Oct 24, 2007
Executives
Sandra Rodriguez - Director, IR Mark C. Rohr - President and CEO John M.
Steitz - EVP and COO Richard J. Diemer, Jr.
- Sr. VP and CFO
Analysts
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup William Kreher - A.
G. Edwards Laurence Alexander - Jefferies & Co.
Lucy - Jefferies & Co. Robert Koort - Goldman Sachs & Co.
James Shield - Deutsche Bank Jeff Zekauskas - J.P. Morgan Kevin Mccarthy - Banc of America Securities Steven Schwartz - First Analysis Securities Corp.
Michael Sison - KeyBanc Capital Markets Dmitry Silversteyn - Longbow Research Edward Yang - CIBC Chris Shaw - UBS Adela Marianna - SAC Capital
Operator
Good day ladies and gentlemen and welcome to the third quarter 2007 Albemarle Corporation Earnings Conference Call. My name is Dan and I’ll be your operator for the day.
At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. We’ll be facilitating a question-and-answer session toward the end of this conference.
[Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded for replay purposes.
I would now like to turn the presentation over to your host for today’s call, Miss Sandra Rodriguez, Director of Investor Relations, please proceed.
Sandra Rodriguez - Director, Investor Relations
Thank you, Dan. Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us today for a review of Albemarle’s third quarter results, which were released after the close of the market yesterday.
Our press release contains preliminary results for the quarter and this information is subject to further review by the company and our auditors outside of our quarterly review profile. Please note that that we have posted supplemental sales information as well as reconciliations for net debt and EBITDA on our website under the Investor Information section at www.albemarle.com.
I’d also like to caution that the remarks today contain forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause results to differ from expectations are listed in our annual report on Form 10-K.
Participating with me on the call this morning are Mark Rohr, President and CEO, John Steitz, Executive Vice President and COO and Rich Diemer, Senior Vice President and CFO. Now I’d like to turn the call over to Mark.
Mark C. Rohr - President and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks Sandra and good morning everyone. We’re pleased to have the opportunity to share our third quarter performance today and before answering your questions, I’ve got brief remarks.
So let’s get started with some strategic highlights of the last quarter. At the end of July we acquired controlling stake in our 2 Chinese antioxidant joint ventures.
In Cruise star ownership increased from 25% to 75 %, that marginal high is the largest and we believe the most successful Chinese provider of antioxidants for the polyolefin industry. And we are very excited about this new to additives platform and the opportunities it brings to us in the Asian market.
August and September revenues from a joint venture totaling approximately $ 8 million are included in our Polymer Additives results for the third quarter which will provide any details on this transaction in these comments. All because of some careless expansion of the Bedford, Texas facility is now mechanically complete.
The new state of the art HPC plant with more than double the capacity at our Bedford site, an increase of global HPC capacity for approximately 30%. We’re listing out now with a capacity to meet the strong growth demands for 2008 and 2009 we expect in this business.
Top listing activities are progressing well and we anticipate our first production round before the year’s end. Our new in Nanjing, China which some of you visited last month, is also nearly on the way with construction on schedule for an early 2008 start up.
This firmly cannot plan up along with our catalyst business facility and technology center for each strengthens opposition in the revenue growing Asia Pacific regulatory market. Last month, we approved a major expansion over polyolefin catalysts production capability in Belarus [ph] which is really conveniently increased demands we expect in polyolefin catalysts next year and beyond.
We also have several expansions underway proprietary bromine of semi-tolerance and maybe tolerance, it will be complete in early 2008. Finally, I would like to highlight our teams continue their personal R&D, we have approximately 500 people worldwide in research and development.
That’s the largest stock of employees in a company which speaks our commitment to create unique solutions for our customers. So address growth across our portfolio we’ve increased R&D spending 34% year over year focusing on many promising areas such as polymer and reactive additives, catalysts for alternative fuels and expanded opportunities for bromine.
We also continue to seek new opportunities to expand the use of our catalyst technology [inaudible] where we currently in and we are having success to that our new catalyst products to serve the expanding very heavy and sour crude markets. Okay, before I begin sharing company results, I want to remind you that all of our comparisons discussed today excluding the $58 million after-tax charge related to disposition of time last year and second quarter 2007 after-tax charge of 3.1 million related to certain operations consolidation.
With that I am pleased to announced third quarter sales of $584 million that compares to $608 million of third quarter 2006 and $564 million last quarter. Year-over-year sales are essentially flat if we exclude times revenue impact and at 3.5% sequentially and their income for the quarter was $59.1 million, down 2.6% from the fourth quarter of 2006 for that 3.6% from last quarter.
Corporate gross margins improved 180 basis points from last year to 26.2%. Continued softness in demand across consumer markets and steps taken to introduce first level inventory of bromine and bromine flame retardants primary tetrabrom, pressure polymer additives margins to 12.6%.
That’s gone up 340 basis points from the third quarter of 2006. Well, Fine Chemicals impacted some of our new bigger fall sales delivered solid semi margins of 15.1%, up 400 basis point improvement over third quarter of 2006.
Our Carrier Segment was certainly the heavy weight this quarter with objective saving seven income margins of 19%. Combining all these together segment performance end of the quarter was $0.61 per share.
Coming on carriers, this business continues to show improved performance, with record selling quarter income of $41 million, an increase of 7% over year ago and 27% sequentially, the discipline demonstrated by Catalysts team and developing critically carrier systems for fewer and polyolefin applications provides a great opportunity for strong year-over-year growth. As expected HPC volumes were not as strong as third quarter last year when the refill cycles were still benefiting refinery spots to de-separation, regulations.
However, we are seeing sequentially steady increases in volumes and expect the refill cycles will create a strong pour for volume in 2008 and 2009. On the HPC side we continue our efforts towards prices recently posing a 15% price increase to $3100 per metric ton, effective January 1, 2008.
Turning now to polymer additives, our flame retardant business continues to weld the market with the consumer electronics through August. A positive turnaround came in September slightly offsetting very sluggish throughout August periods.
Polymer additives third quarter net sales of $233 million improved 4% sequentially. As we entered the fourth quarter, we are consciously optimistic that we will see strong effort volumes as we head into the holiday season.
On Fine chemical segments, our Fine chemical segment had a solid quarter with increased profits of 26% over third quarter 2006. Performance chemicals delivered solid results even though our bromine cost subscription headwinds from reduced bromine supply and reformatory change.
Our bi-chemistry services, pharmaceuticals and our cultural and various businesses continue to contribute impressive results. Year to date profits essentially equal the full year profits of 2006.
Let me now briefly comment on input cost. Raw materials increased $24 million over third quarter last year.
Raw material inflation still remains a big challenge for us in the industry. We expect steady increases in raw material cost through remainder of this year and we don’t see any reason for our inflation to slow in 2008.
In fact our first task view of next year indicates roughly $80 million of year over year raw material inflation. A particular concern is the strong price near pressure on mineral based raw materials by ATH which goes into our Albemarle Chemical business.
Those inflation pressures will put increased margin pressure on Polymer Additives business as we start next year. To help offset this under margin pressure we continue to execute on our cost reduction and pricing initiatives.
Looking forward I expect the fourth quarter to share modest sequential growth on the back will improve volume of polymer additives and catalysts. Albemarle’s fourth quarter should deliver modest sequential improvements although this is typically, seasonally a softer quarter for this segment.
The main products semi tolerant is selling rebound as the communication suggests a slow but sustainable recovery in the pro-sated board and connecting markets. In bio-chemicals we expect stable growth for the remainder of the year and another strong year in 2008.
Our bromine franchise remains real solid and there are over 200 products in the bio-chemistry services pipeline, we expect good growth in our Pharma and Agri portfolios. That is why we’ll be up slightly as we prepare for the record catalyst volumes in 2008.
Putting all these together we are on track to deliver strong results in the year that has been challenged with 3 times the level of raw material inflation and much weaker consumer product demand than we expected. The tremendous determination of our business, leaders and the dedication of our integrated work force around the globe is creating a success.
With that let me turn it over to John Steitz.
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Thanks Mark. Good morning everyone.
I’ll begin with our Polymer Additives segment. Polymer Additives net sales for the third quarter totaled $233 million down 3% from the third quarter of ‘06 and up 4% sequentially.
Polymer’s third quarter segment income is $29.4 million a 24% decline from a very strong third quarter of 2006, primarily due to lower sales volumes and higher unabsorbed manufacturing costs associated with our Tetrabrom units being down most of the quarter as well as increased raw material cost was not identified. Our flame retardants portfolios suffered from continued weakness in electronics demand.
While July and August volumes were even lower than what we saw in the first half of the year, September rebounded with very strong volumes giving us confidence where we’re hoping will be a sustainable market rebound. Looking back we saw very somber comparison of the first quarter to the third quarter of 2005, where the first 2 months were very soft and a sustainable rebound started in September of 2005 and continue to strut away throughout all of 2006.
While our diversified fine material portfolio allow us to weather these types of markets down towns we’ll not rest on our laurels. Our business technology and manufacturing teams are working hard to develop and manufacture more innovative and environmentally friendly products; while continue to create value and solve problems for our customers.
Our stabilizers and curatives business continues to be faced with extreme raw material cost pressure due to the impact of rising petroleum based speed stalk. During the quarter our commerce business also absorbed $ 1 million of inventory mark up charges and other one time cost associated with the consolidation of our Jinhai joint ventures.
Fine chemicals net sales for the quarter totaled $135 million, segment income of $24 million increased 26% over the third quarter of 2006. Our performance chemicals business reported strong sales this quarter.
A slow down in our bromine production due to brominated flame retardants inventory reduction, negatively impacted results for the quarter. Despite these headwinds, Performance Chemical profits increase a double digit rates over the third quarter of 2006.
Our fine chemistry services and intermediates business continues to deliver solid results. Comparisons to second half of last year were negatively impacted by the Tama fluid [ph] immediates business which was achieved in 2006.
Also as mentioned on our last call the second quarter of 2007 included a successful Naproxen [ph] campaign for a potential new product introduction. The pipeline of new pharmaceutical and agricultural intermediate products continues to grow and enhance our longer term segment margins.
Now moving onto to catalyst. Catalyst net sales for the third quarter totaled to $216 million, 4% over the last quarter relatively flat compared to a robust third quarter 2006.
Segment income for the quarter is $41 million compared to $38 million last year and $32 million in the second quarter, great execution by our team. You may recall third quarter 2006 was our highest selling quarter in catalysts and we delivered very strong profitability on those volumes and placed a highlight that while volumes this quarter lagged reference setting volumes of third quarter of last year; catalyst segment income increased year-over-year by 7%.
Sequentially segment income grew 27% and steady value increases in both, the refinery catalysts and polyolefin catalysts. Our refinery catalyst HPC business delivered sequential volume growth.
As expected they continue this positive traction as we close up the year and headed into what is expected to be a strong 2008. We've been running our existing HPC capacity wide open and plan to start commercial production in our new HPC plant late in the fourth quarter to meet growing demand next year.
Our refinery Catalyst.CC business is clearly making solid strides in margin improvement. While we believe there is still room for further margin improvement.
We must continue to deliver high performing superior quality products to meet the growing demands of the refiners processing heavier and heavier crudes. Out FCC business also continues to be faced with dramatic raw material increases related to energy, metals, imported rare earth and transportation costs.
The Polyolefin Catalyst business delivered strong reported results in the quarter with net sales up 15% year-over-year driven primarily by stronger revenues and volumes in our organo-metalic portfolio. And with that let me turn it over to Rich Diemer for comments on the financial results.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks John and good morning everybody. As Mark mentioned in his comments, we have consolidated two months of results from our analysis 75% earned China based anti oxidant joint ventures, which we call Jinhai.
Revenue was approximately $8 million for the August through September period with a relatively small impact to our bottom line this quarter due to required purchase account adjustments. We have an option to acquire the remaining 25% ownership from our partner in the future.
Our reported effective tax rate for the quarter was 15.4% and 20.8% for the year-to-date. The current quarter tax rate benefited from the change in German tax rates that weren’t active this quarter and our revaluation of our ready recorded deferred tax balances in Germany to approx the new rates.
This was approximately a 300 basis point benefit in the quarter. A 100 basis point benefit year-to-date on the tax rates or $0.02 a share.
We recorded tax benefits related to the completion of our 2006 tax returns of approximately $0.03 per share, which also benefit this quarter’s rate and results. Our best estimate for our tax rate in Q4 is 23.2%, which would give us a reported tax rate of approximately 21.5% for the full year.
Unallocated corporate expenses were $12.7 million in the quarter and we anticipate a similar level of expanse in Q4 for this fine item. Our EBITDA this quarter was $105 million slightly below the first quarterly, per-tax quarterly run rate and $2 million in Q3 2006.
We ended the quarter in cash equivalent of a $101 million. CapEx for the quarter was $21 million.
Our third view of 2007 CapEx is in the rage of a $100 million to $105 million. Depreciation, annualization was 26 million and we expect full year D&A of a $106 million to a $108 million.
Our preliminary roll up of cash flow operation is $68 million for the quarter. Turning to balance-sheet at September 30th we have consolidated debt of $698 million including $64 million of JBC join venture debt of which 400 million is fixed and 298 million is rolling, up 57% to 43% growth.
Our flowing debt interest rate is 5.82% at quarter end. The weighted average interest rate for Q3 was 5.4%.
Net of a $101 million cash on hand and excluding $46 million of non guaranteed yet consolidated JBC and Jinhai debt, our next debt is $551 million, up $6 million from year end, a dive of over 100 million from year ago. Our quarter end-to-debt cap ration is 34.9% and our net-debt rate cap ratio is 31.2%.
With that I will turn call back to Sandra.
Sandra Rodriguez - Director, Investor Relations
Thank you, Rich. Okay we’d like to open it up for your questions.
Question and Answer
Operator
[Operator Instructions]. Your first question comes from the line of P.J.
Juvekar from Citi please proceed.
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup
Yes, Hi good morning.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Hi good morning P.J.
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup
Wanted to get to the bottom of slim retardant issue. We met three weak quarters of slim retardant volumes, can you just talk about what are the operation effects what are the current inventories and is there a demand shift between brominated or non-brominated retardants and what’s going on?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
P.J. its John Steitz.
Let me try to address your question. The best thing I can do is kind of compare it back 2years ago to third quarter 2005 where we saw a similar decrease in demand.
So when we go out and talk to our customer base weather it be in electronics industry, the connectors industry the print circuit board industry we’re hearing very similar descriptions of what has been happening. Through the course of FY06, we saw strong demand through the course of the whole year.
And compared to FY05, especially a third quarter of FY05, it was down fairly markedly. FY06 was very strong even though end consumer markets were told by our customers were very weak in the second half, so there was an in hand build up of inventories at their level.
So we feel to match that and we believe that through July and August, we finally worked through what was the big inventory build that’s curled over last 18 months. So if I compare the three quarters, year-over-year we had in FY05 a relatively weak July and August with a very strong September.
In FY06 we had three consecutive months in that quarter, third quarter of FY06 very strong across the board. And then in FY07, we had a very weak July and August, which is similar to a July and August of FY05 but we had record sales and record volumes in September.
We’re starting out October, I would say moderately strong but November looks very strong. So, we are getting, we are cautiously optimistic we turn the corner here.
We feel our inventory levels are appropriate. We’ve had a fire up our tetrabrom plants in the last couple of weeks and we are pressing forward on manufacturing to meet what we see a recent spike in demands.
So that’s, that feels good. That did take a toll in earnings no question in third quarter of FY07 as we moderated our plants back might get my estimates that’s those about $0.05 in the quarter.
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup
So we are getting window getting in June, July and what are the inventories now?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Our inventories?
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup
Yes. Is that what you are talking about, your own inventories?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Yes, our own inventories have gone down in July and August despite the weak sales and in September we obviously had inventory to meet the spike there but in October now we got to produce the increasing demand. So I am hoping for sequential improvements and moderate sequential improvements.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
P.J. this is Rich, the inventory is obviously up on a consolidated basis with the full year and even for us since the last quarter that we reported that the bulk of that increase is in metals pricing which is catalysts and is an increased demand for catalysts order.
So you don’t want to mix some of those big orders that are coming through. The other thing that’s significantly impacting our inventory is OpEx, with our inventories up we have over in Europe so and there again that’s substantially catalyst related.
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup
And John can you talk about your operating rates in bromine wells either in Jordan or Arkansas and then you said your petro pump plant back up so what are operating rates overall in flame retardants?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes I, in Arkansas P.J. I’d say it was in the 50% to 60% range.
I mean we had done follow back fairly dramatically as the biggest volume sync for our bromine in Arkansas as primarily flame retardants. The utilization in Jordan was a little higher than that mostly built on some reasonably strong clear branch volumes in the Middle East.
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup
Are you raising those operating rates now?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Pardon me.
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup
Are you raising those operating rates now?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes, we are. We are increasing them to meet the increased demand flame retardants.
Now where they are running today, no they are not near 100% but they are I’d say more than the 70% range.
P.J. Juvekar - Citigroup
Okay, that’s all from me, thank you.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you P.J.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Laurence Alexander from Jeffery’s, please proceed.
Laurence Alexander – Jefferies & Co.
Good morning this is [inaudible].
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
I’m sorry it’s breaking up, is it Lucy? Lucy – Jefferies & Co.
Yes it’s Lucy for Laurence.
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Thanks you, Lucy. Lucy – Jefferies & Co.
I just actually have another question following up on the fine chemicals. Could you quantify the earnings impact of the inventory reduction in the bromine team?
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Yes that was about $0.02, in the range of $0.02 in the third quarter. Lucy – Jefferies & Co.
Okay, great. And just another question.
Is there a similar impact on polymer additives?
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Yes, it was about double that there however, it was in $0.04 to $0.05 range. Lucy – Jefferies & Co.
And what is the status of [inaudible] in China?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
This is Mark, let me try to take that. What we see in China is the government very actively promoting, industry leaving regulations in all of those areas where, the general public is exposed to potential of far sakes.
So in hotels and office buildings, the material they make to ship offshore all those things were in the absence meet far setting standards of, were international in nature. The best plenty of goods however are not yet familiar tried in China and there seems to be a very conservative effort on part of the government to change that.
Lucy – Jefferies & Co. Okay.
Thank you very much.
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Thanks Lucy for this call.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Robert Koort from Goldman Sachs, please proceed.
Robert Koort – Goldman Sachs & Co.
Thanks very much, good morning.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, hi Rob good morning.
Robert Koort - Goldman Sachs
I was wondering if you could tell me what, if there is any standard behavior around catalyst pricing in free buying ahead of price hikes so what you do to minimize that?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Let me give this a shot Bob, in most cases the inventory here is pretty tight so you make it to deliver it, and frankly we don’t see very much activity there to buy early in line of a price increase. There maybe some interest to cover deal but not to, [inaudible].
Robert Koort - Goldman Sachs
And remember, what effect is there if any from the volatility we’ve seen in refining margins over the last couple of years. I mean they have gone sky high and they crash and they gone back up and they come following a dramatically well or so.
Do you see buying bigger does it change refinery runs that are going or is the industry in the U.S. at least pretty much full out regardless?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, the industry in the U.S. is full out regardless I think today.
It remains a question if you look up 3, 4, 5 years, margins pulled back. Does that impact the value add or upgrading heavy crude oil?
I’m not sure. But in the near term and certainly in the recent past we’ve not seen any impact in these markets.
Robert Koort - Goldman Sachs
And if I look out 3, 4 to 5 years Mark will the U.S. component of that business become somewhat more marginalized owing most of the discussion around growth and opportunities outside the U.S.?
Or do you think it will continue to be at odds for the next wave of regulations in the U.S.?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Bob, the real growth, the new business growth is virtually well outside the U.S. plant.
Middle East, India, China. Those kinds of places.
Brazil, Venezuela.. So new volume is coming of new areas to the world.
I expect refineries in the U.S. are going to compete in prosperity to maximize their income.
And we see lot of enquiries on doing things like upgrading vacuum gas oil. So taking your medics and moving back to, towards, fuel can be used more readily than gasoline, diesel and things like that.
So I don’t necessarily think that we’re going to see a fallout in the U.S. but the entry question growth is all off shore.
The volume growth.
Robert Koort - Goldman Sachs
Thanks very much, next part.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of James Shield from Deutsche bank, please proceed.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes, on tetrabrom for a minute. Just to clarify.
Are you indicating that October sales volumes have been tracking above September and your orders for November are also increasing and accelerating momentum there? Yes that’s what I tried to communicate James.
So it looks sequentially like its improving and that kind of correlates with the IPC report that we get. We’ve seen an increase in the book-to-bill ratio there as well.
James Shield – Deutsche Bank
Now that’s going to be my next question. What is the book-to-bill right now?
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
We can take that, I think it was 1.07 I believe and that’s just at the top of my head. I, we can get that and verify that.
James Shield – Deutsche Bank
Okay and then how about pricing inthis area, are you seeing pricing discipline for the industry?
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Yes, the answer to this question is yes. Overall in our entire polymer additives business we’ve seen year-over-year double digit pricing hold.
And we’ve seen some reasonable high single digit sequential improvement. Specifically in the bromine flame retardant portfolio we’ve seen solid gains year-over-year and sequence on some I’d say moderate sequential improvement.
James Shield – Deutsche Bank
All right thank you very much.
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
I think we’ve got a number here for you on the book-to-bill ratio. No, we’ll come back to you on that.
James Shield – Deutsche Bank
Appreciate it.
John M. Steitz – Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
You bet.
Operator
You next question comes from the line of Jeff Zekauskas from J.P Morgan, please proceed.
Jeff Zekauskas – J.P. Morgan
Hi good morning. Richard J Diemer, Jr.
– Senior Vice President and CFO Good morning Jeff. Hi Jeff.
Jeff Zekauskas – J.P. Morgan
A few questions. Your working capital, are you above negative 120 so far this year and what’s the source of that?
Unidentified Company Representative
I don’t know about the negative 120. We tracked networking capital.
But for 106 days I think is where we are and that principally because of raw materials, inflation and its also due to FX.
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
In a big picture sense, Jeff, we’ve seen inflation, inflationary impacts hit this to the tune of $60 million or so and you’ve got some volume build on top of that, about $30 million or so I think we’re up net about a $100 million. It’s what I recall on that bromine unfortunately but.
A lot of cost rolled through that based on the inflation that we see out there. We’ve also through this year, it’s kind of crazy but we’ve had tremendous sales of catalysts at the end of each quarter so we have the sort of outstanding receivable balance that’s much higher than it should be to make sure the way our business is going this year.
Jeff Zekauskas – J.P. Morgan
Okay that’s helpful. Back to the polymer additive area.
If you look at the volumes over a multi-year period of time, if you go back to, FY05, FY06 and now in FY07, there really hasn’t been any growth in volumes in polymer additives if you net it out. If you go back and you include 2004 when you are up 19% and what you do is you get and in the previous year before that was up 2% but you get something like 2% volume growth, if we give you the benefit of the doubt in ’04 and all of that is probably below the rate of the growth in the underlying plastic.
So when you look at flame-retardants over a multi year period of time whether the fourth quarter turns up or not why does it seem that polymer additive growth seems slower than the growth in the underlying plastics?
Unidentified Company Representative
Well let me start that, if John kind of pop in here for just a minute. You followed us for a long time Jess.
You’ve seen the sort of the thick [inaudible] over sales for this business and it tends to be broadly speaking, it tends to have this sort of stetiscope [ph] associated with it. We have, unbelievable volume growth in ’99.
2000 kind of top range to see volumes shrink 30% for a couple of years then till we came out of that, so Y2Kdriven back in the 2012 top-line. So, if I look at, on that sequence I’ve probably got 10%, 20% growth in some period times and a modest 20% in some other period of times.
So it’s been very choppy and we have seen a lot of changes in this industry. There are a lot more phosphorus related flame retardants are being sold today including those that we expect to sell from the plant that’s coming up there’s been some shift to mineral flame retardants and we've seen a lot of volume growth on mineral basis over a period of time.
So I guess it’s a broad question you're answering. We've said historically that about 2X GDP because of plastics going in to consumer electronics have [inaudible] number I’ll get something pretty close to that.
Before this recent downturn but I need to check and we’ll do that before this recent downturn. I need to check, and we’ll do that and get back to you guys.
Unidentified Analyst
So, I mean all things being equal. Maybe you’ll have a nice year in ’08 given how weak 2007 has been.
Unidentified Company Representative
Possibly, that’s the way it’s been.
Unidentified Analyst
I guess, lastly I just want to be sure that I understood the tax rate explanation. In the quarter was there a $0.03 benefit from the audit of 2006 taxes or a change in--?
Unidentified Company Representative
It’s not the audit there Jeff because the IRS is not on top of it. With that sort of short delay its $0.02 from Germany.
So German tax rates down, its approximately $0.03 and we went through and completed our tax return, you complete your ’06 tax return in ’07 and you do what is called a accrual to return adjustments. So to get that all in sync you threw up your obit books.
So we had positives adjustments, they could be negative they can go either way but in this case they were positive adjustments so our books were brought in sync with the tax return that we filed.
Jeff Zekauskas - J.P. Morgan
Okay thank you very much.
Operator
Your next question comes from line of Kevin Mccarthy from Banc of America Securities. Please proceed.
Kevin Mccarthy – Banc of America Securities
Yes good morning, Mark. The raw material inflation that you reference, can you give us an idea of how much that if any, is passed through automatically quoting your contract divisions and how much of you’ll need to address via price increases and/or cost reductions.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
About $30 million is mildly inflation of the 80% or so we’re having this year and we work to make sure that’ll pass through. So if you look at the other balance of that, the other $50 million or so we got a 5 coded, call waiting getting that past our customers.
Kevin Mccarthy – Banc of America Securities
Okay and just to clarify that that was in FY08 versus FY07 versus number?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
That’s FY07 versus FY06 and when we look at next year, it’s probably not that generous on how we, I’ve got as much as volume inflation pricing we’re seeing $18 million overall and some of that, the, most of the investment will tell its not going to pass through. You have to admit it.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes, not to add there is a cobalt nickels probably in order 15 million and that’s included in the past year.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Okay so let me revise this, the numbers about half [inaudible] that we have to fight for.
Kevin Mccarthy – Banc of America Securities
Got you. In Fine Chemicals you mentioned the low bromine operating rate there being about $0.02 headwind chime.
I think you also mentioned in the text of the press release revenue from foreign chemistry services. Can you elaborate a little bit on the trends there and what the future looks like?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes, Kevin last quarter we had a large and approximate order go out for a potential new migraine drug. So that was a nice a tailwind for us in the second quarter.
We also roll in a lot of our ag intermediates into our fine chemistry services business. And that tends to be, that particular business tends to be a fourth quarter through first quarter driver for us because we’re building up for our customer inventory for the upcoming planning season.
So that tends to be less of a driver in third quarter; second and third quarters and move on the fourth, three of the first quarters in the following year. But generally we’re getting a I think of lot of exciting, new opportunities.
I know you’re relatively hungry to understand those better but just because of the proprietary and confidential nature we keep going into a lot of those details but there are some, I think very unique opportunities in the active pharmaceutical range of products that next year if they come to fruition could be quite exciting for us.
Kevin Mccarthy – Banc of America Securities
Your custom synthesis increased still running north of 50?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes, they sure are Kevin, very strong.
Kevin Mccarthy – Banc of America Securities
And lastly, any change in the elemental bromine prices?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Well we’ve been studying that because the raw material and energy concerns are out there and chlorine continues to go up in pricing and so we’re studying that as we speak.
Kevin Mccarthy – Banc of America Securities
Okay, thank you very much.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
You’re welcome.
Operator
You next question comes from the line of Steven Schwartz from First, please proceed.
Steven Schwartz – First Analysis Securities Corp.
Hi. Good morning.
In the electronics with Polymer Additives one supplier just this morning announced really strong results in the quarter but then it’s like the sentiments disappointed and they gave kind of a, down outlook possibility on the fourth quarter. Is there any way you can help us understand exactly what part of electronics you are more strongly tied to?
John Steitz - Executive Vice President & COO
Well we tend to be, this is John Steitz, Steven. We’re the broadest supplier in the industry, so there are a lot of touch points for us.
There’s industrial and home construction, there’s automotive in the electronics area there is the print circuit board market or small buying electronics and mobile phones. There is small connectors that our brominated polystyreminor products plays into, high temperature nylon, pretty good picture of the end markets around the globe.
Steven Schwartz – First Analysis Securities Corp.
Okay alright. Thank you, that helps.
Moving into catalysts with the price increase on SEC, is there anyway you can help us understand what the potential impact of that might be in 2008. And I guess ideally what I’d like to know is what percentage of your business is placing below $4100 and by how much and I realize you may not be able to give all those details but and maybe you get an idea of what I am interested in?
James Shield – Deutsche Bank
Yes I can get a pretty good idea of what you’re interest today and it’s a difficult question to answer because the next in that range of products is fairly dramatic depending on and the application. But I can tell you that pricing year-over-year is up about 20% and there has been a lot of discipline in the market place.
Hope to achieve that going forward, you have seen the announcement we have made that’s in the range of $200 a ton. Unfortunately we are faced with tremendous raw material escalation in that business as well.
I mentioned, Mark and I both mentioned the ATH raw material as going up. That’s based on aluminum and that’s going up dramatically.
And there are others, are China is going up dramatically and the related transportation cost to get these product shift around the global is going up dramatically as well. So, we are hoping some margin expansion but it’s very difficult in those environment especially when you think of $90 barrel oil and the ramifications of that.
Steven Schwartz – First Analysis Securities Corp.
Okay, great, thank you.
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Okay.
Operator
The next question comes from the line of Mike Sison from KeyBanc, please proceed.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
Hello.
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Hi.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Hi.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
On HPC you talked about the expansion coming on screen congrats. How is that ramping up in terms of orders for next year and can you give us a little bit of color on that you effect and sort of the fill right new plant will be?
Richard J Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and CFO Yes Mike.
You know we are going hard now. We have been going hard this year as we have been sold out turning the construction phases this plant.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
The base, HPC catalysts business has been sold out. Richard J.
Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and CFO Yes.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
Okay. So that sold on out that’s means we are ramping up capacity now anticipation of good oil and your base business in FY08?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
That’s right. So the, as we mentioned kind of end tax the fourth quarter sequentially in HPC looks pretty strong, the first quarter of FY08 looks very strong and will probably be a record quarter for us.
So we needed to be that plant up and running quickly to help us meet the growing demand in the first quarter and beyond. So, we are hopeful that this plant will be sold out at some point towards the end of the back half of FY09 and so the opportunities globally are coming in a very strong phase.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
And in terms of other rates right now and gladly you are going to get more visibility as the first half of FY08 comes to operation, is the HPC expansion partly 20% sold out, 30%, 50%?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
I think it will be in the 40% to 50% range in the first year and the second half of FY09 would ramp up that second 50% of that capacity.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
And if the demand is stronger is it possible to have more of that sold out in FY08 or is it sort of, you need big order then that is probably the best case at this point?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Well ideally yes, I mean if the FY08 demand continues to build momentum through the course of FY08, yes, will keep that new plan running as far as we can.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
Keep that running. And in the fourth quarter of FY06 HP, catalyst segment rather down 24%, so you sort of had pretty easy comparisons going on in the fourth quarter of FY07.
So should the volume drop in the fourth quarter and catalysts be pretty pronounced based on what you said?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Compared to the fourth quarter of FY06, yes I think it’s in the 15% to 20% range and it’s just correctional.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
Okay great and just switching gears a little bit on a, I want to [inaudible] but the impact in profitability per math is 2% or 3% on margin based on both the shut down, both of my math would I confirm 50%-50%. So that 15% level Polymer additives is running at but after the rate you need to get Arkansas back to get back to15 just to get back to that 70-80?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. - Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes again directionally I’d say that’s the order negative we are talking about.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
Right and anything above that you said to get further improvements on that?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
That’s correct.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
And then mine on Fine Chemicals, you know when you started taking a look at the back log and you want to think the fine chemistry business is sort of known for its, sort of its running new projects. How does that back log of new projects will look as we are heading to 2008?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yes it feels really good, there has been a couple of unique opportunities that we are filling couple of our plant sites and one is actually counted in the home and defense area and the other is Ag area. Very profitable and very profitable stream and new products.
We are looking really bullish into next year. And there is a couple of opportunities in the Pharma sector that are really exciting that we’re not building into our financial planning but if they happen could really take us up a notch.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
And lastly brominated pricing and fine chemicals is that continue to go up?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
It’s been, I’d say relatively flat here the last quarter or so. As we enter in January the late, Mike we’re looking at some, you know more raw material cost pressure.
And so, as I mentioned earlier we’re analyzing how we react to that right now.
Michael Sison – KeyBanc Capital Markets
Okay, great. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Dmitry Silversteyn with Longbow Research, please proceed.
Dmitry Silversteyn – Longbow Research
Good morning, a couple of questions if I may, a lot of them have already been answered. You talked about raising prices in SEC catalyst about 15%, your latest price increase to $3100 a ton.
Given all of the cost offset that you’ve had on raw materials transportation are we likely to see additional price increases in FY08 and kind of what is your longer term outlook for this business as far as pricing is concerned.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Well we’re still not you know at re-investment economics and the long term forecasts, I mean over a multi year period are for a lot of volume growth here. And we don’t believe right now that the economics justify know any signified investments.
So, we’re working hard to get the economics right. So, I think we’ve got to be very nimble at how we address this going forward.
And I think that’s particularly true in FY08. We’ve got to be in a position to continue to file against the critical raw material for this industry, obviously and as we mentioned we’re going to continue to drive value through new technology and products and really solve problems in the refining sector.
We’re working hard on that. But to say, you know we’re finished on pricing would, I’d be really misdirecting you there.
And I if we’ve got to react to the raw material pressures and energy pressures and also provide products that really meet our growing slate of difficult problems in this market place.
Dmitry Silversteyn – Longbow Research
So to kind of take this a step further, at what point in time or when would you need to have capacity expansion at least beginning to meet the projected demand and I know we’re talking heading to do something with capacity in 2008 or 2009 or is it further out? I mean how much time do you have to get your economics in order before you really start jeopardizing your business by not just you but other players in the business.
Mark C. Rohr – President & Chief Executive Officer
Yes, it’s further out than 2008-2009. It’s in that range, it’s 3 years out.
So, I think we’ve got to be very thoughtful in how we approach that.
Dmitry Silversteyn – Longbow Research
Okay so you got a couple of more years of price increases, another way looking at it.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
No, we’re going to keep continuing target generate value and earn our way here.
Dmitry Silversteyn – Longbow Research
Very good. Let me follow up on the fine chemicals business value you announced that price increases for the again I think earlier in the third quarter.
Can you give us an update on how that’s going and how successful your price increase from where it should have been?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Pricing year-over-year is up in the double-digit range, but Dmitry we also have in this whole chain of producing Ibuprofen needs a lot of organics and use organics like Isobutylene and Toluene a lot of products like that are used in our process.
So, they are very just inflationary because of the petrochemical base for that. So margin overall has hung in there we are starting to see some increased demand in our Ibuprofen business we feel good about that and we feel especially good about the quality that we bring especially compared to imported products around the world and the concerns around importing the raw materials from China and Indian places like that.
So, we are pushing hard on that, so, we’ve got a good product but I’d have to say that in our fine chemicals sector again, Ibuprofen is one product of a fairly large portfolio and its newer even close to 5% to 10% of our overall profitability in fine chemicals now. So it’s a good seller product as far as the overall portfolio.
Dmitry Silversteyn – Longbow Research
I got it. Thanks, thanks for putting that respective and I have one final question, on polymer additives particularly the petrobromine and brominated in general.
My understanding is that the European reach program, this is one of the first chemicals that being examined. The year early food bank and harbor process is going where you are in getting this product, so to reach the process in Europe and do you see any risk to continue with volume growth or maybe with acceptance of this product in the region?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, above plus or products you have to go through reach and its going to be a far show early on, a part of that assessment. The preliminary results we have and tests we have done and others have done is that we think these products for the most part can go through reach without difficulty.
There are one or two exceptions out there where I think the potential toxicity of the model QO [ph] is the word upon the environment is such that if we have to mitigate real’s got to move to different product. So we finally is not a real is frankly is a right thing to do to test these products to make sure they are okay.
There has been some concern right of bromine broadly in the use of bromine broadly. You have a lot of initiatives underway to manage that well.
So there is a quite of public revenue and I think we can do that successfully. If we can’t do it successfully as you end this decade and go into the next you can fix some follow-up on volume.
Dmitry Silversteyn – Longbow Research
Okay. Alright, thank you very much.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Alright, pleased to meet you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Edward Yang from CIBC, please proceed.
Edward Yang - CIBC
Thank you, good morning.
Unidentified Company Representative
Good morning Ed.
Edward Yang - CIBC
On Mark you’ve mentioned fourth quarter it show modest sequential growth, was that for revenue or EPS?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
I only comment on EPS, near term of that, so, on the revenue basis, we shift this modest growth.
Edward Yang - CIBC
Okay, thank you. And on polymer additive, let’s is understand the acceleration and improvements from August, September, October to November, but to get a better sense of the velocity and the slow pose on potential year-over-year improvement in 2008, John mentioned the 2005.
I think at that time, in the third quarter of FY05 your permanent added volumes was down 7% and a year later they were up a 11%. And like to get a better feel fiscal, on if things play as we did in the FY05, Fy06 playbook, what sort of volume year-over-year volume growth recovery we should seen in FY08 for polymer additives?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, we are still cautiously optimistic as I said and I am hopeful we can get; I don’t think its going to be as dramatic as a 11% but somewhere in the high single digits I think is possible as we rebound lot of this downturn on volumes.
Edward Yang - CIBC
Okay. And you mentioned the strong outlook for Catalyst for 2008 and I think John was trying to back into a volume growth number for 2008 and into Q&A.
And would you have there put forward kind of range in terms of what we should expect to see in terms of HPC volume growth for 2008?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
There I think we got to mention what the velocity addition was probably the HPC plan and so if you look at that as 20% or 25% is that we are saying is that we expect for the year to be lot for to the year on annualized kind of basis, so you take that one credit a month and a half, so 10% to 12% on HPC volume growth is kind of the thing that we work on part to look.
Edward Yang – CIBC
Alright, thank you. And lastly on fine chemicals, the long-term margins for that business?
And something that you target in the 20% range it’s been moving around but…
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
That’s 20% we. I can see quarters where we can get peaks like that because we have this kind of third, second quarter where everything jammed up and kind of nice orders out and also all ran well and buyers were relatively robust.
So I can see peaks like that but to say that, that would be sustainable I think it’s going to take a number of years for us to get there at level. We are at a process of our planning programs for a way through 2010.
Right now we would be solidifying these targets as I have promised many of you by the end of the year and opportunity turn year so we are going to target for margin improvement. And fine chemicals we feel good about that and to say 20% over the next 18 months is too ambitious for us business right now.
Edward Yang - CIBC
Okay, thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Doug Shaw from UBS. Please proceed.
Chris Shaw – UBS
Chris Shaw, that’s alright. How you guys doing?
Just a follow up I guess on the, as I was saying would you, it seems some of the bunch of marginal clients trying to have focus on the inventory reduction, would you expect the margin to be back up or sequentially up in 4Q?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Yes we are working hard to do that Chris, we had some issues that we had to deal with in the third quarter and we have the, we have got the some of these agna [ph] immediates that are picking back up in the fourth quarter. So that will help us.
I think there is no way it would be 20% but I think it will be better than 15 in that 16 plus range.
Chris Shaw – UBS
Okay, and then, just curious, you’re talking about the FCC business not being worth, we are investigating in it right now but is there any of the competitors out there adding expansion right now for the growth that’s coming up?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
You know I think there is a difference between expansion and de-bottle necking and I think there has been some degree of de-bottle necking and some degree of may be consolidation some manufacturing to a degree but major expansion will be in major investment for this market and that’s why I think that has to be done in a very thoughtful manner so it could be several $200 million to $ 300 million investment depending on the size and sculpture of the manufacturing plan.
Chris Shaw – UBS
Except the size you don’t know how you’re planning to do that yet?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
No.
Chris Shaw – UBS
Not a major one but I think VSF [ph] is got an economic expansion underway in Georgia.
Chris Shaw – UBS
Oh okay. And then finally what, you’ve got about $100 million in cash what are your plans for cash and forget the priorities?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Our priority is then to invest internally. We’ve grown CapEx a little bit over the last couple of years.
We’ve invested in R&D. We’ve increased our dividend double digit this year and once we get our outlook set I hope to be able to do that again so, increasing returns that way.
I think I’m probably slightly sub-optimal on debt cap right now although I have cash available and we have not hesitated to buy back their stocks should that look to be a good investment. So, that’s another alternative, another way to return from the shareholders.
Chris Shaw – UBS
And are you still looking at [inaudible] 2.08 plus?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
We’re only looking at M&A that’s the case and as it’s been a couple of quarters it’s I think more of a seller’s than a buyers market but we’re always looking to grow that way also.
Chris Shaw – UBS
Okay great, thanks guys.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Guy Barrel from [inaudible], please proceed.
Unidentified Analyst
Hi guys. I just want to go back to SEC catalysts for a second and you almost answered my question few callers back when you talked about discipline in the industry.
But I was wondering if you could give a little bit more detail as to what, to how your competitors have reacted or reacting to the slicing actions that you have taken in FCC’s or I guess in how you expect them to respond to that?
John Steitz - Executive Vice President & COO
Well I think we’re, my belief is since we’re all under the same raw material pressure. The, a lot of common ingredients from ATH, silicates, rare earths out of China; all these raw materials are going up dramatically.
And so, my belief is we were all under similar cost type pressures. So, therefore we’ve been forced to announce this price increase and we’re trying to implement it through the course of next year.
And we’ve been successful in doing that over the last 18 months. So I hope that our customer base will continue to understand the position we’re in and continue to be, to work with us to get these prices up.
Unidentified Analyst
Okay so do these refineries have for the most part, taking in stride or when do you expect to, when do you expect to or at what prices do you expect to push back on that?
John Steitz - Executive Vice President & COO
Well I mean there is always purchasing organizations are obligated to do their job and there is always lot of push back. So, we just have to continue to try drive the importance of value and try to really focus on solving some difficult technical challenges, the biggest technical challenges the heavier, the heavier crucely [ph] that got to be utilized in the worldwide final market today and as you see catalyst can really help solve that problem.
Unidentified Analyst
And just lastly are you seeing any better I guess there is active, are you seeing other than do anything irrational or try to grow out market share on the yields of your pricing action?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Well its hard to isolate individual situation and say it there is a trend there, there is always going to be situations that come up and but generally there has been pretty reasonable support for this.
Unidentified Analyst
Okay, thanks very much. You are welcome.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Adela Marianna from SAC Capital, please proceed.
Adela Marianna – SAC Capital
As first take my question two quick ones, a part of me. First one, and I know you guys don’t give specifics but when you talked about the earnings in the second half of the year in quarter call that’s what being flat in the first half, which is working through some of the currents you guys talked about earlier I come out with the fourth quarter possibly being the biggest quarter of the year in terms of earnings.
Am I actually correct there or?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
That’s I don’t know how you do the calculus for the but.
Adela Marianna – SAC Capital
I can just walk you through the I think essentially you talked about finalizing and sequentially you talked about the HPC catalyst for all getting better in the fourth quarter and then move on from there and then fine chemicals from receiving that you get a slight improvement in that in the month?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
And then you have the tax rates go up to a more normalized 23.2%, so that will offset some of those banks. So it will cover probably be we execute roll out it could end up that way and if we done secure roll out, maybe so, I am getting close to giving guidance all that is required.
Adela Marianna – SAC Capital
Fair enough and then just a quick follow up on that math that you did on yours but, am I doing the math correct; if I add up the $0.05 cover and then value added the $0.02 and fine chemicals and the penny for June and July you essentially out of that sense we are on time causing this quarter offsetting the $0.06 cost benefit, is that how you think about it?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Adel you are worried I think you got the math right.
Adela Marianna – SAC Capital
Okay, correct. Then finally just one last question in terms of thinking about catalyst on I guess some color in terms HPC volumes and first try and what else the other to the revenue going forward for the segment of the whole we are taking 15% of the CC price over the Polymer catalysts and not just model CC part of the good year of pricing.
Is 20% revenue growth staff on for that segment over all a verified number or I am not kind of [inaudible] number but I am just going to go [inaudible] kind of completely incorrect or [inaudible] excellent.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Adela I know you’re not going to try to nail us down for the number but you get pretty close to that .
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Actually I don’t mind [inaudible].
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
You know I think 20 is probably a higher number, 15 may be more in line with what, how we do work after capitals. But again as we end this year and communicate here and year end we will communicate what to expect for the next year.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
You should know that mail plays a pretty big role in that and we saw deflation for instance in [inaudible] we could pull $60 million of that top line running, thinking about it so you know you just have to be careful in there how you use revenue. What you expect revenue from catalyst, there is so much of metal in fact there.
Adela Marianna – SAC Capital
Okay and then finally just one last question. Just thinking about the capital structure and the kind of how underway you are doing is it at some point that the stock price makes you get more urged to doing something more in the buy back or I mean what’s the right way to think about how long you guys wll let your balance to stay [inaudible] or doing something more aggressive?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
I think my priorities are to continue the growth further may they be organic or by doing [inaudible] that’s the top priority. But in the absence of those types of opportunities we had now to pay this buy back stock in the roll 40’s.
We are cheaper. so but that kind where my head is and I think even half of next year it’s a good investment at that part.
Adela Marianna – SAC Capital
Fair enough, thanks guys.
Operator
Your next question comes from a line of [inaudible] from [inaudible] investment. Please proceed.
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Hopefully that will be last for off set.
Unidentified Analyst
Good morning. With start off with the HPC facility in Daytona could you describe what’s entailed in bringing up in this facility?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
Yes sure. You know once mechanically you have to go through where your series of dummy rounds if you will.
Water or not a material but you really wanted individual sections to verify if it’s okay. Do all your you do the double check [inaudible] you make sure that’s it is all clean and crisp and then there is a series of travels that will run through it to produce commercial qualities with small volumes we produce commercial qualities.
Then we put these batteries in the series of test, to validate if its good quality piece of standards that the industry expect to run. So that’s the process of underway as we speak today.
As we get to examine this year we think we’re trying to make approving commercial rounds or product forms. So we’re confident that auto, right know have you mechanically completed the process beginning the test initiatives necessary to round up your spaces.
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Yes, the team is, the team has done a Herculean effort to mange this in a safe normally sound way. Not even the accidents.
And sell of the equipments in good fashion so if we don’t make any mistakes we don’t. So those a lot of activity out of the way.
It gets more actually [inaudible].
Unidentified Analyst
In the past moving to margins you have described that the consultment level you would like to see your businesses in 15%, 16%, 17%, things change depending on the term we’re talking about. How does raw material inflation as you look at FY08 and likely operating rate affect your confidence and those segment margins?
Mark C. Rohr – President and Chief Executive Officer
We are talking, no apostrophes as comparison, things are going to be 15% greater, seventh margin, income margin and of course for you guys as we in this year and start next talk about that, future with our targets as we establish 50% benchmark. We watch our program before the apples to apples compares a $10 per change in mildly $60 billion, $70 billion, $80 billion; I mean $10 projects $60 billion, $70 billion, $80 billion.
I mean that kind of impact on margins in a [inaudible]. The flip side is we’ve got a lot of equation that we are expecting at little bit of high rate, our jobs got a whole time [inaudible]?
So there is an angle that is kind of numbered, code number would expect the be able to keep those kind of numbers as we go forward.
Unidentified Analyst
Rich how do you suppose you FY08 affected tax rate assumption would compare to the average you foresee for FY07?
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Given increase in profitability that we anticipate to have next year and the fact that the bulk of that increase will be in tax restrictions and now we have the tax rate with the three high 20 pipe rate. We kind of, to a 20, 24 to 24.50 range kind of where I’m looking at tax rate per down next year.
Unidentified Analyst
Thank you very much.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Andrew [inaudible] from [inaudible] Capital, please proceed.
Unidentified Analyst
Hi, another good year catalyst margins that climbed sequentially after a strong 3Q FY06. I was wondering whether that was entirely type of volumes is that a normal trend you expect to repeat in the next few quarters?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Well we improved when we look in the margins and catalyst Andrew we improved the JVs that support that business and so year-over-year, if you look at third quarter of FY06 we had, my numbers indicate 17.6% second margin and went to just under 19. So, and then sequentially we saw it go from 15.6 to just under 19.
So we feel the teams have done a really good job there and if we need to clarify some numbers with you we would be happy to do that but really the cost of the board the revenue is we are down slightly in catalyst but that’s primarily due to a very strong demand in the third quarter of FY06 as some new regulations kicked in prior to the fourth quarter of FY06, we saw a big step up in our demand for HPC catalyst and very strong mix of last year in the third quarter.
Unidentified Analyst
Okay, I guess, I was looking on it before the JV interest?
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Yes, the primary issue there would be the HPC impact we had some very strong very robust sulphur reducing catalyst systems shipped in the third quarter of FY06 to prepare for this new regulations kicking out.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Andrew this is Rich. You only look at the operating before JVs and even before minority interest you can be discarded view of how we different views on how we run the business.
So it’s really important the way we run the business as our JV income in but also you take away the minority interest because we don’t have kind of partners’ interest and some of the business up and consolidate.
Unidentified Analyst
Okay. Well maybe look at the numbers in that range and sum that of.
Richard J. Diemer, Jr. – Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Okay.
Unidentified Analyst
Thank you.
John M. Steitz - Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
You are welcome.
Operator
At this time, there are no further questions in the queue; I will now like to turn the call back over to Sandra Rodriguez, Director of Investor Relations.
Sandra Rodriguez - Director of Investor Relations
Thank you. I would like to thank everyone for participating on the call today.
If there are any further questions, you can contact me at the number indicated on the press release. Have a great day everyone.
Operator
Thank you for your participation in today’s conference. This concludes the participation you may now disconnect.
Good day.