Ecolab Inc
A trusted partner for millions of customers, Ecolab is a global sustainability leader offering water, hygiene and infection prevention solutions and services that protect people and the resources vital to life. Building on more than a century of innovation, Ecolab has annual sales of $16 billion, employs approximately 48,000 associates and operates in more than 170 countries around the world. The company delivers comprehensive science-based solutions, data-driven insights and world-class service to advance food safety, maintain clean and safe environments, and optimize water and energy use. Ecolab's innovative solutions improve operational efficiencies and sustainability for customers in the food, healthcare, high tech, life sciences, hospitality and industrial markets.
Pays a 1.03% dividend yield.
Current Price
$259.51
-0.42%GoodMoat Value
$129.68
50.0% overvaluedEcolab Inc (ECL) — Q4 2023 Earnings Call Transcript
AI Call Summary AI-generated
The 30-second take
Ecolab had a very strong finish to 2023, with sales and profits growing nicely. The company is excited because its efforts to raise prices and win new business are working, even though some markets are still slow. They expect another year of strong profit growth in 2024.
Key numbers mentioned
- Organic sales growth of 6% in the fourth quarter.
- Adjusted earnings per share up 22% in the fourth quarter.
- Gross margin increased by 330 basis points.
- Delivered product costs are still up 35% compared to 2019 levels.
- Adjusted earnings per share growth expected in the 17% to 25% range for 2024.
- Operating income margin finished the year at 14%.
What management is worried about
- The Life Sciences market is expected to remain soft for the next few quarters.
- Europe has been a drag on overall volume growth for the company.
- The unpredictability of macroeconomic conditions persists.
- Delivered product costs, while easing, are still significantly higher than pre-inflation levels.
What management is excited about
- Volume growth turned positive in the fourth quarter, reflecting strong new business wins.
- The Institutional & Specialty segment is quickly narrowing the gap to its historical 21% operating margin.
- Value-based pricing is expected to remain north of 2% going forward.
- They see a clear path to achieving a 20% operating income margin within the next few years.
- New business generation pipelines are at record levels.
Analyst questions that hit hardest
- Josh Spector, UBS: Cadence of earnings through the year. Management responded by attributing the expected earnings pattern primarily to the timing of benefits from lower delivered product costs, which are front-loaded in the year.
- John McNulty, BMO Capital Markets: Expectations for delivered product costs to push higher. Management clarified they did not say costs would push higher, but rather that the favorability from lower costs would ease, expecting costs to stabilize in the second half of the year.
- Vincent Andrews, Morgan Stanley: Changes in procurement strategy and conservatism in the second-half guide. Management gave an unusually long answer praising their new procurement team but ultimately stated the timing of cost recoupment is not in their hands, focusing instead on securing value-based pricing.
The quote that matters
Our success is anchored in the value we create for customers by improving their operating performance while also reducing their water and energy consumption.
Christophe Beck — Chairman and CEO
Sentiment vs. last quarter
This section is omitted as no previous quarter context was provided.
Original transcript
Operator
Greetings, and welcome to the Ecolab Fourth Quarter 2023 Earnings Release Conference Call. This time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. The question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. At this time, it is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Andy Hedberg, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you, Mr. Hedberg. You may now begin.
Thank you, and hello everyone, and welcome to Ecolab's fourth quarter conference call. With me today are Christophe Beck, Ecolab's Chairman and CEO; and Scott Kirkland, our CFO. A discussion of our results, along with our earnings release and the slides referencing the quarter results are available on Ecolab’s website at ecolab.com/investor. Please take a moment to read the cautionary statements in these materials, which state that this teleconference and the associated supplemental materials include estimates of future performance. These are forward-looking statements, and the actual results could differ materially from those projected. Factors that could cause actual results to differ are described under the Risk Factors section in our most recent Form 10-K and our posted materials. We also refer you to the supplemental diluted earnings per share information in the release. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Christophe Beck for his comments.
Thank you so much, Andy, and welcome to everyone on the call. The very strong performance in the fourth quarter capped off a phenomenal year for our company. With the fourth quarter, organic sales growth of 6% and adjusted earnings per share up 22%. I'm really proud of this team, because this strong performance underscores the collective hard work and dedication of our entire Ecolab team and reflects our sustained focus over the last few years on driving long-term growth the right way. Despite the unpredictability of macroeconomic conditions, our team drove further value-based pricing while maintaining our strong business momentum. Volumes in the fourth quarter continued to improve with the positive growth, reflecting new business wins that more than offset soft macro demand. Our success is anchored in the value we create for customers by improving their operating performance while also reducing their water and energy consumption. In 2024, our focus remains on continuing to fuel our strong and consistent long-term double-digit earnings per share growth. The highlights for the fourth quarter were the continued and rapid expansion of our gross margin, which increased by 330 basis points, and our organic operating income margin, which increased 200 basis points to 16%. This growth was led by a 390 basis point increase in the Institutional & Specialty segment margin, as we continue to quickly narrow the gap to this segment's historical 21% operating income margin. The Institutional & Specialty team continues to execute well, driving further value pricing and volume growth that accelerated to the mid single-digit range, reflecting strong new business wins. The Industrial segment operating income margin increased 220 basis points with notable expansion in each of our Water, Food & Beverage and Paper businesses. Additionally, the other segment's operating income margin was up 160 basis points driven by strong Pest Elimination performance once again. As expected, the Healthcare and Life Sciences segment operating income margin eased versus last year. Healthcare's profitability continued to improve, which is good, reflecting the benefits of separating our North America operations into two focused businesses as mentioned, infection prevention and surgical. Healthcare's income growth was more than offset by comparison to the very strong performance of Life Sciences last year amidst continued market pressures. Most importantly, operating income dollars for this segment have grown sequentially throughout 2023 from the actions we have taken to improve performance, and we expect this growth to continue over the course of 2024. From a sales perspective, our Life Sciences business drove slightly positive growth in 2023, despite the market being down double-digits. While we continue to expect this market to remain soft for the next few quarters, our ongoing investments in new capabilities and new capacity enable us to gain market share in this very attractive long-term high-growth and high-margin market. Our overall performance highlights the strength of the Ecolab model, as we continue to execute on pricing and driving new business all backed by delivering leading customer value. Additionally, we've seen benefits from moderately lower delivered product costs. These costs are still up 35% compared to 2019 levels, but declined by mid-single digits relative to last year's fourth quarter, a bit more than we had anticipated. We continue to take a prudent stance on the trajectory of delivered product costs. Therefore, our outlook for 2024 assumes that these costs will remain favorable in the first half of the year and stable in the second half of the year. Although we are very pleased with the margin expansion we have delivered so far, our focus remains on fully recapturing our historical 44% gross margin to reach our 20% operating income margin target. Our value-based pricing model and delivered product costs that are now coming down further strengthened our conviction in achieving this target over the next few years. Our underlying productivity also remains strong, as we continue to leverage our leading digital capabilities. As expected, SG&A expenses remained relatively stable compared to the third quarter. Consistent with previous years, we anticipate a few percentage point sequential increase in SG&A dollars in Q1, but expect to drive further improvements in our SG&A ratio as the year progresses. We expect 2024 to be another strong year for Ecolab, building on our long-term 12% to 15% earnings growth trajectory that is amplified by shorter-term benefits from lower delivered product costs. For the year, we expect adjusted earnings per share to grow in the 17% to 25% range, which assumes soft, but stable macroeconomic demand and lower delivered product costs in the first half of the year as global inflation eases. With this, we expect to maintain our business momentum as we drive further pricing, volume growth, and continued robust operating income margin expansion. Looking at the first quarter, the benefit from lower delivered product costs is expected to peak with costs down high single digits in the quarter, resulting in adjusted earnings per share increasing 44% to 56% versus last year. Beyond the first quarter, quarterly adjusted diluted earnings per share growth is expected to progressively normalize towards the upper end of Ecolab's long-term 12% to 15% target, as favorability from lower delivered product costs eases. As always, we will also remain good stewards of capital by continuing to invest in the business, increasing our dividend, and returning cash to shareholders. Most importantly, with the best team, science, and capabilities in the industry, we will continue to grow our share of the stable and high-quality $152 billion market we serve. I believe Ecolab's long-term parameters are stronger than ever, and I'm confident in our outlook for continued strong performance as we work to deliver superior shareholder returns. Thank you for your continued support and investment in Ecolab. I look forward to your questions.
Thanks, Christophe. That concludes our formal remarks. Operator, would you please begin the question-and-answer period?
Operator
Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. Thank you. Our first question is from Tim Mulrooney with William Blair. Please proceed with your question.
Hey, Christophe. Good afternoon.
Good afternoon, Tim.
If I'm recalling correctly, you guys talked about Europe being a drag on growth in 2023. Can you talk about how volumes trended in Europe in the fourth quarter? And what volumes for the business overall look like if you were to exclude Europe? Thank you.
I love that question, Tim. Thank you. Well, two parts of your question obviously here. Let me give you a little bit of a picture of the broader company and then specifically to Europe, which had a lot of good stuff to offer as well at the same time. As the world is slowing or has been slowing over the past few quarters, especially outside the US, especially in Europe, as you mentioned as well. I'm really glad that we shifted to offense, as we shared with you a few quarters back because it's really working. As you've seen, in the fourth quarter, our volume growth went up one percentage point in Q4. To your question, if you exclude Europe, our volume growth would be 3% up, so quite a bit. So now our job is absolutely to maintain that choosing speed in 2024. As we rebuild margins obviously, the right way, which means in Ecolab speak in a way that benefits customers by reducing the total operating cost. But to your point on Europe specifically, yes, it's been a drag on growth in the overall company plus 1% excluding Europe plus 3%. Europe has had an exceptional year in 2023. We reached almost 14% operating income margin, which was our objective when we started the whole transformation in Europe. So good evolution in a very difficult market, where we prioritized making sure we get the right margins, the right businesses, the right customers investing in the right places. So slight volume decline, very good pricing and really focused on the right businesses with the right productivity. So good year in Europe, difficult from a volume perspective but good for the overall company in Q4 and especially so the 3% excluding Europe is very good news for us.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Ashish Sabadra with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Thanks for taking my question. Just as we think about fiscal year 2024, how should we think about the volume growth as well as pricing normalizing in 2024? And congrats on the solid quarter. Thanks.
Thank you, Ashish. Good question as well. So in that environment as described before, so with Tim, I really expect that to stay on our long-term average Ecolab growth trajectory. With what I would say is a 2% plus pricing, as I've shared with you as well and positive volume growth as we've had in the fourth quarter as well. Bottom line, our long-term growth target remains unchanged. Even in difficult environments, it's going to be a little bit lower than that range for 2024 where we prioritize obviously getting the right value pricing while driving growth as we did in Q4. That will help us deliver a very good year in 2024.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Seth Weber with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.
Hi guys, good morning. Maybe just if I could clarify, Christophe that last comment. Are you saying pricing is 2% in 2024? Is that what you said? And then my bigger question is I was trying to disaggregate the five points of pricing that you got in the fourth quarter, how much of that is new versus carryover, which I guess is ultimately kind of the same question, but I just want to make sure I understood your answer to the prior question about pricing for 2024?
Yes, a few elements to unpack here. So, the 5% in Q4 was all new pricing realized in 2023, and there was no carryover anymore from the previous years. In the fourth quarter, which was a remarkable accomplishment. So, the 5% in an environment with delivered product costs tends to ease. The fact that we can still get incremental pricing from our customers because we deliver even more value to them in terms of total operating cost reduction, for me it's a very good sign. As I've shared with you, I don't know exactly where pricing is going to end up on a longer-term basis. We used to be one plus pre-inflationary cycle if I may say, and what I've shared with you is to say I'm fairly confident that we will be north of 2% as I called it so the two-plus for the future. We'll see where we end up. I feel good about the two-plus. That's going to be true for 2024, while we keep volume growing at the same time. So, let's see where we will end up.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Josh Spector with UBS. Please proceed with your question.
Yes, hi. Good afternoon. So, I wanted to ask about the cadence of earnings through the year. First congrats on a strong guide for the first quarter. But I guess if you look at the typical run rate, you're up about $0.30 in the second order, another $0.30 in the second half. I guess if we run that math through, we're closer to something in $7 in EPS for this year versus your guide in the low $6s. So, just curious if you can kind of run through. Are there things through the year that add to costs or things we should be aware of that would deter you from that path? Or any comments you have around that? Thanks.
Hey, Josh, this is Scott. I'll cover this one. Thanks for the question. Yes, as Christophe said in his opening, we're expecting bigger benefits of delivered product costs in the first half, and bigger in the first quarter. If you look at sort of separating out delivered product costs, we would expect throughout the year that underlying EPS delivery to be at the high end of our long-term targeted range. It's really this expected benefit in the first quarter, a little bit in the second quarter as well, but really looking at delivered product costs in the second half being pretty stable.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of John McNulty with BMO Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Yes, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. So, on the delivered product costs, I guess, are you expecting to see either raw materials or some other part of those costs pushing noticeably higher as we go through the year? Or is there some kind of a speed bump, or I guess reverse speed bump some best fit that you're seeing in 1Q? Because I guess I don't understand why you would necessarily be seeing delivered product costs pushing higher throughout the year?
So we haven't said higher. What we said is that we reached a peak in the middle of last year, so 2023, and it kept easing. In the third quarter, in the fourth quarter, and will be the case as well in the first quarter of 2024. What we're saying is that it's going to keep easing in the second quarter until the second half where we expect it now to be rather stable versus last year. We know, and you know how hard it is to predict, obviously, delivered product costs or inflation, as we've seen this morning as well. So, the inflationary print, it was hard to predict when it went up; obviously, how much and how quickly. It's hard to predict how much and how fast it's going to go down. So for now with what we see, with what we know keeping in mind that we buy 10,000 products in our portfolio, so it's very diverse, which is a good thing in a way as well. Some will go up, some will go down. But generally, it's easing for the first half and stable in the second half, and we will see what truly happens. But it's important to keep in mind what Scott just said before, we keep our eyes laser-focused on really driving this 12% to 15% earnings per share growth with everything we can control and really get as close to the 15% as we can, and delivered product cost comes on top of it, which means the bump in the first half and in the second half, so to be closer to the upper end of that range. How do we do that? Well, it's the old-fashioned way that we've been practicing for a long time now with new business, with value pricing, with productivity, and innovation. That's the way we think about it, and that we hope you will see that way too.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Jeff Zekauskas with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question.
Thanks very much. It's a two-part question. Have volumes in the institutional business accelerated? And if so why? Or is it just that the comparisons are easier year-over-year in the fourth quarter than they were in the third? And secondly, in terms of pricing, how will your price initiatives work? Are you already raising prices in the first quarter here at the beginning of the year? Or will they come later? Will they sort of make their way smoothly quarter-by-quarter through the year? Or will things bump up, I don't know, in May or June? That's the base case.
So hi, Jeff, good to hear you. So, two questions obviously here for the price of one. So the volume in Institutional is clearly up. It's not a year-on-year comparison question, especially when the market is down, as well at the same time so really showing that this Institutional business is in great shape, with great momentum driving volume, driving share, getting price, driving margin, really like where Institutional is heading. So the short answer is yes, volume in Institutional keeps accelerating. The second part of your question on pricing, there are exceptional times like in the past few years and there are the more normal times. I would say like now, which basically the discussions with customers for the most part, they're not all created equal obviously, are happening in the fourth and the first quarter of the year, so fourth quarter and as we speak now. It's usually something that's evolving progressively during the year with no big bumps. It's something which is pretty organic keeping in mind that the pricing is always based on the value we create for customers, which is why we were able to deliver $3 billion in the last few years and kept it and keep building it. It's because ultimately for customers it's a good deal. The net-net in the operations while it's positive including our pricing as well at the same time. So from a timing perspective, Jeff, happening in Q4, Q1, and it's being delivered in the quarters during the year.
Operator
Next question is from the line of Manav Patnaik with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. Christophe, it looks like a lot of things are aligning well here starting the year and you've touched a lot of them. I just wanted to touch base on how you thought about your portfolio. There have been a few pieces like Healthcare and even Paper that have been dragged to top line growth. Just curious on how you think about your portfolio composition today and if anything might be in the works there?
Yeah, hi, Manav. It's a little bit like with our kids; they're not always doing great at the same time. That's a bit the same with our businesses. It doesn't mean that we love them less. But if we look at all our businesses and markets out there, over 90% of them had double-digit operating income growth, so a pretty remarkable bias towards good performance for all our businesses. I like the overall portfolio that we have. We're also approaching investments and resources as a company. That's been true for many years in four different buckets. The ones that we want to fuel are the ones with the highest growth potential, the ones with the highest margin potential as well; we have the ones that we want to protect. Those are the ones that are doing well; no big change. We have the ones that we need to transform. Those are the ones that, obviously, have potential but are not exactly there yet. And then you have the ones that you need to fix. Healthcare being one of the perfect examples of that. Paper would either be on the transform side, because it's north of 16% margin that we have in that business—not great volume growth right now but very good margin—and we'll end up in a good place as well as we keep transforming that business. That's the way we think about it. We're not investing in everyone the same way. It's really by category along the four that I just mentioned as well. Overall, I like the portfolio we have, but we always need to stay critical for every business, every market to make sure that we have the best owner's mindset and making sure that we do what's right for shareholders.
Operator
Our next question is coming from the line of David Begleiter with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. Christophe, again just on the delivered product costs, could you unpack the dynamics as to the high single-digit increase in Q1? Is that primarily a function of the caustic price decrease last year we saw for, I think, every month of the year? And then going forward, is your flattening out a function of just caustic being up as the year progresses? Thank you.
Thank you, David. I'm looking at Scott and he'd love to answer that question. Scott, happy to.
Yeah, happy to, David. Thank you. As Christophe referenced earlier, our delivered product costs are still up and again just to clarify, 35% versus our pre-inflationary period. As you referenced, it peaked in the middle of last year, right? And then we started to see some modest benefit in Q3, some additional single-digit benefit in Q4, and are expecting then that benefit really to peak in Q1 up high single digits. We said, and then some modest benefit likely in Q2, as we then see costs stabilizing for the second half. With the 10,000 raw materials, it's very difficult to isolate individual buckets. Obviously, you have some raw materials like caustic, where we've seen some easing, but you've also seen other products, raw materials like propylene or resins, where we've seen those costs going up as well. And so with the big basket of materials, hard to isolate any one of those.
But what's important to keep in mind here is really where we focus our attention. It's really driving the business in order to get on the upper end of this 12% to 15% earnings growth. What's happening on the delivered product cost front, we see that all incremental benefit, which is exactly what we've shared for Q1 in pretty detailed terms as well. We'll get some more in Q2. We expect flat from delivered product cost tailwind perspective in the second half. But let's see what truly happens. Your best guess will be my guess too.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Pavel Molchanov with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.
Thanks for taking the question. In this uncertain macro environment, including the inflationary pressures you alluded to earlier, can you talk about what you're seeing on the M&A front, as far as valuations and any particular geographies that perhaps look more enticing than others?
Good question, but a difficult one to answer for me, obviously, Pavel as you know. The way I always answer that question is, basically, what you've seen in the past from Ecolab is what you're going to see in the future. We have an extremely strong balance sheet, now our leverage levels are closer to our longer-term average of these two times as well. We're in a very good position to go after opportunities that we believe are strategically relevant for us. Obviously, that we can buy at the right price, as we've done very successfully so in the past. Yes, the market becomes even more interesting right now, which is good. We have a rich pipeline as we've always had, and we will keep focusing on our three key priorities, but as I've always shared, first is water, second is Life Science, third is digital and AI technology, mostly focused on North America and in Europe.
Operator
Next question is coming from the line of John Roberts with Mizuho. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you, and congrats on making the Just 100 list again. In Healthcare, some companies have been talking about de-stocking continuing. Are you seeing de-stocking in Healthcare? And are you seeing equal benefits between your surgical and infection prevention business now that you've got the separation?
Hey, John, thank you for your comment on the Just list. We're never going after awards obviously, but we're always honored and humbled when we get those awards, that's basically describing the way we run our business the right way as much as we can, obviously. The question on Healthcare. I've committed quite a while ago to fix that business with the team. I like the progress that we're making. We've gone through a few phases, as I shared very openly with you and we'll keep doing so in the future. We worked on the cost structure early on, then we worked on the bifurcation of the two surgical and infection prevention businesses by leveraging as well the critical mass of institutional. We early on that journey because that happened obviously in the fall of last year. Healthcare is growing overall, which is something I like because that's early signs of success. Our margins are increasing quite significantly from a low level, as we know, but that's the second good sign as well of progress, and the teams are working really well with the institutional team. I think that we found the right model for now. Again, the work is not finished. We've committed to get to double-digit type of margin in that business. We will get there, and I will keep you posted on our plans and our progress as transparently as I can.
Operator
The next question comes from the line of Laurence Alexander with Jefferies. Please proceed with your question.
Good afternoon. Could you give a bit more granularity on the trends you're seeing in Asia, particularly the strong volumes in China? Can you break out where you're seeing that? And are you seeing sequential acceleration? Or is it just a comp issue?
We're in a fairly good place actually in Asia, especially China. For us, we separate our Asia Pacific, and where we have a few markets in China, which is one of the mega markets. As you may remember, North America, Western Europe, and Greater China are our three mega markets where we focus 80% of our retention, where 80% of the opportunity lies as well. I like quite a bit how we're working in China, not an easy environment as we all know, but growth has been good in China, especially in Institutional. We have a great team, a great business, and we have very good margins as well in China. That was not the case 10 years ago, but that's clearly the case today. We have a very good business, a great team, very well positioned with what customers in China want, when we think food safety, infection prevention and water. That's exactly what they're looking for as well. So pleased with the evolution of China, and that's true with the rest of Asia Pacific as well, but every country is a bit in a different place, but in aggregate a pretty good story.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Shlomo Rosenbaum with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.
Hi. Thank you very much. Christophe, you made tremendous strides in the margin over the last little bit, and the pricing has been very successful and it looks like volumes have turned positive. So there's a lot of positivity there. I was wondering if you could bridge us from where you are today to where — you mentioned getting to that 20% margins. Can you walk us through that bridge, how much would be pricing? How much would you think about in volumes? Is there a certain cadence that we should be thinking about over the next several years? Just give us your thoughts on how investors should be thinking about it and how you're thinking about it?
I'll give it to Scott first, and then I'll make a few comments.
Yes, thanks, Shlomo. Great question. Yes, as we've talked about, and we talked about at Investor Day, we’re really very focused on getting to that 20% operating income margin and I think we have a very clear path over the next few years. It's largely by getting back to those 2019, sort of, pre-pandemic gross margins, right, which are still down relative to 2019. If you look at overall operating income margin, we finished the year at 14%, so about six points from that 20% operating income margin. By recovering those 2019 gross margins, which is really split pretty evenly between the value-based pricing, what we do for our customers, driving that value-based pricing, and then the other half of that being volume and mix sort of combined there. As we showed during 2023, our operating income margins were up 140 basis points, and we're expecting about another 200 basis points in 2024. We think that's great evidence for what we can do, and that path to get to that 20% operating income margin. Additionally in there aside from gross margin, we'll expect to continue to deliver some SG&A leverage, at least equal to what we've done historically.
So, bottom-line, Shlomo, with all the elements that Scott just mentioned, I feel even better with what I said and shared with you at the Investor Day in 2023 of saying we will get to this 20% operating income margin within the next few years and it's not going to take us five years to get there. So, our confidence level has just risen with the delivery of the last three quarters.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Steve Byrne with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.
Hi, Rob Hoffman on for Steve Byrne. And my question was if you guys could share any update on the water for climate and science certified initiatives?
Yes, those are two platform innovations as we call them, Ecolab Science Certified. So, it's keeping progressing very nicely with a few big customers as well jumping on that journey, McDonald's being the latest big one obviously out there. So, we like how Ecolab Science Certified is not only providing benefits to our customers by protecting their guests by providing a safe and clean and welcoming environment, but also safe foods at the right cost with the total operating cost managed as well as we can. Ecolab Science Certified is an overall promise by our customers, which encompasses all our services as well. So, it's a penetration play which is good for us, driving good results for our customers. Ecolab Water for Climate is a bit the same in a very different setup, obviously, because it's helping our customers get to their ambition of net zero. Some customers are much further down the road, and some are very early on that journey. To give you some highlights without going too much in detail since we don't share our customers' details publicly, we have a dozen flagship customers, as we call them, who have committed to getting to net zero. One has been very public that's Microsoft, and progressing very well on that journey as well. It's really helping them get to net zero but in a way that makes financial sense for them and for us by driving a lot of innovation and services in their own operations, in order to deliver their objective. So, two growth platforms, driving penetration, improving impact for our customers, which helps us ultimately drive growth and value pricing.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Kevin McCarthy with Vertical Research Partners. Please proceed with your question.
Yes. Thank you and good afternoon. Christophe, back at your Investor Day in September last fall, I think it was. You talked a little bit about cross-selling initiatives. I was wondering if you could provide an update on those efforts. In other words, if I look at the volume improvement from the first half of 2023 to the back half basically going negative to positive, do you think that those cross-selling efforts have borne fruit? Or is that on the come in 2024?
There's no doubt that it's proving right. It's been true for a very long time, by the way. I'd just like to indicate what we've built with pest elimination, for instance, which is 90% circle the globe type of business, which is ultimately all our businesses from Institutional, Healthcare, and Industrial bringing our team from pest elimination in order to offer the world-class service to all those different segments while we've managed to build a $1 billion business with great margins and highest returns by doing so. That's something that we have proven for a very long time in our company. It's also keeping in mind that half of the $152 billion market we have out there is an opportunity of penetration. Ultimately, customers we already have should be or could be buying everything from what Ecolab does. The two main drivers for it is what I just shared before with Ecolab Science Certified and Ecolab Water for Climate that ultimately drives bigger gains for our customers by driving the overall end-to-end proposition that we have in the company. The last point I'll make is that we have further focused our execution work towards our top 35 customers in the company to make absolutely sure that we were not only providing them with all the resources of the company, but that we could capture as well as much of the opportunity that those customers can offer to us, which is a number that counts in the billions.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Patrick Cunningham with Citi. Please proceed with your question.
Hi. Good afternoon. I have kind of a specific follow-up on the last question. So you've had solid share gains in institutional with volumes up maybe mid single digits where end markets are stable to slightly down. How much of this was a share of wallet versus new customers? And are there any sort of representatives products or technologies which have driven a lot of the share gain this year? How should we think about new business wins for institutional and specialty into 2024?
So a few different questions here, Patrick, so all related to the same topic obviously. New business generation is our number one focus in the company where sales organization says that heart, our mantra in the company for the 47,000 people is we're all in sales just to describe how we think about it as well. So it's really a teamwork. New business generation, our pipelines are at record levels right now, really like how much we have gained. Obviously, we now need to install all that in the next few months and next few quarters. That's always true and it's different by business. It goes faster in Institutional, which is why you see as well a very good growth in Institutional. They have a great new business generation. They can install pretty quickly as well, good for the customers, good for us, and leading to great results because margins are so good, obviously, in that business. So to your question on how much is cross-selling versus totally new. The best way to think about it in our company is generally two-thirds is cross-selling, which is really selling to customers that other businesses already have and one-third is brand new. And that's an average number. It's not obviously always the same across businesses and geographies, but that's a good way to think about it and to keep in mind that we are primarily focused on cross-selling, which is the best way and easiest way to sell and the cheapest way driving the highest margins.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Mike Harrison with Seaport Research Partners. Please proceed with your question.
Hi. Good afternoon. I wanted to ask another question about the Institutional business, specifically regarding the specialty side. You recently experienced significant growth in that area, probably the best year in a decade or more. Can you explain what is contributing to the improvements in both the QSR and food retail segments? Additionally, it seems you acquired the Chemlink business in May. Can you share what Chemlink is adding to the specialty business portfolio?
Okay. So a few questions in there. So Mike, you're right, the specialty, which is quick serve restaurants and food retail had a great year in 2023. It's been true for a pretty long time by the way. So great business based in the same place in North Carolina as you probably know as well. The key reasons why those businesses are going so well are, on one hand, especially QSR is an industry that's doing well at all times, especially in more difficult times because people have a tendency to trade down. When they move from full-service restaurants to quick serve, obviously, we can capture them in a good way at high margin as well at the same time. That's a little bit the beauty of our portfolio since we serve all the various segments. Serving an industry that is very successful is the first element. The second one is it's an industry that by definition is very standardized across the country or across the world. When you think about our promise, well, it's probably the industry where it resonates the most because what we're helping our customers achieve is to understand what's the best-performing unit in their enterprise and to help them get all the units from the enterprise to the level of performance of the best-performing one in terms of cost, in terms of quality of delivery, and in terms of environmental impact as well. So the combination of a very strong business that's been built over decades, with an industry that is especially successful right now 2023 was a great year for that industry, and a value proposition that resonates exactly with them, because their objective is to reach the best-in-class performance across the universe as well. Well, those are three key reasons why this business is doing well. I believe in the future of that business as well going forward.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Scott Schneeberger with Oppenheimer & Company. Please proceed with your question.
Thanks very much. Sort of a little bit regarding the cost savings program. It's now been a full year in place and very sizable. Scott touched a bit earlier on some of the key focus areas, geographies, and segments, and that was very helpful. But just curious, is this on track as far as timing-wise? Is it something that maybe you've had the opportunity where you haven't had to be as aggressive because you've had a really nice growth 2023? Just curious how close to on plan timing-wise and size-wise this is? And any incremental thoughts you'd like to share? Thanks.
Yeah. Thank you, Scott. Let me have the other Scott answer part of that question, and I'll make a few comments.
Yeah, thank you, Scott. We are exactly where we expected to be. If we think about the combined program, which is really what we have left. We had some older restructuring programs, which are complete. The institutional advancement 2020, or complete through the end of the year. The combined program, we delivered through the end of 2023, 75% of those expected savings cumulatively through the end of the year and expect to realize the lion's share of that through 2024. As you know, when we initially launched this at the end of 2022, it was initially focused on Europe, and early in 2023 we expanded it to Institutional and Healthcare. If you think about the performance of those businesses, Christophe talked about Europe, talked about the great margins there, the great growth, and you've seen the great operating income in Institutional specialty up over 40% in the quarter, as well as the Healthcare continuing to get better. So we're on track with those and that program is having a significant impact.
Well said, Scott. In general, we want to get transformation done the old-fashioned organic way. It's only in exceptional opportunities that we go the restructuring way when it helps us move quicker, which means making the business more competitive to gain share and improve our margins in order to return more to shareholders. When I look back, I like what's been done and especially been done as well. So, in budget and in time as we had promised as well. Overall, good stuff for the company, our customers and our shareholders.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Vincent Andrews with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. Wondering if there's been some change in your procurement strategy, whether it's been changing in some of your large suppliers or changing the terms or duration of the contracts that you have? I'm just really trying to bridge. 4Q came in a bit better than expected, but 1H is obviously, a lot better than what we were talking about three months ago. So I'm just trying to understand if something has meaningfully changed in what you're doing or if it is just conservatism? Or what drives us from there to here particularly because it sounds like a lot of folks think the back half raw guide is conservative. I'd probably echo that. So just trying to understand what might change over the next quarter or two that could allow that second half to come in better than what you're guiding to right now?
Well, a few points in your question here. So when I think about our procurement team, we have an unbelievable team around the world. We have a new Chief Procurement Officer, who joined us a year ago from a world-class organization that has been very respected in the procurement world. Yes, he has brought new capabilities, new tools, new approaches, new ways as well of managing relationships with suppliers. So yes, quite a bit of a transformation. I think we're really reaching world-class levels with that new leadership and that new team that we have on procurement. I like what I see on the procurement side. If there's one team that can leverage as much as we can in terms of capturing the benefits of the easing of delivered product costs inflation, well, that's the right team. When we talk about what you've heard from Scott a little bit earlier, our delivered product costs are still 35% up versus what they used to be pre-inflation. I see it as a huge opportunity obviously for our company and for our shareholders because most of it will recoup at some point. The timing is not in our hands. Our team is trying to get it as quickly as we can. We will get it. At the same time, I want to make absolutely sure that we get our value pricing done the right way. As you know, our margins are not at the high watermark of 44% where they used to be; we will get back to these 44% because yes, delivered product costs are going to get back close to where they used to be. When? I don't know. It might take a few years to get there. But on the price side with our customers, we want to do it exactly the right way. That's a net benefit for our customers as well. They get more pricing. When you think about the value we create for them, it far outweighs the pricing that they're paying for us, which is one of the key reasons why our margins are improving so nicely and why we're keeping our customers and building even new relationships as we move forward. So, overall, a good story for our customers, our company, and our shareholders.
Operator
Thank you. At this time we have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. I'll now hand the floor back to Mr. Hedberg for closing remarks.
Thank you. That wraps up our fourth quarter conference call. This conference call and the associated discussion slides will be available for replay on our website. Thank you for your time and participation and hope everyone has a great rest of your day.
Operator
This will conclude today's conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your lines at this time and have a wonderful day.