Good morning. And welcome to CECO Environmental Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this event is being recorded. I'd like to turn the conference over to Matt Eckl, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead..
Thank you for joining us on the CECO Environmental fourth quarter and year-end 2021 earnings call. On the call with me today is Todd Gleason, Chief Executive Officer; and myself, Matt Eckl, Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, I'd like to note that we have provided a slide presentation to help guide our discussion.
The call will be webcast along with our earnings presentation, which is on our website at cecoenviro.com. The presentation materials can be accessed through the Investor Relations section of the website. I'd also like to caution investors regarding forward-looking statements.
Any statements made in today's presentation that are not based on historical facts are forward-looking statements. Such statements are based on certain estimates and expectations and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties. Actual future results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements.
We encourage you to read the risks described in our SEC filings, including on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021.
Except to the extent required by applicable securities laws, we undertake no obligation to update or publicly revise any of the forward-looking statements that we make here today, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Today's presentation will also include references to certain non-GAAP financial measures.
We have reconciled the comparable GAAP and non-GAAP numbers in today's press release as well as the supplemental tables in the back of the slide deck. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Chief Executive Officer, Todd Gleason.
Todd?.
Thanks, Matt. And good day everyone. We're going to start with Slide 3 of the presentation Matt mentioned to follow along with our prepared remarks. As we highlighted in this morning's earnings release, CECO had a strong finish to 2021.
We previously forecasted in our third quarter earnings material that our growing backlog would start to show up in the financials and deliver solid revenue growth both year-over-year and sequentially, and it is.
With our continued strength in orders and strong backlog levels we expect to maintain revenue growth year-over-year for the foreseeable future. No doubt there remains uncertain and challenges in the global supply chain, overall inflationary pressures and the continued labor shortage.
However, we remain strategically focused on project execution, cost and change order management, and of course, taking price as appropriate. Down cash flow generation to finish the year was an additional highlight in the quarter.
Matt will provide additional details around our cash generation and our utilization of cash to repurchase CECO stock and paydown debt. Turning to Slide Number 4, let's review fourth quarter financials in more detail. Orders of $91 million grew 17% year-over-year. This marks the fourth consecutive quarter with orders right around $90 million.
We will discuss how balanced our orders growth was across the majority of our platforms in just a minute. Q4 sales of $94 million were up double digits, both sequentially and year-over-year.
We forecasted during the third quarter earnings report that we expected our backlog to produce revenues in the range of $85 million to $100 million, which I am proud to report we delivered in Q4. Importantly, we continue to sustain near record level backlogs and expect that will deliver continued year-over-year revenue growth.
Gross margins of 30.5% were significantly better than the third quarter of 2021. We remain focused on increasing gross margins even further but remain cautious, given the challenges we are all facing with short term costs around the supply chain, logistics and other items outside of our control.
The increase in revenue and gross margins helped to deliver over $9 million of EBITDA, an increase of approximately $5.6 million when compared to the third quarter of 2021. Cash flow of $2.2 million was up significantly year-over-year, and we remain positive in our ability to continue to generate solid free cash flows throughout 2022.
So, overall, a great finish to 2021, solid improvement sequentially and in good shape for growth as we move into 2022 and beyond. Please turn to Slide Number 5. On the left side, we visually show a few snapshots from the third quarter 2021 earnings release and management presentation.
In that release, we provided various comments on our outlook for growth. It is important that we say what we're going to do and deliver against what we say. We feel good that across the board, we delivered on our outlook with sales and EBITDA growth and good margins.
CECO is committed to a steady portfolio transformation, one that includes investments in organic growth and programmatic M&A. By delivering organic growth, improved margins and cash flow, we know we will have momentum for the transformation and continued support of our shareholders.
We will revisit this topic later in today's presentation as we continue to provide updates on our commitments and our journey. Now let's move to Slide Number 6. As a company with a significant portion of revenue from long-cycle projects, it was critical we rebuild our backlog in 2021.
That mission was certainly accomplished as full year orders were up almost 30% year-over-year. Because CECO’s 2021 starting backlog was depressed as a result of the impacts from lower orders during the COVID-related deaths of 2020, we could not overcome margin pressures and lower volumes to grow 2021 EBITDA.
But we ended 2021 strong and are navigating the well-discussed challenges. We feel very good about our position as we enter 2022. Please turn to Slide Number 7. You can see why we are encouraged by the momentum we have built.
For 2021 seven out of eight CECO platforms grew orders, strong double digits, from the 54% Industrial Air platform orders growth, through the 77% Emissions Management growth and several other platforms that generated over 50% orders growth as well, we truly have a very balanced growth profile.
The one platform that did not grow year-over-year was our Separation and Filtration platform. Yet, we expect that platform to have a much stronger 2022 as their pipeline continued to build throughout the year and is poised for future growth. You can read the commentary associated with each platform on the slide.
You will see we have a good pulse of the various markets and remain confident we will grow our Q1 2022 orders book overall. I’m going to hand it over to Matt now to run through more specifics on our financials and then I will wrap up our call with some other observations and comments.
Matt?.
Thanks, Todd. Starting with Slide 9 in orders, we are pleased that all three segments grew year-over-year with sequential growth in both Fluid Handling and Engineered Systems. Sequentially, Engineered Systems grew 7% as we were awarded several wins for our water treatment and thermal acoustic solutions throughout the Middle East.
Our Fluid Handling platform was up 33% versus Q3 as we saw a significant increase in quotes and bookings for our Dean pumps and Mefiag filters that serve the surging U.S. petrochemical and automotive markets, respectively.
Both these markets are experiencing growth, we haven’t seen in years, and we are pleased with the CapEx investments made to improve our cost position and cut our lead times by 30% of that of the competition. It’s showing up in the results. Industrial Air was down sequentially against tough comparisons, but up 3% versus same quarter last year.
Fourth quarter is seasonally this platform’s slowest given our customers’ CapEx spend cycles. On the right, revenue moved up into the right in a big way, up 13% year-over-year and 70% sequentially as we start to see the fruits of all our labors pay off. As Todd highlighted, our long-cycle, backlog-based business takes time to turn to revenue.
But once it does, the flow-through to EBITDA is significant. Most of the sequential increase came from Engineered Systems where approximately $10 million of revenue slipped out of Q3 and into Q4 as supply chain challenges with our subcontractors started to loosen.
While inbound material receipts are still slow, customers are signing off on technical drawings quicker, which is allowing us to procure materials sooner, driving faster revenue recognition. This is a clear correlation between countries opening up as COVID cases subside and customers and our subcontractors getting back to work.
For our long-cycle platforms, this is welcome news. We are all pleased to see our long-cycle project businesses growing revenue but I’m even more pleased with how our short-cycle and recurring revenue businesses are performing.
To transform CECO, improved the economics of the company and garner the appropriate valuation, we must grow our higher margin more repeatable platforms organically and inorganically. In the quarter, we reported $21 million of short-cycle sales, up 8% sequentially and an astounding 24% year-over-year.
For the full year, we produced $76 million of short-cycle product sales, up 6% year-over-year, which includes standard equipment like industrial dust collectors, dampers and pumps as well as aftermarket parts and services.
Just in the past week, we closed on our announced acquisition of GRC, a leader in flow control products such as duckbill valves and rubber expansion joints. We are excited to add GRC to our portfolio for their superior products.
GRC also adds fantastic economics for CECO’s shareholders and will contribute approximately $12 million more of short-cycle sales to CECO in 2022. This increases our short-cycle mix to approximately $100 million in predictable, more recurring revenues.
We continue to focus on M&A opportunities for the future, concentrate on product businesses with stronger aftermarket and higher margins. Including my first slide, I will double down what I stated in our last earnings call. We expect double-digit top line growth in 2022.
Slide 10 shows our backlog is at $214 million, up $30 million year-over-year and slightly down sequentially on FX. Our book-to-bill ratio was strong in 2021 at 1.1 turns and our 12-month pipeline shows no signs of slowing down at $2 billion and growing.
While today’s focus is Q4 results, I would also highlight that we have a very good visibility to the first two months of Q1. We would suggest orders have rarely been this strong at CECO through the first two months of the quarter. We are excited to provide more of an update on our Q1 earnings release in May.
On Slide 11, we saw a good bounce back in Q4 across all metrics, which improved sequentially on the heels of a strong sales performance. Gross margins rebounded to 30.5%, non-GAAP OI was at $7.6 million, and adjusted EBITDA crested $9 million and nearly 10%.
In Q3, I described the quarter’s underperformance in thirds, 1/3 on prior year pricing, 1/3 on inflation and 1/3 on execution. While 30.5% gross margin is up 200 basis points from last quarter, we still have work to do to get back to historical levels or better. I’ll comment on each third briefly.
Older backlog pricing with some projects booked in 2020, for example, remains a headwind and will linger through 2022. Larger projects often turned from backlog to revenue over 9 months to 18 months and certain international projects sometimes extend over two years. It will take some time for old jobs to roll off and new higher-priced jobs to roll in.
We are confident in our pricing strategy and win rates across key markets where there is inelastic demand for our engineered systems like FCC cyclone and DNOx solutions. In some markets such as power generation, the broader competition is more aggressive given the limited number of pursuits.
Conversely, our short-cycle businesses have introduced multiple successful price increases in 2021, we are executing additional price actions in 2022, yet another reason we are allocating capital in M&A and short-cycle businesses. Regarding inflation, it remains a challenge that we are regularly tracking and managing.
Steel and metal pricing softened a bit towards the end of 2021, but started to climb again this year. This will be a continued focus of our platforms and project management teams.
We’ve done a nice job getting change orders on a high percentage of projects impacted and we monitor every quote that goes to the customers, ensuring we’ve documented the steel price component of our bid in case it fluctuates.
And we want to applaud leaders like Eric Lindemann and Kim Holzworth in the project management and procurement organizations as they are two great examples of leaders at CECO creatively navigating this inflationary environment. You personally are making a difference for CECO.
Beyond materials, we’re seeing inflation in our labor costs as well, retaining talent across project managers, sales reps and all the functional areas is extremely important. I think every company has seen increased competition for talent, especially those roles that are highly fungible and end market-agnostic.
Ironically, retaining recruiters has been one of the toughest positions to keep. And most companies are learning what it means to operate in a post-COVID environment with virtual employees becoming more the norm. At CECO, people are our number one asset.
We are introducing higher merit increases, more hybrid work environments and lots of new training and development opportunities along with greater benefits and more equity ownership to better align our entire team with shareholders.
We have some great programs in place to reward, retain and recruit talent and we’ll look to add even more benefits features in 2022. The final third was execution and supply chain. I’m very pleased with our execution in Q4. We completed key FMEA studies, dove and root causes and remediate critical issues.
Ramesh, our COO, also commissioned a third-party led enterprise-wide project management assessment to identify productivity opportunities. Lastly, we hired Edward LeComte, our first ever continuous improvement leader specifically focused on lean operations.
Supply chain challenges associated with logistics, subcontractor and material availability still persist, but we’ve course corrected many of the areas we can control. The effect of these outcomes plus volume shows up in the non-GAAP operating income and adjusted EBITDA graphs, both improved nearly 3x sequentially, great results.
Year-over-year, we were down slightly because of challenging comparisons. Non-GAAP SG&A at $20 million was flat sequentially, but up $3 million versus same period in the prior year on headcount, add backs, merit inflation, incentive comp and one-time COVID savings in 2020 that didn’t repeat in 2021.
To summarize our EBITDA, I’m pleased and we expect to see a continuation of EBITDA expansion in full year 2022. Slide 12 summarizes the fourth quarter in total. A few housekeeping items. First, GAAP OI was up $1.6 million year-over-year as expenses such as amortization, earn-out. Restructuring and M&A were lower in 2021.
Non-GAAP OI on the other hand, excludes these non-recurring items, it was down $1.2 million year-over-year, mostly on volume and gross margins.
Additionally, non-GAAP EPS was $0.10 in the quarter, down $0.06 year-over-year, attributed to a loss of $0.02 on operations and down $0.04 on certain foreign projects denominated in euros and rupees that were negatively weakened against the dollar. Slide 13 is a full year view of 2021’s performance. Much of this is territory we’ve already covered.
What I’d point investors to is the upper right and the bottom right side of the data table. Orders up $81 million and free cash flow up $11 million year-over-year. These are great precursors to CECO in 2022. Everything in between outlined that 2021 was CECO’s COVID year. In my opinion, we are well positioned to provide additional growth in 2022.
We here at team CECO are only looking up and to the right. Slide 14. Trade working capital was largely benign in the quarter as WIP turn to AR. AR aging is in a great place, and teams are working to improve on milestones. In the meantime, free cash flows remain choppy, but did manage to produce $2 million source of cash in the quarter.
Lastly, on Slide 15, our balance sheet is in the best shape it has ever been after several strategic actions in the quarter. We worked with our syndicate to amend and extend our 2019 credit facility, increasing flexibility for M&A. Thanks to CECO leaders Paul Gohr, Jennifer Turner and our syndicate for the partnership here.
We concluded on our announced $5 million share buyback authorization program back in October 2021. And thanks to the team at Needham for executing this for us. Lastly, we paid down $1.5 million of debt in the quarter.
We will evaluate future stock buyback programs as we believe in returning capital to our shareholders as part of our overall capital allocation strategy. However, we are currently holding our dry powder for a healthy pipeline of M&A that we believe generates greater total returns. A great example of this is last week’s closing of the GRC acquisition.
As mentioned, GRC is a flow control leader serving the industrial water markets. It’s a solid bolt-on to our damper and expansion joint platform and great economics for the CECO shareholder.
We are laser-focused on using our inexpensive cost of debt to make accretive acquisitions of smaller to medium-sized industrial leaders with more short-cycle sales, higher margin profiles and lower capital intensity. Our current M&A funnel is well over $200 million in opportunities and GRC is just one of several we expect to bring to closure in 2022.
As we wrap 2021, I’m more excited about CECO’s future than I had ever been before. The market demand is hot. Our balance sheet is healthy. We’re growing in new adjacencies and CECO’s transformative journey is underway. Todd will elaborate more on what we see ahead.
Todd?.
Thanks, Matt. I agree. I am pleased with our 2021 results and excited for 2022 and beyond. Now let’s go to Slide number 17. On the left side is a summary of the general outlook we provided back in November of 2021.
The concept, which is highlighted here, is that our average quarterly orders of $90 million, which start to produce around $90 million of revenue in future quarters. And as we have been highlighting today, fourth quarter 2021 reflected that level of sales.
We also expected to return to gross margins in the greater than 30% range, which we also did in the fourth quarter. The balance of this slide reiterates that we continue to feel confident about this directional outlook.
Certainly, we are aware there are quarterly puts and takes that relate to in-period costs, which do ebb and flow in any given quarter. Additionally, we acknowledge persistent challenges in supply chains and with short-term inflation. But we aim to offset many of these challenges with good cost management, M&A and other strategic actions.
We remain committed to growth and feel very confident in our ability to deliver. Turning to Slide number 18. Here, we show some additional snapshots of several press releases CECO distributed already in Q1 of this year.
To tie this slide back to the thematic reason for showing Slide 5 earlier in this presentation, we are demonstrating traction on strategic areas we have discussed regarding CECO’s transformation. We have publicly stated that when we were ready, we would start to action strategic, accretive M&A.
As Matt already covered, we announced and then completed the accretive acquisition of GRC. We have a robust pipeline of M&A targets, and we’ll continue to provide transparent updates on our progress. Another snapshot on this slide relates to a large geothermal energy project.
We’ve previously highlighted our focus and internal investments to participate more actively in the energy transition. This term represents the array of sustainable energy initiatives and projects taking off all over the world.
In Q1, we already publicly announced CECO’s project win in this large other geothermal project with engineered solutions from CECO’s Peerless branded portfolio. We are actively bidding and winning projects that relate to numerous other energy transitions.
Given our diverse highly engineered solutions, you can expect to hear about future hydrogen, carbon capture and other biogas related project wins and the investments. It is an exciting time to have decades of experience solving complex engineering challenges in the energy markets. CECO’s diverse leadership position is a real advantage.
Now, let’s wrap up with Slide 19. We made great progress in 2021. We are also glad it is in our rearview mirror. We enter 2022 with a stronger and more diverse backlog than we entered last year. And our pipeline of over $2 billion in sales opportunities remains robust.
There are significant opportunities, big and small, that we are pursuing and already doing a great job of winning in 2022. As Matt mentioned, we are off to a very fast start, we feel. That solid backlog and our active pipeline gives us a lot of confidence we will deliver steady growth in 2022. That is our expectation.
And adding some M&A activity will obviously add to our expected organic growth. We are very close to publishing our inaugural ESG report. We look forward to that announcement and sharing our ESG goals, objectives, targets and commitments. Our first report will just be one step in a continual journey towards our commitment to sustainability.
CECO is committed to steady transformation, investing to grow organically and move into more sustainable and emerging markets. And with our healthy balance sheet, we expect to be programmatic acquirers of accretive and strategic transactions. Before we open the line to questions, let me just share one last thought.
We are certainly troubled by the situation in Ukraine. While CECO does not have a direct exposure to material business in Ukraine or Russia, it is certainly a major impact to global markets. On a personal and leadership perspective, our thoughts are with the millions of people that are being displaced and under siege.
We are evaluating way CECO can lend support. We pray for a return to piece. Our hearts are certainly with the Ukrainian people. With that, we welcome your questions, and we’ll open up the line.
Operator?.
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Jim Ricchiuti with Needham & Company. Please go ahead..
Thank you. Good morning. Congratulations, by the way, on the improved results Q4. Question – a couple of questions. First on GRC. I’m wondering if you could talk a little bit more about that business from the standpoint of how much customer overlap there might be potential opportunities that you see for cross-selling.
And I wonder if you could also share with us what kind of backlog they have recognizing. It sounds like they’re more skewed towards short-cycle business..
Yes. Thanks, Jim. I appreciate the comments on the quarter. Couple of comments and I’ll hand it over to Matt. He’ll provide additional color as well. So first of all, there’s always some overlap in customers.
But our big opportunity here, we think, is utilizing both channels, I suppose, but especially the CECO international channel and a lot of our larger projects as well to bring the GRC product line through our projects, our infrastructure projects. We’ve got a large and developed sales force in the Middle East and other parts of the world.
They just haven’t had a chance to branch out internationally as aggressively. So, we’ll be able to leverage that. And they’ve got a really good, strong distribution themselves. So our ability to bring, whether it’s our flow control products through expanding our distribution, they see projects we don’t.
Historically just really well established in infrastructure water, which is an area that we’ve been investing. We’ll continue to invest. So, I think it’s a really nice balance between the two. Obviously, we’re a much larger organization. So, we’ve got certain areas of scale and balance sheet strength to help also accelerate some investments.
Matt, if you want to add anything to that?.
$2 million of backlog, Jim..
Yes. Thank you..
Got it. Thanks. And I wonder if you could talk a little bit about the revenues that you already alluded to that slipped from Q3 to Q4. How much of that? Were you able to ship all of that? And to what extent have you seen additional slippage just in light of the ongoing supply chain issues that we’re all hearing about the material shortages..
Yes, we’re seeing – it seems like every quarter, we have projects that move around. So, we mentioned in the third quarter, we had approximately $10 million of revenue that just got pushed around – pushed out of the third quarter. I would say we captured – we captured that and then we probably lost a few million from the fourth quarter.
And that that, I mean, when I say lost, I mean, just got pushed out as well. So it's choppy Jim. We're still experiencing it in the first quarter. That doesn't mean that these projects are going away.
We have a tremendous amount of confidence in our project teams and the year, but every quarter it has dynamics, right? Every quarter seems to have, whether it's $5 million, $10 million worth of revenue.
And we are – when you're a project business, you have to wait not just for your products to come in, in your supply chain but then when we're ready to go we have to wait for those customers, and all of their other suppliers to have everything in. So there's a lot of variables at play.
We really like the momentum we have in the marketplace, but it's choppy..
Got it. And I'll jump back into queue. One final question if I may though before I do. Nice improvement at gross margin.
How should we be thinking about gross margins in the near term? You're obviously you're beginning to get some benefit presumably from some of the pricing actions you've taken and some of the other initiatives you have underway any way to think about gross margins?.
Yes. I think that's going to continue to be a little choppy, too, just because of, like you said, but the market continues to – the market continues to throw new challenges at us in terms of cost increases, whether it's – how much we're paying at the pump. We all saw what happened in nickel in just a very short period of time.
So we have to adjust for that, work with our suppliers, work across our logistics. So I think we're in an environment right now where we're doing a nice job of getting price, has to flow through our backlog, of course, which creates a little bit of an imbalance at times. So think of it as being flat.
Could be slightly down a little bit if you want to think about where we're currently at. But again, our long-term aspirations and experience is that we'll get those gross margins back up as we work our way through the year. But it was a nice improvement sequentially. So we appreciate the comment..
Thanks a lot..
Our next question comes from Sameer Joshi with H.C. Wainwright. Please go ahead..
Yes. And good morning and thanks for taking my questions. Again, congratulations for the good progress. For the near-term in 1Q, historically it is sort of a low-quarter of the year. And add to that that you had some spillage from 2Q that you recognized in 4Q.
Should we expect 1Q to be significantly lower to the 4Q numbers?.
Yes. I think your point around our first quarter, like a lot of companies first quarters are sometimes or have proven to be a little bit of a lower quarter. There's a bit of an increase in first quarter costs as we sort of reset the year from an SG&A. There's a lot more accruals that happened in the first quarter as you start through the year.
And again, like we just said, it's going to be a little choppy out there in terms of our ability to execute on all of our projects and the supply chain inflation. We're working through these things. And we feel, like I said, great about 2022.
But the first quarter will certainly reflect a trend that we've probably had historically, which is sequentially, if you go from the fourth quarter to the first quarter, we just have – we have some pressures at every company or I should say every, but a lot of companies, and we certainly have.
They just – there's going to be a little bit more cost sequentially, but nothing that's different than probably a historic trend has proven..
Understood. And then just a quick question on QRC – the GRC, the acquisition.
Is there in that business a sequential and year over improvement that you have seen, is there any granularity you can share on that – that trend?.
There is sequential improvement that's expected is a pretty flat based business every single quarter. No seasonality really associated with it. Year-over-year, we are expecting growth out of that business.
They're ending the year with a pretty decent backlog and orders are strong, especially with the infrastructure bill coming through and spending happening in the water market..
Great. And then just one on the M&A front. You reiterated you're looking at small to midsized opportunities.
Do you have any active discussions that may materialize in the next couple of quarters? Or are these longer term – mid- to longer-term aspirations?.
Yes. We're probably not going to give a huge description of what we're looking at in our pipeline. But other than to say, we will be programmatic. We are looking at transactions that are accretive from a margin perspective, we expect give us more short-cycle sales; expand in the areas of industrial air, industrial water and the energy transition.
Those are our focus areas. We think that's where we already have a seat at the leadership table. We're going to continue to invest in our seat at that leadership table. All of the things we're looking at just also continue to bolster our sort of our strong commitment to protecting people, protecting the environment and protecting industrial equipment.
So we're staying true to our swim lane, so to speak, on M&A. These are small to medium-sized deals at the moment just because we like that size of transaction for us as we just kind of continue to shape our portfolio in the right direction in a steady fashion. We'll look at larger transactions, but that's really where we're looking right now..
Got it. Thanks. I’ll take another questions offline. Thanks..
[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Bill Dezellem with Tieton Capital. Please go ahead..
Thank you. Let's begin, if we could, with the strength of January and February orders this year.
Would you please provide a little more detail behind that?.
Broad-based, Bill, good to speak with you. Thanks for the question. This is Todd. Pretty balanced across most of our platforms. As we've demonstrated throughout 2021, so Q1 maintains that. We've been talking about our pipeline stayed strong. So I would say two or three things balanced across most of our platforms.
Starting to see in the quarter some larger energy and energy transition jobs that we think are proof of the patience that we've had to stay focused in certain areas, starting to really show up in our order bookings.
And we would suggest that the first quarter is – the first two months of the first quarter is as strong as we've seen in the first two months of the quarter in a number of years from a bookings perspective..
Great. Thank you.
And then what more would you like to add relative to GRC and that acquisition and what it brings to you all in the near term and longer term?.
I think it's a great growth opportunity. They are well positioned in the market. We feel that their size is, and their position in the market is something that we can both work and take advantage of in the sense that, there's a lot of opportunities there for both of us to partner across projects.
But we think that it's a business that could be 2x its size and with the right investment and the right focus. And their leadership team is fantastic. They really understand their operations, their markets, the opportunities and the challenges. So whenever you make an acquisition, you bring in strong leadership, that's a double plus..
Great. Thank you..
Thanks, Bill..
Our next question is a follow-up from Sameer Joshi with H.C. Wainwright. Please go ahead..
Yes. Thanks. I'm sorry for missing this question earlier.
But just a quick question on the short cycle margins and the sales cycle, can you – like I know the longer cycles are nine to 18 months and maybe upwards of two years, but short cycle, should we consider it two to three months or less than six months? Or how should we look at it? And then you mentioned margins will be – because you can price it not at historical levels, but at current levels, the margins are better.
But how much better, if you can quantify?.
We would – we quantify short cycle sales of less than four months. It's typically right around 1.5 to two. So pumps, filters, aftermarket services, gathering going out and turning something, we build them.
As far as pricing goes and how we measure it, we've had multiple price increases where we've sent letters to customers, and we've seen anywhere from the range of 5% to 7%. When we actually look at realized probably around 3% to 4%. So it's been very strong on the short cycle acceptance of price increases..
Got it. Thanks..
This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Todd Gleason for any closing remarks..
Thanks, Sarah, and thanks to everyone for the questions, participation this morning to our team at CECO. Again, as always, we appreciate your focus and leadership to navigate a lot of the choppiness and challenges that continue to be in the marketplace.
We've got a great organization of dedicated professionals here to serve our customers and our communities and each other. We look forward to continuing to share our progress as we enter 2022. Again, like Matt and I have articulated, the pipeline remains really strong.
That, coupled with now us starting to be a little bit more active M&A, we think – just continues to support a good growth trajectory for us for the short, medium and hopefully longer term as well. So with that, we'll end today, and we look forward to speaking with many of you throughout the next few days. Thanks a lot..
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect..