Jul 25, 2007
TRANSCRIPT SPONSOR
Executives
Kirk Larsen - Director of IR Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and CEO Theodore D.
Crandall - Sr. VP, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim CFO
Analysts
Robert T. Cornell - Lehman Brothers John Baliotti - FTN Midwest Securities Stephen Tusa - J.P.
Morgan Mark Koznarek - Cleveland Research Jeffrey Sprague - Citigroup Nigel Coe - Deutsche bank Richard C. Eastman - Robert W.
Baird & Co John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch Nicole M.
Parent - Credit Suisse
Operator
Thank you for holding and welcome to the Rockwell Automation's Quarterly Conference Call. I need to remind everyone that today's conference call is being recorded.
Later in the call, we will open up the lines for questions. [Operator Instructions].
At this time, I would like to turn the call over to Kirk Larsen, Rockwell Automation's Director of Investor Relations. Mr.
Larsen, please go ahead.
Kirk Larsen - Director of Investor Relations
Thank you, Michelle. Good Morning and thank you all for joining us for Rockwell Automation's third quarter 2007 earnings release conference call.
Our results were released earlier this morning and have been posted to our website at www.rockautomation.com. A webcast of the audio portion of this call and all the charts that will be referenced during the call are available at that website.
It will remain there for the next 30 days. With me today are Keith Nosbusch, our Chairman and CEO and Ted Crandall, our CFO.
Our agenda includes opening remarks by Keith and then Ted will review both the quarter and our outlook. We will as always leave time at the end of the call to take your questions and ask that you self limit to two questions to allow broader participation.
We expect the call today to take about 50 minutes. As is always the case on these calls, I need to remind you that our comments will include statements related to the expected future results of our company and are therefore forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Our actual results may differ materially from our forecasted projections due to a wide range of risks and uncertainties that are described in our earnings release and detailed in all of our SEC filings. With that, I'll turn the call over to Keith.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks Kirk and good morning to everyone who have joined us on this morning's call. My comments will be brief today.
At this same time one quarter ago, we laid out the rationale for considerably better performance in the second half of our 2007 than we delivered in the first half. We projected somewhat higher growth rates and better execution against our productivity objectives.
I am extremely pleased today to report that our Q3 results were very much as we expected. U.S.
revenue growth did accelerate modestly to 2% year-over-year or 6% sequentially. We did sustain the rapid growth outside the U.S.
with particular strength in Latin America and Europe and improvements in Asia. Architecture & Software did for the first time in about two years grow more quickly than Control Products & Solutions.
Consumer industries did for the first time and over two years outpaced resource-based industries. Productivity did improve substantially to 5%, and therefore our conversion margin did recover to our targeted range of 30% to 40%, in fact, somewhat above that range.
The results we posted in Q3 and the momentum that we are carrying into Q4 have allowed us to raise our guidance for the full year. With only one quarter to go, we are raising our guidance for revenue growth to the high-end of our previous range of 8% to 9% and then taking on an additional percentage point for the recent acquisition of ICS Triplex.
So we now expect revenue growth to be about 10%. We are also raising our estimate for EPS from continuing operations from $3.55 to $3.65 to $3.65 to $3.70.
As should be evident from this guidance, 2007 will be another great year for Rockwell Automation. But I can assure you we are not resting.
We remain intensely focused on sustaining above market organic revenue growth on diversifying our revenue base and on driving the adoption of our Integrated Architecture, while further developing our continuous improvement culture. I am confident that we will close out a successful 2007 and carry that momentum into 2008.
I will now turn it over to Ted to provide more details on the quarter. Ted?
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
Thanks Keith, and good morning to all who called in. We have posted charts to our website and I will reference those charts along with my following comments.
Turning to chart 1, entitled third quarter results summary, this slide summarizes key items from the income statement. Starting at the top, revenue in the quarter was $1.281 billion, an increase of 9% over 2006.
Segment earnings were $262 million, up 21% year-over-year resulting in a 2.1 percentage point improvement in margin. Walking down the page, you will note that general corporate net was $18 million, down about $4 million from last year.
The primary driver of the year-over-year decrease is interest income of about $5 million on the proceeds from the Power Systems sale. Going forward, you should think of general corporate net of expense of about $20 million to $25 million as a normal quarterly run rate.
Interest income from the Power Systems' proceeds will no longer be a factor as we have used those proceeds to buy back stock and fund the purchase of ICS Triplex in early July. Moving down the page, interest expense was flat with last year.
The third quarter effective tax rate is about 26%, down about 4 points from last year. The rate was lower due to our global earnings mix and the resolution of certain state tax matters.
We estimate the rate will be 28% to 29% for the full year 2007. Average shares outstanding in the quarter were $156.5 million, down 13% from a year ago.
During the quarter, we repurchased 6.2 million shares. At the end of June, we had $284 million available under our $1 billion repurchase authorization.
Let's move to the next chart, Q3 results, Rockwell Automation continuing operations. As always, we are showing total Rockwell results over the past five quarters, excluding Power Systems.
As I said before, growth was 9% year-over-year or 7% excluding the effects of currency translation. Sales were up 6% sequentially.
From a regional perspective growth was led by continued strong performance in Europe and Latin America with improvement in Asia, Canada and United States. Operating margin in the quarter was 20.5%, up 2.1 points from the third quarter of last year.
You can't see it on the chart, but our trailing fourth quarter return on invested capital was 23.7%, up 2.6 percentage points versus the year ago period. I'd like to go to the next chart which summarizes our Architecture & Software results.
Sales were up 11% year-over-year. On a sequential basis, sales were up 8%.
Logix sales grew 15% in the quarter with nearly two-thirds of the growth coming from process applications and the CompactLogix product offering. Legacy PLC sales were down about 7% in the quarter.
Operating margin was 28.3%, up 2.9 points from the third quarter of last year. Profitability benefited from volume, productivity efforts and price, partially offset by inflation.
I'll turn now to slide 4 which covers our Control Products & Solutions business. Sales were up 8% year-over-year and up 5% sequentially.
Operating margin improved by 1.2 points year-over-year to 14%. Profitability in this segment benefited from volume, productivity efforts and price, partially offset by inflation and less favorable revenue mix.
Let me turn now to geographic breakdown of our sales in the quarter. This chart provides regional growth rates and the far right column shows growth rates excluding the impact of currency translation.
As you can see in the chart, we had a strong global mix of sales in the quarter. Our U.S.
sales were up about 15% in the quarter, a very good result continuing the progress we have seen in the last few quarters. We are optimistic that we will see continued momentum in Europe with the help from short term economic factors as well as the benefits of growth investments we've made in the region.
Latin American sales were up 22% with continuing strong performance. Asia Pacific sales were up 9%.
Once again our Asia results are the average of emerging Asia and a slower growth developed Asia. This quarter clearly reflects an improvement over the last two quarters.
Canada sales were up 7%, also an improvement from the last couple of quarters. Looking into the United States, sales were up 2% year-over-year.
The U.S. accounts for 54% of our sales, a decreasing percentage but still large.
Consequently U.S. results have a significant impact on our average growth rate.
Turning to chart six, you'll see cash flow details for Q3 and year-to-date. In the third quarter, free cash flow from op...
from continuing operations was $184 million that excluded tax payments related to the gain on the sale of Power Systems. This is higher than net income and much improved compared to the first two quarters of the year.
Capital spending was about equal to depreciation and amortization. I'll close with chart 7 which summarizes our full year guidance.
As Keith said earlier, we are raising our revenue growth guidance to 10%, which is the high end of our prior 8% to 9% range and that includes an additional 1 percentage point due to the ICS Triplex acquisition, which we closed in early July. We are also raising our diluted EPS guidance from continuing operations before special charges to $3.65 to $3.70 per share from our prior range of $3.55 to $3.65 per share.
We are holding our guidance for free cash flow at $500 million. And with that, we'd be happy to answer any questions you might have.
Question And Answer
Operator
Thank you sir. [Operator Instructions].
And our first question comes from the line of Bob Cornell of Lehman Brothers. Please proceed.
Robert T. Cornell - Lehman Brothers
Big size release going on out there. It's just remarkable quarter I have to say.
A lot of questions, the first I guess would be, why Keith, did you see the consumer facing industries this much better than the resource-based industries? And is that a function of some of the investments you made in those verticals?
I mean what's really going on, is it end market or Rockwell-related?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well I believe there is two things Bob. One, the resource-based industries just have very tough comps because of the strong growth that they had previously.
So it's very hard to continue at that accelerated rate of growth. Having said that I believe a lot of our investments have been made to improve our capabilities in the consumer industries.
And certainly what we are doing in the verticals, what we are doing with information, what we are doing with the expansion of Logix, all of those are more appropriate and more attuned to the customer industry. So it's a combination of those two facts.
Robert T. Cornell - Lehman Brothers
Yes, I mean and Logix at 15% I guess is good but maybe less than we might have expected that... expected that given the overall good quarter 18% last quarter and what's...
how does 15% shape up in your mind?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well actually we're very happy with the 15%. As we have said our goal and our aspiration is to keep that at 20% which gets to be a pretty tough...
a pretty tough number as we keep growing that at the pace that we're growing at and as ...as we also have said 20% requires that we're hitting really all cylinders and in this case, we had a very good across the board growth other than in Asia. And we are growing at high single digits 9% in Asia, that's not a high enough number to pull Logix at the 20% level.
So, so we still have some work there but overall we're very happy with the Logix performance. And that combined the performance in Logix plus the return to a more normal degradation of the legacy platforms is what was a strong driver for our performance this quarter.
Robert T. Cornell - Lehman Brothers
A follow-up question there is, you talked about the improvement in Asia but you didn't break down those specifics in reference to China, maybe just take on that observation.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Sure, sure. If you look at our growth in China, we had excellent growth in India.
Once again India was up 30%. China was up 21%.
So a real good turnaround in China with continued strength in India that leads Southeast Asia was... had a difficult quarter but mainly that was because of projects related work.
Southeast Asia is a very project-driven market and most of that is just timing year-over-year.
Robert T. Cornell - Lehman Brothers
Got it thanks. Thanks Keith.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
You are welcome Bob. Thank you.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of John Baliotti of FTN Midwest Securities. Please proceed.
John Baliotti - FTN Midwest Securities
Good morning.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
HeyJohn.
John Baliotti - FTN Midwest Securities
Maybe we could focus on if there is any perspective on comps, Logix, as you said, you guys put at 15% the comp, I think was a little bit harder this quarter than last. And if I am right then next quarter actually drops to a comp at 12%, is that right?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
I believe that's right John.
John Baliotti - FTN Midwest Securities
Okay. And similarly on geography I think the...
as you've mentioned Asia was going to pick up. It looks like the comp was actually...
ex-currency was tougher this quarter for Asia than the prior quarter, you had a nice pickup there. And along those lines it looks like the comp actually for both Asia and the U.S.
gets easier in the current quarter that you are in. Is that right?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
That is true although I wouldn't say easier.
John Baliotti - FTN Midwest Securities
Well roughly you are right at. Relatively I know it's easy for us to say from our perspective.
But so with that what kind of absolute momentum are you feeling right now relative to last quarter going into the rest of the year?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, we talked last quarter that we felt very good momentum heading into the second half which obviously is the big breeze and we increased our outlook for the second half. Going into the fourth quarter, right now we basically see no different from what we saw earlier.
We've done our normal polls around the world, and we believe it's very similar to what the outlook was a quarter ago and in particular we have strength in our solutions businesses where we have built that backlog throughout the year. And we believe that will be a key driver of our performance in the fourth quarter.
John Baliotti - FTN Midwest Securities
Okay. And maybe just a big picture, the capacity utilization seems like you're still sticking around at 81%, 82% and I think in the past you talked about that being above 80 being very healthy for you guys.
Is that... are you feeling like given there are bumps around 10 basis points here or there?
Do you feel like things are still pretty solid from a foundation standpoint there?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. I think if you look at all of the economic numbers that have come out over the last three to four months really support the increased momentum that we were talking about at the start of the third quarter...
of the second quarter, I am sorry... at the start of the third quarter, second quarter in the calendar year.
But that, that momentum is continuing. The only housing and historically what was going on in automotive were the only sectors that we did not see growth in.
And we continue to see a broad based investment that is going on through the other industries.
John Baliotti - FTN Midwest Securities
Okay. Great, thanks very much Keith.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Sure John.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of Stephen Tusa of J.P. Morgan.
Please proceed
Stephen Tusa - J.P. Morgan
Hi, good morning.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Steve.
Stephen Tusa - J.P. Morgan
The ICS deal, I know that added a point of growth but I think it was going to be dilutive in FY08. Is it going to be...
it seems a closer a little bit earlier than we were expecting dilutive in the fourth quarter?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
It will be slightly dilutive. But as we have said, it will be dilutive for the first year.
It probably closed perhaps a little quicker. So it's not going to be a significant impact.
But it is dilutive in its first year of transition. And certainly that is the reason we added one additional point onto our revenue growth because we will own that business for the entire quarter.
Stephen Tusa - J.P. Morgan
So, the revenue contribution there for this quarter, it's $50 million bucks for the fourth quarter something like that?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
No, no. It's about $35 million.
Stephen Tusa - J.P. Morgan
Right, right. Okay.
And then just thinking about are the longer term here and talking about on automotive, are you getting any kind of sense that if these guys do get favorable deals with their unions that they will begin to look at maybe investing a little bit more in their products and flexible manufacturing. I know that that's not on their radar screen for the next couple of quarters, and we are certainly not counting on it.
But is that something that is a potential tap in maybe in 18 months to two years time?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
WellI think they are going to invest... compared to where we were...
where we got down to, we are seeing now some project activity, and we expect to see some order held from the automotives over the next couple of quarters. So, projects appear to be...
that some projects will be flowing. The magnitude of those I think is, some of it is dependent on the performance or the opportunities that they are able to generate from the negotiations that are currently on.
I think if they feel that they put themselves in a more competitive position they will be more willing to invest. So, we are very optimistic that we'll see that happen after negotiations are successfully completed.
And the other dimension, there are still these supply chain sorting out that have to take place. And so the Tier 1 are still going through change and then also each one of those...
each one of the Detroit-based automotives particularly GM and Ford are still going through their plant rationalization which does impact our installed base or MRO business but not the project-related activities.
Stephen Tusa - J.P. Morgan
Right. So you are pretty confident that auto has indeed bottomed here?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, yes. We're not even talking about that as the headwind anymore.
Stephen Tusa - J.P. Morgan
Right. And then one last question, the incremental in Architecture & Software, I understand that you had a pretty good productivity quarter, and we certainly won't be assuming a 50% plus incremental there going forward.
But is that just a little bit of sneak-peak it as to how profitable this business could be if it continues to grow the way that you guys are hoping would grow over the next few years?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Wellthe answer... there is two parts of that.
If it grows at the rate, we are hoping it will grow, it will have decent margins. What is more important this quarter is the mix in A&S was much more processor software centric.
If you remember the last quarter, we talked about a weak mix and also a software action that was required. And really both of those changed and so we had what I would call probably a more favorable mix in this quarter.
That plus the growth rate is what created the margin improvement, this past quarter.
Stephen Tusa - J.P. Morgan
Right. Thanks a lot.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Sure.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of Mark Koznarek of Cleveland Research. Please proceed.
Mark Koznarek - Cleveland Research
Hi, good morning.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Mark.
Mark Koznarek - Cleveland Research
Really great quarter on the margin line. A question about those, we had recently spoken to some channel contacts who were experiencing some delays associated with some of the manufacturing plants that you folks were installing your SAP upgrades, and I think you even mentioned this in the prior quarter.
And it gave me the sense that there still could be some challenges associated with that, but these margins suggest that you have overcome those challenges or you've done some other way to offset them. So could you address those issues whether that's a temporary phenomenon that you have overcome or is there still some issues to drop coming up with regard to your system implementation?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Sure, Mark. I will be happy to answer that.
Certainly from the history in ERP implementations, basically all of them do cause some level of disruption and quite candidly, our implementation is no different. We have had some disruption.
Those disruptions have impacted customers and they have done a good job of working with us, our channel partners to get through these bumps in the row. And certainly we believe that as is evidenced by this quarter that there has been no impact or I should say more importantly, a negligible impact based upon the introduction at some different sites.
And we believe that the worst of the disruption is behind us. And I got to tell you, our entire organization is very intensely focused on minimizing these disruptions and more importantly, we have learned from the previous site installation.
This past month, we went to our fourth setup site and we had a much smoother introduction, basically because of the learning out of the first three sites. So, I believe the worst is behind us, and that we are a learning organization.
And yes, we have had some disruptions and that has impacted our... the ability of our channel to support the customers the way we believe we should be supporting and servicing our customers.
And we take that very seriously and are working very hard to get that a 100% behind us and we believe we are on that path.
Mark Koznarek - Cleveland Research
Keith, I understand that the plants that you're now rolled on to this fourth set of sites includes some or all of your Logix facilities. And some of these channel partners said that they were kind of nervous about that and had pre-bought some of these products in the quarter.
Do you think that was... had a material impact at all on the Logix growth rate or do you think that's some relatively minor and this is reflecting actual underlying market demand, what you have reported today?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
We believe that it is, that whatever that pre-buy was, was very negligible. We monitor that very closely, and we believe that had no impact on the performance in the quarter.
And more importantly, we believe that the go-live is going extremely well for that set of plants and we expect to be back to the pre-go-live status much quicker than in anyone of the other implementations. So we're very encouraged with the...
I'll say the three weeks look as we have rolled out those other sites but no impact on quarter three.
Mark Koznarek - Cleveland Research
Okay. With that, I guess the conclusion of all this is that you're offsetting those internal challenges that are getting better.
Margin improved a lot and you did mention that mix improved. Was there anything else that helped the year-over-year margin performance or even compared to the prior quarter?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yes two things Mark. You hit the first one, absolutely mix was a big deal.
The other one was, they probably had their best quarter in productivity of the entire year, not probably they did. And as you know, the right mix over achieving in productivity is a pretty powerful leverage in the A&S businesses and they certainly hit on both of those points, this past quarter.
Mark Koznarek - Cleveland Research
That's great. Congratulations, thank you.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks Mark.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of Jeff Sprague of Citigroup. Please proceed.
Jeffrey Sprague - Citigroup
Thanks, good morning.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Jeff.
Jeffrey Sprague - Citigroup
Good morning. Just to draw a little bit further and kind of the margin and expense dynamics, you didn't really call out some of your cost reduction efforts.
Maybe that's all wrapped in that productivity bucket. But I am just wondering just kind of looking at what the Q4 guidance implies.
It seems to suggest the margins come down a bit, so maybe it's mix normalization. Can you just frame that a little bit better for us kind of the basic cost cutting actions versus the mix and maybe how things shake out in the first quarter?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well I will make a couple of comments and then Ted can fill in whatever I've missed here. But certainly we had a...
we had a very strong cost productivity in the quarter, and to your point, that is where the cost actions are captured. And being at 5% we talk about 3 to 4 so, quite candidly we don't...
we are not planning for another 5% in quarter four. We are planning on being in the range of 3% to 4%.
So there is a little... there is a slight pull-down because of that.
And so productivity is going well. Our cost actions, we are on target for what we expected to be at with the actions we took in quarter one.
We are achieving those benefits. If you remember the actions that we talked about in quarter two, are more longer term and there is minimal if any, minimal of any impact in this fiscal year.
That's teeing up our productivity for '08 and quite candidly more in '09. So that's the mix as the productivity aspect of it.
The other dimension in Q4 is that we expect a mix shift to be back a little bit to a stronger solutions revenue which is typical for us in the fourth quarter because a lot of ours, our systems businesses produce very strongly. And particularly with the backlog we have, we know we are going to have a very strong solutions business revenue stream in the fourth quarter and that, that as well will be...
will cause downward pressure on our margins. So it is those points and I'll let Ted fill in any of the missing parts.
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
Well and, Jeff I would add a couple of other things in terms of a Q4 to Q3 comparison. A smaller item is basically will have call it either interest, increased interest expense or reduced interest income related to the ICS Triplex acquisition that was completed in early July.
And that's really how you ought to think about the dilution around that acquisition at this point. Secondly and probably more importantly, in our third quarter tax rate was 26% that was due to kind of a discrete tax events that occurred this quarter.
We do not expect that to recur and we are not projecting a rate that low for the whole second half. So couple of the things Keith talked about with being back in our 3% to 4% productivity range, a little bit less favorable revenue mix, the tax rate difference going from Q3 to Q4 and I think that kind of explains the balance of our outlook for the year.
Jeffrey Sprague - Citigroup
Great. And next question is final question, maybe two in one.
But just first on pension you guys on a June 30 measurement date, just wonder what that suggests for 2008 on pension. And secondarily just kind of on financial items in general.
Now that you have redeployed the Power Systems proceed, how do we think about capital deployment going forward? Is it more of the same share repurchase in a deal dropped in here or there or is there some other priority?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
No, I will answer the last one first Jeff, and that is we have really no change in our philosophy of capital deployments. We look at internal organic growth opportunities then we consider a continuation of our disciplined acquisitions strategy.
And then our default mode is to, is to not have excess cash in our balance sheet and that we'll return it to all those shareholders in the form of dividends or share repurchase. So consistent to what we've been doing is what you can expect.
We have worked our way through the 1 billion repurchase... I should say we are working our way through it.
We have worked through the cash aspect of that with the ICS Triplex acquisition now. And we are currently...
we are currently analyzing what the optimal capital structure will be going forward, and that will be something that we'll talk more about in the fall when we talk about our plans for 2008. But our priorities remain the same Jeff, as they have been and that's the outlook at this point.
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
And regarding to your question about pension, we're kind of working through the result of the rate changes based on our measurement date on June 30 that is not yet completed. And I think we will be sharing that when we talk about '08 guidance.
Jeffrey Sprague - Citigroup
Thank you.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of Nigel Coe of Deutsche Bank. Please proceed.
Nigel Coe - Deutsche bank
Thanks, good morning.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Nigel.
Nigel Coe - Deutsche bank
Just wanted to ask a quick on ICS Triplex, does this substantially replace your sort of organic push into safety or simply orientation or maybe if you could just wrap into a discussion whether you failed, you might need improvements, pushes into other areas such as process control?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
I... could you repeat the last part of that?
Nigel Coe - Deutsche bank
Yes, I mean it sounds like that the process control is a key initiative of Logix platform [ph]. I was wondering if you might need to acquire one of the properties there.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. The first point is this augments our existing safety activities.
Most, not most, all of our investments in safety previously was in the discrete machine safety element, and we had machine control and we had safety components. We were able to address part of process safety at the low sell-through level and below.
What Triplex did for us was allow us to move into the process safety and the high availability for tolerant segment of that market. That is a very different segment than what we were able to address with our current portfolio.
So it was new technology allowing us to broaden our industry applications and really did complement to your second point, really did complement what we were trying to accomplish in the process space, which is in area that we are moving the Logix architecture into for an expanded served markets. So process is our greatest growth initiative inside the company and Triplex really augments and adds to and gives us more creditability in the process and particularly the oil and gas space.
And it helps us broaden our geographic footprint as well because most of their sales were outside of the United States. So, it hit on a couple of key elements.
So, what we are trying to do to grow the business and we are actually very excited about having it as part of our portfolio. And we do believe that we can also take that technology, the high availability both power and technology and move that into the batch, hybrid space and into some discrete applications because of the importance of asset utilization in many different manufacturing environment today and probably more important in the future.
So, that's the beliefs and our goals of what we are trying to do with that acquisition.
Nigel Coe - Deutsche bank
Great. And so you mentioned price in a couple of areas doing the slides specifically in terms of the good leverage you had for the quarter.
Can you quantify the price this quarter and maybe whether you see it improving?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I don't believe we see it improving. But over the last couple of years we have talked about a more favorable price environment.
And while it's not as good as it was a year ago, we are able to probably overall realize under 1% as we look forward and as we have... and as we have developed this past year.
Nigel Coe - Deutsche bank
Okay. Thanks Keith.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of Richard Eastman of Robert Baird. Please proceed.
Richard C. Eastman - Robert W. Baird & Co
Hi Keith. Good morning.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning.
Richard C. Eastman - Robert W. Baird & Co
Just a question, I just want to circle back for a second to the Architecture & Software margin. Can you just talk for a second or two, did the geographic mix within that segment help you from a margin standpoint?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
No. The geographic has less to do with it than the mix within this segment.
And so the product mix is more important to us than the geographic mix. And so...
Richard C. Eastman - Robert W. Baird & Co
And when you talk about the consumer facing industries having picked up, I guess I'll assume they grew at a rate greater than the 8% local currency in that Architecture & Software area. Which particular verticals within consumer grew?
You had mentioned auto was ... was auto flat or down in the quarter?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Auto was slightly up.
Richard C. Eastman - Robert W. Baird & Co
Okay.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
And if we talk about the consumer industries, food and beverage and home and personal care growth was at about the company average. The real star performer for us this quarter was life sciences.
Now that was up more than 20% and automotive was in the low single digits.
Richard C. Eastman - Robert W. Baird & Co
Okay. All right.
And then Keith, one of the things you had mentioned was your backlog is strong on the solutions side. Some of that will flow out in fourth quarter which is somewhat typical.
How do you see the growth in the solutions backlog relative to where we may be in the investment cycle overall?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well I would say, what we're seeing in the growth in the backlog tells us we are still in the investment cycle. And I think this is a probably a little unique investment cycle because of the commodity pricing that is going on and the worldwide demand for those commodities.
So we are seeing continued strength. Certainly if you look at some of the mining sectors, they are talking about years of investments.
And I don't think that will be universal across all of the resource industries but this appears to be a long investment cycle but mainly driven because of commodity pricing. And if things change dramatically there, it can turn pretty quickly as we have evidenced before.
But the oil and gas and the commodities, very, very strong demand and very... and therefore capacity expansions are going on.
Richard C. Eastman - Robert W. Baird & Co
Okay. And just a second question for, maybe for Ted.
Just... in the guidance you talk about the $3.65 to $3.70 including FX and acquisitions.
It sounds like the acquisitions will actually be, maybe minus a penny. Did FX help the bottom line in this quarter?
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
I would say not significantly.
Richard C. Eastman - Robert W. Baird & Co
Okay, great. Thank you.
Operator
And our next question comes from the line of John Inch of Merrill Lynch. Please proceed.
John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch
Hey, good morning.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, John.
John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch
I thought there was maybe some capacity additions that were coming online or had come online for the Architecture & Software business. Did that...
Ted or Keith, did that have any kind of material impact to the results of Logix or the profitability or growth rates that we saw?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
No, I don't believe we had capacity additions. What we have been talking about John, is that we are globalizing that business and we started up a facility in Singapore.
And that was not really capacity expansion. That was a realignment of our manufacturing footprint.
That is coming up to speed. That is accelerating, but it's not from a capacity standpoint and I wouldn't say that, that was a help in the quarter, of anything that probably continued to beat the expense items as we ramped that up more so than an ability to generate more top lines.
John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch
Yes, I know Singapore was what I was sort of referring to. So there was no...
to your knowledge, Keith there was no sort of channel failed impact or start-up benefit associated with this from our pure demand or our distribution standpoint?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
No, nothing in that regard at all.
John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch
Okay. Just...
yes I want go back to the pension for a second. Ted, if I am not mistaken, I think around at this time when your pension plan closed, you guys at the time sort of had articulated that the discount rate was up a 125 bips to 6.5%.
And then I think fiscal '07 is benefiting versus '06 from a less of a drag by over $30 million. Do you...
I know you haven't sort of finalized the numbers yet, but can you give us at least a generic sense based on sort of as you see kind of where the plan stands, a realign still to get a kind of contribution to the bottom line as we head into '08 or are things possibly neutral or possibly in a little bit of a headwind?
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
John, I can't answer that at this point. I mean we are still right in the middle of that analysis.
John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch
In a sense one way or another, which way it's going to swing?
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
I don't at this point.
John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch
Okay. Last question just as we've worked our way through the share repurchase from the proceeds of the Power Systems sale, and then Keith, you have done the ICS deal.
Should we be thinking in terms of capital allocation perhaps of a reorientation back towards some fill-in acquisitions or to more of these kinds of deals as you expand out process? I mean you guys have done a terrific job of buying back your stock.
I mean how are you thinking of the trade-offs before? I know you are opportunistic but again is there any kind of shift going on here?
How would you like to sort of think about this heading into next year?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I don't believe there has been any shift. We continue to run the disciplined acquisition process, and as we have said, just because we had the Power Systems cash, we weren't going to go out and do anything that was not consistent with that strategy.
And we expect to be aggressive in the small bolt-on types of acquisitions that we have been doing the last couple of years. And they do fill in very nicely to your point, John.
And we see more of that going forward and we commented with the ICS acquisition that was probably a little bit on the high end for us but, but we thought it was a great fit in and something that we wanted as part of the portfolio. So looking forward we're going to continue to look at acquisitions that allow us to do more for our customers, that fills technology gaps or that allow us to grow share and competencies and expertise in different geographies of the world, so.
John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch
But it sounds like it's still very much a bolt-on emphasis.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yes, yes that's the... that is the way you should view us.
John G. Inch - Merrill Lynch
Okay. Thank you.
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
Michelle we're taking one more question.
Operator
Okay wonderful. Our last question comes from the line of Nicole Parent of Credit Suisse.
Please proceed.
Nicole M. Parent - Credit Suisse
Good morning, guys.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Nicole.
Nicole M. Parent - Credit Suisse
A quick follow-up Ted, could you elaborate on the corporate expense line going up as we think about it going forward?
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
Nicole, I think if you look back over the last several quarters, we have kind of been in that $20 million, $23 million range and general corporate net is also the place where kind of special items that may come quarter-to-quarter generally fall. If you went back to previous quarters, it would have been things like legal settlements, environmental charges.
And that's why we've kind of quoted that range of $20 million to $25 million. The increase from this quarter being about 17 is basically reduced interest income going forward.
Nicole M. Parent - Credit Suisse
Okay.
Theodore D. Crandall - Senior Vice President, Components & Packaged Applications Group and Interim Chief Financial Officer
And that was also captured in that category.
Nicole M. Parent - Credit Suisse
Okay. And I guess just one last one on Asia sales.
When you think about China and the growth there, what's really driving it? And can you talk a little bit about the strategy there?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well what's driving it is the incredible investment that's going on in China and in India to some degree. And that's obviously evidenced by the continuing reports that come out that talk about the incredible growth rate in the output, manufacturing output as well as the balance of payments and the fact that they are exporting an awful lot of those manufactured goods.
So we see that continuing. As a matter of fact, we see the dynamics changing a little to where...
because of the disposable income, particularly in China, that is being developed because of their growth that we see more of a future in the consumer industries. And therefore a lot of the strength that we have and the opportunities that we'll have will be closer to where the sweet spot is for Rockwell Automation.
But it's a combination of the infrastructure investment that's going on in those two countries and the increase in disposable income that allows more specific consumer-driven investments. And actually China is trying to develop a more consumption-based economy as opposed to the investment-based economy that has currently been driving it.
So within Asia, particularly the developing Asia, that's what the core underlying aspects of growth are.
Nicole M. Parent - Credit Suisse
I guess maybe, I should have asked it in a different way. When I think about the growth rate that you posted in the second quarter versus the growth rate in the third quarter, we accelerated, is this just a comp issue or was...
you had said on the... I mean ex-China, it was more timing-related.
Did things get pushed into the third quarter from the second quarter or is it just lumpy?
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well it is lumpy, absolutely because there is much more project business in Asia than any one of our other regions. So Asia can be lumpy but I think the improved...
I think the change between second quarter and third quarter is the start of some of the things that we've been talking about the last couple of calls as to how we're trying to build more infrastructure and more maturity, more organizational maturity in a very fast growth region. So part of it is the outcome of that hard work that that team over there has been doing in the last three quarters.
And our goal is to continue to get back to that range that we have identified for our growth long term.
Nicole M. Parent - Credit Suisse
Great, thank you.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
You bet.
Kirk Larsen - Director of Investor Relations
Michelle, that concludes the call. Thank you everybody for joining us and have a good day.
Michelle?
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen that concludes today's conference call. This time you may disconnect, thank you.
Thank you, gentlemen. Have a wonderful day.
Keith D. Nosbusch - Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks Michelle.
Operator
You're welcome.