TD SYNNEX (NYSE:SNX) Q1 2023 Earnings Call dated Mar. 28, 2023.
Corporate Participants:
Liz Morali — Head of IR
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Keith Housum — Northcoast Research — Analyst
Sameer Kalucha — RBC — Analyst
Joseph Cardoso — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Tim Long — Barclays — Analyst
Ruplu Bhattacharya — Bank of America — Analyst
Adam Tindle — Raymond James — Analyst
Matt Sheerin — Stifel — Analyst
Shannon Cross — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, good morning. My name is Abby, and I’ll be your conference operator today. I would like to welcome everyone to the TD SYNNEX First Quarter Fiscal 2023 Earnings Call. Today’s call is being recorded, and all lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. And at this time for opening remarks, I would like to pass the call over to Liz Morali, Head of Investor Relations. Liz, you may begin.
Liz Morali — Head of IR
Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for today’s call. With me today are Rich Hume, CEO and Marshall Witt, CFO. Before we continue, let me remind you that today’s discussion contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including predictions, estimates, projections or other statements about future events, including statements about strategy, plans and positioning, as well as our expectations for future fiscal periods. Actual results may differ materially from those mentioned in these forward-looking statements as a result of risks and uncertainties discussed in today’s earnings release in the Form 8-K we filed today and in the Risk Factors section of our Form 10-K and our other reports and filings with the SEC. We do not intend to update any forward-looking statements.
Also, during this call, we will reference certain non-GAAP financial information. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP results are included in our earnings press release and the related Form 8-K available on our Investor Relations website, ir.tdsynnex.com. This conference call is the property of TD SYNNEX and may not be recorded or rebroadcast without our permission. I will now turn the call over to Rich. Rich?
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Liz. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. Our flexible business model and broad industry-leading portfolio allowed us to capture growth in Q1 across Advanced Solutions and high-growth technologies, despite a rapidly changing market environment. Our team showed the ability to execute well, remaining flexible to market conditions and pivoting to areas of growth. This allowed us to grow revenue for the quarter on a constant-currency basis, expand margins, deliver non-GAAP EPS growth towards the high-end of our previously guided range and return meaningful cash to our shareholders. Relative to our expectations, the macroeconomic environment impacted demand for PCs and related products during the quarter, and the market declined in North America more sharply than we had forecasted.
From a regional perspective, the demand declined in both Europe and Asia-Pacific, Japan were less pronounced. Looking forward, many of our top vendors indicates that we could anticipate a more stable Endpoint Solutions portfolio in the second half of the year with drivers such as the post-pandemic refresh cycle and the government and education spending season, fueling PC demand. Nevertheless, this quarter highlighted the strength of our strategy to invest in diversifying our portfolio.
Our investments across datacenter and networking infrastructure along with the build-out of a robust set of offerings for hybrid cloud, cybersecurity, data analytics and hyperscale infrastructure are paying off, and we are pleased with the momentum we continue to see in those categories in Q1.
In total, our basket of high-growth technologies including Hyve grew in the mid-teens for the quarter. This growth highlights the strategic importance of these projects to our customers and their end-users, and is aligned with our longer-term growth rates we’ve discussed previously for this category.
Overall strength in Advanced Solutions and high-growth technologies helped to offset the declines in Endpoint Solutions, and the overall business saw 4% constant currency growth in gross billings in the first quarter. It is worth noting that IDC and context reports for North America and Europe that we used to track our distribution market participation indicate the overall market share in those regions grew in fiscal Q1.
From a supply-chain perspective, we continue to see improvement in the quarter, and we experienced decline in our backlog across the board quarter-over-quarter. While there remain a few isolated areas of constraint, our overall backlog levels are approaching historical levels. The normalization is a positive sign as a more balanced supply-chain environment allows us to serve the demand for our customers in a more timely fashion.
We continue to make excellent progress on our ERP systems migration, and as I’ve mentioned previously, we deliberately have taken a measured and steady approach to reduce the risks of disruption to our customers and vendors. I’m pleased to report that more than 75% of our North America distribution business is now transacting in CIF. Customer and vendor sentiment around the transition has been positive, and we will continue to migrate the remaining portions of our business throughout the year.
Also during the quarter, we are very proud to publish our first corporate citizenship report, demonstrating our commitment to being a responsible corporation. We have set clear environmental and social goals as described in the report, and we look forward to continuing to update you on our progress in these important areas.
As we enter the second quarter, which is our seventh post-merger quarter, we are confident in our ability to navigate the rapidly changing market dynamics in our industry. We believe our variable-cost structure, diversified portfolio and commitment to investing in high-growth technologies allows us to succeed in any market condition.
In closing, we expect to see a continuation of the trends we saw in the first quarter play out in our fiscal Q2 with demand for Endpoint Solutions likely seeing continued pressure and opportunities for continued growth in Advanced Solutions and high-growth technologies. We are confident in our ability to navigate the dynamic environment by leveraging our broad portfolio to pivot towards pockets of growth and margin expansion.
I’ll now turn it over to Marshall for some additional comments about Q1 and our Q2 outlook. Marshall, over to you.
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Rich, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. Before I review our quarterly performance, I wanted to highlight a new measure that we introduced in our filings today. Beginning this quarter, we have added gross billings as one of our disclosures. We believe gross billings is an important metric to consider when evaluating our business, as it represents our total book of business, including the sales that gets netted down in the reported revenue line. As a reminder, for many of our virtual offerings across software, cloud and security, the net revenue we report represents only the gross profit we earn for the services we have performed. Thus, the totality of growth across those businesses is not captured in the reported net revenue line.
As a larger portion of our revenue move to software and services that will be reported on a net basis, we believe providing gross billings and the associated growth rate will allow investors to fully appreciate underlying trends and the scope of our business. This new disclosure was also in response to requests from our investors who value this metric from a reporting perspective.
As you’ve heard from Rich during the February quarter, we saw softer than expected demand across several Endpoint Solution technology categories, particularly in North America. Despite this additional pressure, our broad diversified portfolio coupled with our focus on margin-accretive, high-growth technologies allowed us to grow gross billings and revenue on a constant-currency basis and expand margins despite the lower-than-expected revenue growth in the quarter.
Now moving to-Q1 results. Worldwide gross billings came in at $20.2 billion, up 1% year-over-year and up 4% in constant-currency, while net revenue was $15.1 billion, down 2% year-over-year and up 1% in constant-currency. From a regional perspective, Americas revenue declined 4% year-over-year, while Europe increased 5%, and APJ increased 26%, all in constant-currency.
In Americas, we saw a significant deceleration in demand for Endpoint Solution products, partially offset by strength in Advanced Solutions and high-growth technologies, including Hyve. In Europe, the growth came from outperformance in Advanced Solutions, partially offset by less severe declines in Endpoint Solutions. In APJ, the region outperformed our forecast driven by growth in Advanced Solutions, services and high-growth technologies.
Non-GAAP gross profit was $1.01 billion, which is our second consecutive quarter greater than $1 billion, and non-GAAP gross margin was 6.68%, up 26 basis-points year-over-year. The improvement in gross margin was driven primarily by an increased mix-shift to Advanced Solutions and high-growth technologies.
Total adjusted SG&A expense was $568 million, representing a 3.8% of revenue. Non-GAAP operating income was $443 million, up $11 million or 2.6% year-over-year, and non-GAAP operating margin was 2.93%, up 14 basis-points year-over-year, primarily driven by increased mix-shift to high growth technologies and cost synergy attainment. On a constant-currency basis, non-GAAP operating income increased 5% year-over-year.
Quarter one non-GAAP interest expense from finance charges were $78 million, $5 million above our outlook. For Q1, the non-GAAP effective tax-rate was approximately 23%. Total non-GAAP net income was $279 million, and non-GAAP diluted EPS was $2.93, which was at the high end of our previously communicated guidance range for the quarter.
Now turning to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $539 million and debt of $4.4 billion. Our gross leverage ratio was 2.4 times and net leverage was 2.1 times, which is in line with our investment-grade profile and approaching our previously communicated target of two times gross leverage ratio. Accounts receivable totaled $9.36 billion, down from $9.42 billion in the prior quarter, and inventories totaled $8.37 billion, down $694 million or 8% from the prior quarter.
Net working capital at the end of the first quarter was $4.2 billion, an increase of approximately $390 million from Q4 due to seasonal trends. The cash conversion cycle for the first quarter was 26 days, up three days from quarter four, and cash used in operations in the quarter was $103 million.
From a shareholder return perspective for the current quarter, our Board of Directors has approved a cash dividend of $0.35 per common share payable on April 28, 2023 to stockholders of record as of the close of business on April 14, 2023. During the quarter, we paid $33 million in dividends and continued executing on our share repurchase program by buying approximately $115 million of our stock. We have approximately $900 million remaining on our three-year share repurchase authorization, and expect to continue further share repurchases through the year aligned with our cash-flow generation. We continue to make-good progress on the remaining merger-related cost synergies, recognizing an additional $25 million in the quarter, and to date, we have achieved over $170 million of our total $200 million target.
Now moving to our outlook for fiscal quarter two. As Rich had mentioned, we expect to see a continuation of the trends we saw in the first quarter, with a stronger weighting towards Advanced Solutions and high-growth technologies. We expect gross billings at $18.7 billion to $20 billion, approximately flat on a year-over-year basis in constant-currency at the midpoint. We expect total revenue to be in the range of $14 billion to $15 billion, which equates to a year-over-year decline of approximately 4% on a constant-currency basis at the midpoint.
The 4% decline in net revenue is driven by incremental gross-to-net adjustments year-over-year as we continue to grow in Advanced Solutions and high-growth technologies. This outlook also reflects the impact of year-over-year foreign-exchange headwinds of approximately $200 million of revenue and $250 million to gross billings. Our guidance is based on a euro-to-dollar exchange rate of 1.07.
Non-GAAP net income is expected to be in the range of $214 million to $261 million, and non-GAAP diluted EPS is expected to be in the range of $2.25 to $2.75 per diluted share, based on weighted-average shares outstanding of approximately $94.2 million.
Non-GAAP interest expense for quarter two is expected to be approximately $76 million, and we expect the tax-rate to be approximately 24%. Our guidance is inclusive of headwinds year-over-year from interest expense and euro devaluation which collectively represent a $0.27 per share headwind to non-GAAP EPS versus quarter two fiscal of 2022. Excluding these discrete items, our outlook implies non-GAAP EPS growth of approximately 2% at the midpoint as our underlying business continues to perform solidly.
Regarding our thoughts for the full year of 2023, the market continues to be volatile, which may impact our business, but we believe that our differentiation in the market and ability to pivot to pockets of growth is clear in our performance this quarter and our guidance for Q2. We are seeing stable and consistent margins to the fiscal year outlook we provided last quarter and continue to feel confident we will deliver on our previously guided $1 billion plus in free-cash flow, a large portion of which we expect to be returned to shareholders to continued share buybacks and dividends.
I will now turn the call back over to the operator to begin the Q&A session. Operator?
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And we will take our first question from Keith Housum with Northcoast Research. Your line is open.
Keith Housum — Northcoast Research — Analyst
Good morning, guys. I appreciate the opportunity here. In terms of the strength that you saw in Europe and Asia-Pacific specifically, Marshall, can you please talk a little bit about some of that strength. Are you guys taken share there? Is there a feeling of that, or is it just the market there are strong than what you’re seeing here in North America?
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, so Keith, in the prepared remarks, well, first of all, good morning and thanks for the question. I am ready to jump-in right away. So first, in our prepared remarks. I had commented on market share in Europe and in North-America, absent APJ. And the reason for that is we don’t have the service in APJ that readily reports the on-market position, but clearly, as stated in the remarks, we feel as if we’ve grown our market participation in North America, in Europe, and obviously the topline revenue strength in APJ was quite good. So, that’s the first point. If I were to characterize the European performance, we have this theme for our company globally where we had said that we had declining endpoints and we had growing Advanced Solutions. And in Europe on the endpoint, let me just say that it declined less, and on the Advanced Solutions, they grew more. Part of the endpoint declining less is due to the mix of that endpoint segment. You might recall, we have mobility as part of the endpoint segment in Europe as an example. So, therefore, some of those things in terms of the mix of the endpoint were why we had declined less. So that’s really the major overlaying thing.
Keith Housum — Northcoast Research — Analyst
Okay. I appreciate that.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
One thing that you’ll see in the press release on the regionals is that off income for Europe did decline. That was more about high-growth technology tough compares year-on year.
Keith Housum — Northcoast Research — Analyst
Okay. I appreciate that. Just following up bridge on that endpoint device commentary there, you noted that the vendors expect a second-half improvement in endpoint devices. I guess my question is, I guess do you and your customers agree with that assessment that you’ll see an improvement in the second half?
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
I would say that generally, yes, Keith, there’s a couple of parameters here that I think are important. So, first, if you think about the government buying season, what we had experienced is that in the prior year, there was a pretty tepid government spending season because of the huge COVID purchase the year or two before that. So, we believe there’ll be a rebound there. The second is we all know about the post-pandemic refresh cycle in Windows 11, so we’ll start to see some of that tick in, and the third is, candidly, the back-half of the year is when the declines had begun, so, the compares are easier. They basically will begin to wrap starting in the third quarter overall.
Keith Housum — Northcoast Research — Analyst
All right, guys, good luck. Thank you. Appreciate it.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Keith.
Operator
And we’ll take our next question from Sameer Kalucha with RBC. Your line is open.
Sameer Kalucha — RBC — Analyst
Hi, can you hear me okay?
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Yes.
Sameer Kalucha — RBC — Analyst
Okay, great, thanks for taking my question. So, when you give the guidance for the full year last quarter, the outlook was underpinned by a flattish GDP outlook. I was curious what are your views on GDP from where we are right now given the market conditions are a little bit different from what we saw at the beginning of the year, so that’s number one. And number two, given all the rage about new technologies like generative AI, I’m curious how big are the, as part of your portfolio, in the high-growth solutions in AI ML part, and how do you expect them to drive growth going-forward? Thanks.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, well, thank you for your comments. First, as it relates to GDP, as you’re well aware, I mean I think there’s been some real-time events that have played out in the last couple of weeks that probably aren’t yet reflected in the reports that exist, you know, for GDP. So, we will have to wait and see when those things flow through and the economists do their job as to what that outcome might be. Last reported, we thought that GDP in the markets that we participate would be flattish, so we will see where things go from there.
And then on your second question, when we think about our strategy, we talk about high-growth technologies which include hyperscale infrastructure, cybersecurity and then data and analytics. And data and analytics at its core becomes the foundation, if you will, for a lot of the AI work that’s going on. I would say sort of looking backward, the predominance of our sale had been more around analytics, pure analytics, and the we now see the emergence of artificial intelligence, although it really hasn’t become a material or meaningful part of our entire revenue stream or portfolio yet. My experience has been that when new technologies emerge to the market, they will manifest themself in first of a kind offerings first and then through time they get packaged and make their way down through, you know what I’ll call the medium or smaller customers, which is where most of our engagement with our customers is directed. As you well know, when you get into AI, it’s all about, you know the data and the accuracy of the data. So, my expectation is we might go through the similar cycle of being deployed first as custom projects and then making its way into packaged solutions. But I believe that that whole development cycle will be greatly condensed now given the emergence of a lot of the new artificial intelligence in the market.
Sameer Kalucha — RBC — Analyst
Got it, thank you.
Operator
And we’ll take our next question from Joseph Cardoso with J.P. Morgan. Your line is open.
Joseph Cardoso — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Hey, thanks for the questions, guys. So just one for me. We’ve seen some positive data points in the PC supply-chain over like the last one to two months as it relates to inventory levels. Just curious to hear what you guys are seeing as it relates to channel inventory. And then just on the demand side, you suggested some of your partners suggesting a recovery [Indecipherable] on those various kind of data points. I’m just — are you actually seeing any of that to date, and at least conversations that you are having with your customers, or should we think about that becoming more tangible later in the year?
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Thanks for the question. And when I had discussed the PC ecosystem earlier off of Keith’s question, I had left out the fact that there was a lot of visibility brought by vendors broadly to, I’ll call it extra inventory within the channel. And fundamentally, or I should say anecdotally, I believe that’s true. We don’t have visibility with precision with regard to all of the inventory that’s held by our resellers, but anecdotally the evidence was there to — through the discussion we were led to believe that there was an inventory work down. So, I do believe that that’s part of the realignment if you will, for the second half of the year. To answer your question explicitly, have we seen the green sprouts yet? No, we haven’t. I do believe there are months ahead as opposed to beginning currently.
Joseph Cardoso — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Got it. I appreciate the color. Thanks.
Operator
And we will take our next question from Tim Long with Barclays. Your line is open. Tim, your line is open, please check your mute button.
Tim Long — Barclays — Analyst
Oh, sorry about that, sorry about that. Two questions here if I could. First, if you could talk across the device business in the Advanced Technologies businesses, the impact of pricing and price changes. Obviously, PCs were inflated, and then if you look at the server and storage market, we’re seeing pretty meaningful memory cost decline. So curious if you’re starting to see any of that showing up in your numbers? And then secondly, maybe, Marshall, if you can talk a little bit about cash conversion cycle and how we think about that through the rest of the year. Thank you.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Okay, thank you for the question. I’ll handle part A and then Marshall Part B. So, this varies a little bit by region, but we have seen price activity in PC given the supply situation we spoke about earlier. Expectation is that as supply stabilizes that there’ll be lesser activity, if you will, around the PC segment. We have, consistent with your thoughts around some of the commodity prices coming down, which obviously are big part of the bill of materials within Advanced Solutions, we have seen price activity begin to emerge. It’s been a good long time since we have seen that, but yes, there has been price reductions in. We would anticipate price reductions as the flow-through of those commodities occur. The other question that should go along with that, kind of put it in the category of too early to tell is a lot of times when these commodity come down, the ASP’s get held while customers take, I’ll call it, more Rich configurations. So, the question will be, will we see that or will we see customers given the economic circumstance, except leaner configurations. Don’t have enough evidence or information on that yet, but that’s something that probably will play out in the next 90 days.
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
And on the cash conversion cycle question, you saw for quarter one, we are around 26. I expect that to improve by a couple of days in Q2 to about 24-ish, and then similar to what we had said at the beginning of the year. I do expect that to continue to decline or improved for the rest of the fiscal. Ideally, if we can get to around 20 days-ish, that would be great. In my comments, you saw we did reiterate the confidence around our free-cash flow being a $1 billion-plus, we still feel given the working capital improvements to the earnings power of the organization, an assumption that supply-chain remained stable and the inventory channels continue to clear, I think we’re going to be good to hit that.
Tim Long — Barclays — Analyst
Okay, thank you guys.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
And we’ll take our next question from Ruplu Bhattacharya with Bank of America. Your line is open.
Ruplu Bhattacharya — Bank of America — Analyst
Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. Rich, it looks like you had another strong quarter for Advanced Solutions, and that probably also benefited margins. So how much did Advanced Solutions benefit from backlog reduction in the quarter, and what do orders look like, and if Advanced Solutions weakens in the second half, what would the margin trajectory look like? And do you see the need for incremental cost structure changes.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Lots of questions there, so let me take it one at a time. First, certainly, I do believe that as the backlog has been running down that it has assisted in our growth for Advanced Solutions. Second, when you think about when Advanced Solutions really began to have a higher growth rates overall, it approximately was, you know in the back half of last year. So, therefore, the compares in the back half will be a bit more challenging for Advanced Solutions. So, we would expect that the growth rates wouldn’t be as they were previously.
As it relates to cost actions, we’ve talked on the last couple of calls, relative to us being very, very focused in every region of the world, to make sure that we are being very prescriptive as it relates to all of our discretionary spend, all of our new higher spend and ensuring that every single dollar is measured. We look at our and think about our cost structure on a continuous basis, and we’ll look forward to understand the ebb and flow of economic change and adjust accordingly as we think about the back half of the year. So that’s the way, Ruplu we think about it, and thanks for the question.
Ruplu Bhattacharya — Bank of America — Analyst
Okay, Rich, thanks for the details there. Marshall, I have a question for you on ROIC. But before I ask that, I just wanted to ask a clarification, maybe I missed this, but last quarter you had talked about full year 2023 revenue growth to be 3% to 5% on a reported basis. Did you confirm that also for in this quarter, I may have missed that, if you can just clarify that? And then my question on ROIC is, I guess you reported 10.6% this quarter. A year ago, it looks like it was in the mid-teens. It may not be an apples-to-apples because it maybe it wasn’t on a combined company basis, so the target of 2% to 4% above WACC, I mean what needs to happen for you to get to the high-end of that ROIC range, and how should we think about ROIC in the long term. Thanks.
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
I’ll address the ROIC first, Ruplu. The mechanics around how that’s calculated, we do a five-quarter average for that. As we have come further away from the merger, invested capital continues to grow, the denominator is growing, which is expected. So, the 10.6 is in line with our expectation. To your question on WACC, I mean, clearly, interest rates have increased, so that has increased our WACC. We are at a WACC of roughly around 8.5% to 9%, and a lot of that again is just due to rising interest rates. It hasn’t changed our overall requirement of returning 200 basis-points to 400 basis-points above our weighted-average cost of capital that continues to be the threshold that we look at when we make investments in the business, and we make investments externally in terms of M&A opportunity. To touch on the question about what we gave guidance for and what we didn’t, you are right, we did not give guidance for revenue for the second-half of the year. A lot of that has to do with what Rich said in his prepared remarks, just around the uncertainty and volatility that we’re currently experiencing. We certainly want to see this quarter play out. Let’s see how it does and then come back with the rethought for our guidance as we get into the end part of Q2 and into Q3.
Ruplu Bhattacharya — Bank of America — Analyst
Okay, thank you for all the details. I appreciate it.
Operator
And we’ll take our next question from Adam Tindle with Raymond James, your line is open.
Adam Tindle — Raymond James — Analyst
Okay, thanks, good morning. Marshall, I want to expand on that guidance point that you just made. I understand, maybe not expanding on the revenue piece of it, but stripping out gross versus net and all that sort of stuff and just looking at the actual earnings of the company, I think you would have come to a conclusion of an earnings for around 12 bucks for the year based on your comments of 3% to 5% growth, 2.6% to 2.8% operating margin, that’s kind of where we all landed for the year. Obviously, you’re tracking below that on a year-over-year basis for the first-half of this year. Just wondering maybe if we could switch that question to more of an earnings question to see what has changed since you last gave that guidance, and if we look at the current run-rates, we’re probably going to be closer to low 11s in terms of the earnings for the year. Is that something that makes more sense to you based on what you’re seeing right now? Thanks.
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I’ll start and then allow Rich to provide commentary. I think we’ll start with just what we said about what we experienced in the quarter. Endpoint Solutions software went down on a year-on year basis and the majority of the regions that we performed, so I think revenue itself is probably the biggest driver of, we will call it, the operating income decline. As we said, we feel good about the margin profile and structure of our business being in that 2.6% to 2.8% range. We like the position of where we’re at strategically within the organization. We’re proud about the market-share that’s either at or better than what it was. To us certainly implies that during these uncertain times, our position in the market is allowing and providing for our partners to spend more with us and use us more as they are also trying to figure out ways to be more efficient in this uncertain economic situation. Rich, if you want to add anything else to that?
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, the only thing that I’d add, and it’s a bit repetitive, is that Marshall had stated the financial profile and the engagement model as it’s been. As we talked about our market participation, I think is very strong. This is more macroeconomic challenge as opposed to anything else, and with all the uncertainty, we just don’t feel comfortable with providing a view with regard to it this time.
Adam Tindle — Raymond James — Analyst
Alright, maybe. Then as a follow-up, since that might create some volatility. Marshall, how you’re thinking about capital allocation and cash flow, and I guess maybe more specifically, you talked about the $1 billion for the year. The cadence of that and any kind of buckets that that’s coming from how that should layer out the remaining quarters, and what gives you the confidence? And secondly, on capital allocation, I think you said it would be aligned with cash generation. Presumably that’s going to increase going forward, given you were negative in Q1 and talking about $1 billion for the year, might that translate to more share repurchase? Just how we can think about that would be great. Thanks.
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Yeah, I will first answer the question just on the cadence of cash-flow. Typically, Q1 is, you saw, tends to consume cash as what we saw just over $100 million, that begins to reverse itself, and as I mentioned on a previous Q&A, we think cash days improves probably a couple days in Q2. I would expect that probably to end up being similar improvements in three and four, Adam, so I think you could think about it from that perspective of being positive cash-flow on some form of equal basis, Q2, three and four. And thinking in regards to the capital and our allocation, overall goals and strategies, that hasn’t changed. As you know, our cash-flow and how we allocate that free-cash flow between reinvestments back into business and returns back to shareholders, we still feel-good about that 50-50 allocation for 2023, our desire is to continue to stair-step up to that 50% attainment and hopefully we’ll reach around 40% for 2023, and as you had mentioned and we’ve mentioned historically, it has certainly aligned cash-flow generation, and we feel positive about where we expect to be for this year and if we do exceed our initial expectations. We certainly will look at opportunistic repurchases going forward.
Adam Tindle — Raymond James — Analyst
Great, thank you.
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you.
Operator
We’ll take our next question from Matt Sheerin with Stifel. Your line is open.
Matt Sheerin — Stifel — Analyst
Yes, thanks and good morning, everyone. Rich, my first question, just another demand question and you talked about the weakness in North America. Could you drill down a little bit in terms of those various channels that you sell into, the large resellers versus borrowers selling into SMB versus public sector, and what you’re hearing from those customers in terms of when they think is stabilizing it. The same thing on the Advanced Solutions side, because your comment was that it’s growing, but not as strong as in Europe.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Thanks. Thanks for the question, Matt. I’ll share this with Marshall. I would tell you that I think that as we evolve through the year so far, we have seen a bit of a change in sentiment relative to the customers to, you know, words like a bit more cautious, words like things elongating in terms of the sales cycles. So, I think that as the sort of the economic circumstance is playing out, there is a bit of a change in sentiment, so that is what we see from the macro level. As it relates to are we seeing any differences between particular channels, you know, I would say, no, not so much that overlaying sentiment seems to be fairly consistent, but, Marshall, maybe you can provide some insights right from the numbers.
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, Matt, so when we look at our bar allocation between public sector, large, medium, small, retail and all other aspects that go with it, the percentage of those buckets have remained fairly consistent, which is great. So, S&P, as you know, is a very important aspect of our portfolio, and it has stayed resilient throughout this market. I would say, as Rich said, across-the-board, there’s probably just generally less spend on it, but if you look at how we’ve been allocated, it stayed fairly consistent over the last two to three quarters.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, the one exception from jogging my memory, as Marshall was talking, I think we see government spending a bit more robust relative to the other segments. But that’s sort of the only outlier.
Matt Sheerin — Stifel — Analyst
Okay, great. If I could just sneak in a couple of quick ones — one, it sounded like you said that Hyve was up double-digit year-over-year. If you could clarify that and what you’re seeing there? And then also on the interest expense line, Marshall, should we be modeling that you’re closer to $80 million or so through the year, or do you expect to work that down with your free-cash flow and bringing down the short-term borrowings or anything like that?
Marshall Witt — Chief Financial Officer
Hyve for quarter one performed great, with the expectation around 15% in terms of revenue performance and margin profile as you know for that business has been strong. With that said, part of the reason why there was a decline in quarter one to quarter two is we were guiding somewhat lower expectations for Hyve in quarter two still growth, still good margins, but saw some good performance in quarter one. It breaks down into three categories, and there’s more that Hyve provides, but you think about the design part of the Hyve business that continue to perform at or better than expectations. If you look at the, think about the assembly type of work that’s performed well as we saw the quarter play out. And then finally, the distribution like services, whether that strategic buys, if it’s loose parts and spares, those programs continue to perform well. They’re very resilient, and our hyperscale community datacenter and power continue to be of shortage or constraint. So, there is still some demand out there for us to fulfill. And then just getting to the interest expense, yes, it’s been elevated. You can see that it it almost doubled in Q1 year-on-year. It’s quite meaningful. It gets a little bit better in quarter two, but still up $30 million-ish. At 76, now I think I would assume the cash-flow generation expectation and the paying down of the revolver that we tapped throughout the quarter probably brings down that interest expense somewhat in the second-half of the year, but I wouldn’t take much off of that.
Matt Sheerin — Stifel — Analyst
Okay, fair enough. Thanks so much.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I just want to add. We had a particular around Hyve there, but high-growth technologies grew mid double-digit and continued to be greater than 20% of our overall portfolio. And as that becomes more meaningful, this is why we’re beginning to refer to gross billings overall, because obviously we — when we think about gross billings, we think about the productivity, entire organization.
Matt Sheerin — Stifel — Analyst
Okay, thank you.
Operator
We’ll take our next question from Shannon Cross with Credit Suisse. Your line is open.
Shannon Cross — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thank you very much. I had a couple as well. First, can you talk a bit about end verticals and what you’re seeing? I’m just wondering obviously while there are challenges in the financial sector, there are challenges in the tech sector with the layoffs, I’m just wondering within your conversations with your customers, what they’re hearing from some of their customers in terms of demand, and if you’re seeing any or hearing of any pockets of growth as well, and then I have a follow-up. Thank you.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Yes, so Shannon, we don’t have a maniacal focus on end verticals in particular within our planning system. Anecdotally, what I would say is that, there is a fairly common theme around constraint and making sure that people are very careful with their purchase. Perhaps the outlier around that and it’s not really an end vertical would be the hyperscale infrastructure, and then all of the high-growth technologies for each of the customer set are in more demand than what I would call the foundation or the foundational technologies of the rest of the set. So, the dynamics around digital transformation type offerings would be more of a horizontal statement, seems to be uniform around all of the end-markets.
Shannon Cross — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Okay, thank you, and then I’m just curious in terms of inventory. Can you be a little more specific in terms of what drove the decline in inventory, and where you think maybe normalized inventory levels for you are? I know you’re getting close, I think, but it was it more PCs or was it because you had strengthened Hyve, just kind of wondering about the composition, composition of what you have there, and I guess also, do you see any opportunities for maybe some inventory, strategic inventory purchases given where component costs are may be on the Hyve side. Thank you.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I’ll start with the last question first, on inventory strategic purchases. Well on all sides of the business, so clearly that’s an aspect, an element, primarily North America around strat buys, they are a little bit larger, those haven’t stopped. We continue to have the same kind of discipline around the requirements of what that is needed for us to purchase and how fast that sell-through. Shannon, to question about strat purchases within Hyve, that continues to play out. They are still [Indecipherable] and producing quite well, so I think that will continue for the rest of this year. I mean, if I think about overall inventory demand, it was somewhat elevated as we came into quarter one. I think that will start to work itself down. The answer to were there any pockets that saw elevation or improvements, I think it was a fairly consistent improvement across the board, and that’s in Americas, Europe and Asia comment. And then what we had said last quarter, and is still true in our expectations in regards to Hyve is that we do expect that the Hyve inventory will continue to unwind as we made some larger investment decisions last year that are starting to be collected or excuse me, billed and collected in Q2 and Q3 and Q4.
Shannon Cross — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thank you.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Shannon.
Operator
And there are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call-back to Mr. Rich Hume for closing remarks.
Rich Hume — Chief Executive Officer
Well, thank you very much. I’d like to thank our 23,500 coworkers around the globe for their focus and dedication in helping our customers and vendors and partners proceed each and every day. And, I’d like to thank you. We appreciate your interest in TD SYNNEX, and thanks for joining us today.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks].