AMETEK, Inc.

AMETEK, Inc.

AME·NYSE

$228.23

+0.22%
IndustrialsElectrical Equipment & Parts

AMETEK, Inc. manufactures and sells electronic instruments and electromechanical devices worldwide. It operates in two segments, Electronic Instruments (EIG) and Electromechanical (EMG). The company's EIG segment offers advanced instruments for the process, aerospace, power, and industrial markets; process and analytical instruments for the oil and gas, petrochemical, pharmaceutical, semiconductor, automation, and food and beverage industries; and instruments to the laboratory equipment, ultra-precision manufacturing, medical, and test and measurement markets. This segment also provides power quality monitoring and metering devices, uninterruptible power supplies, programmable power equipment, electromagnetic compatibility test equipment, gas turbines, and environmental health and safety market sensors, dashboard instruments for heavy trucks and other vehicles, and instrumentation and controls for the food and beverage industries; and aircraft and engine sensors, monitoring systems, power supplies, fuel and fluid measurement systems, and data acquisition systems for the aerospace industry. Its EMG segment offers engineered electrical connectors and electronics packaging to protect sensitive devices and mission-critical electronics; precision motion control products for data storage, medical devices, business equipment, automation, and other applications; high-purity powdered metals, strips and foils, specialty clad metals, and metal matrix composites; motor-blower systems and heat exchangers for use in thermal management, military, commercial aircraft, and military ground vehicles; and motors for use in commercial appliances, fitness equipment, food and beverage machines, hydraulic pumps, and industrial blowers. This segment also operates a network of aviation maintenance, repair, and overhaul facilities. In addition, the company offers clinical and educational communication solutions. AMETEK, Inc. was founded in 1930 and is headquartered in Berwyn, Pennsylvania.

At a Glance

Live Snapshot
Market Cap$52.31B
EPS6.4200
P/E Ratio35.55
Earnings Date07/30/2026

Earnings Call Transcript

AME • 2024 • Q4

Operator
Hello, and welcome to the Fourth Quarter 2024 AMETEK Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce, Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasurer, Kevin Coleman.
Kevin Coleman
Thank you, Andrew. Good morning and welcome to AMETEK's Fourth Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Joining me today are Dave
Dave Zapico
Thank you, Kevin, and good morning, everyone. AMETEK delivered strong results in the fourth quarter, highlighted by robust margin expansion, outstanding cashflow generation, strong organic orders growth and double-digit growth in earnings per share. In the quarter, we established records for sales, operating income, EBITDA and diluted earnings per share as well as for operating cash flow and free cash flow. We also repurchased $155 million in shares during the quarter and this morning we announced the acquisition of Kern Microtechnik for approximately €105 million. Our performance this quarter marks the culmination of a strong year in which we leveraged the proven strength of our operating model to deliver outstanding results despite a challenging economic environment. Now let me turn to our fourth quarter results. Fourth quarter sales were a record $1.76 billion up 2% from the same period in 2023. Organic sales were down 3%, acquisitions added 5 points in the quarter and foreign currency was flat. Orders were solid in the quarter with organic orders up 4% versus the prior year with positive organic growth across both our EIG and EMG segments. And we ended the quarter with a strong backlog of $3.4 billion. AMETEK's operating performance in the fourth quarter was excellent. Our operating income in the quarter was a record $469 million a 5% increase over the fourth quarter of 2023. Operating margins were 26.6% in the quarter, up 90 basis points from the prior year, while core margins, which excluded the dilutive impact from acquisitions were up a sizable 140 basis points. EBITDA in the quarter was a record $561 million up 7% versus the prior year with EBITDA margins an impressive 31.9%. This operating performance led to robust cash generation with free cash flow a record $498 million in the quarter, up 4% versus last year's fourth quarter and free cash flow to net income conversion of 129%. Diluted earnings per share were a record $1.87 up 11% versus the fourth quarter of 2023 and above our guidance range of $1.81 to $1.06 per share. Now let me provide some additional details at the operating group level. First, the Electronic Instruments Group. EIG delivered outstanding performance in the fourth quarter with impressive margin expansion and operating margin levels that reflect the high quality of our businesses. EIG sales were $1.2 billion down 2% from the fourth quarter of last year. Organic sales were down 3% and acquisitions added 1 point. Growth was strongest across our Aerospace and Defense businesses, while our Advanced Optical Metrology businesses,
Dalip Puri
Thank you, Dave, and good morning, everyone. As Dave noted, AMETEK had a strong finish to 2024, establishing records for sales, operating income, earnings per share and cash flow in the quarter. Now let me provide some additional financial highlights for the fourth quarter and the full year as well as some additional guidance for 2025. Starting with general and administrative expenses. Fourth quarter G&A expenses were $28.9 million up $2.5 million from the prior year. For the full year, general and administrative expenses were up approximately $5 million. As a percentage of sales G&A expense was 1.5%, in line with 2023 levels. For 2025, general and administrative expenses are expected to be approximately 1.5% of sales. Fourth quarter other operating expenses were down $1 million compared to the fourth quarter of 2023 due to lower due diligence costs. For 2025, we expect other operating expenses to be largely in line with 2024 level. The effective tax rate in the quarter was 12.8%, down from 17.8% in the fourth quarter of 2023 due to statute expirations. For the full year, the effective tax rate was 17.3%, which was in line with our guidance range of 17% to 17.5%. For 2025, we anticipate our effective tax rate to be between 19% and 20%. As we have stated in the past, actual quarterly tax rates can differ dramatically either positively or negatively from this full year estimated rate. Capital expenditures were $52 million in the fourth quarter and $127 million for the full year. Capital expenditures in 2025 are expected to be approximately $155 million or about 2% of sales. Depreciation and amortization expense in the quarter was $96 million and for the full year was $383 million. In 2025, we expect depreciation and amortization to be approximately $400 million including after tax, acquisition related intangible amortization of approximately $194 million or $0.83 per diluted share. For the quarter, operating working capital was 16.8% of sales. Operating cash flow in the fourth quarter was a record at $550 million up 2% versus the fourth quarter of 2023. Free cash flow was also a record in the quarter, up 4% to $498 million with excellent free cash flow conversion of 129% for the quarter. Free cash flow for 2024 was a record $1.7 billion up 6% versus the prior year, with full year free cash flow conversion also very strong at 124% of net income. For 2025, we expect free cash flow conversion to be approximately 115%. Total debt at year end was $2.1 billion down $1.2 billion from the end of 2023. Offsetting this debt is cash and cash equivalents of $374 million. As Dave noted, we spent approximately $155 million on share repurchases in the fourth quarter, bringing our total share repurchases for the year to approximately $220 million. Additionally, subsequent to the end of fourth quarter, we deployed approximately €105 million on the acquisition of Kern Microtechnik. At the end of 2024, our gross debt to EBITDA ratio was 0.9x and our net debt to EBITDA ratio was 0.8x. We continue to have excellent financial capacity with approximately $2.5 billion of cash and existing credit facilities to support our acquisition strategy and growth initiatives. In summary, we delivered strong fourth quarter and full year 2024 operating results, highlighted by record earnings, robust margins and excellent cash flow generation. With a proven strategy, significant capital deployment capacity and a strong track record of execution, we are well positioned to navigate current trade uncertainties and to drive growth and value creation in 2025. Kevin?
Kevin Coleman
Thanks, Dalip. Andrew, can we please open the lines for questions?
Operator
[Operator Instructions]. Our first question comes from the line of Matt Summerville with D.A. Davidson.
Matt Summerville
Thanks. Good morning, David. Maybe could you talk a little bit about the nature of delays you saw within EIG? And if you started to see some of that break now that we're into February? And then maybe if you could also comment on your views regarding the remaining duration of the OEM destocking, you're continuing to see in EMG? And then I have a follow-up.
Dave Zapico
Sure, Matt. Good morning. The project delays in ERG were pretty much what we've been seeing. It was across the board. It wasn't really notable, but we got some delays on the shipments, but the orders were good. And similar, the destocking headwinds largely impacted our OEM exposed businesses in EMG, which include our Automation and Engineered Solutions sub segment. And but we're starting to see improved order patterns from some OEM customers, while others are taking a little time to destock. We were encouraged by the sequential orders growth in Paragon. We have substantial double digit orders growth. We're also encouraged by the orders in EIG, so both groups were up organically in orders and very positive from that viewpoint and the order strength continued into January. So we're not through the destocking, some customers are through it, some are not, but you can see it definitely easing a bit as we go forward.
Matt Summerville
A follow-up, David, can you talk about where you were with price cost in '24, what your views on that are for '25 and what you see as AMETEK's ultimate level of price capture this year?
Dave Zapico
Thanks. Sure. I think in 2024, the last quarter we ended up pretty much in line with what we were performing throughout the year. We captured a bit more than three and our inflation was a little bit more than two. And going into 2025, we've been pretty conservative in budgeting that we're saying that we'll offset increased price with inflation by a little bit. So we think the environment for inflation, at least what we're seeing is mitigated to a great degree and I think you're in that 1.5% to 2% number for the pricing.
Matt Summerville
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Jeff Sprague with Vertical Research Partners.
Jeff Sprague
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. David, could you give us a little bit more of an update on Paragon? You mentioned orders were firming up here as we exited the year. Can you just level set us on where we're at revenue base for that business and what you are expecting in 2025?
Dave Zapico
Yes, I mean, to remind everyone, we acquired a business, it's in the med tech space, it manufactures single use and consumable surgical instruments and implantable components in markets with good growth rates, long-term growing markets, excellent engineering capability, leading additive manufacturing capability and a lot of new program wins, which we continue to execute through 2024. In 2024, they're going through a destocking of their customers, but as I said, some of their customers are destocked and they started the order aggressively, but some of the customers are not through the destocking. The net effect of that is sequentially we saw a significant double digit increase in order input. We remain excited about the business. It's the end demand in procedures within their surgical and orthopedic markets remain strong. So we know it's truly a destock as the end procedures are continuing and the inventory is being consumed and we're gaining share with these new programs. So we're investing in the long-term growth that they continue to win new programs. So we also have a combined management team leading Paragon, combination of AMETEK and legacy Paragon management team is functioning well. As I said, the inventory normalization continues to impact the business, but we're working through it. So we're encouraged by that sequential orders growth.
Jeff Sprague
Dave, just to put a finer point on that. So, could we end the year then somewhere around $420 million-ish of revenues in Paragon?
Dave Zapico
Exactly, exactly, Jeff. We're in that ballpark. I'm not going to give the exact number, but you're right on the pen there and we expect that business to grow higher than AMETEK as we move throughout the year and especially in the second half.
Jeff Sprague
And not to overly drill on Paragon, but also just given the restructuring and everything you did last year in the business, can you give us an idea of kind of maybe order of magnitude of margin improvement you're looking for there?
Dave Zapico
Yes, I think from where they're at now, which is the substantial improvement in the next 12 months and that will be it's biased towards the second half, but it will definitely happen and it will be well in excess of the 20 or 30 basis points of margin improvement we're looking at for the whole company, well in excess of that.
Jeff Sprague
Great. I'll pass the baton. Thanks a lot guys.
Dave Zapico
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Jamie Cook with Truist Securities.
Jamie Cook
Hi, good morning. Congrats on a nice quarter. I guess my first question, understanding, the orders have continued to improve, there's some concern out there from investors that the improvement we're seeing in the industrial economy was more of a pre buy based on concerns post election. It doesn't sound like you're seeing any of that, but if you could just comment sort of on the cadence of orders, whether there was anything unusual. And then I guess my second question, understanding you're guiding to, I think you said low single digit growth, it sounds like we're flat in the first quarter. Just trying to understand the cadence of growth that you're expecting again just given some of the uncertainty on the macro? Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Sure. In terms of the cadence for orders, we had a pretty typical quarter where the orders increased every month of the quarter, but and December was the strongest month for the orders, but that's typical cadence, but also for the whole year, December was the strongest month. So that was a good order month. And then in January, that same orders positive orders continued. So the last really since the middle of last year, we started to see an improvement in orders, it's definitely continuing and our customers aren't telling us is to pre buy us to get ahead of tariffs or anything, but it could be, you don't know, but it feels pretty strong from our viewpoint. And as those orders make their way into our backlog, those will make their way into sales as we go forward. We're starting out the year flat as you mentioned. As we move throughout the year, the destock will mitigate and we have good pipelines. So it's a conservative or prudent start to the year is the way we're looking at it.
Jamie Cook
Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Thank you, Jamie.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Andrew Buscaglia with BNP Paribas.
Dave Zapico
You're breaking up. Andrew, why don't we put him on hold and we'll go to the next caller.
Operator
Certainly. One moment please. And our next question comes from the line of Brett Linzey with Mizuho.
Brett Linzey
Hey, good morning all. Just want to come back to the project comments, the softness at the end of the year. It sounds like the pipeline is building and maybe strong, so front log looks pretty good. Are customers giving you any indication on the timing of when these projects might release? And how are you thinking about ES, Engineered Solutions, backlog conversion as part of the guidance construct?
Dave Zapico
Yes. I think that we have a really good pipeline and it's going to play out in 2025 and expecting to see projects that have been delayed are now moving. In terms of the A&ES piece of the business, I think that's where we're suffering from the OEM destock the most. And I think in the automation side of the business, we've bottomed and it's a great place to grow from where we're at right now. And on the med tech side of the business, we've already started to see the destock abate. So that's where we are and that will play out in our guidance throughout the year and we expect those two businesses to do better as we progress throughout the year.
Brett Linzey
Okay, great. And maybe just shifting over to Aerospace and Defense, could you give us an update on how you're thinking about the outlook on aero versus defense? I know a lot of moving pieces there. And then anything to think about in terms of profitability as we shift to more OE versus aftermarket and what you're embedding there in the guide for the year? Thanks.
Dave Zapico
Sure. Our A&D business, it had another strong year and in the fourth quarter it was up mid-single digits, it was up high single digits for the year, mid-single digits for the quarter. Growth in the fourth quarter was strongest across our commercial businesses. So we already saw the OE component of the sales go up in the fourth quarter, we make a lot of money on OE, a lot of money on aftermarket, so I don't think there's a margin concern there. We think in 2025, it's going to grow at mid-single digits and we're seeing strength in both our commercial and defense markets. So commercial may be a bit stronger than defense, but both of those will be healthy growers in 2025.
Brett Linzey
All right. Appreciate the insight.
Dave Zapico
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Rob Wertheimer with Melius Research.
Rob Wertheimer
Thank you. Good morning, everybody. So margin performance was very strong, especially given just the soft core environment. I wonder, can you just talk in general about how you approached cost and margin through the quarter? Was this a bit of a batten down the hatches? Is this normal improvement flowing through? Is acquisition improvement flowing through? Maybe just characterize how you see the margin improve in the quarter?
Dave Zapico
Yes. I think the it's AMETEK operational excellence. We had an excellent operating quarter. We have reported margins were up 90 points and core margins were up 140 basis points. And we got good productivity, we got good positive price cost, good mix. So it was a good quarter for margins, but we've been delivering good margins for year after year for a long time. I mean for the year, our core margins were up 120 basis points and I don't see any reason that that's going to stop. It's our DNA. We're constantly working on operational excellence programs and we're executing them and we have high contribution margin businesses that are contributing to it. So the margin performance was good, it was very good. We had some records that we set, but it was kind of expected.
Rob Wertheimer
Okay, perfect. So nothing dramatic and negative. This one may be a little tricky to answer because there's obviously a lot of back and forth going on in government policy right now. But is there any hiccups or stutters you're seeing in potential future demand or current demand from funding that might flow through to laboratories, test measurement, scientific instruments and so forth? And I'll stop there. Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Yeah. I don't see any specific thing that's going to hurt the laboratory demand. I mean, I will say one thing about the laboratory demand, it's very strong internationally right now. So that's driving it more so than the U.S. When I think about the overall regulatory environment, I think some of the things with the new administration are positive. We have regulatory relief, we're looking forward to projects moving ahead faster. There's a different approach to antitrust. We have a focus on energy development, that's good for us. There's an increased focus on military spending and that's good for us. There's lower taxes for products manufactured in the U.S., we do a lot of manufacturing in the U.S., there's tax breaks plan to boost equipment investment. So I think a lot of those pro-growth policies can be really positive for us. And as a U.S. manufacturer with a lot of capability in the U.S. with a significant U.S. manufacturing footprint provides many options and opportunities depending how the situation develops. We have a flexible asset light model, consistent with our strategy and we think as we get throughout this year, we'll see some opportunities develop.
Rob Wertheimer
Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Okay, Rob.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Andrew Obin with Bank of America.
Andrew Obin
Yes, good morning.
Dave Zapico
Hello, Andrew.
Andrew Obin
Just to clarify, what's organic growth rate that's embedded in your first quarter guidance?
Dave Zapico
Let me see. We it's a flattish number, Andrew. So both the total sales and organic sales were flat.
Andrew Obin
Okay. So we are accelerating organically from fourth quarter to the Q1?
Dave Zapico
Yes, we're going from the -2, -3 to a flat. So the organic growth is accelerating from Q4 to Q1 and is tied to the acceleration in order input to organic orders. So, I think that's going to continue throughout the year. So as those organic orders were strong, our sequential quarters, the organic growth will be increased versus fourth quarter and it's just a continuation of a slow acceleration to the year.
Andrew Obin
Got you. And just sort of combining the two questions, first, how did you all this tariff noise, do we see it in the guidance? And also how does FX impact your 2025 outlook because you are a meaningful U.S. exporter? So how should we think about the impact both on the revenue and margin? Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Yes, they're good questions. And the guidance we have taken into account, the things that we've heard about over the last few days, few weeks, but we've been making contingency plans since shortly after the elections for tariffs. And our 2017 and 2018 playbook is relevant. That's when we executed a China for China manufacturing strategy and decoupled our supply chains from China, we executed flawlessly and we're ready to do the same thing now if it's required. We manufacture niche, highly differentiated products. We plan to pass on the cost impact of the tariffs if the tariffs get enacted to our customers as we have done previously. We have a significant U.S. manufacturing footprint, as I said, as a flexible asset light model, so we're very agile. And I think that we're well positioned to manage through the current environment. I mean our guidance doesn't take into account, doesn't assume a broader economic slowdown because of an escalating trade war to be clear with that, no demand destruction is assumed in our budget. But with everything that we know of and with our past success and decoupling our supply chains from China and with our operational capability, we think we're ready for this and we got it covered.
Dalip Puri
And Andrew on foreign exchange, obviously we're a global business, but we are primarily a U.S. dollar centric business. So our top line is not overly exposed to foreign exchange. And we have a very balanced foreign exchange footprint at the profit and cash flow level through natural offsets. So we can very much we're not impacted by broad based U.S. dollar movement. And I think the last few years, you've seen a lot of FX volatility and it hasn't impacted our bottom line.
Andrew Obin
All right. Thanks so much.
Dave Zapico
Thank you, Andrew.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Christopher Glynn with Oppenheimer
Christopher Glynn
Thanks. A lot of ground covered. Just curious on current, Dave, how you think about the size of the addressable market? What's the competition like and how long you've been looking at that business?
Dave Zapico
Sure, Chris. It's part of our Ultra Precision Technology division and we bought a business in that part of our company about 15 years ago named Precitech and they build what's called diamond turning machines that make these surfaces that are incredibly precise optical surfaces and the business has done extremely well for AMETEK. And we look at Kern as kind of a sister company with some different technology. And we think Kern is they also do submicron level accuracy systems. Their end markets are places that need exceptional levels of precision. That includes the medical market, the semiconductor market, the research market, the space market and there's a lot of opportunities to us to grow this business and running them as sister companies with our Precitech business. We have capabilities that solves a bigger set of solutions for the customers. It's typical AMETEK acquisition, highly differentiated, high precision, leader in niches, really works for the miniaturization that's going on in the technology world. We got a fair price worth, management team is staying with us and we think it's going to be a good acquisition and most of the sales are exported outside of Germany. They're a German company, but over 70% of their sales are all outside of Germany. So the world goes to Munich to get the best systems and it fits well within AMETEK's family of businesses.
Christopher Glynn
Great, thanks. And just kind of a churning part of the cycle to a degree here. Several years ago, you went through some divestitures. As you look at things play out now, realizing you've really shrunk oil and metals for instance. Are there any areas of the portfolio that are bubbling up for potential divestiture?
Dave Zapico
Yes, we go through that strategic analysis every year and we went through it this year and there's nothing that's going to impact our guide. There's nothing large or substantial. There may be some smaller plans or things that we continue to act on during the course of the year, but these will be inconsequential and we like the portfolio that we have right now.
Christopher Glynn
Great. Thanks a lot.
Dave Zapico
Thank you, Chris.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Nigel Coe with Wolfe Research.
Nigel Coe
Thanks. Good morning. Lots of information so far, but I'm sorry if I missed this David. What is the organic I think low single digit for the full year, but what is the how does that break out between EMG and EIG? And I'm just curious if you're seeing a stronger rebound in EMG just given that Paragon and Automation were quite badly impacted by destocking. So I'm just wondering if you're factoring in a stronger rebound in those two businesses.
Dave Zapico
EMG is going to have slightly higher organic growth than EIG, so it's going to be a bit higher. It's going to be low single digit for the year and but EMG is going to be a bit higher.
Nigel Coe
A little bit higher. Okay. That's great. And then just the EMG margins in fourth quarter, I mean, obviously, EIG was spectacular, but EMG came in a bit lighter. And I know that there's typically some production disabsorption in the fourth quarter. Just wondering, was there any intentional like extended production shortfalls in the fourth quarter?
Dave Zapico
No, it's the calendar effect and we're going through a destocking there and our automation business is extremely profitable and it's down substantially with it. So we had core margins down over 100 basis points in that part of the business. And the good thing is we've leaned out the cost structure and we're really at a good place to grow. So as destocking abates and that business has bottomed, we're looking forward to when that turns, it should be some profitable sales for us.
Nigel Coe
And then just a quick follow on to that comment about automation margins. Are you expecting automation to be back to positive organic growth in the first quarter next year or this year?
Dave Zapico
Yes, the automation business is lagging the medical business a bit. So we will have to see how that plays out.
Nigel Coe
Okay. Thanks, Dave.
Operator
Thank you. One moment please. Our next question comes from the line of Joe Giordano with TD Cowen.
Joe Giordano
Hey, guys. Good morning. I'm not sure. Did you give the actual order number or the book to bill for the quarter? I if you did, I apologize.
Dave Zapico
Yeah. Let me let me, grab that. The organic orders were 4%. The book-to-bill was 1.01 if we exclude FX on the backlog. And both I guess both grew for positive, EMG was a little bit more positive than EIG, but they were both strong.
Joe Giordano
And then can you walk us through just I think you mentioned in the outlook the view for Aerospace and Defense. So can you kind of do your walk with like the 2024 actual and like the View? Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Yes. We forgot that we didn't get to that yet. So on the process side, the process declined low single digits in the fourth quarter. We saw strong growth in the quarter within our advanced optical metrology businesses as well as our high-end microscopy business had a good quarter. And similar to last year, we experienced some temporary delays -- similar to last quarter, we experienced some temporary delays in project spending. And then looking forward to 2025, we expect organic sales for our process businesses to be up low single digits for the full year. And then I talked about the Aerospace and Defense business already and there we expect ongoing strength in both Commercial and Defense and to be up mid-single digits for 2025. So process, low aerospace and defense, mid. Then you go to Power and Industrial, our sales were flat in the fourth quarter. Our RTDS business, which provides advanced power simulation systems to utilities and research institutions saw good growth in the quarter. For 2025, we expect organic sales for our Power and Industrial businesses to remain flat relative to 2024 levels. And finally, the Automation and Engineered Solutions business, overall sales were up low double digits, driven by the contributions from the Paragon acquisition. Organic sales were down high single digits in the quarter consistent with the levels we've seen during the year given the continued normalization of our OEM customer inventories. And for 2025, we expect organic sales to be up mid-single digits for the year with improving growth trends throughout the year.
Joe Giordano
Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Okay, Joe.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Deane Dray with RBC Capital Markets.
Deane Dray
Hi, good morning. This is Sahil Manocha on for Deane Dray. Can you provide any context on the $85 million in growth investments? How is that split between segment and is that adding mostly sales and engineering and what was the 2024 growth investment?
Dave Zapico
The 2024 was $90 million and the 2025 is $85 million, so they're very close. And again, that's the incremental spend and it's largely research, development and engineering spend. So I'd say 2/3 of the $85 million is RD&E and about 1/3 of it is additional marketing channel sales and marketing work. So about 2/3, 1/3 and it's biased toward EIG largely because of the size of EIG. So it's pretty it's across the whole company biased to EIG.
Deane Dray
Got it. And then, the vitality index reached 28% in the third quarter, I believe, which you noted was strong level within the target range of 20% to 30%. Could you discuss the new product intros that you're most excited about for 2025? And how do you see the vitality index trending?
Dave Zapico
Yes, we talk about a vitality index being between 20% to 30% is a good number and we didn't mention it, but actually it was extremely high in Q4 30%. So it was one of our highest numbers. So the new product engine is working and that's why we have such a strong pipeline of new orders and I think it's going to pay off next year. We think a number like 20% to 30% is a good number for us and we started tracking this, it was down in the low teens, mid-teens many years ago. So we think it's a good number now. It's a way that we can look at the investments we're putting in and making sure we're adding value to our customers. It shows up in pricing also, we can get premium prices by adding features to products and having providing new value to our customers that we weren't providing before. So it's a healthy amount, we spend a healthy amount of RD&E and given our niche market focus and technology leadership, innovation leadership that matches the strategy of the company.
Deane Dray
Awesome. Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Robert Mason with Baird.
Robert Mason
Yes. Good morning, Dave, Dalip. Dave, you had mentioned earlier that your Labs business, you were seeing strength more just call it rest of world versus the U.S. right now. Can you drill into that a little bit? Is that your own overlay or footprint where you're exposed or differences in government priorities or just what's maybe driving that difference?
Dave Zapico
It could be government priorities, it could be channel investments we made, but the place that we're seeing a lot of lab expansion work is in Asia. So Asia, the market is healthy everywhere, but Asia is particularly healthy.
Robert Mason
Maybe just to continue the thought there, relative to your 2025 guidance, could you provide kind of a geographic overlay to that, just how you're thinking about the regions for 2025?
Dave Zapico
Yes, I'll talk about 2024 -- where we ended up in 2024, we had essentially strong growth in Europe and Asia offset by some declines in the U.S. So if you look at the full year, we had about plus 2 internationally and down MSD in the U.S. And that was largely our automation business that was down in the U.S. So in places like in Asia, we were up and China was roughly flat. So that's kind of hanging in there for us. And when we think about 2025, we're looking for all regions to grow. We're thinking we actually see some strength in Europe. Like I said, we were plus 2% in Europe and some strength in Europe. We think some of the strength in Asia is going to continue, maybe more strength outside of China than in China. We have good channels there and we think the U.S. is going to return to growth for us. So it will be balanced growth across all geographies.
Robert Mason
When you said China was flat, was that a Q4 number or a full year?
Dave Zapico
I think it was a full year number.
Robert Mason
Okay, very good. Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Thank you, Rob.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Andrew Buscaglia with BNP Paribas.
Andrew Buscaglia
Hey, good morning, guys.
Dave Zapico
Can hear you fine.
Andrew Buscaglia
Yes, good morning.
Dave Zapico
Good morning.
Andrew Buscaglia
Good. Yes, sorry about that earlier. I'm not sure what happened. So, yes, I wanted to touch on your orders. You're saying are up 4%, and you had some good commentary just about your subsegments for sales. But what about it sounds like orders are getting a little bit better, the momentum is picking up. What about order momentum in each subsegment? Where is that coming from?
Dave Zapico
Yes, I think that what you really have is in the sub segments, the big thing in the Automation and Engineered Solutions, that was the destock abating and we're starting to see some of the customers place orders now specifically in the med tech area. So that's positive. And on the automation part of the business, we think it's bottomed and we've got a lean out cost structure. So we're optimistic about what that's going to do when it increases. The process and the power businesses, we think we're well positioned and those are the project businesses, we saw some delays, we're hoping that those are going to abate a bit and quoting a lot of activity, good pipelines there. And then in Aerospace and Defense, it's pretty much steady. We think both our military and our commercial aftermarket is going to do well, ongoing strength in both sides of it.
Andrew Buscaglia
Yes, okay. And yes, you are generating a ton of cash, great cash flow in the quarter. This year, are we going to see a series of sort of like current deals or you expect like another Paragon-ish size deal in 2025?
Dave Zapico
That's a great question. I mean, right now we have bigger deals in our pipeline and we also have smaller technology deals, what I put Kern in our pipeline. So, and we have we could probably spend $5 billion in 2025 on deals and we'd still only have a debt to EBITDA of about $2.5 billion the way we calculate it. So we're very aggressive in that area and there's properties, businesses that people were holding back on. It seems like the market is picking up a bit. So we think with our strong balance sheet, we're going to be able to get deals done, we're going to be able to be opportunistic with share buybacks and we're going to reward our shareholders -- long-term shareholders with an ever increasing dividend, small dividend, but ever increasing. So we have a balance sheet where we can do it all and we're going to do it all. But I think the most optimism is in the M&A area right now.
Andrew Buscaglia
Yes, okay. Thank you.
Dave Zapico
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. I'll now hand the call back over to Vice President, Investor Relations and Treasurer, Kevin Coleman for any closing remarks.
Kevin Coleman
Thank you, Andrew, and thanks everyone for joining our call today. And as a reminder, a replay of the webcast can be accessed in the Investors section of ametek.com. Have a great day.
Transcript from February 4, 2025

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