn to slide eight labeled Cost Structure and Actions. This chart is to help illustrate our cost structure and the levers available to us as the top line visibility remains challenged. Materials is our biggest cost at approximately 40% of sales and is the one piece of our structure that is truly variable. We are engaged in a number of supplier rapid renegotiations to continuously look for opportunities to further reduce input costs. The rest of the cost structure has variability, but requires actions on our part, and many of the actions come with costs and/or consequences. In the short term, we will look to drive manufacturing labor reductions in line with volume declines with temporary measures such as furloughs to keep as much of the team intact for the eventual recovery.
Although a significant portion of our overhead is fixed, we are focused on deferring and reducing nonlabor outside spending. We are targeting overhead reduction at roughly half of the potential volume drop. On the operating expense side, we have implemented hiring freezes, and we are driving significant savings from delaying, reducing or eliminating purchase services and travel. There are other costs to go after depending on the extent and level of the volume decline, and we also recognize if the declines expected globally in the second quarter carry over to the remainder of the year, then sales and management incentive plans may not pay out at planned levels. We are taking necessary actions in the short term to mitigate the expected top line decreases, and we’ll watch closely for signs of stabilization before looking to pull additional levers. Our goal is to manage through this environment to the best of our abilities while doing what we can to prepare for an eventual recovery. Please turn to slide nine labeled Balance Sheet and Access to Liquidity. With liquidity in focus, we want to spend a few minutes highlighting why we feel comfortable with our financial position. As this slide illustrates, we do not have any meaningful debt maturities for the next few years. We ended the quarter with $169 million in cash and $326 million available under our revolver.
Given the seasonality of our pool business, we tend to use cash in the first quarter, and our second quarter tends to be our strongest cash-generating period given the collection on the pool receivables. We do not expect that trend to change this year, and, therefore, we anticipate our financial position strengthening even further as the second quarter progresses. We ended the first quarter with a leverage ratio of 2.1 times, which is well below our 3.7 times covenant. Given the dramatically changing environment, we have lowered our capital expenditures forecast by over 10% for the year. During the first quarter, we repurchased $115 million of our shares, but we suspended the buyback during the quarter and are currently choosing to remain on the sidelines as we focus on our strong liquidity. Please turn to slide 10 labeled Balance Sheet and Cash Flow. This is our standard slide we present each quarter. On the left-hand side of the page, our free cash flow improved rather dramatically from the comparable period last year. As we highlighted on our fourth quarter earnings call, we did see some timing issues around payables at the start of 2019, but we believe that this year’s performance is more reflective of our normal seasonal pattern. The right-hand side of the page highlights our debt position at the end of the quarter.
While we covered our liquidity position on the previous slide, we would point out that we have a healthy mix between fixed and variable debt. Our average borrowing rate for the quarter was a very respectable 2.6%, and we ended the quarter with 14.4% ROIC. Overall, we feel our balance sheet is strong. And while the outlook for the P&L in the near-term is a bit challenging, given the lack of visibility, we believe that our balance sheet is well positioned to help us navigate through these uncertain times. Please turn to slide 11 labeled Q1 2020 Pentair Performance. For the first quarter, overall sales grew 3%, and core sales also increased 3%. Segment income grew 13%, return on sales expanded 140 basis points, and adjusted EPS increased 21%. This performance was helped by positive sales mix, price costs and productivity. Below the line, we saw an adjusted tax rate of 16%, net interest other expense of $7.5 million, and our average shares in the quarter were $168.7 million. Please turn to slide 12 labeled Q1 2020 Consumer Solutions Performance. Consumer Solutions saw sales increased 9% with core sales growing 7%. Pool grew at a low double digit rate against an easy comp and more normal weather patterns. The pool season appeared to start off more positively this year. And as John alluded to earlier in the call, it seems anecdotally that pool owners, who are sheltered in place, are opening their pools perhaps a bit earlier than normal. Our Water Solutions business grew high single digits in the quarter as positive acquisition contribution helped offset sharp declines in China and Southeast Asia that were impacted by the global pandemic.
Within the larger U.S. market, demand had not begun to fall off at the end of the quarter, and we are monitoring trends closely. The segment had strong segment income performance growing 13% year-over-year, and ROS expanded 80 basis points to 21.8%. We are pleased with the strong start to the year by Consumer Solutions, but we expect that this will reverse course in the second quarter. While we plan to manage the cost structure accordingly, we remain focused on the long-term opportunities for the segment. Please turn to slide 13 labeled Q1 2020 Industrial & Flow Technologies Performance. IFT reported a 3% decline in sales with core growth down 2%. Residential and irrigation flow saw flat sales performance as positive pricing and a still healthy professional channel was not enough to offset weakness in agriculture and retail. Commercial and infrastructure flow experienced a mid-single-digit decline in sales as some of the backlog-driven business was negatively impacted by COVID-19 related delays. In addition, we continue to focus on improving internal delivery rates for this business. But overall, backlog remains solid, and we are monitoring the order book closely. Industrial filtration saw sales decline low single digits due primarily to global delays in global projects. Similar to commercial and infrastructure flow, this is a backlog-driven business, and we will also be closely monitoring the order book for the business. Segment income was a positive story with a 9% year-over-year increase, and ROS improved 150 basis points to 13.9%. While mix and price costs were positive contributors, productivity was especially strong. While its mix of businesses will create some near-term challenges for IFT, there remain a number of self-help opportunities that we remain focused on intently. I would now like to turn the call over to John to discuss our assumptions for the rest of 2020.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Mark. Please turn to slide number 14 labeled 2020 Current Planning Assumptions. While we have suspended our guidance until better visibility returns, we wanted to provide some of our current planning assumptions to help you understand how we are approaching the outlook for the remainder of the year. First, we are planning for a recessionary environment. Forecast call for double-digit declines in GDP in the short term, and it is hard to imagine that we would be immune from these external forces. While we have some businesses that may fare a little better than others, such as our Pool and Water Solutions businesses, other parts of the portfolio might see more significant near-term headwinds. As a result, as Mark highlighted earlier, we are aligning our costs with the lower expected volumes. We do have additional cost levers to pull if necessary, but we want to be thoughtful in pulling any of these levers too soon. We have made a number of significant investments to better position our Consumer Solutions business. And while we may delay some of those investments, we do not want to cut them off altogether.
Our Pentair employees have been a big part of building our businesses, and I would like to keep our talented teams in place. And I’m hopeful that we can weather the storm and aggressively pursue opportunities in our segments as the economy recovers. As Mark highlighted earlier, we feel our liquidity is in a very strong position. We have historically been a strong cash flow generator, and I believe that we are well positioned financially to weather this uncertain environment. Finally, our goals remain on protecting our employees, customers and our businesses. We will continue to optimize our free cash flow and liquidity. And we expect to deliver the best financial results possible in the near term while focused on our longer-term strategies. Before I turn the call over to Shelby for Q&A, I want to thank Mark for his partnership to me since 2008 and his tireless dedication to Pentair. I’m sure when Mark said he would stay to oversee a smooth transition, he never envisioned a quarter like this. I’m very excited to have Bob on board, and he and Mark are driving a seamless transition. I am very confident that Bob will be a great replacement for Mark, but I’m still losing and will miss one of my best friends. I wish you only the best, Mark. You truly deserve it. I would now like to turn the call over to Shelby for Q&A, after which, I will have a few closing remarks. Shelby, please open the line for questions. Thank you.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Josh Pokrzywinski of Morgan Stanley.
Joshua Charles Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Hello. Josh Propylene. Good morning, how are you.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning. Well, thanks. How are you guys doing.
Joshua Charles Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Good excellent. So I guess just first question, anything that you can share with us, John, on exit rates, any kind of shutdown impacts impacting the commercial and hospitality level? Just trying to get a sense of maybe kind of the snap, the line impact on demand today.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Josh. I mean, clearly, we thought we were going to have a Q1. And quite frankly, it would have even been better than it was, given the fact that we had to at given times, we had five factories that were completely closed. And we are working through all of the global challenges around the shelter in place or the orders country-by-country. So as I’m sure many companies have already shared, that became a little bit disruptive. Really proud of the teams about how they moved to create the social distancing and get most of our factories up and running because we didn’t see supply chain disruptions very much. But we did leave a little bit of backlog heading into the quarter. What we did see is starting April that the order rates are declining. And as I mentioned in my comments, we’re not going to be immune. I think the fact that most global restaurants, hospitality, etc., are closed, it’s going to take a while for our distribution channel to balance that inventory need. One of the things we did learn, though, is that when these restaurants come back and open up, they’re more likely to change those cartridges out for our water filtration unit. So that’s the visibility we need, Josh, to be able to call it. But across the portfolio, as we started April, we certainly started to see order declines and revenue declines.
Joshua Charles Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Got it. And maybe just a follow-up that might be a little bit easier to point to. Anything in the portfolio or any sites that are closed as nonessential as we sit here today?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Right now, all of our factories are open. The degree of open, the degree of capacity varies, obviously, Josh. But right now, we have 100% of our facilities deemed to be essential and, therefore, available to produce product.
Joshua Charles Pokrzywinski — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Great, thanks for that one. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Jeff Hammond of KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Jeffrey David Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Hey, good morning guys.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Hey, Jeff. Good morning
Jeffrey David Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
So really, I understand the guidance pull, but just trying to get a better sense of kind of April trends as we and I don’t know if you can go through either by business what you’re seeing, in order of magnitude or what’s proving most resilient versus most challenged as you look across the board. Just trying to get a sharper more granularity there.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. Jeff, I appreciate the question. I mean, I’d answer it a couple of ways. First of all, we’re a global business, as you know. So everything’s in a varying degree of response to what’s going on with this pandemic. I don’t think April’s a great month to judge anything on in general just because it’s a very short month. It’s got some holidays in. But if I put it in a context, I mean, nothing was immune from an order of softness, even including our pool business. As we mentioned in our comments, I do think, while we believe our pool business is likely to hold up through this at least Q2, because it is a key season, and we do think those in-ground pools are going to be serviced, we do think that we’re going to see a slowdown or a pushout of some of the remodeling or the new pool builds as people monitor their spends. So I would just say, overall, I mean, we saw a pretty sharp decline in April to start. And we think our steepest decline for the year will be Q2. That being said, we also have the season for most of our businesses that might help mitigate it. So we’re in an observed mode here for the next week or two as we watch orders and the order patterns, and also as we make sure that we’re checking beyond our distributors into the sell-through into the channels. Because that’s key for us is what’s happening in the sell-through to the consumer, and then we can make our decisions on what we think the volume’s going to be for the rest of the year.
Jeffrey David Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Okay. And then so you mentioned pool is maybe one of the more resilient ones. What specifically are seeing the sharpest declines into April?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I would say things like ag OEM, where we have the OEM offerings or we have into maintenance or equipment builds that would be on the sharper side, but they’re in the sort of like a 20% decline kind of range.
Jeffrey David Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Okay. And then just on the Industrial segment, margins looked really good there. If you were to see a 10% to 15% decline in that business on a full year basis, like what how resilient can the margins be? Or how should we think about decrementals?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
We’re thinking mid-30s.
Jeffrey David Hammond — KeyBanc Capital Markets — Analyst
Okay, thanks a lot. I’ll get back in queue. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Steve Tusa of JPMorgan.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
Hey guys, good morning. Good morning. Okay, sorry, that last answer, was that for kind of total company, what you would target for what was that decremental margin comment again related to?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I would say the question was specifically to IFT, but I would say it’d be relatively same across both ends of the portfolio. And so that’s both the total company and an IFT response.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
And that’s for 2Q or that’s for like total year?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I would say, if you look at the revenue for the total year, I think that would be the relative expectation we would have. So sales minus material and then mitigated by cost actions to get to somewhere around a mid-30s decremental.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
And are you taking any of these cost actions? Are you taking structural costs? Should we see are we going to see restructuring go up? Or is it more of the temporary actions like furloughs and things like that and just kind of waiting and seeing how the volumes play out?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. Our actions right now have been limited to trying to pace the manufacturing labor in accordance with the volume declines and utilizing furloughs in those particular areas to make sure our employees are well taken care of and be there when the volume comes back as well as aggressively attacking purchase services and obviously getting benefits from things like T&E and no trade shows for the remainder of the year, Steve. So that’s been where we are today, which has been a cash focus. We have not yet looked at those ’08, ’09 levers. Those are the ones that we’re talking about would be the next lever to pull or any permanent reductions, and that would be based upon how we see things start to uncover here as we work our way through Q2.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
Got it. Okay. And is there a revenue decline that kind of breaks those decrementals like if revenues are down? I know Lennox talked about if revenues are down greater than 20% that their decrementals kind of go to hell. Are you is there like a level of revenue that you’re thinking about that like, hey, all bets are off on kind of those decrementals for you guys?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I think you probably gave a pretty good answer there that once you get up to that like mid-20s, then I think our decrementals start to get worse, right? I mean there’s this level one of cost actions we’re taking right now we feel very confident in. If volume continues to get challenged, we take that next set of actions and can still hold those decrementals. But yes, when you start if you got up to like a mid-20 number, I think the decrementals would start to get worse. Now I don’t see Steve, at the moment, I don’t see that happening in the long term. And so what we’re really looking at is really where are the longer-term order rates and what are the longer-term sell-throughs of our products, and then have more visibility of product line by product line, what we think the impact is going to be, not just for 2020, but what we think a potential recovery could be into 2021. So I mean, really, what we’re doing is trying to position ourselves the best for how we recover.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
Right. And what are you seeing so far in April in the pool business?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Sell-throughs have hung in through the visibility that we have, not to our original forecast, but they’re doing relatively okay. But as I mentioned, I would be concerned as we proceed here through Q2 and Q3 that we start to see a slowdown or a pullback in the new construction build side or the new remodel, which is a much higher price tag for the end consumer.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
Got it. One last one for you. Inflation has been kind of a stubborn drag for you guys. Any potential relief there? And then on free cash flow, can you guys kind of as volumes go down, can you translate that into better cash, release some working capital?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. Mark? You want to…
Mark C. Borin — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Yes. So first, just on inflation, as we talked previously, certainly you see that moderating this year and continuing to just focus on kind of that price cost being more neutral and not being the headwind that it had been in the past. So and I’m looking for opportunities to mitigate continued inflationary pressures. So pursuing those things pretty aggressively. And then on the cash flow side, that’s certainly the way we would think about it as well, is looking as we see that volume decline, looking for opportunities on the working capital side to help us further improve the overall cash flow performance. But keep in track of it, as you would expect, really, really close monitoring of our customer receivables and ensuring that we feel comfortable that those are continue to be creditworthy, and those are going to come in as planned, managing and monitoring our payables. And then being opportunistic, if necessary, to the extent we see places where we can help customers. We haven’t seen a significant amount of that yet. But if the opportunities come up where we need to help customers or work with our suppliers, we’re certainly going to look at that as well, all within the context of managing our own liquidity, which, as I said in my comments, we feel very good about.
Operator
Your next question is from Brian Lee of Goldman Sachs.
Brian K. Lee — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Hey guys, good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Not to beat a dead horse here, but just on the pool business, I know a lot of focus here just around the run rates and sort of activity levels you’re seeing just because it’s such a big piece of the business for you. And it sounds like it’s been more resilient here, at least in the early part of this COVID crisis. Would you say that it’s actually been tracking better year-on-year even through the month of April? I know you’re saying there’s some slowdown, but the comps from last year, at least for the early part of Q2, were pretty soft. So I’m wondering if you’re still tracking better to that degree in the pool business?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I’d say no. I mean I’d like to clearly share with you where we are. I mean, the sell-through to us matters because it’s ultimately an indicator of how our distribution channel is going to prepare to support the dealer channel for those views. And that’s held up, like I said, for the most part, but we expect that as we move through Q2 and head into Q3 that we’re going to see the order rates decline primarily around servicing those new pools or remodel pools. That’s the working assumption right now. So I would say, as we head into in Q2, I don’t think this pool business, it will fare better. It’s not going to be immune to a year-over-year headwind.
Brian K. Lee — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Okay. Fair enough. And then just a second question here on price. You had a positive two points here in Q1. Just wondering if you’re expecting this to soften through 2020, given the weaker demand outlook. Or just maybe if you could provide some context around how you’re seeing pricing trends in prior downturns and how you’d expect this one to compare to those.
Mark C. Borin — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Given the nature of our business, much of it through distribution, we would expect to see kind of price continue to read out. A lot of that price has already been put in, and so it’s in place. And it’s at lower levels, again, as I mentioned earlier, lower levels than we saw in late 2018 and into 2019. But continue to expect to see kind of price readout and, again, offset inflation.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. I think if we thought about price adjustments as we head in 2021, that’s probably where you’d see less of an increase if things continue the way they were, Brian.
Brian K. Lee — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Okay, fair enough. Thanks guys.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from Joe Giordano of Cowen.
Joseph Craig Giordano — Cowen and Company — Analyst
Thanks, good morning. Apologies if you touched on any of these things in your prepared remarks. I’ve had some issues getting into the call. But can you talk about the spending that you’re going to plan on doing for some of the new kind of tech-enabled parts of the consumer platform? Like how does that change in an environment where you’re managing cash and there might be slower adoptions of these things as consumers are a little bit weaker? So can you just talk about how you’re thinking about those businesses given how kind of fundamental they are to the forward view of the company?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. So just to put it in perspective, the big consumer-enabled investment we’re making across Consumer Solutions is really the front-end web capability to be able to create a digital lead and to be able to transact that lead all the way into a collection. We that project’s ongoing. It will be completed by the end of the year. But order of magnitude, think about a $3 million to $5 million kind of cash flow spend there. So not sizable or significant in any one quarter and certainly something that I want to get after because of the impact it has in the business. There’s natural delays in spend, things like new product developments, new product development actions, those are going to delay even if I didn’t want them to because our lab capacity is not yet back up to 100%. And a lot of new product designs are being pushed a little bit, at least a quarter to the right. As I mentioned, the trade shows, the marketing activities, etc., they’re going to have a lot less impact. And so they’re easier to moderate the spend on as we think about the investment cycle and the value of that investment. So I mean, I think the only one that I’m keeping going really is our web-enabled, and I think it’s important that we continue to build our brand and lean into this as a water expert and a Consumer Solutions leader. And that’s really just that web capability, which I think is pretty modest, given our overall cash generation.
Joseph Craig Giordano — Cowen and Company — Analyst
And then how are you thinking about like the pacing of like once economies open, how willing are people going to be to have people in their house? How fast do commercial facilities start to ramp up? Like I know you’re not giving forward guidance, but how are you guys kind of framing that out and once kind of orders are lifted?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
No, you got it right. And in my remarks, I said our Consumer Solutions water business or Water Solutions has several different channels. There’s the traditional lead generation, which would be more localized in nature, kind of probably not going to state fairs to do that business or a kitchen and bath show, but still doing direct mail. We are seeing a lower response rate as far as the overall customer asking people to come and do the water filtration installs. That being said, we have a higher yield of the people that are asking to the actual convert, right? So less quotes, but overall a higher percentage of those quotes turning into sale. And that’s what we’re monitoring here as we move through. I mean, other industries are dealing with this, too. And I think we’re just moving to contactless visits, training our employees to not touch things while they’re there, looking at wearing of masks, all those types of things to prepare for a safety environment. So we’ll see how that unfolds over the next couple of quarters, but that’s really where we are, Joe.
Joseph Craig Giordano — Cowen and Company — Analyst
Okay. And just last for me on I’m just going to just can you touch on the productivity you saw on consumer this quarter being a little bit light?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. I would say primarily two things. Mix of business, as I recall, I mean both businesses here did well. We did have some challenges to get product out in our pool business. We continued some of those investments, as I said, but we also had to move to the shelter in place expectations primarily in China first, where we had China shutdown. And so across all of our factories, even though we’re up and running between social distancings and the types of things we had to do to keep those factories running, we certainly weren’t at 100% of our expected productivity yields. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Andy Kaplowitz of Citigroup.
Andrew Alec Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
Hey, good morning guys, and good morning. John, can you talk about your China and Southeast Asian business? In particular, you had good momentum going into the pandemic. You mentioned you’re back online, but demand hasn’t recovered. So where is it versus pre-pandemic demand? And is there any more color you can give us on the shape of the recovery? Is it UV? Anything more that you can give us there?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, I can. I obviously very interesting periods of how things unfold because they were the first to experience things. They’re first to go back to normal or you saw they work. But candidly, even though we’re having and seeing restaurants open in China, we’re not seeing the traffic in those restaurants anywhere near pre-pandemic. And think of that maybe as 1/3 or 50% in the aspects of people coming back into the capacity it used to have. When it comes to the residential commercial side and the retail elements, the way people transacted was going into a retail area looking at the particular device that they wanted to buy and then ordering online, that traffic is also a lot slower than it was pandemic. So while our capacity is up and running, we’re seeing demand slowly recover, but at a very moderated rate. And I can’t predict when it’s going to come back to pre-pandemic levels. But let’s say it’s climbing up the curve slowly.
Andrew Alec Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
That’s helpful. And then if I look at your food and beverage filtration business around the world, not just China, obviously, you talked about it falling off significantly when the shelter in place initiatives ramped up. Has that rate of decline stabilized yet outside of China? And how much overall exposure do you have to that particular filtration business?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. So a couple of things. In filtration, our F&B is really around beer membrane infiltration, components into dairy and to beer and then has the CO2 recovery in the sustainability. So productivity and efficiency is what it really promotes on the industrial filtration side. That business is still doing relatively okay, especially given the fact that beverage is generally up across the world. If you flip that into Consumer Solutions, that’s where we’ve got the water filtration into hospitality. So hotels, restaurants. That is the business that’s been extremely challenged. And while we expect that to come start coming back online, as we see states and countries open, I think that’s going to be a long slug to get back to anywhere near pre-pandemic levels. thanks guys.
Andrew Alec Kaplowitz — Citigroup — Analyst
Thank you.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from Saree Boroditsky of Jefferies.
Saree Emily Boroditsky — Jefferies — Analyst
Thanks. So you suspended your share repurchases and lower capex in the quarter. Can you just talk through how you’re thinking about capital deployment in this current environment? And what would you need to see in the market in order to start lifting these restrictions? Thanks. So you suspended your share repurchases and lower capex in the quarter. Can you just talk through how you’re thinking about capital deployment in this current environment? And what would you need to see in the market in order to start lifting these restrictions?
Mark C. Borin — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. As I talked about the really, a very strong focus on liquidity and maintaining our liquidity in light of the uncertainty. And so we’re going to wait and see on with respect to share repurchases and just how we deploy and utilize our capital. So really pulling that back and sitting on the sideline and waiting to see how things play out. We continue to pay our dividend, and that’s something that’s very important to us. And so we’ll continue to look at that as well, but that would be something that we would see as a priority as we think about how we’re allocating and spending our capital.
Saree Emily Boroditsky — Jefferies — Analyst
And then you highlighted material savings as one cost bucket you were targeting. Could you provide some color on how your conversations with suppliers are progressing? And are you getting any pushback there?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. A couple of things. I mean I want to be clear. I mean as far as direct sourcing savings, we’re expecting inflation to moderate, but I haven’t put a lot of savings into the forecast regarding that just because of the length of time it takes to realize. What I was talking to is purchased services, more discretionary spend or outside purchased services. And listen, we’re not the only company doing that. So delaying, deferring, eliminating is really what we’re doing there. So it’s not really a supplier negotiation. It’s more of our choice not to spend.
Saree Emily Boroditsky — Jefferies — Analyst
Great, thanks for taking my questions. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question is from Deane Dray of RBC Capital Markets.
Deane Michael Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Thank you. Good morning, everyone.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Deane.
Deane Michael Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Just wanted to wish Mark all the best and a welcome to Bob when he starts, I think, you said tomorrow.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, he’s actually officially there tomorrow. He’s been here for…
Mark C. Borin — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
He’s been here for two weeks, and he’s intently listening to this call.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
And he’s listening on this forecast. He owns this forecast, and he’s been a big part of it. So thank you, Deane.
Deane Michael Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
That’s good to hear. All right. So first question, I guess, I would qualify it as one of these high-quality problems to ask because I’m still kind of unclear. Why did you pull the first quarter guidance when you ended up with what we would consider a high-quality beat? You’ve pulled the guidance in the right towards the end of March, so you probably had a good sense of how you were going to shake out in the quarter.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. I appreciate it, Deane. That is a great question, I mean, but here’s really where I was at. I got to a point where we have large facilities, especially a support pool and pool, as you know, is a big piece of our overall revenue stream. And as these state shelter in places started to be named, and there is confusion around what was essential and nonessential, I felt we needed to pull the guidance because the decision on any given day could become a material event to Pentair’s earnings and disclosures. So we were able to work through those better than I anticipated, and we shipped more product than I thought we would. But that’s the short answer, Deane.
Deane Michael Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
That’s real helpful. And then just on that theme, because we were watching this carefully regarding which businesses states were saying were essential. And it wasn’t clear whether pool servicing was going to be consistently considered essential or not. Like in Connecticut, it was. In parts of New York, I don’t know if the whole state, it was not. So where does that stand in terms of state-by-state? I don’t not go through them all, but just are they all now considered essential? Or are there pockets where it’s not?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I would struggle saying all. I think we’re well into the 90% type of range where our pool dealers are sharing with us that they’re servicing pools in their particular areas and probably even higher than that. I mean pool turns green if you don’t do anything with it. So it’s also an outdoor backyard type of activity. So I think they’ve been able to work through that relatively well, Deane. But we’re in constant contact with that channel. That channel’s reporting that they’re back-servicing pools, for sure.
Deane Michael Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Yes, we agree. We think that’s well positioned. And then last question, I know it’s not a big piece of the business, but on the municipal side, what’s your sense of the muni budgets over the near term? A big chunk of your business is break and fix. That tends to be really resilient. But in terms of projects, there’s usually a delay before munis start pulling back. But is there anything different this time? What’s your expectation?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I think it’s lack of visibility right now, Deane. I mean, on one hand, you would say, in your gut, that states are going to be challenged certainly for budgets and tax revenue, and they’re going to see a compression of the overall tax revenue and how to spend it. So you’d say that, that would be a negative potential headwind that would start to unfold in Q3 and Q4. In the same sense, a lot of these states and the federal government are talking about infrastructure builds to try to get people working again. So I don’t know yet, and that’s a big part of the lack of visibility that we’re referring to. So we’re monitoring the backlog. We’re monitoring the orders. It is a break and fix for the most part, Deane, but that’s one that I really have no visibility into at the moment.
Deane Michael Dray — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Got it. Much appreciated and best of luck to everybody thank you.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Dave.
Operator
Your next question is from Nathan Jones of Stifel.
Nathan Hardie Jones — Stifel — Analyst
Good morning everyone and thanks for taking my questions. I’d like to start on channel inventories outside of pool. I think you said on the pool business, you think the channel inventories there are okay. But could you comment on the channel inventories outside of pool? And any expectations you have for destocking? And what kind of impact that could have on the top line over the next 2, three quarters?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. I really don’t have the specificity except everything looks more normal, Nathan. It doesn’t look out of line. That being said, we don’t yet have all of that visibility around the sell-through into the dealers, into the channel and one of the things we’ll be monitoring. One of the areas that I would envision the inventory being slightly high, and I don’t mean by a lot, but a little bit, would be in the foodservice area, where if you think about our revenue streams as we exited the quarter into where we are and what mode that channel is in right now, I think this inventory in the channel will service the startups, and we’ll have that slower ramp-up in that particular business than we will in most of the others.
Nathan Hardie Jones — Stifel — Analyst
Fair enough. A follow-up on the productivity question from earlier. With volumes likely to decline ahead here, does that put pressure on your expected productivity numbers for the year if we take out discrete events like having to close down a facility or something like that and the impact that could have? Or are you able to accelerate productivity actions to make up for that? Just how you’re thinking about productivity in a declining volume environment.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
No, you’re right. It does put pressure. And if you don’t get the cost out in the labor and the overhead of the factory, you end up producing unwanted inventory, which usually challenges you when the recovery occurs. So it is the keenly it is the most focused area we are. We also learned in the last recoveries, both in this one and valves and controls of the downturns in ’08, ’09. And valves and controls, it’s the area that you’ve got to have the most amount of focus on because if you don’t get after that cost on the input side, you’re you don’t see it in the short run from a P&L issue, but you start seeing it in the form of cash. And then you don’t benefit when the market recovers, as I said. So it is playbook 101 to make sure we’re pacing that manufacturing cost with the downturn volume. And it should reflect orders more than sales, Nathan.
Nathan Hardie Jones — Stifel — Analyst
Okay. I’ve got one more. I’m going to have one more crack at the top line question because we don’t have a lot of historical data about these businesses and how they’ve reacted in recessions. You said you’re preparing for a recessionary environment. Can you give us any color on what these businesses have typically seen in a recessionary environment? And whether it’s a reasonable expectation for this time to be shorter and sharper than historically.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Nathan, I’ve got all of these notes in front of me. Don’t give guidance on revenue. Don’t get I’m not going to give it to you even though you asked it a different way. I mean, here’s the challenge we have. This is not like anything we’ve seen before. When we took a look at this and people say, looking at ’08, ’09, you’re looking at 2000, what recession are you going back to? Keep in mind, our business has got residential significant residential exposure. And when we entered that ’06, ’07, ’08 time frame, we were talking about housing starts two to three times normal levels. And that was an inventory that had to work its way down. We’re not in that situation with housing today. What we’re at is the pandemic is causing stay at homes. It’s causing loss of employment. It’s causing stress to people on where and their spending patterns. And until there’s visibility there, it’s hard to predict how those wallets are going to open up again and then how that demand comes back across our businesses. That’s why I can’t give you a number, Nathan.
Nathan Hardie Jones — Stifel — Analyst
Okay, fair enough. Thanks for taking my question.
Operator
Your next question is from Scott Graham of Rosenblatt Securities.
Scott Graham — Rosenblatt Securities — Analyst
Yeah. Hey, good morning and good luck to you, Mark.
Mark C. Borin — Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Scott.
Scott Graham — Rosenblatt Securities — Analyst
So I’m going to beat that dead horse a little bit further, I’m sorry, but just in this way. So we are April 30, and we’re kind of the first month, and you were kind of giving us some order rate numbers as sort of we turned into April. I guess I was curious to understand that the use of the word, sharp, which we’re just trying to hang on to anything here to try to make our models work essentially. And then you turned around. You the first place you went to was ag, which is a very small business, and you said down 20%. Down 20% doesn’t feel sharp to me. Maybe that’s to you. But if ag OEM down 20% in April on orders, are you suggesting that, that was the worst business line?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
That is sharp. That’s I would think I feel sharp to me, especially given the Q1 we had, Scott. So keep in mind, we’re continuing to see orders rising throughout Q1. And even though the pandemic worked its way across the globe in various degrees, we did still see demand hang in there to what would have likely been up until the last couple of weeks of March. And even some of that was we said we still saw orders, and we didn’t know if that was in customers buying inventory with the anticipation of supply chain disruption, etc., etc.. So but you had in April. And I think most people have been very planful in the way they thought about reacting to shelters in place and overall volume and demand. And just like us, if we’re going to see a decrease in Q2, I mean, shouldn’t we pace our manufacturing in line with that expected decline and get in front of it in a planful way, as I think a lot of our customers were doing. So yes, you’ve got the outer end of where I think Q2 could be. With that being said, I don’t think April is indicative of any pattern or trend yet. And as we head into May and June, we’ll have a much better clarity, primarily because this is our season. This is usually our peak quarter in the year, Scott.
Scott Graham — Rosenblatt Securities — Analyst
Yes. No, understood. Understood. That was great additional color. Just one other question. I’m hoping you can connect these thoughts maybe very simply. You have in your decremental of 60, and that’s with no cost actions, and you’re now alluding to a sort of mid- 30s number. So can I take that to mean that, that line, that connection is very simply all of these variable cost actions that you’re doing because obviously, you’re not doing anything structural yet. Is that how you get here?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. Yes.
Scott Graham — Rosenblatt Securities — Analyst
I told you it would be simple.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Scott.
Operator
Your next question is from Julian Mitchell of Barclays.
Julian C.H. Mitchell — Barclays Bank — Analyst
Hi, good morning. And I’d like to give a thank you to Mark for all the help. Maybe just my first question around you’ve mentioned several times the issues in the hospitality and restaurant sector. Maybe just size those for us in terms of Pentair kind of firm-wide how large is that piece of your end market exposure where you’re most worried about a sluggish recovery. And then could you just remind us or update us on the status of organic sales trends within Aquion and Pelican and how satisfied you are with their integration to date.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. So 6% of sales roughly would be that commercial foodservice revenue for overall Pentair, okay? Most of that tied to cartridge replacement or aftermarket replacement and, call that, predominant 75% to 80% of it and the 20% maybe on original equipment install. As far as the second question, yes, I’m very happy with both of the acquisitions for different reasons. So as a reminder, what we liked about the Aquion acquisition was it made softener systems and POU systems. And that system’s integration and capability is something we’re excited about as we start to brand at Pentair and Pentair water solutions and offer it to a broader channel set. Its front end, though, is an affiliated channel. And that affiliated channel primarily works through Home Depot. And the traffic in Home Depot is not there to demand or ask for those leads.
And also a lot of those leads come from larger appliance purchases, where softening the water is kind of critical. So let’s say we’ve seen a drop-off in the demand on that front-end of the channel. Opposite story, the Pelican water solutions, where we do our own direct lead, and we market and we can market on digital media, things like Facebook, you probably see us on LinkedIn, etc., those are different channel dynamics. And as I mentioned earlier, even though we’re getting less leads, we’re converting those leads at a higher rate, meaning we have a much more interested party to gaining. So the revenue up on the direct channel’s up significantly. I mean it’s in line with what we expected. And on the other side, we have seen a fall-off demand because of that retail traffic, as I mentioned. But we’re happy with the systems capability that it brings. And that’s why I want to continue to invest in the front end of the channel because I think if we’re doing our own lead generation, and we’re converting that into our systems and the things we’re selling, we gain that higher margin, but we’re also controlling our own destiny. And so that’s why I’m excited about seeing through the Water Solutions piece.
Julian C.H. Mitchell — Barclays Bank — Analyst
And just my follow-up question. You’d noted that the sell-through of pool product has been good so far in Q2. Just trying to home in on that sell-in. There was a company this morning also in the sort of building products arena focused on tools. They talked about double digit sort of point of sales increase in April, but their sell-in into that market was could be down 30% or so. So enormous disparity between the sell-in and the sell-through. I guess what I’m looking at Pentair, am I right in thinking that there is a large disparity, but perhaps not on the scale of what that tools company had mentioned they had seen in April.
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. I think you’re thinking about it right. I think the magnitude is a lot less than tool company. But that is exactly where I’m at, meaning, I think the sell-through, the channel remains positive. I would expect us to be in a sell-in negative, not because there’s extra inventory today, but because that channel has got to anticipate the falling demand as it looks forward into the new pools and the remodeled pools. And I think they’ll moderate their orders until they see that, that part of the market continues to unfold.
Julian C.H. Mitchell — Barclays Bank — Analyst
Very helpful, thank you.
Operator
Steve Tusa of JPMorgan has a follow-up question.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
Sorry. Did I hear you say you had basically no disruption from the kind of plant shutdown in California?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I did not say that. So thank you for the clarification. What I said was, at one point, we were shut down or told to shut down. We deemed ourselves as essential. Got back up online, obviously, not at the full capacity. And quite frankly, Steve, it was, as I mentioned, having backlog and past due at the end of the quarter, which is not a normal pool. That is actually a facility in which we have backlog and past due and still due today.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
Okay. So like you would you have been able was there any meaningful impact to the quarter?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
There would have been at least another $10 million of revenue from that one plant alone.
Charles Stephen Tusa — JP Morgan — Analyst
That’s I mean a lot of companies are kind of using, obviously trying to kind of use as many excuses as possible. So we appreciate you guys just kind of eating that to a degree and putting it in the results. So thanks for the clarification. Best of luck in the second quarter here.
Operator
There are no other questions in queue. John, do you have any closing remarks?
John L. Stauch — President and Chief Executive Officer
I do. Thanks, Shelby. Thank you for joining us today. I just want to take a moment to remind everyone of our long-term strategy, which remains unchanged. We believe we serve large and stable end markets, particularly within our Consumer Solutions segment. Our pool business has a proven track record, and we believe we are positioning our Water Solutions businesses to take advantage of helping consumers and businesses solve their water quality needs. We still see a number of growth levers longer term. Our 2019 acquisitions of Aquion and Pelican help move us closer to the consumer, and we have continued to invest in building our digital capabilities and new product pipeline. In addition, we are accelerating PIMS to help fund many of our growth initiatives. We have been and will continue to be focused on disciplined capital allocation. We start with our commitment to our investment-grade ratings. We have increased our dividend for 44 consecutive years and are proud to be a dividend aristocrat. We expect to continue to use our strong cash flow to fund the most attractive growth opportunities. Before I turn the call over to Shelby for Q&A I just want to let everybody know that we are navigating these uncertain times together, and I would like to offer my best wishes to all of our employees, customers and shareholders. Thank you for your continued interest. Shelby, you can conclude the call.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]