e8vk
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of report: April 21, 2011
(Date of earliest event reported)
IDEX CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
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Delaware
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1-10235
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36-3555336 |
(State of
Incorporation)
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(Commission File Number)
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(IRS Employer
Identification No.) |
1925 W. Field Court
Lake Forest, Illinois 60045
(Address of principal executive offices, including zip code)
(847) 498-7070
(Registrants telephone number, including area code)
Check the appropriate box if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the
filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
o Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)
o Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)
o Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))
o Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))
Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure.
Q1 2011 Presentation Slides and Conference Call Transcript
Presentation slides and a transcript of a conference call discussing IDEX Corporations quarterly
operating results are attached to this Current Report on Form 8-K as Exhibits 99.1 and 99.2 and are
incorporated herein by reference.
The Securities and Exchange Commission encourages companies to disclose forward-looking information
so that investors can better understand the future prospects of a company and make informed
investment decisions. This Current Report and exhibit may contain these types of statements, which
are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act
of 1995, and which involve risks, uncertainties and reflect IDEXs judgment as of the date of this
Current Report.
Forward-looking statements may relate to, among other things, operating results and are indicated
by words or phrases such as expects, should, will, and similar words or phrases. These
statements are subject to inherent uncertainties and risks that could cause actual results to
differ materially from those anticipated at the date of this Current Report. The risks and
uncertainties include, but are not limited to IDEXs ability to integrate and operate acquired
businesses on a profitable basis and other risks and uncertainties identified under the heading
Risk Factors included in Item 1A of IDEXs Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 2009 and information contained in subsequent periodic reports filed by IDEX with the Securities
and Exchange Commission. Investors are cautioned not to rely unduly on forward-looking statements
when evaluating the information presented within.
The information in this Current Report furnished pursuant to Items 7.01 and 9.01 shall not be
deemed filed for the purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,
or otherwise subject to the liabilities of that Section. This information shall not be incorporated
by reference into any registration statement pursuant to the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
The furnishing of the information in this Current Report in not intended to, and does not,
constitute a representation that such furnishing is required by Regulation FD or that the
information this Current Report contains is material investor information that is not otherwise
publicly available.
Item 9.01 Financial Statements and Exhibits.
(d) Exhibits
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99.1 |
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Presentation slides of IDEX Corporations quarterly operating results |
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99.2 |
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Transcript of IDEX Corporations earnings conference call on April 21, 2011 |
SIGNATURE
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused
this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
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IDEX CORPORATION
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By: |
/s/ Heath A. Mitts
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Heath A. Mitts |
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Vice President and Chief Financial Officer |
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April 25, 2011
Exhibit Index
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Exhibit |
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Number |
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Description |
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99.1 |
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Presentation slides of IDEX Corporations quarterly operating results |
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99.2 |
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Transcript of IDEX Corporations earnings conference call on April 21, 2011 |
exv99w1
Exhibit 99.1
First Quarter 2011 Earnings Release
April 21, 2011
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Agenda
2
IDEX Economics
IDEX Markets
Q1 2011 Performance
2011 Guidance
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Replay Information
Dial toll-free: 800.642.1687
International: 706.645.9291
Conference ID: #56253366
Log on to: www.idexcorp.com
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Cautionary Statement
Under the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act
This presentation and discussion will include forward-looking statements. Our
actual performance may differ materially from that indicated or suggested by
any such statements. There are a number of factors that could cause those
differences, including those presented in our most recent annual report and
other company filings with the SEC.
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IDEX Economics
Strategy continues to pay off
Strong global growth
Niche markets with a great growth model
Productivity initiatives help drive bottom line performance
Operational Excellence
Pricing offsetting inflation
Positive price
Global Sourcing
Opportunities to deploy capital
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Solid performance in an inflationary environment
Operational
Excellence
Growth
Conversion
Innovation
New Products
New Markets
Acquisitions
Commercial
Excellence
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IDEX Markets
Chem / Industrial
Chemical production up in Europe
Chem / Industrial investments in China
HST Industrial, Band clamping, other Ind. strong
U.S. expansion modest / MRO continues
Life Science / Analytical Instrumentation
Global growth outstanding
Fire & Rescue
Rescue International growth
US Muni - Pumper truck builds still weak
Water
International growth
US Muni continues to struggle
Energy
Global growth; mid and downstream
Paints
International growth...E. Europe and Asia
U.S. soft but stable
Agriculture
OEM and aftermarket very strong
Pharma
Both big Pharma and generic
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85%+ of IDEX markets growing...with international growth outpacing domestic
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Total Revenue
Operating Margin
Free Cash Flow
EPS
IDEX Q1 2011 Financial Performance
Continued growth and margin expansion
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2010 EPS / Op Margin data adjusted for restructuring expense
Organic: 12%
24% Growth
140 bp expansion
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Fluid & Metering
Double digit orders and sales growth...margin expanded 180 bp
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Q1 Sales Mix: Organic +15%
Acquisition +2%
Fx -
Total +17%
Q1 Summary:
Strong top line growth; executing organic growth initiatives
Energy, Chemical, Agriculture very strong globally
Water/Waste Water ok globally, challenged with US muni spend
Margin expansion; productivity / price offsetting inflation
Total Orders
Total Revenue
Operating Margin
Organic: 21%
Organic: 15%
180 bp expansion
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Health & Science
Record sales and profit; 160 bp of margin expansion
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Q1 Sales Mix: Organic +19%
Acquisition +24%
Fx -
Total +43%
Q1 Summary:
New products and increased content within L.S. and A.I.
Industrial, environmental, and medical strong
Optics and Seals - PPE(r) performing very well
Completed Microfluidics and AT Films acquisition
Completed segment transfer of Pharma platform from FMT to HST; better fit from a market perspective
Total Orders
Total Revenue
Operating Margin
Organic: 8%
160 bp expansion
Organic: 19%
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Dispensing
International markets helping to offset North America softness
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Q1 Sales Mix: Organic -5%
Acquisition -
Fx +1%
Total -4%
Q1 Summary:
Wins in Eastern Europe and Asia
Latin America markets performing well
Holding share in N.A.; wins on retrofits and spare parts
Nearly 18% op margin reflects right-sized cost structure
Total Orders
Total Revenue
Operating Margin
Organic: (13)%
Organic: (5)%
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Fire & Safety
Global growth...23%+ Op Margin
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Q1 Sales Mix: Organic +4%
Acquisition -
Fx +1%
Total +5%
Q1 Summary:
Rescue winning internationally; China PLA win
Rescue North America challenged but winning with eDraulic
BAND IT growth exceeding expectations; O&G, new applications
North American Fire markets not improving, Int'l share growing
Total Orders
Total Revenue
Operating Margin
Organic: 3%
Organic: 4%
200 bp expansion
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Outlook: 2011 Guidance Summary
Q2 2011
EPS estimate range: $0.58 - $0.60
Organic revenue growth of 7% - 8%
Positive Fx impact of ~3% to sales (at Mar 31 rates)
Positive impact of 4-5% from acquisitions
FY 2011
EPS estimate range: $2.30 - $2.40
Organic revenue growth in the high single digits
Operating margin of 18.0% - 18.5%
Positive Fx impact of ~2% to sales (at Mar 31 rates)
Positive impact of ~4% from acquisitions
Other modeling items
Tax rate = 32.5%
Cap Ex $34-36M
Free Cash Flow will significantly exceed net income
EPS estimate excludes future acquisitions and related costs
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exv99w2
EXHIBIT 99.2
Conference Call Transcript
IEX Q1 2011 IDEX Corp Earnings Conference Call
CORPORATE PARTICIPANTS
Bruce Manning
IDEX Corporation Director of Corporate Finance
Larry Kingsley
IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
CONFERENCE CALL PARTICIPANTS
Robert Barry
UBS Analyst
Wendy Caplan
SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
Scott Graham
Jefferies & Co. Analyst
Matt Summerville
KeyBanc Capital Markets Analyst
Chris Wiggins
Oppenheimer & Co. Analyst
Charlie Brady
BMO Capital Markets Analyst
Walt Liptak
Barrington Research Associates, Inc. Analyst
Mark Barbalato
Vertical Research Partners Analyst
PRESENTATION
Operator
Good morning. My name is Susan and I will be your conference operator today. At this time
I would like to welcome everyone to the IDEX first-quarter 2011 earnings conference call.
(Operator Instructions)
After the speakers remarks there will be a question and answer session.
(Operator Instructions)
Mr. Bruce Manning, Director of Corporate Finance, you may begin your conference.
Bruce Manning Idex Corp Director of Corporate Finance
Thanks, Susan. Good morning everyone, and thank you for joining us for our discussion of
IDEX first-quarter 2011 financial results. Last night we issued a press release outlining our
Companys financial and operating performance for the three month period ending March 31, 2011. The
press release, along with presentation slides to be used during todays webcast, can be accessed on
our Company website at www.IDEXcorp.com. Joining me today from IDEX management are Larry Kingsley,
Chairman and CEO; Heath Mitts, Vice President and CFO; and Mike Yates, Vice President and Chief
Accounting Officer.
The format for our call today is as follows, we will walk through a big picture global environment
look and the impact there on IDEX, as well as offer an updated status on the end-markets we serve.
We will then walk through Company results, in our four business segments. And finally we will wrap
up with our updated outlook for 2011.
Following our prepared remarks we will then open the call for your questions. Should you need to
exit the call for any reason you may access a complete replay, beginning approximately two hours
after the call concludes, by dialing the toll-free number 800-642-1687 and entering conference ID
number 56253366. Or simply log onto our Company home page for the webcast replay.
Before we begin, a brief reminder. This call may contain certain forward-looking statements that
are subject to the Safe Harbor language in todays press release, and in IDEXs filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission. With that I will now turn this call over to our Chairman and
CEO, Larry Kingsley. Larry?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Thank you, Bruce. Good morning everyone. Im on slide 5 of our presentation. As Bruce
mentioned, we will take a couple minutes here and talk about the big picture, the environment, and
then well dive into the quarter. I am going to talk about inflation, the recent global events and
a little bit about our end-markets. Our strategy, which focuses on the development of niche
applications-intensive markets continues to pay off, and pay off well.
The majority of the markets we serve continue to grow at a pace as two times GDP. We continue to
complement that growth with initiatives to introduce new products, to expand the serve markets and
to improve our global market reach. And our robust but nimble operating model, ensures bottom-line
performance. Mixed modeling remains at the foundation of all of what we do to drive customer
satisfaction, to enable the growth and operational productivity. And we continue to step up our
global sourcing organization and execution to drive year-over-year material cost savings.
Another very key element within our operating model and our product scope, is our ability to
capture price. The customized nature of our product facilitates this, but especially so in an
inflationary environment. Last call, we explained a slight unfavorable price, versus inbound
material equation in Q4. Price offset material inflation in Q1, and for the full year this year, we
expect price to offset material inflation.
We are obviously cognizant that we must achieve total cost reduction for our customers. At the same
time we successfully demonstrated how all of what we provide is enabling their value propositions,
in the case of OEMs, and is driving reduced operating costs where we directly serve our end-user
customers. And we continue to achieve global price, similar to the developed market pricing, in
almost all of our end markets. So as we continue to grow faster outside of the US and Europe, it
should not adversely impact our business mix.
So we have the appropriate pricing measures and actions mapped to combat year-over-year inflation
at current levels, and we can realize further increases if necessary. So no worries regarding
material inflation at this time. Were daily, actively assessing, but it looks like were
well-positioned and well-prepared.
As far as the implications associated with recent global events, we have seen recuse tool program
cancellations in the Middle East. In total itll cost us between $3 million to $4 million of
revenue for the remainder of the year, but all of our fluid metering Middle East activity appears
to be
unaffected. And we continue to monitor the terrible Japanese seismic events and associated
influence on market demand and the supply chain, but we do not anticipate any significant impact to
demand or to the supply chain. As global growth continues to accelerate, and Ill speak in a minute
about a couple of key accomplishments and wins that are upside, which will mitigate issues in the
Middle East and a little bit in Japan.
The ongoing US local, the state and federal budget wrangling, is playing out as anticipated, so no
change versus our Q1 discussion regarding water programs or fire suppression equipment purchases.
And so net-net regarding the current events in the macro environment, were in good shape to grow
and drive profitability; and our cash generation capability is looking very good.
The M&A environment is still a sellers market, however, we have a very solid opportunity set, and
thats both short and long-term, and well accelerate capital deployment here as we have a clear
path to close some meaningful transactions and significantly build out our health and science
segment. Stay tuned. More to come in the short-term with regard to M&A.
Turning to the next slide, Im going to walk quickly through our serve markets. Our rescue business
is supporting dramatic global growth as emerging countries seek to outfit their first responders
with more advanced tools. And our new eDRAULIC product continues to impress, even in the US,
departments that perhaps wouldnt spend in this environment, are finding ways to fund the purchase
of the new product line.
And our dispensing serve markets, international growth, while modest, is helping to partially
offset North American market softness. And in the fluid metering space, the chemical and industrial
process markets are strong and were performing very well. Major chemical projects in China are
moving forward and our new products built for the local Chinese market are selling quite well.
Within the US we are supporting capacity expansion now on top of strong implant engineering and MRO
spend.
Within water, international growth continues, particularly in the UK with the Amp 5 project work
and continuation there. Other parts of Europe and the Middle East are growing as well though, and
within the US the municipal budgets and funding mechanisms do remain challenged. But there still
are very good projects to be won, and were executing. We are winning them. Energy is obviously
doing very well. Within our agriculture end-markets we are realizing very strong OEM and
after-market demands.
And then moving over to the health and science markets. Life science, diagnostics, and all of the
rest that is the focus of our HST strategy is doing very well, really benefiting from the growing
demand for testing. Whether it is clinical or water or food or air. And also the biotech markets
continue to perform really well. The Pharma space, particularly the lab space within Pharma, is
strong and again better internationally than in the US.
So, simply stated, regarding markets and demand, the international revenue profile is very healthy
and growing. It is great. The domestic business is generally good, with the public sector as
anticipated. But with generally healthy forward-looking indicators. So, we feel good about the full
year based on strong demands and we have taken our guidance up accordingly.
And now with regard to the results for the quarter. So, for the quarter sales were up 20% in total,
that is up 12% organically. All of our segments grew very nicely in the first quarter, with the
exception of dispensing, which was down just modestly. Q1 EPS was $0.57, that is up $0.11, or 24%
over Q1 of last year. The $0.57 was inclusive of about $2.6 million of out-of-pocket expense
associated with the completed and upcoming acquisitions.
So, from an operational performance standpoint, it was a $0.59 quarter, which is up 28% over Q1 of
last year. The Q1 operating margin of 18.2% was up 140 basis points from the prior year.
Productivity was strong with solid operating leverage on the organic growth, and our team has done
a great job, managing inflation as I mentioned. You will see as we go through the segment details,
just strong across the board performance. And finally, free cash flow was $20 million, similar to
the same quarter a year ago based on solid operating conversion, and offset somewhat incremental
2010 compensation payouts.
So I will begin the segment walk with fluid metering, and Im on slide 8. For the quarter, orders
were up 23%, up 21% organically. Backlog grew significantly during the quarter, as current bookings
support our organic growth projections. Our global presence, specifically in the energy and
chemical areas as I mentioned, is really driving the growth but solid execution just across the
board in the segment.
Sales increased 17% for the quarter, thats up 15% on an organic basis. Operating margin of 20.6%
was up 180 basis points from the prior year. And within FMT especially, within FMT the team did a
great job more than offsetting inflation. The FMT team is off to a strong start for the year and
they have line of sight to most of their organic initiatives, and the quote activity is quite
strong.
So, onto health and science, orders were up 31% for the quarter, that is up 8% organically. Sales
increased 43%, up 19% on an organic basis. Operating margin of 23.3% was up 160 basis points from
the prior year, as we leveraged well here too. HST performance continues to be just outstanding
across all products and markets. Within the strong instrumentation base we serve, we continue to
gain share on customer platforms and progress that we made in the regions, particularly in Asia,
has contributed to our outstanding growth. The HST segment will continue to perform well. The
markets we serve are growing much faster than GDP and we will outgrow the markets, as we have.
In the last call we discussed the recent acquisition of AT Films, which enhances the build-out of
our Photonics platform within HST. We also recently closed on the acquisition of Microfluidics,
adding to our Pharma platform. The integration of these businesses is going very well. And we will
continue to build-out in the HST space, as said. It remains our first priority for capital
deployment. And finally, before we move over to dispensing, within the first quarter we completed
the move of our Pharma platform to HST from FMT, to better align from a market perspective. And our
reported results reflect this change.
So now in to dispensing. Orders were down 12%, down 13% organically. Sales were down 4%, down 5%
organically. Operating margin of 17.5% is down, versus the prior-year, but as you can see we
continue to achieve very respectable margin at current volumes. A testament to the great job that
we have done to improving profitability here. We are realizing expected growth from emerging
economies, particularly places like Eastern Europe, Turkey, Russia, the Ukraine, China, and other
developing areas.
And so while we see North America and Europe not recovering this year, but will next, were very
productive at the current sales levels. And achieving very good margin on the lower volume. So with
the cost structure we now have in place as we said last quarter we should realize just tremendous
flow-through on the recovering volume.
And finally onto fire and safety. This segment continues to perform well, particularly given the
municipal spend environment. Orders were up 4%, up 3% organically. Sales increased 5% of 4% on an
organic basis. And operating margin of 23.2% was up 200 basis points from the first-quarter of last
year. And as we previously said, the North American fire market will remain soft for the
short-term, but were offsetting that domestic market with growing business internationally and the
markets there are quite strong.
The rescue tools business continues to excel. Global growth is certainly outpacing domestic growth.
In China the central government is allocating significant spend to natural disaster recovery
capability. And they intend to cover essentially all of China with rescue tools, and this has been
and will continue to be a fantastic opportunity for us. Our band clamping business is performing
very well, even better than expected. The growth is coming from outside of their core markets and
it should enable continued very strong, organic contribution.
So in summary for the Company, broad-based growth. Minimal market segment softness. Our global
expansion investment is paying off and quickly. And our operating model is allowing us to support
further investments while accruing margin. So Im to slide 12, our guidance update. We expect Q2
EPS to be in the $0.58 to $0.60 range now. Q2 organic revenue growth will be 7% to 8%. FX will have
a positive year-over-year impact on Q2 sales of approximately 3%.
For the full year we now anticipate that organic revenue growth will be in the high single digits
and EPS will be in the range of $2.30 to $2.40, 16% to 21% higher than 2010. Operating margin for
the Company for the full year will exceed 18%. Well have well continue to flow-through on the
incremental organic revenue between 30% and 35%. As far as other modeling items, the 2011 tax rate
is anticipated to be 32.5%. Full-year CapEx will be $34 million to $36 million. And we, as we have
always demonstrated, will continue to convert cash extremely well, well in excess of net income.
And again, our earnings projections exclude future acquisitions and related costs for the remainder
of the year.
So with that, we are going to open the line to your questions. Operator?
QUESTION AND ANSWER
Operator
(Operator Instructions) Your first question comes from the line of Robert Barry with UBS.
Robert Barry UBS Analyst
I think last quarter you said you were looking for mid-to high single digit growth in FMT
and high single to low double digit growth in HST and the quarter you just put up mid-to high teens
of revenue growth in those businesses so Im wondering about how should we be thinking about the
rest of the year?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
We do not hear the first part of your question but I think I got the gist of it, Robert.
Robert Barry UBS Analyst
You seem to be tracking well ahead of the growth rates you were expecting for FMT and
HST.
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Yes, HST is tracking very similar to what we would have anticipated. As I said in the
prepared remarks, the markets there are strong. We do not see any abating from any of the target
health and science markets and even the markets within HST that are more commercial and less health
are performing extremely well. So you know we talked last quarter about double digit organic
expectations for the full year. That is consistent with our view now and we will see a little bit
quarter-to-quarter organic orders per abation but if you think about how it sets up for the full
year, double digit is our expectation. FMT, you are right, it accelerated in the first quarter. We
built a fair amount of backlog. And as I said in the prepared remarks, it was pretty broad-based. I
think at this point, you know, it is still early. We are going to let it play out a bit but we
should expect slightly improved organic performance out of FMT as we work our way through the year.
We are set up nicely. Otherwise its pretty consistent with what we characterized in the prior
couple calls.
Robert Barry UBS Analyst
I mean, do you think you can see mid-to-upper teens growth in HST?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
No, I would not model mid-to upper teens organic growth in HST. I think you know stick
with a double digit assumptions. You may get the low teens at the very high end, but that would be
a good way to think about it.
Robert Barry UBS Analyst
Yes, could you talk about how much of the revenue growth in the quarter came from
pricing?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Not that much. You know, we offset material inflation but if you look at how much of it
was price per se, it is 100, maybe as much as 120 BIPS.
Robert Barry UBS Analyst
Okay, and what is the expectation of the year of that high single digit revenue growth?
How much of that would be pricing would you think?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Similar.
Robert Barry UBS Analyst
Okay. And then lastly, I was wondering what your expectation was in the fire and safety
business as we progress through the year. I know you had been looking for a mid-to high
single-digit growth there. I think it was about 4% in the quarter and the cops get tougher. Do you
think there will be some acceleration there? At that middle east $3 million to $4 million impact?
Is that weighing on the growth?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Well, yes.
Robert Barry UBS Analyst
I mean, obviously it is a little bit but it probably only accounts for about 1%.
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Thats right. If you look at, we didnt quantify, but to give you a little more color the
rescue business continues to win very nice, pretty significant, large organic opportunities with
China at the top of the list. So we have got the first half of a very large commitment coming out
of China for rescue tools which will ship through the remainder of this year. I think mid-single
digit assumptions is a good way to think about it FSD. And that would assume, you know, some
domestic market softness for fire within that statement.
Robert Barry UBS Analyst
Okay. Okay, great. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Wendy Caplan with SunTrust Robinson Humphrey.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
supply chain issues but any capacity constraints in the systems?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Hi, Wendy. Were still only getting the tail end of peoples questions, operator.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
Oh, should I try to again?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Yes, please.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
Sure. Good morning. I think you said that you werent you did not see any supply chain
issues but I was wondering whether there were any capacity constraints that you were experiencing
in your systems?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
No, Wendy. We are in great shape relative to capacity. Internal capacity as you know we
can flex pretty quickly and theres nothing that is going to keep us from achieving 2011 or 2012.
And it is not going to require a huge investment frankly to chase our way into 12 at this point.
We have some very isolated supply-chain issues around electronic components and perhaps we will see
some specialty material allocation issues that will have a very minor impact on us for the course
of the through the course of the year. I think in general we are in very good shape.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
Those electronic components from Japan or ?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Some of it is Japanese related. I think some of it is using Japan as an excuse, some
consumer-products hog some of those passive electronic components.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
Sure. Sure. And your movement of the Pharma business from FMT to HST, I do not recall how
large that was? Is it meaningful relative, will it make any difference in terms of the margin or
any kind of growth issues there.
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Yes, that is a great question. Theres two ways to think about it. One, because we have
been acquiring the body of that platform over the last several months if you were to kind of look
at it against 2010 revenue, it is only about a $30 million shift impact but if you think about its
contribution pre-further acquisitions for 2011, it is a $70 million ad in terms of its profile it
would fit closely with how you would see HST today. Both in terms of growth and profitability.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
Okay, and you did say, Larry, that HST was your number one priority in terms of
acquisitions. Is that, you know as you gaze, in the pipeline of properties, would that be the
overwhelming place that we would see? Overwhelming category?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Yes, theres a short and long-term answer to that question, Wendy. Long-term we love FMT
and HST. So you are going to continue to see both. And the very short-term there is more, much more
meaningful opportunities that we think are very much line of sight within HST.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
Okay. Okay. Thank you and one last question on China. You mentioned this large rescue
project which I assume is part of Dingli. I remember when you acquired it and it was a $5 million
business. I assume that it is larger than that today. And when we sell products through to China
it is through Dingli as opposed to our other subsidiaries?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Very good memory and great question. Again, Dingli has become a very meaningful element
within our global rescue strategy and for IDEX for how we go after China and the greater Asia. The
Dingli brand is essentially the product that we manufacture in China, the Ding Lei organization is
the group that we use to sell all of our rescue brands and some of the fire product in Asia. It is
a much, much larger business. I am not going to quantify it. Its actually a business thats
performing extraordinarily well and with margins that are at or above IDEX.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
So the large project in China that continues is not simply Dingli product but full breath
of IDEX rescue tools?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
It is a combination of technology from Germany and China and it is sold as Dingli and
Lucas banded product.
Wendy Caplan SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Analyst
Great, thank you very much for the clarification.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Scott Graham with Jefferies.
Scott Graham Jefferies & Co. Analyst
So I was just wondering if you could give us a little bit of color on what you sow in the
refined fuels business in the quarter, what you are seeing with water quoting domestically and the
third question would be, does the organic orders increase of I think it was 9% in HST, does that
concern you relative to what we saw in the sales growth?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
First on the fluid metering, couple questions with regard to refined fuels, it is very
strong quarter activity, very healthy set of projects, much stronger internationally than in the US
but it is growing at a very nice clip organically in the US. A lot of it is projects that had been,
not frozen, but slowed down over the last couple of years. So, were seeing really good activity in
what we call our energy business, as you know Scott its kind of midstream. Most of it in the
post-refinery pre-retail portion of the market. With regard to water and the quoting activity
there, if you look at the US market as a different picture than the rest of the world. The US spend
will be down this year versus last as a function of, you know, both lack of stimulus as well as
what is happening from a budgetary standpoint. Same time weve taken our win rate up by about 12
points year-over-year. So, well actually show pretty nicely even in the US. Not a story we will
tell all day long, but it will be a solid year in the US. The international opportunity set is very
strong. And the international area I think we will see solid organic growth its a combination of
the ongoing work that were doing in the UK but also increased penetration otherwise mainly in
Europe. And then with regard to HST and the organic order profile, no to give you the short answer
to the question with regard to particular the Q4 versus Q1 organic orders rate. You really have to
look at when blankets are placed as it influences that organic behavior you know. There is
variations every year when you look at quarter versus quarter. But if you look at the combination
of Q4, Q1, take that six month period of time, versus the same six months, 12 months prior, you
know, you see a very healthy growth among those. Out of the six month period and you see backlog
building nicely and setting up that double digit equation that I talked about earlier. I think that
we feel quite good.
Scott Graham Jefferies & Co. Analyst
Okay. That is helpful. I do have one other question and its on the M&A. Where it seems
you are more than signaling something in the very near term here and you cited HST again. And I
guess I am wondering, you know, you have a much broader platform under which to acquire businesses
in FMT. So I know that you intended to say, you know, where more of the acquisition activity is
expected to come from near term, but what are you seeing on the FMT side from an M&A standpoint?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Very good opportunity Scott. There is both continued product and technology acquisitions
that make sense for us and there are some that are really key enabling businesses that take us into
global areas that we are not as well penetrated. Beyond that, as we continue to expand the way we
think about FMT you know the funnel is in good shape there. We have a great set of opportunities
that I think you will certainly see some additions between now and the end of the year. My
comments, you know, my answer to Wendys question were simply around the very short-term versus you
know the ongoing M&A strategy. From an ongoing perspective, both HST and FMT are big, available
markets for us to acquire in. I think if you look back at the end of the year or say a year from
now you will see two very large segments with lots of room to grow both organically and
acquisitively.
Scott Graham Jefferies & Co. Analyst
So the M&A, if we flash forward to the end of this year, would you expect to add as much
in revenue to FMT as you seem to have pretty good line of sight in HST or will it be much more
skewed toward HST?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
It is hard to predict the very end of the year activity. Certainly at this point it looks
like there will be a little bit more HST content added.
Scott Graham Jefferies & Co. Analyst
Okay. Thanks very much.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Matt Summerville with KeyBanc.
Matt Summerville KeyBanc Capital Markets Analyst
Good morning, just a couple follow-up questions. Larry, can you give just a little more
color on the linearity and of and overall order trends for IDEX as you move through the quarter and
what youre seeing across the businesses thus far in April? Has the magnitude of strength, you know
you experienced in Q1, has that continued over?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Linearity was reasonable. Its a different story by segment and again, the HST quarter
rates were more heavily influenced by blanket bookings that took place between Q4 and Q1 and
through the course of Q1. FMT accelerated through Q1. April is off to a great start. I think that
for the vast majority of the Company, we are, feeling pretty strong about how we are sitting up Q2
and the remainder of the year.
Matt Summerville KeyBanc Capital Markets Analyst
Larry, you talked quite a bit about acquisitions. There has been a lot of questions about
that. Based on the opportunities that you see in front of you, how much capital could you see IDEX
deploying over the next 12 to 24 months?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
We have always ranged this for obvious reasons given the nature of, you know, how assured
one can be about M&A transactions when you are beyond the ones that are in the line of sight. But
on the low end, certainly a few $100 million is possible. And we have with a combination of debt
and cash, you know, plus this years cash generation the ability to do several $100 million.
Matt Summerville KeyBanc Capital Markets Analyst
And then just one final question. You talked a little bit I think in our prepared remarks
about some things you are doing on the sourcing side to help reduce your cost structure. How much
in sourcing savings do you anticipate IDEX obtaining this year versus last year? And I guess Im
trying to get a sense for whether or not the benefit from that is accelerating?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
If you look at the net between strategic sourcing savings offset by material inflation, I
do not think you would say that its going to accelerate this year. We are going to see some minor
improvement of the raw sourcing savings. A few $1 million versus 2010. But I do anticipate that we
will
continue to see material inflation. So, I would model it kind of just on a similar basis to
what you saw in 2010 in terms of incremental contribution.
Matt Summerville KeyBanc Capital Markets Analyst
Thanks a lot, Larry.
Operator
Chris Wiggins with Oppenheimer.
Chris Wiggins Oppenheimer & Co. Analyst
I was just wondering if you could provide an update on your emerging market strategy and
where you stand as far as the Indian manufacturing facility in Brazil particularly?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Sure. We have opened our new Indian facility. We have the formal ribbon cutting still a
couple months out. But were up and running. We have added significantly to the front end of the
business. And we will continue to build-out first, our fluid metering content there but we are also
going to be moving some other product lines their that I am not in a position to talk externally
about yet. Most of that with the intent of serving developing regions but it will also continue to
enhance our cost position for what we bring home. And with regard to you know how that facility
sets us up for India itself, I there we are where we want to be. And then your second question.
Sorry?
Chris Wiggins Oppenheimer & Co. Analyst
On Brazil.
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Oh, on Brazil. Yes, we are not quite as far along in Brazil, but we have made the
investments that we talked about. The team is being built now and we have people moving down there
as we speak plus we are hiring locally and I think our opportunity set there is going to be
fantastic. So we are, you know, were probably going to see a nice little pick up here toward the
tail end of this year, but 2012 ought to be a great organic opportunity for Brazil.
Chris Wiggins Oppenheimer & Co. Analyst
Great. And at HST, any concerns I guess more specifically looking in 2012 with the NIH
budget cuts?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
None at all.
Chris Wiggins Oppenheimer & Co. Analyst
Okay. And then the last question I have, just on the housekeeping side with the move of
the Pharma platform to HST did that include the Fitzpatrick acquisition?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
It did.
Chris Wiggins Oppenheimer & Co. Analyst
Okay. Great. Thank you for your time.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Charlie Brady with BMO Capital.
Charlie Brady BMO Capital Markets Analyst
So, just quickly I guess on dispensing as we look at the margins of that business is it
fair to say I mean, do you think Q1 was kind of bumped along the bottom of where that margin
ought to hit and we ought to at least stay that way or maybe get a little bit better as we move
through the year?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Well, it is a volume dependent discussion. At the volume that he achieved in Q1 assuming
similar mix and mix does play up or down a bit from that level. But at that revenue level that we
witnessed in the first-quarter, that is probably the way I would think about margin rates for the
business. The bigger issue as I have said now a couple times is that you know you start to see a
little bit of recovery in North America and Europe. Sales pick up will flow through just hugely in
terms of incremental margins. So we are frankly pretty pleased if you look at a $32 million quarter
and achieving just under 18% out margin. That is a good basis to build from.
Charlie Brady BMO Capital Markets Analyst
Yes, no question. Fair enough. I guess just bigger picture as you look at that business,
as you acquire more businesses in other areas like HST it becomes obviously a smaller and smaller
piece of the business. And Im just was wondering how you think of that business may be longer-term
in the context of kind of the IDEX mix of businesses in terms of, you know, is it still kind of
regarded as a core business you see going long-term or is it maybe something that you dont own
three to four years from now?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Well, we do not see the M&A opportunity to build on that business at all. You know, the
comments I just made with respect to FMT and HST are as a function of the size of those markets and
how we can build out. And you know I think the dispensing business is a great niche market. It is
going to certainly going to cyclically recover here. So its going to be a very attractive
business. In terms of calling it core versus non-core, certainly it is not as bi, its going to be
a very large contributor to the Company no matter what the plan for it is long-term.
Charlie Brady BMO Capital Markets Analyst
Thanks.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Walt Liptak with Barrington.
Walt Liptak Barrington Research Associates, Inc. Analyst
I wanted to ask you one that maybe its a little bit tough to discern but when you look
at your organic order or you organic sales, how much would you especially in HST and FMT how
much would you say is cyclical growth versus other things that are within your control like new
products or market share that are more sustainable?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Sure. If you look at HST, Walt, we actually talked a couple quarters ago and more
specifically about a bridge from market growth rate at the foot of that bridge and our achievement
at the top. And we talked about the new customer contribution, the new platform, kind of the shared
wallet increase that we got by way of increased content on the customer platforms and essentially
expanding the served market by way of some of the product innovations. And we bridged essentially
from you know, essentially 10 points at the time. I will tell you, that if you think about a double
digit performance achievement this year out of the business, that at least four or five points,
even at that rate is going to come by way of our own initiatives. And so the markets are growing in
the high single-digit range now. Were growing, obviously substantially better than that. If the
markets softened to some degree for whatever reason and 2012 I still think we can outgrow the
market by a few or several points. Now, off the same issues that weve talking about historically.
The team is doing really well. Weve got great technology, we continue to work with the OEMs in
terms of helping them think through their hardware going forward where were taking an really a
very much larger portion of that hardware responsibility and their focused more exclusively on
their software, and what that brings to the total product solution.
With regard to FMT, you know, I give you probably a little murkier answer to be quite frank because
the broad, broad base of business activity. I think if you add up all the markets that we serve
youll probably get to a current organic performance that is in again, the high single digit range.
Maybe coincidentally the math for what were bridging into our own performance is about the same. I
think that the question regarding how you model FMT going forward has a lot more to do around
assumptions of where our sales content is by those end-markets I talked about and which
geographies. I think if we continue to see the very strong international growth which we anticipate
we will, and we see good contribution out of energy and the process control segments, chemical at
the top of that list. I think you will see a very, very strong organic contribution for FMT which
is better than what you would model in terms of a broad FMT exposure. But even, but even within FMT
you have got Ag and what are smaller segments for us that are doing just fantastically well.
Walt Liptak Barrington Research Associates, Inc. Analyst
Okay. And then going back to the HST. The revenue that you are getting, the organic
revenue is leveraging pretty nicely. Would you expected that you could continue that leverage rate
going into 2012?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Yes.
Walt Liptak Barrington Research Associates, Inc. Analyst
Okay. Okay. Thanks they much.
Operator
Your next question comes from Mark Barbalato with Vertical Research Partners.
Mark Barbalato Vertical Research Partners Analyst
Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I guess my first question is what
percentage of the revenue is coming from new products and can you give us a sense of what the
margin differential is between new products and existing products?
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Yes, in terms of the contribution in the current sales that is about 20% right now. On
the order base, you know, we do not have clear visibility to that but its probably a little bit
north of that, and the margin contribution is actually very strong. Stronger than the base.
Mark Barbalato Vertical Research Partners Analyst
Stronger than the base. Okay. And then I guess when I think about HST, the organic
revenue growth was, you know, very strong and has been very strong. And, you know, organic orders
up 9% you know seems to be a little bit of a disconnect at least maybe for this one quarter. If I
look at
incremental margins in Q1 and adjust for deals, Im kind of at low 30%. Not sure if thats, you
know, in the ballpark. How should I think about incremental margins going forward at HST? You know,
if orders are decelerating.
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Well, first of all, I think back to the orders question first.
Mark Barbalato Vertical Research Partners Analyst
Okay.
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
I dont think you are going to see orders decelerating. You are still going to set up at
double digit sales equation that we spoke to. And do not get too hung up with Q4 versus Q1 organic
orders rate. You know, youre likely to see Q2 organic orders back up. And the organic orders
equation has got a lot of variables to it that its tough to trend that and make sense of it. I can
just tell you simply that building backlog, healthy backlog, you will see a nice book to bill
equation, if you will, through the course of the year and we do not have concerns about
deceleration at this point. With regards to the leverage that we can achieve, it should be mid-30s
still. The organic sales to the P bit line. That is pretty typical of what were seeing across the
board. On an all up Company basis, we look at the organic flow through. It was 32-ish, and if you
take out, you know we talked a little bit in the prepared remarks about the special kind of
out-of-pocket acquisition related cost. So, if you take those into consideration the organic filter
was 38.
Mark Barbalato Vertical Research Partners Analyst
Thank you very much.
Operator
There are no further questions at this time.
Larry Kingsley IDEX Corporation Chairman, CEO
Okay. Thank you, operator. Thanks everyone for joining. We certainly appreciate your
interest in the Company. We are very pleased with our first quarter results. We look forward to
continued success for the remainder of the year. As I said our organic prospects for the year
remain strong and we will grow very profitably. We are working to close both the short-term and the
long-term acquisitions which look quite good and they will be meaningful additions to the Company.
So again, thanks for participating and good news to come.
Operator
This concludes todays IDEX first-quarter 2011 earnings conference call. You may now
disconnect.