Linde Q4 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

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Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, a good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Linde Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty four Earnings Teleconference and Webcast. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session.

Operator

And I would now like to hand the conference over to Mr. Juan Pelaez, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Juan Pelaez
Juan Pelaez
Head of Investor Realtions at Linde

Abby, thank you. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for attending our twenty twenty four fourth quarter earnings call and webcast. I'm Pampin Eisz, Head of Investor Relations and I'm joined this morning by Sanjeet Bamba, Chief Executive Officer and Matt White, Chief Financial Officer. Today's presentation materials are available on our website at lindy.com in the investor section. Please read the forward looking statement disclosure on page two of the slides and note that it applies to all statements made during this teleconference.

Juan Pelaez
Juan Pelaez
Head of Investor Realtions at Linde

The reconciliations and adjusted numbers are in the appendix to this presentation. Sanjeet will provide some opening remarks and then Matt will give an update on Linde's fourth quarter financial performance and 2025 outlook, after which we will wrap up with Q and A. Let me now turn the call over

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

to Santhiv. Thanks, Suan, and good morning, everyone. Looking back, 2024 was another successful year for the Linde organization. I'd like to personally thank the 65,000 plus employees for their relentless drive to deliver shareholder value while they live our core values every day. This isn't something that happens overnight or can be copied or indeed driven top down from a handful of individuals.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Rather, it is a result stemming from decades long culture, mindset and operating rhythm. And it can best be exemplified by the results shown on slide three. From my perspective, there are four key categories that Linde must excel at day in and day out to maintain our long term industry leading position. Of course, we must deliver on our key financial metrics and remain responsible stewards of our owner's capital. That's a given.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

But we have a sustainable leadership position. For that and the long term, that requires continued investments in our people and surrounding communities, as well as doing our part to help improve the environment. Finally, we must position ourselves for the future to ensure resilient and continuous growth and improvement. We can never be complacent based on past performance. I wanna start with our people and communities because Linde's success has always been and always will be attributed to our employees ownership mentality and collective efforts.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

We continuously strive to be good corporate citizens in thousands of communities where we live and work. Also having a safe and diverse workforce is a top priority in order to ensure Lindy's competitiveness for many years to come. And you can see the improvements we've made from an already leading position. More work is to be done and I fully expect to leverage technology in that effort. But I am pleased to see the progress made to date.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

While people and communities are a priority, efforts towards ensuring a sustainable environment are becoming more challenging every day. I think it's fair to say we're seeing more extreme weather now than in prior years. And here at Linde, we will continue to do our part to help the environment. Through an increased focus on low carbon power, Linde increased its active low carbon and renewable energy consumption by 19% year over year. In 2024, over 40% of our total power consumption is now low carbon based.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

These are just a few of the many accomplishments and I want to encourage you to read our annual report for many more. Furthermore, it is rewarding to see our sustainability efforts being recognized by some of the most prestigious names such as the Dow Jones, which included Linde in its Sustainability World Index for the twenty second consecutive year. In addition, we pride ourselves in helping our customers avoid more than two times our CO2 emissions through the use of our products and services. But there is much more work ahead to achieve our ambitious sustainability goals, including reducing our greenhouse gas emissions 35% by 02/1935. Turning to financial performance, Linde once again led the industry across e metrics, 25.9% ROC.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

EBIT margins increased 190 basis points to 29.5. EPS increasing 10% ex FX and $7,000,000,000 of capital returned to shareholders from the significant excess free cash flow. These are the best metrics in the industry, some by a wide margin. This provides us with a source of pride and ownership, but we also recognize this is the past. Valuations are derived from a combination of past performance and future expectations.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So we must continuously position ourselves for future growth regardless of the macroeconomic conditions. Positioning for future starts with a concise strategy and a capital allocation policy. At Linde, we know that the investments we make and the ones we avoid are equally important because mistakes in this industry can have long lasting consequences. This is why sticking to our core business while maintaining disciplined contract terms is critical to building safe, reliable and profitable supply infrastructure. The year ended with more than $10,000,000,000 in backlog including a record sale of gas backlog of $7,000,000,000 Included in this is a 2 plus billion dollar Dow win in Canada which is a great example of a high quality project in a core geography.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

This project not only has fixed payment structure with predicted returns but materially improves our local supply density in a fast growing region for clean energy. I fully expect to be announcing new projects and customers in the near future. But growing in industrial gases in more than just mega projects. We have to continue keeping our eye on smaller opportunities as well ensuring that they add attractive annuity like growth. During 2024, we once again set a record for small on-site wins signing 59 long term agreements for a total of 64 plants.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

All of which will increase reliability and strengthen our network density. Acquisitions of small tuck in package gas opportunities also remain an important part of synergized growth with 18 signed transactions with annualized revenues of approximately $200,000,000 All in, 2024 was another successful year despite the many challenges. That being said, it's time to move forward and look ahead. All of you have seen the new earnings guidance for 2025. And therefore, I believe it's important to reiterate the components of our long standing EPS growth algorithm on Slide four.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

For many years now, we've defined our EPS growth into three categories of which both capital allocation and management actions are within our control and the economy is not. Capital allocation represents contributions from a long standing and stable capital management policy. The main elements include our contractual project backlog, share repurchases, small bolt on acquisitions and capital structure efficiencies generally achieved through interest in tax management. It's important to note that our backlog definition is unique in our industry as it only includes incremental growth from contractually committed customers with fixed payment elements and termination provisions to ensure a minimum return on capital. While no other company follows the strict interpretation, it certainly provides with the greatest certainty of backlog EPS contribution in any environment.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Similarly, the majority of acquisitions are justified on cost synergies only and therefore provide a high degree of confidence on capital return and thus EPS generation. Finally, share repurchases offer an attractive and flexible use of excess free cash flow as project start up and acquisition cadence will ebb and flow, enabling a highly consistent EPS contribution from overall capital allocation. All of these elements have historically contributed 4% to 6% EPS growth and I feel confident this will continue for the years to come. Management actions represent the daily self help initiatives our employees undertake to ensure growth regardless of the macro climate. Digital solutions and AI are increasingly supporting productivity, price and cost management which are controllable initiatives deeply embedded into our culture and operating rhythm and which allow us to grow earnings regardless of the economy.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

History has proven for these to be the largest compound value generators as they are not directly correlated to overall economic activity. This combination of capital allocation and management actions is expected to deliver 10 plus percent EPS growth each year with margin expansion and 2025 is no exception. For the pre or post merger, these two components have been the dominant drivers of our long term double digit EPS growth CAGR. While I remain confident in our ability to deliver on this 10%, we are constantly striving to find more opportunities to improve. Conversely, we cannot control the third category which represents macroeconomic factors.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

For Linde, these are two factors that matter the most, the foreign exchange rates and industrial production as a proxy for base volume trends. Recall that we are a U. S. Dollar functional company with approximately two thirds of earnings denominated in foreign currencies and thus exposed to FX translation. Similarly, while our customers are often at the long term contracts with fixed facility fees, the incremental gas they consume is a function of their own production rates which typically highly correlates to industrial demand.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Hence, why global IP is a generic proxy for our customer gas consumption of base volumes. The current 2025 guidance range assumes a 4% FX translation headwind, while the midpoint of the range assumes 0% IP growth environment. Overall, it's clear that the growth algorithm is well intact but we have a work cut out regarding unfavorable FX translation. This does not come as a surprise as you may recall from our statements last quarter and subsequent self help actions that we initiated. Furthermore, we will continue to identify and execute additional management actions to mitigate macro weakness.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Eventually, these economic headwinds will convert to tailwinds as they always do. And until then, you can be rest assured that the entire Lidley organization will be focused on creating shareholder value and maintaining our long term industry leadership no matter the environment. I'll turn the call over to Matt to walk through our financial results. Thanks, Sanjay.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Fourth quarter results can be found on Slide five. Sales of $8,300,000,000 are flat prior year and down 1% sequentially. For both the prior year and sequential comparisons, foreign currency translation was a 2% headwind. Excluding FX and cost pass through, underlying sales grew 2% versus last year and were flat from the third quarter. Price increases of 2% over 2023 and one percent sequentially continued to track with globally weighted inflation.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Volume growth was flat as contribution from the project backlog in The Americas and APAC offset lower base volumes in EMEA. The sequential volume decline is primarily attributed to softer EMEA metals and mining volumes and seasonality factors in APAC. In general, economic trends mostly followed our prior guidance, although the FX impact was worse than expected from a significant strengthening of the US dollar toward the back half of the fourth quarter. Operating profit of $2,500,000,000 grew 9% and resulted in a 29.9% margin, primarily from management actions around price, costs and productivity. EPS of 3.97 grew 11% or 13% excluding FX.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

The 9% CapEx increase is entirely driven by contractual projects, as base CapEx decreased from a combination of currency, productivity and lower base volumes. I anticipate this trend to continue as we execute on the record $7,000,000,000 sale of gas backlog to support future growth. Further details in capital management can be found on Slide six. Full year operating cash flow ended at $9,400,000,000 with almost 60% occurring in the second half. As mentioned in prior calls, I expect this split to remain due to seasonality of specific cash outflows, including incentive payments, taxes and interest.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

The pie chart on the right shows the full year capital allocation. We invested $5,000,000,000 back into the business, with half underpinned by secured high quality growth opportunities. And we returned $7,000,000,000 to shareholders in the form of dividends and stock repurchases. Returning this amount of capital to our owners year after year requires a disciplined capital allocation policy and a very healthy balance sheet, two things that are much easier said than done. I'll wrap up with guidance on Slide seven.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

We're initiating full year EPS guidance of $16.15 to $16.55 representing 4% to 7% growth or 8% to 11% when excluding an estimated 4% currency headwind. As mentioned earlier, the 4% impact is from the accounting translation of foreign earnings, which experienced a rapid strengthening of the US dollar toward the end of twenty twenty four. Recall this is merely a projection, as we're required to book the actual month's average rate to the income statement. The methodology used for this estimate is consistent with prior practice. By using the forward curves on a weighted basis for each foreign currency at the start of the month.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Historically, large currency devaluations have often been followed by periods of more significant local inflation, with 2022 being a recent example. If that occurs, I'd anticipate incremental pricing opportunities to recover the currency devaluation impact. These potential pricing opportunities are not baked into the guidance range at this time, since the amount or timing of subsequent inflation is difficult to estimate. The midpoint of this range assumes no economic improvement from the current environment and thus assumes flat base volumes. As Sanjeev mentioned, our base volumes derive from customer supply contracts.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Their growth is a function of gas consumption from our contracted tanks and cylinders, hence why local industrial production tends to be the best proxy. First quarter EPS guidance range is $3.85 to $3.95 with similar assumptions to the full year. At this time, we believe it's appropriate to remain prudent with a more cautious economic outlook. If things turn out better, so too will our results. And if they worsen, we'll take additional mitigating actions.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

But regardless of the economy, I'm confident Linde will continue to create shareholder value through our time tested execution culture, disciplined capital allocation, and proven management actions. This has been embedded in our DNA for decades. And over the years, while many have claimed they'll simply copy this model, all have failed, because here at Linde, we're often imitated but never duplicated. I'll now turn the call over to Q and A.

Operator

Thank you. And we'll now begin the question and answer session. And your first question comes from the line of Mike Lighthead with Barclays. Your line is open.

Michael Leithead
Michael Leithead
Director - Equity Research at Barclays

Great. Thank you. Good morning, guys. Sanjay,

Michael Leithead
Michael Leithead
Director - Equity Research at Barclays

there's

Michael Leithead
Michael Leithead
Director - Equity Research at Barclays

a lot of political noise out there right now between tariff potential, new administration, some pullback on green energy funding. I guess, how has your discussions with potential project partners evolved at all? I'm really trying to get at say projects that are pre FID today. Have those discussions slowed down or picked up at all?

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So Mike, as we've referenced in previous calls, we have seen people take a little bit more time and apply a bit more rigor before going to FID. I think it's a good thing because you do need that when you're doing multi billion dollar projects typically. And I think we're seeing that phase continue. In there, built in there obviously is some uncertainty around, the regulatory framework and requirements in terms of what the new administration may or may not do. The one thing I do want to emphasize though, and I think in the context of clean hydrogen, this is particularly important.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

People tend to think about the IRA and there's a lot of talk around what happens with the IRA and the new administration. Within the IRA, there is a specific provision, an IRS provision in fact called 45, which predates the IRA. It actually goes back to around 02/2008 when it was implemented. And about 90% of the projects that we're developing in The US are actually looking at 45Q as a potential incentive. And I think we feel fairly, fairly confident that that structure around the 45Q will remain, as given particularly that it predates the IRA.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So I just want to provide that specific clarification because I get a lot of questions around that. But generally, we're seeing people take a bit more time to get to FID, and we're seeing that they are actually being a little bit more rigorous in their approach before they make a final call in terms of putting capital on the ground. The other point I'd just quickly add to that, Mike, is you're aware that in the past we've talked about, you know, I think it was actually two years ago, we talked about $8 to $10,000,000,000 in clean energy investments from a Linde perspective. We're about halfway there given the two projects, the large projects we've already announced in North America. We're obviously continuing to develop projects elsewhere.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Those two current projects we're working on are both likely to see another phase, which likely means that we will see, you know, equivalent investment there plus the other projects as well. So when I look at the overall pipeline, I feel pretty good about the quality of projects that we're pursuing and the path to getting to that $8,000,000,000 to $10,000,000,000 of investments over the next few years looks pretty much intact.

Michael Leithead
Michael Leithead
Director - Equity Research at Barclays

Great. Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Stephen Haynes with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.

Steven Haynes
Steven Haynes
Vice President, Equity Research at Morgan Stanley

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. So it kind of looks like exiting the year, your EMEA margins are now like 200 basis points ahead of Americas, maybe 100x the cost pass through. So do you think your Americas margins will gain ground in twenty five percent? And then also as a second piece of this, I think the gap is kind of widening versus APAC.

Steven Haynes
Steven Haynes
Vice President, Equity Research at Morgan Stanley

So I was wondering if you could also kind of frame the opportunity there? Thank you.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Thanks, Stephen. So if you go back historically, about five years ago, many of you asked the same question when Americas margins were leading and I think APAC and EMEA were at 1719%. And we had said then and I want to repeat again today that there our business is over genius and there is no impediment to getting to the highest margins we see anywhere in our business. The one thing I often point out when we have this conversation around margins is each one of our segments has a country or a business that has a margin with a phone number in front of it. And in many ways, we encourage our businesses, each of the segments to push and try and understand what those successful businesses with a 40 plus percent margins are doing to ensure that we can bridge the gap.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So to answer your question, both for Americas and APAC, my expectation remains that margins will continue to improve. And again, we've said in our prepared remarks earlier on, you should expect to see margin expansion in 2025 for Linde PLC overall, which obviously is an aggregation of the different segments. I'd say to you that I'd probably say that that margin expansion range is between 20 to 50 basis points typically. That's what we expect longer term. Obviously, we've been delivering well in excess of that and that obviously sets up some expectations.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

But expect margin expansion. Each of those segments will continue to grow margin. No impediment to APAC bridging that gap. And of course, America's got a solid business which will continue to expand its margin as well.

Steven Haynes
Steven Haynes
Vice President, Equity Research at Morgan Stanley

Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Duffy Fischer with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Duffy Fischer
Duffy Fischer
Equity Research Analyst at Goldman Sachs

Yes. Good morning, guys. You talk about IP being your biggest KPI, which is fair. Roughly, what is the leverage if IP is up or down 1%? How much EPS does that generally drive for you?

Duffy Fischer
Duffy Fischer
Equity Research Analyst at Goldman Sachs

And then if you would maybe just take a spin around the world, what are you seeing IP? I know guiding to flat is prudent, but where do you see potentials for things to be better or worse than that?

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Duffy, I'll let Matt talk a little bit about the IP correlation and then I'll give you a walk around the world.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Yeah, Duffy. So, to start, as you probably know, so we split our volumes into project and base. And our project volumes solely track our start up. So that is, as you know, completely independent of any IP or macroeconomic factor and it's purely contractual based on the fixed element. So that one is part of the capital allocation contribution of the EPS algorithm.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

But to your point, when you think about base volumes, as Sanjeet mentioned, we have the rental which is fixed irregardless. That gets back to the resiliency of our model. As you recall, about 65% of our revenues are fairly resilient. But of the molecules that they take, whether in the cylinder or whether in the tank for liquid and to some extent over fixed fees in the pipe, that's just going to be a function of their production. So, from that end, that tends to best proxy to IP.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

And so, I would say within the base volume piece, it aligns. Now, to your point, we tend to get higher IP leverage in developing countries, where they are expanding more, which you'll look at as intensity of gas per capita. Whereas in more developed nations, it's closer to a one to one ratio you tend to see on the IP and the base volume tract. So, that's how I would think about that. You know, when you look around the world, I think we can all agree that how some countries report IP is not equal in all countries.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

But when we adjust for what we feel are a little bit of some noise in the numbers, what we've been seeing is IP close to zero, maybe tens of bps globally weighted in our businesses, is what it's been ranging at. But, we'll have to see how it plays out going forward. I think EMEA a drag, as you know. Americas has been pretty solid and I think China, depending upon which number you actually want to use, it can range anywhere from close to zero to the official number of 5%. And that's how we would kind of see the IP.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

But I'll hand off to Sanjay, maybe he can give you a little walk around the world just with general color on trends.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Thanks, Matt.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So that's helpful in just kind of grounding you on how IP plays into our equation but also how we think about it. Duffy, let me just walk you through the wall. I think it's a question I'm sure it's on many people's minds. I'm gonna try and break this down and parse it by two different perspectives. I'll start off with the markets that we have, the end markets, and use that as a characteristic to kind of define what we're expecting and then talk about different geographies as well.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So let's start off with resilient end markets. By their very nature, you expect them to grow and therefore we expect low to mid single digit growth in our resilient end markets driven primarily by electronics and food and beverage. Industrial sector, obviously more cyclical impacted by industrial activity and demand. We do expect lower volumes there and versus last year, we expect flat to low volumes particularly in metals and chemicals. If I now take the other perspective and talk about geographies, and I'm going to start off with maybe The Americas.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Our expectation, low single digit growth in The Americas across the resilient end markets. The industrial sector also expected to be kind of flattish against what we see last year. I won't specifically talk about The U. S. Though.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

And in The U. S, I'd say to you our current view remains and I've said this before, right, U. S. Volumes and sales at a high watermark, our expectation remains in the first half of the year, they're likely to be flattish. That's what we're hearing from our customers.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

But towards the back end of the year, the second half for sure, we are expecting increased momentum across The U. S. And we will see that play through in how we see The Americas, you know, volumes and growth activity come through. On the other hand, a bit of a contrast unfortunately, in Europe we expect to see continued softening. This is primarily in Western Europe, also a little bit in Eastern Europe, but primarily in Western Europe.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

The resilient end markets will continue to grow. There is a good trajectory there and we'll expect that, but metals, manufacturing, chemicals, energy, all expected to be softer and lower volumes versus previous year. So Europe unfortunately is a drag at the moment. Now as far as Asia Pacific is concerned, I'll start off with China because I know that's on a number of your minds. I was in China Two Weeks ago, spent a week with the team talking to our customers, meeting a number of CEOs and getting a flavor of what I think is going to happen in China.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

And I think my short summary is from our perspective, we don't expect anything significant in China in 2025. We're not taking in any kind of recovery. I think industrial volumes and activity will remain stable, but flat, no recovery in any of those sectors. Metals and mining specifically is likely to be negative year on year for a number of reasons driven partly by demand but equally by some large turnarounds that our customers are taking in the course of the year. So we kind of see that play in Q1 and Q2.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

But again, metals and mining, I'm unlikely to see any growth. The one sector in China that is growing today and will continue to grow is their electronics sector. A lot of energy and a lot of money has been put into that sector by the government as well. So we do expect that that'll play out and continue to see some level of growth. If I was looking at China a bit more broadly, I'd say to you two trends of particular note coming out of my visit.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

The first that the government has recognized the need for support if it's got to get personal private consumption and the property market to pick up. It's said a lot of things. Not enough stimulus has gone into the market so we haven't seen any improvements other than the fact that the last quarter you saw a bit of improvement from industrial activity for exports. But we haven't really seen private consumption pickup happen. Now there are all kinds of subsidies in place that they're putting out there.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

They're small, but hopefully they will have an impact over a period of time. So I'd say to you, I wouldn't hold my breath for 2025 in terms of improvement. But beyond that longer term, certainly we will see the China market stabilize and probably grow at a smaller pace than we're used to. But certainly, we will expect to see growth come back. The rest of Asia Pacific is largely flat, versus previous year except for India, which is obviously the growth story at the moment.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

And again, given our strong presence in India, we are making the most of it, winning more than our fair share, feel really good about where that's going. That's kind of a view around what we see across the world and expect in 2025.

Duffy Fischer
Duffy Fischer
Equity Research Analyst at Goldman Sachs

Great. Thank you, guys.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of David Begleiter with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.

David Huang
David Huang
Vice President Equity Research at Deutsche Bank

Hi, it's David Wong here for Dave. Wondered your concerns if any of the Praxor LingDe fully booked will be now imported products given the recent management change. I guess, would that be a negative for LingDe? Has the shift away from focusing too much on mega projects? Will could that change resulting a even more rational industry pricing environment?

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Jim, I didn't get it. I didn't get your question entirely, but I'm I'm gonna answer it anyway. Lindy has a leadership position in the market because of a number of factors. I said in my prepared remarks, you cannot replicate, and I think Matt put it really nicely, you know, you can try and copy, but you can never never really duplicate, you know, what Linde has developed over many decades. And that's built into our operating rhythm, it's built into our performance culture.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

And more importantly, it is built into the networks that we have developed density we have, we're able to get the margin improvement that we see and, of course, command the strength, you know, of the relationship with the customer and have the pricing power we have. That's what's demonstrated in the margin expansion that you've consistently seen over the last five years. We will continue to work on that. What others will or won't work on really is a question you will need to address to them. But I think Linde is the market leader and we will reflect that in the behaviors we put out there in the marketplace consistently.

Operator

And your next And your next question comes from the line of Laurent Favreau with BNP Paribas. Your line is open.

Laurent Favre
Managing Director at BNP Paribas

Yes, good morning guys. I've got a question on Healthcare where I think you've been around 0% organic growth every quarter in 2024. I was wondering if you could talk about what you've seen on price versus volumes and if there's any specific area that is providing a big headwind. And I guess if you can expand into what you're thinking for 2025 for this one? Thank you.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Thanks, Laura. I think the, you've heard me say this before that in the healthcare space, we expect long term kind of mid single digit growth and that's what we would expect. Now you know the healthcare sector is made up of two sub segments if you like, the the hospital care business, which is growing reasonably well and and and well on its way, and then obviously the home care business around the world, which tends to be, you know, moving forward as well. Now we have, as you're aware in from past calls, we have said that we were doing some portfolio rationalization in our home care business out of The U. S.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

And in many ways, you know, what the numbers you're seeing at the moment are reflecting some of that rationalization that has been done in that LinkCare business. That is moving forward well. As you know, the home care business in particular given the inflationary environment that we see has to work really hard on productivity efforts. And I'm happy to see that at LinkCare we are really seeing that progress being made. So it's looking pretty robust and resilient as things stand.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

At some stage, we will lap these portfolio actions and you would see the long term kind of mid single low to mid single digit growth that we would expect from healthcare overall.

Laurent Favre
Managing Director at BNP Paribas

Thank you. And if I can have a follow-up on the project side, you talked mostly about decarbonization related projects that could be signed in the future. You didn't mention electronics. Is there a specific reason for that? I don't think we've seen significant new FIDs in electronics on your side over the last couple of years.

Laurent Favre
Managing Director at BNP Paribas

Is this an area where we should be expecting new projects?

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Laura, I'll only tell you there's a 20% of my all time record sale of gas backlog is electronics. We are executing on electronics projects as we speak. And I'm more than happy to tell you that we'll be announcing new wins very shortly as well. So I'm not sure whether that question really addressed a specific point. But I think really good about electronics and our specific position in there in fact, we took our board recently to the, to our Phoenix facility which serves TSMC, which you know has been a very successful project for TSMC.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So feel really good about it, executing a number of projects as we speak. They are starting up and providing impact and we continue to win more than our fair share.

Laurent Favre
Managing Director at BNP Paribas

Excellent. Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Jeff Zekauskas with JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Jeffrey Zekauskas
Jeffrey Zekauskas
Analyst at JP Morgan

Thanks very much. In 2024, your cash flow from operations was up 1% even though your EPS grew about 10%. Was that a depressed number? And so when you look at 2025 and your EPS growth of 4% to 7%, is cash flow from operations going to grow higher or lower? And then secondly, in terms of market share in the overall industrial gas market, Is market share pretty much constant for all of the major players?

Jeffrey Zekauskas
Jeffrey Zekauskas
Analyst at JP Morgan

Or are you gaining share overall or losing share? Is there any share shift? Thanks.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Yes. I'll let Matt talk about the cash flows and then we'll talk about the market.

Jeffrey Zekauskas
Jeffrey Zekauskas
Analyst at JP Morgan

Yes.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Yes, Jeff. So on the OCF, it's your point. We tend to look at EBITDA rates, the OCF rates. So similar to what you're saying, but instead of EPS EBITDA. And to your point though, they should grow similarly and the ratio we tend to always look to achieve on OCF to EBITDA is usually in the low 80s.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

And to your exact point, what we had occur over the last probably, I would say, twenty four months give or take is this unwinding of our engineering portfolio as we worked out the sanctioned projects. And so what that created was you had a large influx of deposits of cash that stopped and then we had to settle the payments to basically suppliers and you had a very rapid, acceleration of an unwind. So, that created a large outflow of cash associated with the engineering business. And that's what created a slower growth of OCF relative to EBITDA because essentially what you had was some liabilities, which are the contract liabilities, if you look at that specific line, has been quite unfavorable. And what it is is these liabilities are unwinding on the wind down, but they're not cash generative.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

So that's why they create that unfavorable, aspect on the working capital line that you see. So, that is what's been driving this inability for the EBITDA and OCF to grow together. We've substantially gotten through all that in our engineering business. I expect 2025 to be a lot closer aligned on those growth rates. But this is, normally, this is how the engineering percent completion business works.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Normally, it's spread over a four year build cycle, so you don't notice it. But given the events of the sanctioned projects, it got compressed into a much tighter structure, as we had to deal with the sanctioned projects.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Thanks, Matt. And let me talk about market share. So actually, Jeff, to be honest, we don't spend a lot of time thinking and talking about market share. I think it's something that we can segment down and talk about specifics. And that's what I'm going to do for you.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So I'm going to start off by just reminding you record sale of gas backlog of 7 plus billion, right? That's a good test of where market share is headed. And to be honest, we're winning more than our fair share of those large projects, which are, as I'll remind you and as we said in our prepared remarks, you know, these are contracted growth with good solid terms and conditions, including termination guaranteeing a minimal return on capital that is guaranteed. So just as a reminder that very, very rigorous definition of backlog where we are excelling today with our record backlog kind of demonstrates on the larger project side how we are positioned in terms of market share. For the merchant and package business, the concept of market share is less relevant.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

What is more important and which is where we spend most of our time is thinking about network density. Clearly, if you have network density, you are the leading player in that market usually by a mile. So it is very important to make sure that network density is what you drive through the decisions you make and in terms of how you manage your business on a day to day basis. So I feel pretty good about the network that we've developed and the strength of our market position in each one of those networks, which actually results in, you know, as I said earlier, getting the margin expansion that we look for and getting the market position with the strength of our relationship with our customers because of those networks that we've developed. So I'll just summarize by saying Linda remains a market leader and we expect that leadership to continue to move forward given these elements that I just talked about.

Jeffrey Zekauskas
Jeffrey Zekauskas
Analyst at JP Morgan

Great. Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Steve Byrne with Bank of America. Your line is open.

Steve Byrne
Research Analyst at Bank of America Securities

Yes. Thank you. I was wanting to better understand this the 59 small on-site wins. Maybe more specifically, how would you compare the contract terms of those small on sites versus the long on sites? I would assume these are long term take or pay agreements.

Steve Byrne
Research Analyst at Bank of America Securities

Some of them maybe even have your own employees on-site. So how would you compare the returns on these projects versus the big ones? And is can you comment on what are the gases that are driving these small on sites, I. E. Or is this oxygen for oxyfuels or is this hydrogen, etcetera?

Steve Byrne
Research Analyst at Bank of America Securities

Thank you.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

That's a fantastic question, Steve. And I, I really wanted somebody to raise it. So thanks for doing that. 59 long term contracts, you would have read we signed 59 long term contracts and are building 64 plants. All of this happened in the space of the last twelve months.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So feel really good about breaking that record. Now let's talk about the profile of the small on-site. I get excited about small onsites because from so many different, you know, perspectives, they are actually a perfect way of generating equity income for this business. And you can imagine this, building 64 plants will be starting up more than one plant a week to make sure that that revenue and cash generation happens. Let's talk about returns, terms and conditions, and the types of gases.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So I think good to start with the types of gases. We use both oxygen, nitrogen, and indeed, in the future we expect to see electrolyzer based hydrogen, which is currently not included in our definition for small onset winds. But at some stage, we'll see that as a developing portfolio element to be added on to the small onset. Oxygen nitrogen largely. Oxygen, I'll give you a great example.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So we've been working with many customers. I'll take one, Owens Illinois, where we've been supporting them on their decarbonization efforts. And in this particular case, we have a piece of applications technology called Optimelt that we have developed and we have deployed that successfully across a number of class customers, Pointill and I being a good example of one of those where we are able to recover, do heat recovery which allows them to get significant efficiencies, reduce natural gas consumption and run the throughput of their furnaces at a significantly higher level. That's a good example of small on-site, goes on-site, actually provides that. We do the same with paper and pulp.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

We do the same with electronics, etcetera, which is where we would largely use nitrogen as an example. So both of these gases drive, our small on-site portfolio and are kind of largely equally split between the different technologies that we apply and win. The terms of these small on-site contracts range between ten and fifteen years, exactly identical to what you would typically see on the large on-site fees. The terms and conditions are almost identical as well. Same fixed fee elements that we talk about, similar profile in terms of cash flows.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

What tends to happen though is that the execution timeline for these projects is much shorter. Typically, we'd be able to deploy a small on-site anywhere between nine to fifteen months. As you know, the large on-site projects or the larger projects that we do tend to take longer in terms of their, construction commissioning period. So again, a very, very nice piece. Often on the small on-site, we're able to de risk the execution as well because the execution or a portion of the civils is carried out by the customer.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

And again, helps us both implement and construct quickly, but also have the customer take the risk around the civils piece as well. That brings me in the end to returns. And our returns typically for small on-site are above what we would see on average for some of the large projects. So I feel really good about the returns, highly accretive to our portfolio. And again, you've been seeing over the last four or five years, we've put a lot of focus on developing this part of the portfolio and are really seeing the benefits of that in these 59 long term contracts we signed and the 64 plus we're building up.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

All in, I think really a good part of the portfolio we have. Very excited about it.

Steve Byrne
Research Analyst at Bank of America Securities

Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Michael Sison with Wells Fargo. Your line is open. Hi.

Analyst

This is Abigail on for Mike. Thanks for taking my question.

Analyst

This was sort of touched on earlier in the call, but I wondered if you could just clarify the contributions from pricing versus productivity and cost management when we're talking about forward looking guidance for the quarter and for the year? Thanks.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Hey, Abi. It's Matt. So, we don't split that out. But as Sanj, you've mentioned on the algorithm. So, we've got 10 plus percent in the combination of the capital allocation contribution and the management action contribution.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

And for purposes of guidance, I'd say roughly split fiftyfifty, just say 5% at this stage. Historically, management actions have been the larger contribution, But we always need and want to think about that as a spread, right? To think about one in isolation to us doesn't make a lot of sense because you'll see very different inflation levels in different countries. So, the local spread of price to cost inflation is a critical metric for us because that positive spread is what's part of the compound, value creation of the model. So I would say, you know, it's a very, very local discussion, but the spread needs to remain positive.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

That's a big component of the margin expansion, the long term margin expansion as well. But I'd say for purposes of the guidance right now, just assume it's roughly half from management actions actions of the 10% and half from capital allocation of the 10%, so five and five. And as Sanjay mentioned, we're obviously going to continue to take actions to try and improve on that, but that's what's laid out

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

in the guidance at this stage.

Analyst

Okay. Thanks.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of John McNulty with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open.

John McNulty
John McNulty
Managing Director - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets

Yes. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. So a question around the $10,000,000,000 backlog between sale of gas and sale of equipment. How much of the equipment at this point is locked in where we don't have to worry about tariffs or maybe the benefit of the strong dollar?

John McNulty
John McNulty
Managing Director - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets

And how much of it is there a little bit of exposure on? How should we be thinking about that?

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Thanks, John. So, again, as you said, $10,000,000,000 in backlog, about $3,100,000,000 or $3,200,000,000 of that sits in the SOE side, the sale of equipment side and the balance seven plus sitting in the sale of gas side. So as far as tariffs are concerned, obviously, we've been looking at the portfolio. On the SOE side, our contractual protection typically takes care of that. So we go in with form pricing with our contractors and wherever necessary, we'll have contractual protection to make sure that events like tariffs, etcetera, get adequately covered.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

On the sale of gas side where we're doing a lot of the procurement, we're obviously managing and tracking that quite closely. We did that study recently for our U. S. Projects and actually the impact of tariffs is de minimis. So really we are not seeing any impact there.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Now our experience of the past has been, and there were tariffs, have been tariffs for a while now, including the first round of the administration a few years ago when we dealt with this, one of the things we found was when tariffs did get introduced typically they didn't really impact our firm offers that we put in on the procurement cycle. But also more importantly, we got some benefit typically out of devaluation of currencies that more than offset the tariff impact if there was impact of any significance. So all in, I'd say to you, we've looked at tariffs as part of what we've done in the past and we kind of manage them adequately. At this point in time, we feel pretty good about where our projects stand.

John McNulty
John McNulty
Managing Director - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets

Great. Thanks very much for the color.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Peter Clark with Bernstein. Your line is open.

Peter Clark
Head of Global Chemicals Equity Research at Bernstein Societe Generale Group

Good morning, everyone. I got kicked off, so I hope I don't ask something that's been asked before. But I'm not terribly surprised with your guidance, but maybe I was a bit off on the Forex. And using the sales line, I guess slightly lower. But I'm assuming you've got some very profitable markets in there that have been hit very hard with the currency.

Peter Clark
Head of Global Chemicals Equity Research at Bernstein Societe Generale Group

I'm thinking Mexico, maybe Brazil a bit. Just wondering if there's an element of that in that guidance. And then allied to that, the tariff risk, I know gases don't travel. I know it's mostly for customers in the region, but again some of these very profitable markets are ones at risk in terms of tariffs. And again, Mexico would be a classic in terms of that.

Peter Clark
Head of Global Chemicals Equity Research at Bernstein Societe Generale Group

Just how you think around that as well? Thank you.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

Hey, Peter, it's Matt. So we'll start on the FX. Yeah, you actually hit on the two bigger ones. Brazil and Mexico were the larger ones. I would say if you think about the evolution of FX through 2024, some of the European based currencies, as you probably know, were almost quite favorable to flat in the beginning of 2024.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

But unfortunately, what you were seeing were a lot of LatAm currencies devalue fairly materially. The peso, Mexican peso will be one, the Brazilian real and then Argentinian peso, as you can imagine, which is on a managed devaluation, which uses hyper currency inflation. So, the LatAm currencies, we're probably seeing more of the brunt in the first half to two thirds of the year. But what we saw in the fourth quarter, just given some of the geopolitical and political events, was a significant flight to the dollar. I think DXY index is probably the best indicator of that.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

If you sort of look at DXY, right around the beginning or the prior to the U. S. Elections to where it ended in the year, it appreciated almost 10%. And I think you gave a pretty good indication of the six major basket currencies of which that index is comprised of, how much those major currencies you saw that move. So, that was, I would say, was a two stage impact on the rates.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

And what that ended up with was some of the more larger currencies like the euro and the sterling and the Aussie dollar, etcetera, really devalued in the back half of the fourth quarter. So that, I'd say that was the dynamic we saw. It will be what it will be, right? We'll obviously, as we mentioned, you book on the average rate each month and then we'll see if the devaluations do create inflationary aspects. I think Sanjeev had mentioned the tariffs and, you know, as you could imagine, our impact on the tariffs is really indirect.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

We don't, since we're so localized to your point, we don't have much direct impact. Sanjeev mentioned the equipment, which is small and that tends to self correct. So, it really just comes down to a function of the customers that we supply and what production levels they have. Given our leading density positions in a lot of these economies, we feel quite good that we are there to capture where the products move to, because I think at the end of the day, what you have to ask yourself with these tariffs, is production shifting or will there be a reduction of production? But in a shifting basis, we feel quite good we'll capture where it goes.

Matthew White
Matthew White
Executive VP & CFO at Linde

And if there is a net reduction, the question will be from where. So, time will tell on that, but this is more going to be a function of that IP we talked about and we'll see how it plays out. But given the guide we gave on basically a zero IP at the midpoint, we'll have to see how things play on that.

Peter Clark
Head of Global Chemicals Equity Research at Bernstein Societe Generale Group

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Patrick Cunningham with Citi. Your line is open.

Patrick Cunningham
Patrick Cunningham
Vice President, Senior Analyst at Citigroup

Hi, good morning. Just on the step up in CapEx for 2025, is most of that being driven by the two large projects? And is this step up from those projects more meaningful in 2026 as well? Thank you.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So Patrick, the, we just referenced the sale of gas backlog being an all time high at $7,100,000,000 Clearly, that's the reason why you're seeing the step up in CapEx. And obviously sitting within that are the two large projects that we're executing around the clean energy piece but also a number of electronics projects, etcetera. So that is really that's all that's driving the CapEx number as things stand.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of John Roberts with Mizuho. Your line is open.

John Roberts
John Roberts
Managing Director at Mizuho Financial Group

Yes. Thank you. Your competitor had a large non recurring helium sale in the quarter. Did that take down industry helium prices? Or how would you characterize the helium market?

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

John, I think the helium market continues to display exactly the characteristics that we've been seeing for most of 2024 in fact. As I look at the helium market today, I'd say to you that there are parts of the world where helium is long. Asia is one of them. As you know about a third of all the imports into China coming out of Russia which obviously has unbalanced that market to some extent. The demand side on helium remains flattish.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

We see some softness around electronics and maybe MRI, but that tends to kind of pick up during the course of the year. Pricing as things stand remains stable. We are not seeing any significant movements on pricing. Corrections had happened as you know about a year, eighteen months ago. There's nothing unexpected happening.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

The, you're referencing a transaction that I won't comment on at this stage, but there are shifts in helium supply and demand all the time. There is nothing new happening over here that would impact the market itself.

John Roberts
John Roberts
Managing Director at Mizuho Financial Group

Thank you.

Operator

And your next question comes from the line of Kevin McCarthy with Vertical Research. Your line is open.

Matthew Hettwer
Equity Research Associate at Vertical Research Partners

Hi. This is Matt Hatler on for Kevin McCarthy. Regarding the new CCS hub in Jebail, could you provide more details on the scope and structure of your investment in the project? How large is the investment? And do you see this project being foundational in nature and that it could turn into a base hub for additional follow on investments with the goal of increasing regional asset density?

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Thanks, Pat. So essentially, I'm going to give you a high level view of the project. It hasn't gone to FID. When it does, you will hear us talk a bit more about it. But essentially, it's a three way joint venture that is developing which will be in its first phase a very large CCS project in Saudi.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

The three partners are led by Saudi Aramco, SOB and Linde, each, kind of contributing their skill set into that project. The first phase of that project is between 9,000,000 to 11,000,000 tons per annum of CO2 being sequestered. There is an expectation that there will be two more phases. By the end of the third phase, when it gets completed, this could well be the world's largest CCS project at 54,000,000 or 53,000,000 tonnes per annum of CO2 being captured and sequestered. So yes, there is potential for growth beyond.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

Obviously, we will assess those phases when they happen. At this point in time, this joint venture structure is developing the project. The FEED has been completed. The capital is being assessed as we speak, so I'm not going to give you a phone number just yet. I expect FID in the next few months and once that happens you'll get a lot more detail around it.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

But it is a fairly significant project with some exceptional partners in a part of the world where Linde will strengthen its position and obviously there will be a future opportunity to continue to grow with this. Alongside this project, we will also look at developing, blue hydrogen project which would leverage the CCS infrastructure that has been developed in this project. But again, when that goes to FID in due course and meets our investment criteria and we have a project worth talking about, you'll hear us talk a bit more about that.

Matthew Hettwer
Equity Research Associate at Vertical Research Partners

Thank you.

Operator

And we will now take our final question from the line of Laurence Alexander with Jefferies. Your line is open.

Daniel Rizzo
Daniel Rizzo
Analyst at Jefferies

Hi. This is Dan Rizzo on for Laurence. I was just wondering what your view is on the depth of the pipeline of potential hydrogen projects, particularly in The EU and Japan?

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

So I said this earlier and I'm going to maybe just quickly recap my earlier comments and then talk specifically about the markets you've mentioned. So we have seen that people are being more rigorous and applying more diligence before they take on FID, decisions for these large projects. And when I think about our pipeline in the context of that, I feel really good about the strength of the high quality projects. We have enough pipelines that we're developing. We're developing those projects as you would expect in The U.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

S, in Canada, so in North America, in The Middle East, largely in Saudi Arabia but also potentially in Emirates, in Europe, particularly with partners like Equinor where potentially we have an opportunity to provide low carbon hydrogen or blue hydrogen into the European network. And then we are looking at some projects in Asia, which are localized for local markets. Your specific question around Europe and Japan, I would say to you that the projects in Japan are minimal other than the fact that Japan is a very important market from an import perspective that they would want to import in either clean hydrogen or derivatives such as ammonia or methanol into their market for a host of applications that they've determined are needed for their decarbonization efforts. So everybody is looking at Far East from a point of ability to export into that market which is why it remains an important market alongside Japan, Wiltsett, Korea as well. But, the development itself in Japan I think is minimal.

Sanjiv Lamba
Sanjiv Lamba
CEO & Member of Board of Directors at Linde

As far as Europe is concerned, obviously you know, you see a lot of discussion around clean hydrogen Europe, including green and including blue and so on and so forth. The reality is that regulatory framework is so difficult that to be able to get to a decision point in a very large substantive investment requires a lot of time and I think we're seeing that play out in Europe as things stand, which is why there is a real fear that the European aspirations for the amount of hydrogen they need for that market will not be entirely met because the combination of the time to kind of decipher the regulatory framework and to make investment decisions in this environment is obviously a little more challenging.

Daniel Rizzo
Daniel Rizzo
Analyst at Jefferies

Thank you very much.

Operator

And I would now like to turn the call back over to Mr. Juan Pelaez for any additional or closing remarks.

Juan Pelaez
Juan Pelaez
Head of Investor Realtions at Linde

Abby, thank you and thank you everyone for participating in today's call.

Juan Pelaez
Juan Pelaez
Head of Investor Realtions at Linde

If you

Juan Pelaez
Juan Pelaez
Head of Investor Realtions at Linde

have any further questions, feel free to reach out directly. Take care.

Operator

And ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call and we thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

Executives
Analysts
Earnings Conference Call
Linde Q4 2024
00:00 / 00:00

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