Jul 19, 2012
Executives
Gavin Bell William R. Nuti - Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, President and Chairman of Executive Committee Robert P.
Fishman - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Accounting Officer and Senior Vice President Peter A. Leav - Executive Vice President of Global Sales, Industry Lines of Business, Professional Services and Consumables
Analysts
Gil B. Luria - Wedbush Securities Inc., Research Division Ian A.
Zaffino - Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., Research Division Daniel R.
Perlin - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division Matt J. Summerville - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division Kartik Mehta - Northcoast Research Julio C.
Quinteros - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division Dan Dolev - Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Operator
Welcome and thank you all for standing by. [Operator Instructions] This conference is being recorded.
If you have any objections, you may disconnect at this time. And I would now like to turn today's conference over to Mr.
Gavin Bell. Thank you.
Sir, you may begin.
Gavin Bell
Thanks, Victor. Good afternoon and thanks, everyone for joining us for our second quarter 2012 earnings call.
Bill Nuti, NCR's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer will lead our conference call this afternoon After Bill's opening remarks, Peter Leav, Executive Vice President of our Industry Solutions Group and Head of Global Sales, will update you with respect to progress in certain key initiatives. Bob Fishman, NCR's Chief Financial Officer, will then provide comments on NCR's total company financial results.
Our discussion today includes forecasts and other information that are considered forward-looking statements. While these statements reflect our current outlook.
They are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to vary materially. These risk factors are described in NCR's periodic filings with the SEC and in our annual report to stockholders.
On today's call, we will also be discussing certain non-GAAP financial information, such as free cash flow and results excluding the impact of pension and other items. Reconciliations of non-GAAP financial results to our reported and forecasted GAAP results and other information concerning such measures are included in our earnings press release and are also available on the Investor page of NCR's website.
A replay of this conference call will be available later today on NCR's website, ncr.com. For those listening to the replay of this call, please keep in mind that the information discussed is as of July 19, 2012, and NCR assumes no obligation to update or revise the information included in this conference call, whether as a result of new information or future results.
I'll now turn the call over to Bill Nuti.
William R. Nuti
Thank you, Gavin. Good afternoon and thank you all for joining us.
Our second quarter results keep us on track to achieve our full year objectives and demonstrate the consistent execution and innovation that we are leveraging across all of our lines of business. Consolidated as-reported revenues increased 11% in the second quarter of 2012 compared to the same period last year.
Revenues increased 15% on a constant currency basis and gross margin and NPOI margin once again reached record levels in Q2. We continue to execute our strategy to become a solutions company, where hardware, software and services are integrated to deliver more value to our customers.
This strategy and our solid execution is resulting in NCR generating profitable growth. In addition to our strong revenue, gross margin and NPOI results, orders surged in the second quarter, growing 19% over the prior year period.
Order growth was bolstered by a significant order in Brazil. We finished the quarter with backlog of $1.29 billion, a record high, and our 11th consecutive quarter of year-over-year backlog growth.
As a reminder, this order and backlog growth does not include our hospitality line of business, which also expanded its business pipeline during Q2. In addition, it does not include our consumables line of business.
Our focus on growing our core verticals, Financial Services, Retail and Hospitality, and solid execution across our product groups and our global services business are combining to drive strong financial performance and a robust business pipeline. Outside of the core, we continue to leverage NCR's strengths in attractive Emerging Industries like Travel, as well as Telecom and Technology.
Consistent with this strategy, we completed the previously announced sale of our Entertainment business to Redbox in the second quarter, consistent with the pricing and terms we announced at the time of the deal. One of our main goals is now to grow overall revenue contribution from higher margin software and services as we continue to transform into a solutions company.
In the second quarter, software and SaaS revenues were up 47% compared to Q2 of last year, and our software gross margins were in excess of 65%. Our target for software revenues this year is $500-plus million, and we are well on our way to achieving that objective.
We demonstrated growth in our services business as well, with revenues growing 7% and gross margin expanding 270 basis points over the prior year period. Earlier this month, we announced that we reached our highest-ranking to date in the 2012 Global Outsourcing 100 rankings, rising 2 spots to #6 overall.
The rankings are established by the International Association of Outsourcing Professionals, the global standard setting organization and advocate for the outsourcing profession. The Global Outsourcing 100 is an annual ranking representation of the standard of excellence in outsourcing and NCR's services team clearly stands as one of the top outsourcing services providers.
Customer references -- company recognitions, certifications and executive leadership. As one of the world's leading providers of software support and managed services, NCR performs 11 million service actions per year and maintains more than 2 million points of service worldwide.
As we look ahead, NCR remains well-positioned to benefit from expected growth in expanding our front office technology across our verticals. Whether it is productivity gains achieved through advanced ATM or in-branch [ph] solutions, our converged Retail Solution that greatly enhances in-store sales and enterprise SaaS solutions for restaurants that enables higher growth through loyalty, or our mobile tech and experience for airline passengers that speeds up processing and lowers cost.
Robert P. Fishman
In Financial Services, we're building upon our global leadership by delivering a robust enterprise platform and market-leading multichannel banking capability that enable financial institutions to enhance their branch operations reduce cost and better connect with their clients. This innovative and service-backed enterprise platform is driving market share and gains across the globe, yielding strong financial performance and high praise for our customers.
Financial Services revenue grew 7% in the second quarter and segment operating income growth was 10%. In addition to strong financial performance, we also continue to see solid order trends with global orders up 24% in Q2, mainly due to growth in Brazil and EMEA.
It's worth noting that our business overall in Europe remains healthy despite the economic issues facing the region as evidenced by FX neutral revenue growth of 13% and FX neutral order growth of 3% in the second quarter. We continue to expect relatively flat performance for the year in European geographic region overall.
William R. Nuti
Revenues from the U.S. regional and midsize banking sector increased 58% during Q2 and for the first half of the year are tracking 119% as of last year as financial institutions in this sector continue to unlock capital spending.
Going forward, NCR will face very tough compares in this segment, and our share gains continued, and the overall growth of this business over the last 18 months has been significant. In Retail Solutions, Q2 revenues decreased 9%.
On an apples-to-apples basis, excluding the effect of moving our specialty retail accounts from our Hospitality segment to Retail Solutions, revenues decreased 6%. Despite the decrease in revenues, segment operating income in Q2 was $28 million compared to $19 million in Q2 of last year.
Retail orders were up 2% on an apples-to-apples basis in the second quarter. Like Financial Services, our retail vertical strategy is built upon understanding our customer's needs and enabling them to secure productivity gains and deliver a converged experience that meets and exceeds the expectations of a rapidly changing consumer.
And nowhere is this value proposition more evident than with the successful launch of NCR Silver this week, our latest SaaS-based Retail Solution which will make it easier for small business owners to run their business, connect with customers and sell from anywhere. As we outlined on our recent Investor Day, NCR Silver is more than just a point of sale.
Rather, it is a total solution that provides a full suite of applications to customers, including point of sale, secure payments, customer loyalty, business reporting and mobile access. We are very excited about the positive acceptance we've received from small businesses, media and our partners.
This week, we launched a media blitz that reached well over 30 million people through broadcast television, radio and print in more than 400 publications. Media and customers are embracing NCR's return to our small business roots, and our renewed image and visibility is driving business excitement across our business and across the globe.
The overall response has been that Silver is a game changer for small businesses, given the advanced feature set and customer support designed specifically to meet the small business owners' needs with approximately 4 million small businesses in the U.S. and another 8 million globally.
We see Silver as a great opportunity for NCR. We have a rich history and expertise in providing innovative solutions to industries that service consumers.
NCR Silver leverages that expertise to deliver a powerful yet simple new solution to a segment of the market we have not been serving for nearly 50 years: small and medium businesses. Simply put, we are leveraging our past to create our future.
While we remain committed to delivering innovative POS solutions, we also continue to be the global leader in self-checkout retail technologies. Revenues for NCR self-checkout solutions were up 33% in the second quarter versus the prior year.
Overall, we remain bullish about the retail vertical long term given our innovative and leading suite of POS and self-service technologies. Our third core vertical, Hospitality, posted another strong quarter with revenues of $130 million and segment operating income of $21 million.
Again, these numbers reflect the movement of accounts in connection with the vertical realignment we implemented earlier this year. Excluding the effect of these moves, Hospitality, formerly known as Radiant, generated Q2 revenue of $114 million and NPOI of $23 million.
We continue to add to our #1 position in the restaurant technology space by focusing on the things that have gotten us where we are: An amazing point of sale hardware/software solution, augmented by a SaaS stack with a dozen modules. The excitement of our customers worldwide is showing up in our pipeline and backlog data, which has grown more than 20% since the end of 2011.
The growth in the business in both revenues and margins has been led by the SaaS business. Not only is this a part of the business, the value driver of our customer's profits, it also reflects how we win when our customers win.
The key driver of our SaaS business application sites grew over 40% from a year ago to over 90,000. Business activity in the sector remains strong, and we are capturing orders with recent wins including all of Carlson's U.S.-based T.G.I.
Friday's locations and all of Krispy Kreme's U.S. corporate-owned sites.
While we are growing the business and signing brand-name customers in the U.S., we have also been executing our strategy for longer-term growth abroad through a number of acquisitions in Brazil, a market where we have long been dedicated to, and one in which restaurant spending is forecasted by Euromonitor to grow 9% to 10% annually. The expansion of our client base and global footprint are occurring in tandem with our ongoing integration and cost elimination efforts, which are well on their way to deliver the expected annualized pretax cost synergies in the $40 million to $50 million range over the next 3 years.
As a final comment before turning it over to Peter, we continue to evaluate alternatives with respect to our pension strategy and expect to disclose the results of our analysis in the very near term. It is more likely that we will communicate our strategy within the next several weeks.
Peter Leav, who now runs our Industry Solutions Group and Global Sales organization will now provide more detail on our performance by vertical, as well as provide a deeper dive into our business highlights for the quarter. Peter?
Peter A. Leav
Thank you, Bill. In Financial Services, we saw a strong order momentum in Q2.
Order growth was 24% for the quarter, driven by ongoing strength in emerging markets, particularly Brazil. U.S.
regional and midsized banks increasingly view NCR as the most logical partner for the deployment of advanced ATM solutions to improve the consumer experience, deliver increased productivity and customer satisfaction gains and provide an integrated banking experience across multiple channels. One notable win in this market was Central Bank, which serves Provo, Utah and surrounding communities.
Central Bank will be deploying NCR SelfServ ATMs as part of its efforts to revamp its ATM network and provide customers with faster and more convenient service levels. The SelfServ ATMs that Central is deploying contain our Scalable Deposit Module or SDM technology, which allows consumers to deposit both cash and checks together simultaneously through a single slot.
We continue to win with SDM as evidenced by the announcement this morning that NCR has been selected by SunTrust Bank to deploy SDM technology as sole provider of their ATM deposit automation network. SunTrust is making self-service banking faster and easier for its customers in more than 1,600 locations by deploying NCR SDM technology.
SunTrust has already installed more than 1,200 NCR SDM SelfServ ATMs. Advanced technologies such as SDM distinguish NCR's portfolio from the competition, and we continuously work to further differentiate our offerings by investing in the next generation of technology to enable branch productivity gains.
A great example of this is our new NCR Mobile Cash Withdrawal application, which gives consumers the ability to initiate cash withdrawals from their mobile devices and then complete the transaction at an ATM by simply scanning a 2D bar code. Early tests of the technology show that it can reduce ATM transaction time to 10 seconds.
We continue to invest in solutions focused on branch transformation. We currently have R&D partnerships in place with 6 major financial institutions and see this as a major opportunity for NCR to help drive innovation with our customers for their customers.
In addition, NCR recently launched an expanded suite of digital signage, kiosk and managed services tailored to meet the needs of our community banks and credit unions. These solutions will provide our partners with an opportunity to improve the security and availability of their self-service network, while also using digital merchandising technologies to effectively promote products and services in their branches.
In our Retail segment, orders were up 2% on an apples-to-apples basis in the quarter. Overall, we are pleased with the progress of our self-checkout.
We are also pleased with the progress we've made with our international customers, including a significant win in Australia. Strategically, we continue to develop a global self-checkout driven business supported by a profitable services proposition.
Our Hospitality segment continues to perform well. In Q2, we saw revenues of $130 million and operating income of $21 million.
We secured a number of noteworthy customer agreements during Q2. Krispy Kreme will implement the NCR Aloha solution in all of its U.S.-based corporate-owned sites and will also make this solution available to all of its franchisees.
Aloha will enable Krispy Kreme to manage key daily operations at the local level, while also providing the freedom to host transactional data, systems configuration and management functions in the cloud. As a result, Krispy Kreme will be better positioned to deliver an improved customer experience across its locations and secure productivity gains to improve restaurant operations.
We also entered into an agreement with Carlson Restaurants, which will be implementing NCR's inventory and labor management solution across all of its domestic T.G.I. Friday's restaurants.
This solution will provide each T.G.I. Friday's with multiple back office maintenance efficiencies, including food and cash management, labor scheduling management, employee transfers and the ability to export information through existing HR and point-of-sale systems.
These efficiencies are designed to allow restaurant managers to spend more time on the floor, interacting with guests and helping deliver a better service experience. While our hospitality solutions are already generating noteworthy client wins, we are continuing to invest in our offerings and build upon the value proposition we can provide our customers.
In May, we launched NCR Customer Voice, a web-based customer loyalty retention and referral tool that will allow restaurant operators to track customer satisfaction, quickly respond to customer dissatisfaction and drive brand awareness online via key social media channels. NCR Customer Voice is currently integrated with the NCR Aloha restaurant technology solution and will be made available for other NCR product lines next year.
Our Emerging Industries grew orders by 39% in Q2. In Travel, we are investing in new products and services, designed to deliver better and faster consumer service in the terminal and gate areas of airports.
These new products include the next generation of mobile applications and kiosk systems for passenger check-in, as well as modern cash management and interactive digital signage and wayfinding solutions. One of these products, NCR Mobile Pass is a new solution that converts a smartphone into a boarding pass and expands our mobile suite to allow passengers to manage their flight from booking and reservation, to check-in, and now to boarding at the gate.
Another solution worth highlighting is NCR Netkey Wayfinding, which helps improve orientation at airports and helps passengers find gates, flight information, shops and special offers. In the Telecom and Technology vertical, NCR recently achieved 2 new next-generation data center certifications from Cisco Systems, the unified computing technology and advanced data center architecture specializations.
These designations recognize NCR as having fulfilled the training and program prerequisites to sell, deploy and support the Cisco Unified Computing System and Cisco Data Center Solutions. NCR is well-positioned to assist customers in their next-generation data center transformations, including data center fabric, virtualization and cloud computing.
Lastly, our services business generated 7% revenue growth in Q2, and grew its file value and attach rates. During Q2, we expanded our relationships with Aruba Networks through a new global services agreement and won the highly coveted Best ATM Installation and Management Project award at the Asian Banker 2012 Technology Implementation Awards for our deployment of NCR Predictive Services with the Bank of New Zealand.
In summary, NCR remains well-positioned across our solution groups, and our focus on our core verticals is delivering results. Financial Services continues to be a bright spot for NCR, and we are successfully executing our global growth strategy in hospitality.
We are strengthening our retail offerings through exciting introductions, such as NCR Silver, while also demonstrating progress in our emerging verticals and expanding our Global Services business. I will now turn the call over to Bob Fishman.
Robert P. Fishman
Okay. Thanks, Peter.
One preliminary note. As Bill mentioned, we completed the sale of our Entertainment business on June 22, 2012.
So consistent with Q1, the results of that business are classified as discontinued operations and are excluded for the periods and the guidance that we are discussing on this call. NCR's total revenue in the second quarter was $1.41 billion, up 11% versus Q2 2011, and up 15% on a constant currency basis.
We reported GAAP income from continuing operations of $67 million or $0.41 per diluted share. This compares to GAAP income from continuing operations of $45 million or $0.28 per diluted share in Q2 2011.
NCR's results from continuing operations include special items in both periods. Income from continuing operations in the second quarter of 2012 included $39 million or $0.17 per share of pension expense, $10 million or $0.04 per share of acquisition-related amortization of intangible assets, $4 million or $0.02 per share of acquisition-related integration costs and $4 million or $0.01 per share impairment charge related to an investment.
Income from continuing operations in the second quarter of 2011 included $53 million or $0.23 per share of pension expense and $1 million or $0.01 per share of acquisition-related transaction cost. Excluding these items, non-GAAP diluted income per share was $0.65 per share in Q2 2012 versus $0.52 in Q2 2011.
To analyze NCR's operational performance without the effect of special items and pension expense, please see the supplemental financial schedule included in our earnings press release that reconciles our GAAP to non-GAAP results. Excluding the impact of special items and pension expense, our Q2 2012 gross margin was 27.3%, up 290 basis points from 24.4% in the prior year period, resulting from higher product and services sales, favorable customer and product mix, including significantly more software and the successful implementation of cost-reduction initiatives driven by our continuous improvement program.
And operating expenses, excluding pension expense and special items, were approximately 16.4% as a percent of revenue due to continued investment in sales and R&D. During Q2 of 2012, we completed the sale of a facility in Scotland and recognized a $5 million gain on the sale.
Last year in Q2, we announced the change in the long term disability benefits provided to former employees, which resulted in a $6 million benefit. Non-GAAP income from operations or NPOI was $154 million in the second quarter compared to $116 million in the prior year period.
Operating margins were higher for all lines of business in Q2. Financial Services increased to 10.9% versus 10.6%.
Retail Solutions increased to 6.8% from 4.2%, and Emerging Industries increased to 23% from 21.7%. Hospitality operating margins were 16.2% in Q2.
Other expense was $13 million in Q2 2012, which included $8 million related to interest expense. Income tax expense was $21 million in the second quarter compared to income tax of $13 million in Q2 2011.
Excluding the effect of pension and nonrecurring items, the second quarter 2012 effective tax rate was 26% compared to 25% in Q2 2011. NCR's full year 2012 effective tax rate is expected to be approximately 27%.
Turning to the balance sheet. Cash on hand at June 30, 2012, was $377 million, with total debt of $740 million at the end of the quarter, down from $827 million at the end of the first quarter.
Moving to the cash flow statement. NCR generated $31 million of cash from operating activities in Q2 2012 compared to $71 million in the prior year period.
Net capital expenditures totaled $37 million in Q2 2012 compared to $36 million in the prior year period. NCR generated negative $41 million of free cash flow in Q2 2012 compared to 0 in Q2 2011.
NCR defines free cash flow as cash flow from operations and discontinued operations less capital expenditures for property, plant and equipment and additions to capitalized software. Both cash from operations and free cash flow in Q2 were negatively impacted by additional pension contributions.
We continue to deliver good performance with our working capital. On a year-to-date basis, free cash flow is positive $8 million versus $4 million in the prior year period.
The company still expects free cash flow of $100 million to $150 million for the full year. In the second quarter, NCR also generated $100 million from the sale of the Entertainment business, which is excluded from our free cash flow calculation.
I'd like to conclude by confirming our full year 2012 revenue growth expectations, including services and on a constant currency basis for each line of business. And as a reminder, effective 2012, our Retail line of business now includes the specialty retail business from Radiant and our Hospitality line of business now includes all hospitality accounts across NCR.
This change in 2012 moves approximately a net $50 million to $60 million of revenue from Retail to Hospitality. As a result, our revenue guidance is as follows.
In Financial Services, we expect revenues to grow 7% to 9%. In Retail, we expect revenues to break even.
In Hospitality, we expect full year revenues to be in the range of $490 million to $500 million. In our Emerging Industries, we expect revenues to be up 7% to 12%.
We expect NPOI to be in the range of $140 million to $146 million or growth of 14% to 19% for the third quarter. We are also reaffirming our full year 2012 NPOI and non-GAAP EPS expectations.
Both Q3 and full year guidance now includes an approximate $10 million incremental investment in the back half of the year in customer services. This investment is being made to support the growth that we have seen in customer services revenues.
Finally, we expect the effective tax rate in Q3 to be approximately 30%. Now I'll turn the call back over to Bill for closing comments.
William R. Nuti
Thank you, Bob and thank you, Peter. NCR performed solidly in the second quarter and the significant growth in order volumes strengthens our conviction in the goals we have set for 2012.
Despite signs of renewed economic difficulties in a number of markets and geographies, our business trends continue to look healthy. We are delivering innovation and productivity to customers in an area that is critical to them, the front lines where consumers meet them to transact business.
At NCR, we want to take full advantage of the opportunity this presents to us by growing revenues in our core verticals, by expanding our business into adjacent verticals and emerging areas like travel and by enhancing our profitability. And we're achieving the latter not just through cost savings, though cost reduction is critically important.
We're doing it by transforming NCR into a software-driven business, an initiative that enhances the solutions we deliver to customers while also enhancing our margin profile. In short, I believe the company is executing well on all of these strategic fronts.
And that is demonstrated in the results we are delivering. We aim to continue the momentum.
That concludes our prepared remarks. In addition to Bob and Peter, I've asked John Bruno to join us for Q&A on the call.
Operator?
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from Gil Luria with Wedbush Securities.
Gil B. Luria - Wedbush Securities Inc., Research Division
The U.S. regional is doing very well right now, but I think you said something about comps getting harder.
Is that revenue comparable than the second half of the year next year? Is that order comparable?
Are we going to look at flat revenue next year? I know it's a little early to think about that, but -- or are we really peaking in terms of activity in the U.S.
and should expect declines going forward?
William R. Nuti
Gil, I think we'll continue to see healthy revenue growth in nationals the next few quarters for sure. The backlog for that business remains healthy.
There's no question we're facing tougher compares because, of course, our success in that space has been quite significant over the course of the last 18 months, for sure, if not 2 years. With the ADA process behind us, and in front of us, deposit automation, I remain encouraged.
And of course, we haven't yet talked about what we're doing in branch automation and store automation, which is something that we'll talk more about in Q3 and Q4, which we think will have a significant impact on revenues in that space in 2012. That being said, it's a tough -- the compares are just getting tougher because the numbers are getting bigger.
Gil B. Luria - Wedbush Securities Inc., Research Division
Got it. And then my follow up is about a couple of the expense items that you mentioned for the second half of the year.
Could you give us more detail about what that $10 million in customer service is? And then how much spending on advertising and specifically spending on Silver is impacting second half numbers?
William R. Nuti
We're spending an incremental $10 million in the back half mostly, Gil, on headcount for new customer engineers, new territory managers to manage those customer engineers and just making sure that we have the right capacity in place given the significant increase in the number of units we're now servicing. So that's mainly where that $10 million is going.
It's also to some extent going into parts and the ability to just upgrade our parts inventory. We have baked in to this outlook, as well, an incremental $11 million of investment in Silver, and that's on the year and that $11 million was already in our outlook last quarter.
So we didn't need to call it out today, but it's about $11 million and more than that if you look all-in on the full year for Silver.
Operator
Our next question comes from Ian Zaffino with Oppenheimer Capital.
Ian A. Zaffino - Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., Research Division
Can you give us an idea -- and I know you always breakout the revenue from an FX standpoint, but would you be able to give us the earnings hit this quarter kind of what you're assuming in guidance going forward, I guess, it's becoming more and more pertinent.
William R. Nuti
FX, just to give you some perspective, of course, we have the euro going against us, but we have other currencies going with us around the world. The Indian rupee is a good example of that.
When you look at the full year, year-on-year revenues right now assuming nothing changes given what we know, will be down about $131 million on a year-on-year basis. That's apples to apples, if you will, year-on-year.
The impact on profit given our hedging strategies, given that we have some FX going with us, some going against us, is in the neighborhood of like $10 million year-on-year.
Ian A. Zaffino - Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., Research Division
Okay. So I guess $0.01 or $0.02 per quarter?
Because I'm trying to look at guidance, and it looks like guidance should probably be maybe $0.05 higher, $0.06 higher, but I guess you're assuming kind of the euro stays around this $1.22 level or so.
William R. Nuti
Exactly.
Ian A. Zaffino - Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., Research Division
Okay. Second question would be on the pension, I guess there's kind of 2 parts.
The first one would be, help us understand what the new service transport bill does to your position, does to your thinking and as well as your approach. And then number two, and this might show my naïveté to the whole situation, but why not give us an update now?
What are you doing for the next couple of weeks that, that would delay any type of announcement?
William R. Nuti
Well, I'll answer the latter, and I'll let Bob answer the first part of your question in terms of the impact that the latest pension reform has on us. We're still analyzing all of the pension alternatives that we have.
We, of course, need to review all of this with our Board of Directors as well, and that's -- our board continues to remain very involved in all of our strategic efforts, and this being one of them. So we still have some work to do, frankly, Ian, and we do expect to be able to talk to you all about this in the next several weeks.
Robert P. Fishman
In terms of answering the first question, I would say the reform certainly helps push out some of our U.S. contributions a couple of years.
But the underfunded position really stays the same from a GAAP perspective. So that piece doesn't change, and we'll talk about that a little bit more fully when we have our pension announcement.
Ian A. Zaffino - Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., Research Division
Okay. And as far as the last thing you said, from what the rating agencies look at, would that change?
Because I know they oftentimes treat the underfunded pension as debt, I'm wondering if now that amount is reduced and therefore, the rating agencies are looking at you as a much less levered company?
Robert P. Fishman
Well, I think the rating agencies, at least S&P, have tended to look at our underfunded position net of tax, and that really doesn't change too significantly based on pension reform.
Operator
Our next question comes from Dan Perlin with RBC.
Daniel R. Perlin - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division
Just a couple of quick ones. When we think about -- kind of going forward the next couple of quarters for order growth and you've already called out more challenging comps in regionals, but -- and you obviously had a very big order in Brazil, and I'm just trying to think about how we should break down this growth expectation between those 2 areas, emerging and then what we've had over the past, as you said, several years benefit from regionals.
Is that just shifting over towards more of the emerging market and then there's some opportunity that we can think about domestically? And then also on that same vein, if you're seeing a mix shift more towards emerging, can you just remind us the margin differential?
William R. Nuti
Sure. The first thing I'd say is that in terms of order growth looking out, we just had a tremendous quarter in orders.
And again, Brazil featured prominently in that quarter. But you'll continue to see the developed markets and even the national bank segment grow for us.
Over that time period, we'll have tough comps. Growth will come down, and we'll see where that lands, but I do think the deposit automation cycle is alive and well in that space.
And again we have other technologies we'll be selling into that space going into next year. That doesn't mean that it will be robust in the back half of the year.
I'm not -- we're not expecting that in our outlook frankly. In terms of emerging markets, yes, we continue to see great growth in the emerging markets driven by Brazil this past quarter.
We'll continue to see growth in India. We'll continue to see growth in other markets that are smaller in nature, but emerging around the world.
I think the way you need to think about growth going forward in the core is that it will moderate somewhat in the next few quarters, but that our other businesses not included in our growth forecast for orders, like Radiant or Hospitality will continue to be good solid growth businesses for us, and that's a great tailwind for NCR. So remember, when we talk about orders, we're talking about our core business that does not include our Hospitality line of business.
Does that help you?
Daniel R. Perlin - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division
Yes, that's good. Well, I just had a quick question on the cash flows.
One of the items in your working capital went -- it looks like negative $33 million, your other assets and liabilities. I'm just wondering, is there anything to call out of that?
A pretty big swing relative to last year's? Does it have something to do with Silver?
Does it have something to do with -- your putting out equipment that's under a services deal as opposed to just a hardware deal?
Robert P. Fishman
No. This is pretty typical for us.
Working capital is a usage of funds in Q2 and Q3 as we ramp for a big Q4. So typically, we see our inventories increase, as well as our receivables.
So nothing unusual and all built into our free cash flow forecast for the year.
Daniel R. Perlin - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division
I wasn't really talking about receivables or inventory, I was talking about the other asset and liability line, negative $33 million versus $20 million positive in the year ago.
Robert P. Fishman
Yes, the other assets and liabilities is made up of many different accounts, from our tax accounts to our different other accounts. So it really is an explanation of those [ph] -- movement in 7 or 8 different accounts.
It just tends to be lumpier. That piece, you'll see good guys flow one quarter and bad guys in others.
I wouldn't be particularly concerned about the movement you've seen in this quarter.
Operator
Our next question comes from Matt Summerville of KeyBanc.
Matt J. Summerville - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
A couple of questions. First, I just want to make sure I understand the order numbers properly.
If you kind of back out that Brazil order, Bill, how would the ATM business have looked in terms of order growth year-over-year and then the total company as well if you have that.
William R. Nuti
I think we've been up low single digits for both the Financial Services business and for the company.
Matt J. Summerville - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
And then how would U.S. ATM orders have looked in the quarter and then how are you thinking about the retail business going forward?
Are you seeing point of sale revenue push out? Are you seeing cancellations, deferrals?
Is that a concern and maybe you can speak to that in terms of North America versus Europe, rest of the world?
William R. Nuti
On the retail front, apples to apples, orders were up about 2%, which was encouraging particularly given the fact that we did have some orders pushed out from Q2 to Q3. And I'm optimistic about retail in Q3 in terms of orders.
On the ATM front, the U.S. was -- do you have the number?
Peter A. Leav
Slightly up in total.
William R. Nuti
Slightly up in total. And it was okay for us in the U.S.
Again, I think we're also dealing with a tough comp from Q2 last year. We had some big orders in Q2 of last year.
So I was pretty pleased with the quarter on the financial side.
Operator
Our next question comes from Kartik Mehta with Northcoast Research.
Kartik Mehta - Northcoast Research
Bill, one of the areas that you pointed to as strength was Europe. And I'm wondering if you just could provide maybe where you're seeing the strength and maybe just your overview on some of the larger markets, what's happening there fundamentally?
William R. Nuti
Well, I mean, the strength in Europe is coming from Eastern Europe, not Western Europe. Although we had one country in particular in Western Europe that did well this past quarter in orders.
But on an overall basis, it's Eastern Europe driven for us and the point that I made in the script was that, I think Europe on a constant currency basis would have been up 3% in orders and 13% in revenue. And we've been calling that flat.
And on an as-reported basis was down. So I'm still in the space, Kartik, of this -- again, planning for a flat Europe going forward at least in the middle term.
But I am encouraged by our strength in that market despite some of the issues that we are experiencing. Again, our strength in Eastern Europe though is outpacing the headwinds we see in any countries in Western Europe.
Kartik Mehta - Northcoast Research
Then just a second question, Bill, you mentioned this at the analyst meeting and then again it seems like the market in India is changing quite rapidly and it seems as though NCR has a lot of opportunities there. I'm just wondering if you could talk a little bit about maybe how you see that playing out and what you see that as having an impact on revenue growth going forward?
William R. Nuti
Well, the market in India is or has changed. We have been participating in a process in India that will have NCR become in essence an ISO player in that market over the course of the next 2 to 3 years.
We're excited about the potential of that market. We continue to serve the Indian market, as well as a vendor provider for both public and private banks.
So that business model shift that I just described isn't going to fully turn the market up on its head. By the way, we also provided ATMs to companies who won those bids, third parties that we were providing ATMs to.
So we're going to participate where we have in the process in becoming an ISO, and we're also providing ATMs to those who've won ISO bids, and we'll continue to work as their vendor partner to those public and private banks that don't move in that direction.
Operator
Our next question comes from Julio Quinteros with Goldman Sachs.
Julio C. Quinteros - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
I wanted to go back to the EPS, some of the puts and takes there, especially as it relates to currency and the incremental expenses. I don't know, Bob, if you can just kind of walk us back through some of the drags that you expect from currency.
It sounded like you said $0.01 to $0.02 per quarter and then an incremental $10 million of expenses for customer service. Can you just make sure that those are the correct numbers?
Robert P. Fishman
Yes, we talked about a $10 million investment in the back half of the year. So that obviously has to be factored into the...
Julio C. Quinteros - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
That's not per quarter, that's for the whole.
Robert P. Fishman
No, that's for the back half of the year.
Julio C. Quinteros - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Okay, got it.
Robert P. Fishman
And then on the FX, the point Bill was making is, for the full year compared to last year, the revenue impact is around 3% in total. And then the bottom line impact because we hedge, because we have offsetting exposures is less than $10 million.
Now the way the currencies move, it's not necessarily a flat divide by 4 and $2.5 million. So we actually saw in Q2 favorable FX impact to the bottom line and in Q3 and Q4, we're seeing a little bit more headwind to the operating income.
But overall for the full year, it's around $10 million.
Julio C. Quinteros - Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Research Division
Got it. Okay.
Great. And then if we just go back to the margin profile of the businesses, the performance in the services was way, way ahead of where we were in terms of gross margin expansion modeling.
Is this new level that we're seeing now, this 26% or so level, we've had 2 quarters of it now, kind of the sustainable run rate? Or how do we think about that as you go forward from here?
Is there some seasonality to think of? I was just trying to get my arms around how that piece looks for the rest of this year here?
Robert P. Fishman
Well, the way I think of it and then Bill can add his comments, is services is really a mix of businesses. It's a mix of our installation services, on hardware and software maintenance, our professional services consulting business, as well as our SaaS business.
And so as we get more SaaS into the mix, it's going to help drive that gross margin higher. We also have a number of continuous improvement initiatives within the overall maintenance business, which helps improve margins.
So really it's 4 or 5 different types of services all impacting that margin.
Operator
And our next question comes from Gil Luria with Wedbush Securities.
Gil B. Luria - Wedbush Securities Inc., Research Division
A quick follow up. Bob, you've paid down the debt, looks like to right around $700 million.
You just got a check for $100 million. You're going to generate cash flow in the back half of the year.
Is the cash going to go to paying down debt more or maybe buying back some stock?
Robert P. Fishman
Well, again, Gil, we look at all alternatives. I think it's important to think through a few of the things that I had talked about as part of the Investor Day back in May.
We certainly talked about buying back shares when it makes sense. We talked about smaller strategic M&A, and then we also talked about our focus on pension.
And I think, Bill had alluded to the fact that we would be having our pension announcement in the next couple of weeks, and I think that will help clarify how we are thinking about using our cash.
William R. Nuti
Yes, Gil, I'd say a few things. First of all, we're orchestrating an interesting strategy for the company, right, where on one hand we're headstrong with regard to eliminating some legacy issues the company has had so that we can continue to focus on our growth strategy as a company, and we're doing that.
And we're always going to use our balance sheet effectively to accomplish that goal. If I had to tell you today what I think the next year looks like though, it would be a combination of using the balance sheet to affect a change in our pension underfunded status, and where it makes sense, some acquisitions for growth.
Perhaps not to the magnitude, of course, of a Radiant, but in line with our strategy to continue to improve our gross margin mix, and they would be very software-oriented acquisitions to, if you will, bolt on to what is a very big and fast-growing software company here at NCR.
Operator
Our next question comes from Dan Dolev with Morgan Stanley.
Dan Dolev - Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Just a quick question, like a bit more general. So you had a great quarter, great EPS, above expectations, and you're still keeping the guidance for the year.
What is it, if at all, that keeps you, I mean, maybe it's just that extra expense, but what is it that keeps you sort of more conservative for the year? Is there one thing or multiple things that keep you?
William R. Nuti
Well, I think it's a combination of things, Dan. I think, first of all, we are making a number of significant investments in the business.
Bob talked about the investment in services and the silver lining of that investment is that we had substantially higher growth, and the unit [ph] count that we're supporting in the field is substantially higher than we expected, and we don't want to lose traction relative to customer satisfaction. So we're going to make those investments and continue to build a strong services business.
Secondly, I did reference Silver. We're investing about $11 million in Silver.
And most of that investment, by the way, is in the back half of the year, not the front half of the year. So that is another piece of the puzzle.
By the way, we are making investments in other businesses. So let me be clear, we're investing in sales headcount.
We're investing in retail technologies. So R&D continues to be an area of investment.
Additionally, for those of you who know us, I think you know us to be pragmatic and practical with regard to outlooking our business. And the increased volatility and uncertainty in the world I think has to be recognized right now in terms of how one thinks about their outlooks.
And we've been very successful here in meeting or exceeding our guidance, and we want to continue to do that. In the world in which we live today, I think it's prudent as well given all the investments we are making just to be cautious.
Operator
Our final question comes from Matt Summerville of KeyBanc.
Matt J. Summerville - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
Just a second quick follow up, Bob, and I apologize if I misheard you. Did you say that FX had a positive influence on your bottom line in the second quarter?
And if so, can you help me understand the mechanics behind that?
Robert P. Fishman
Yes. It just so happens that where we had our costs, our plant for example, in Budapest, some of our costs in India, those currencies worked in our favor and so our cost came down.
We're not talking a huge number. It's less than a $5 million favorability in Q2, but it did happen to swing in our favor in that quarter.
We will see a little bit of headwind in Q3 and Q4 and overall for the year, about $10 million.
Matt J. Summerville - KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., Research Division
Were there hedges behind this? I mean the rupee's been getting hit for a while here.
I guess I'm still not understanding. Every other company I speak with is talking about the rupee being a headwind.
Robert P. Fishman
Yes, we've outsourced a significant piece of our transaction processing to Accenture. It helps to bring our cost down in that type of relationship.
In Budapest, we obviously have our manufacturing plant. So that's the favorability we're seeing.
William R. Nuti
Well, look, thank you all for joining us today. We appreciate that.
And obviously if you have further questions, Gavin and Bob will be available to talk to you. Thanks a lot.
And we'll talk to you soon. Take care.
Operator
This concludes today's conference. Thank you all for your participation.
You may disconnect your lines at this time.