AGCO Corporation (AGCO) on Q1 2021 Results - Earnings Call Transcript
Operator: Good day. And thank you for standing by. Welcome to the AGCO 2021 First Quarter Earnings Release Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Greg Peterson, AGCO head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Greg Peterson: Thank you, James. And good morning. Welcome to all of you joining us for AGCO's first quarter 2021 earnings conference call. This morning, we're going to refer to a slide presentation that we posted to our website. You'll find it at www.agcocorp.com. We'll be using non-GAAP measures in the slide presentation, and those non-GAAP measures are reconciled to GAAP measures in the appendix of that presentation. We'll also be making forward-looking statements this morning, including demand, product development and capital expenditure plans and timing of those plans and our expectations with respect to the costs and benefits of those plans. We'll talk about production levels, share repurchase, dividend rates, future revenue, price levels, margins, earnings, cash flow, tax rates and other financial metrics. We wish to caution you that these statements are predictions and that actual events may differ materially. We refer you to the periodic reports that we file from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020. These documents discuss important factors that could cause the actual results to differ materially from those contained in our forward-looking statements. These factors include, but are not limited to, adverse developments in the agricultural industry, including those resulting from COVID-19, including plant closings, workforce availability, supply chain disruptions and product demand. There is also risks around weather, commodity prices and changes in product demand. We disclaim any obligation to update any forward-looking statements except as required by law. We'll have a replay of this call available on our corporate website later today. Moving on, so on the call with me this morning are Eric Hansotia, our Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Andy Beck, our Chief Financial Officer. And with that, Eric, please go ahead.
Eric Hansotia: Thank you, Greg, and good morning. We appreciate your interest in AGCO and your participation on the call today. I'm going to begin my remarks on slide three, where you can see that we had an excellent start to 2021. Our first quarter sales grew nearly 20% on a constant currency basis compared to the first quarter of 2020. The recent rally in commodity prices lifted farmer sentiment, creating higher demand for agricultural equipment in the first quarter. Adjusted operating income was up over 94%, driven by a 300 basis point increase in our adjusted operating margins, with improvement achieved in all of our regions.
Andy Beck: Thank you, Eric. And good morning to everyone. I will start on slide six, which looks at AGCO's regional net sales performance for the first quarter of 2021. AGCO's net sales were up about 20% compared to the first quarter of 2020, excluding the positive impact of currency translation. Strong end market demand and favorable pricing drove the increase across all regions. Europe, Middle East segment reported an increase in net sales of approximately 12%, excluding the positive impact of currency compared to the first quarter of 2020. The largest increases occurred in Germany, Turkey and the UK. Net sales in North America increased approximately 10%, excluding favorable impact of currency translation compared to the levels experienced in the first quarter of 2020. Increased sales at tractors, Precision Planting products and replacement parts produced most of the increase. AGCO's first quarter net sales in South America grew approximately 84% compared to the first quarter of 2020, excluding negative currency translation impacts. Sales rose across all the South American markets with the most significant growth in Brazil.
Greg Peterson: Thanks, Andy. And in the spirit of expanding participation in the Q&A portion of this call. We’ll ask that you limit your questions to - well, limit yourself to one questions and one follow-up. James, with that, why don't we move to the Q&A section?
Operator: And our first question comes from the line of Tim Thein with Citigroup. Go ahead please. Your line is open.
Tim Thein: Thank you. Good morning. Maybe just to follow-on Andy's comments there in terms of the margin improvement, that - plus 150 basis points. What is that, just so I'm clear, what does that assume in terms of net pricing? I think you gave some color regarding that the first quarter, I'm not sure does that get fully unwound for the full year? Or is the expectation that it narrows and you stay on the plus side for the full year?
Andy Beck: Yes. We're anticipating that we stay on the plus side. So in the first quarter, that net pricing was a little below 2% impact. So that well was – we got the pricing in, in advance of the surging commodity price increases that we expect to see for the remainder of the year. As we get to the full year, we said our pricing would be 3.5% to 4%, and our net price would be about 50 to 70 basis points. So we expect to stay positive. There are some challenges that we see kind of keeping the pricing up with the cost in some businesses in the middle part of the year. But by the end of the year, we expect to be fully covering all these costs.
Tim Thein: Okay. Got it. Just a quick follow-up. On the full year, what is the assumption in terms of your dealer inventories, given the issues around component and just product availability? I'm guessing there is some prioritization there that's going on in terms of hitting retail orders versus stock orders. But maybe just some color there in terms of that kind of 10.7 at the midpoint for the full year revenue outlook. What is assumed in there in terms of where dealer inventories end the year? Thanks a lot.
Andy Beck: Right. Well, we – as you know, we worked hard on getting our dealer inventories down last year. And as we look at where our dealer inventories are at the end of the first quarter, they're substantially below where we were a year ago. And a lot of that is due to the work we did last year but also the strong retail activities that we've had. So to your point, the focus is on retail for sure, but we want to make sure we've got enough adequate supply of inventory to meet all the demand that we can accomplish. Our business plan or model really anticipates that our dealer inventory will be relatively flat year-over-year by the end of the year, so no additional increase or reduction planned.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Volkmann with Jefferies. Go ahead please. Your line is open.
Stephen Volkmann: Great. Good morning, everyone. I'm curious, maybe Eric, how you're thinking about sort of how this cycle is unfolding here. And maybe I'll refer to your slide 10, where you have your various regional outlooks. Are those outlooks what you think can actually get produced and sold or is that really what you think demand is? And I guess what I'm trying to figure out is, does demand get pushed into ‘22 because we have supplier issues in ‘21? Just sort of what are you thinking about in terms of the medium term?
Eric Hansotia: Good question, Stephen. Yes, the way I would respond to that is that I believe that there is more demand out there than the industry will be able to supply in 2021, especially in some of our markets. I think South America will be curtailed with - the highest confidence of being curtailed. North America is at risk. Western Europe is probably less vulnerable to a curtailment. But there's just a lot of uncertainty left in the marketplace for what the impacts will be on COVID. So your assumption is the same as what I would guess as well. Some of this demand will not be met.
Stephen Volkmann: And then just a follow-up on that. Is it logically reasonable to think that incremental margins would be better in 2022 as all these supply things kind of revert and we have a more normalized kind of a year, assuming that happens?
Eric Hansotia: Assuming things smooth out, which with vaccines coming online, that's the root cause of these component issues. That, plus a lot of the freight problems, but there's just such a surge, the overall infrastructure wasn't able to catch up. And then we're having spot issues all over the place on all sorts of different commodities and largely COVID is the root cause. So it all comes down to our assumptions on that. If the vaccines work their way through the system and they hold and are effective, then next year could return to normalcy, and a lot of these hidden costs and waste could fade away, which would lead you to believe that there's some incremental margin to be had.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Adam Uhlman with Cleveland Research. Go ahead please. Your line is open.
Adam Uhlman: Hi, guys. Good morning. Congrats on the strong quarter.
Eric Hansotia: Thanks, Adam.
Adam Uhlman: I had a question on slide 5 for your tractor production hours. I guess, I'm just wondering why after the second quarter, the hours wouldn't be more elevated in the second half of the year, maybe closer to, I don't know, some more like the first half of the year, I guess. Why would you be pulling back on your production hours on an absolute basis?
Eric Hansotia: I think that last year was kind of an unusual year in terms of production. We really had a significant delay in production last year in the second quarter. And so the third quarter, when we typically have summer shutdowns and things like that, we actually worked last year. So our plan this year is to have normal summer shutdowns in our plants in 2021. And so that's going to naturally mean that our production in third quarter last year is going to be higher than what we had this year despite the demand. And in the fourth quarter, we expect to see some production increases back end. So I think also fourth quarter is relatively strong. You started to see some of these market increases. So that's what we're seeing so far.
Adam Uhlman: Okay. And could you dimension the order intake, I think you mentioned that orders are up significantly. Are we looking at like 30% type order growth? And maybe flush that out by region. And are you – I assume that you're sold out in some areas of the globe. Maybe you could share with us your availability?
Andy Beck: Sure, yes. So we're, Adam, up close to double pretty much across the regions, which gives us some very good lead times and gives us some good visibility really into the back half of the year. So yes, even though the – we saw some growth in overboard through the end of last year, we continue to see orders strengthen as we came through the first quarter and ended up, like I said, about double where we were last year.
Eric Hansotia: And Adam, that includes green and protein.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jamie Cook with Credit Suisse. Go ahead, please. Your line is open.
Jamie Cook: Hi. Good morning. I guess just my first question. Can you just talk about – I mean, obviously, the order book is pretty strong here today. Can you talk about what you're seeing on the market share front, some of the successes potentially in North America, in South America, if there's anything to be said there? And then I guess my follow-up question, Andy. Obviously, the sales growth is looking to be pretty good. For South America, the margins improved again in the first quarter. Any change in sort of your margin outlook for South America? Thanks.
Eric Hansotia: Sure. You want to take the first half?
Eric Hansotia: Yes. We're continuing on the same trajectory that we have talked to you about in the previous discussions in that we're seeing good success in our large horse - high-horsepower tractors, and that's driven largely by our globalization of the Fendt brand and then our Precision Ag business. So, I can give you a few numbers here. In 2021, our momentum planter volume is going to grow by 60% over 2020. Our smart rows, so we also - in addition to selling full-fledged planters out of the factory, we also sell rows that are intelligent, largely out of Precision Planting. That's up 42% from 2020. And then our smart nozzle installations that go on sprayers are coming out of the factory, we're projecting that will be up 35% since 2019, and we expect that to continue to grow across all markets going forward. So - and our connected machines by the end of the year will be up 4x versus 2019. So, Precision Ag is growing strongly, and some of the largest growth rates are in North America and South America. But then our full machine sales in terms of high horsepower in North America and especially the sprayers, planters, combines, but even tractors in South America are all growing in terms of share as well.
Andy Beck: And Jamie, when you look at share, one of the things that looks a little bit puzzling, especially with our North America numbers is that our sales didn't grow quite as fast as the market, and that's a function of us not building our dealer inventories as much in the first quarter of ‘21 as we did in ‘20. So, our retail market share, as Eric said, did very well, but it's a little bit masked by the fact that we didn't build our inventories like we did last year.
Jamie Cook: Okay, great. And then just any color on the South America margins, sorry?
Andy Beck: Yes. So, on the South America margins, as you said, we got off to a good start this first quarter. What we're looking at for the full year is somewhere 100 to 150 basis point improvement in the margins. We do see a little bit of a weaker mix. Some of our stronger margin markets like Argentina; we expect to start to slow back down. And we're also - the cost increase and cost inflation is the most severe in South America right now, and so there's challenges keeping our pricing up to offset all that. So, a little bit of an issue in a few markets and a few products there. So, about 150 basis points - 100 to 150 basis points is what we're targeting.
Operator: Our question comes from the line of Ann Duignan from JPMorgan. Go ahead please, your line is open.
Ann Duignan: Hi, thank you. It's Ann Duignan. Yes, I'd like to go back to your end market outlook versus your production hours. I'm not sure that you answered the earlier questions sufficiently. I think given your outlook this year and the supply chain constraints, your Q4 production absolute hour’s looks, frankly, woefully low. I mean, why wouldn't it be higher than Q3, back to at least maybe Q1 or Q2 levels, given the lack of dealer inventories, the expectation that demand is likely to be pushed out to 2022? Unless you believe that North America low horsepowers but fall off a cliff into 2022 after the huge expansion we've seen in the last couple of years. So if you could explain that, not the year-over-year production hours, the absolute Q4 hours. Why wouldn't they be higher?
Andy Beck: Well, Ann, what we have in the fourth quarter is that you know, it was against the backdrop of a pretty strong fourth quarter 2020. So we at this point, have our revenue and our projections up only about 3% to 5% in the fourth quarter. So I think we have the huge increase in Q2. And then the back half, it's getting a little more - in Q3, as I mentioned, our sales are expected to be relatively flat versus 2020 because of the increased production we had and catch-up that we did a year ago, and then up about 3.5% - 3% to 5% in Q4. So I think that's the focus. In terms of is there opportunities for increase, I think it, as Eric said, is about ability to produce, and certainly, we're going to be watching the end markets for the rest of the year.
Ann Duignan: But that doesn't really explain the strong demand and the lack of – I mean, every dealer we speak to says they have no inventory, they need inventory. And if you can produce at the absolute levels in Q2 that you're forecasting, why can't you produce them in Q4?
Andy Beck: Well, I think we – last year, we had our dealer inventories coming down. And this year, that's going to give us somewhat of an increase. In terms of production hours, I'm more focused on what our revenue's going to be and I've already described that. The production hours do – should pick up, as we said, in the fourth quarter and then be somewhat in line with what we said the sales increase would be.
Eric Hansotia: And then also, Ann, keep in mind that in Brazil, we also had the maintenance shutdowns in the fourth quarter. So seasonally the production is going to be lower, because of those maintenance shutdowns in Brazil. We have those maintenance shutdowns in Europe in the third quarter. So that's why typically, that fourth quarter production levels aren't as high.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Larry De Maria from William Blair. Go ahead, please. Your line is open.
Larry De Maria: Thanks. Good morning, everyone. You talked about some of the products like the Momentum planter, et cetera. But I think if I'm not mistaken, Mallika's presentation called out a slower-than-maybe-expected rollout of the IDEAL combine. Can you kind of update us on where you are versus where you thought you'd be? Just trying to understand the strength of the overall portfolio, including the harvesting as we go into this up cycle? Thank you.
Eric Hansotia: Yes. IDEAL combine is performing extremely well relative to all the competitors in the marketplace. We run it head-to-head. We've done tests in North America, South America, Europe, Australia, running in the same field against the competition, and it's got just outstanding performance. We've been – in the early stages, we had some reliability problems. We believe that those are largely behind us now. But we always had planned to have a staged ramp-up here in terms of making sure this is a very complicated machine on the one hand. And we had a lot of dealers that weren't so focused on combines in some parts of our network and so we wanted to walk our way into this marketplace. But the machine is performing very, very well. Customers really like, we’ve been supporting it, very carefully to make sure that the ramp-up has been successful. And so we're on track and it continues to grow. We're going to have significantly more sales this year, and our projection is to be growing that again into next year. So it's on a steep growth curve globally. We're still producing in two locations in Europe and in South America. And at some point, we will turn on a US location when the volumes justify. So that was always part of the plan.
Larry De Maria: Okay. As a follow-up, obviously, shareholders supported your proxy and performance in the quarter and obviously, it's pretty good, very good. Are we - more or less, do we think issue, is this maturing and coming to a head or is it becoming still a distraction? Or how would you characterize it overall?
Eric Hansotia: Yes. Well, the - it's - I would say we got positive votes - support votes on all directors and all proposals from TAFE. We've been having active discussions within the Board meetings. And so, I think that it is coming towards -- the discussions are moving towards the center. It's hard to predict exactly where things will go. We've had a long-term relationship with TAFE. But our interest will not always be like we've got a strong vote of support during the shareholder meeting, and we'll just see where things go from here.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Nicole DeBlase with Deutsche Bank. Go ahead please. Your line is open.
Nicole DeBlase: Yes, thanks. Good morning, guys.
Eric Hansotia: Good morning, Nicole.
Nicole DeBlase: I wanted to start on a question similar to Ann's, but rather than focusing on the revenue performance that you guys expect throughout the year, can you talk a little bit about how you're kind of thinking about the progression of margins? And it might be that the margin path kind of follows what you said about revenue, but any color would be helpful?
Andy Beck: Sure. We expect a sizable margin improvement in Q2. Again, last year was down because of the lack of production, so we're looking for a 250 basis point improvement in Q2 over Q2 last year. In Q3, our margins, we expect to actually be lower than 2020. Again, we had unusually high sales and production in 2020. And so that's – we think we'll get kind of more normal cadence that we see in 2021. And then in Q4, we expect our margins to be up again year-over-year in the fourth quarter by 100 to 200 basis points. So all in all, as we said in our comments, that, that would lead to about a 150 basis point improvement in margins on an annual basis.
Nicole DeBlase: Got it. That's really helpful. Thanks, Andy. And then one more question on margins for you. The other driver of upside, I think, versus what we were thinking for the quarter aside from South America was North America margins also looked really strong. Can you talk a little bit about what you're expecting for that segment for the full year?
Andy Beck: Sure. We've got a little bit over 100 basis points improvement for the full year for North America. Some of the improvement, as you point out, came in the first quarter. We had a really good first quarter. And the higher production levels and pricing that we expect to get, we think, can support that margin improvement. The one negative area I'd point out is we do get a little bit of a hit on foreign exchange impacts. We import product from Europe into North America. And so that, with the stronger euro is giving us a little bit of a tighter margin in our North America results. But obviously, overall, with our strong European profits, those are offset by translation benefits. So to the company's bottom line, it's not a big impact, but it does show up in the margins for North America. But overall, a margin improvement is expected in North America, expect to get to double-digit margins this year.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Joel Tiss with BMO. Go ahead, please. Your line is open.
Joel Tiss: I want to change the format a little bit and have a comment and then a question. I bet Martin's doing cartwheels right now with the stock price so strong versus getting all worked up about how his name is pronounced. Anyway, can you guys talk about how the operating margins, like what kind of normalized levels could be possible like looking three to five years out in South America? It seems like there's been a very quick turnaround there. And I just wonder, like if I try to think more structurally what's changed, how do I think about how that translates into margins a couple of years out when things normalize? Thank you.
Andy Beck: Yes. We - Joel, we talked about that a little bit in our strategy discussion that we felt like we needed to continue to focus on the South America margin improvement as a key element of focus for the company over the next number of years. We are way ahead of schedule because of how strong the market is, and so that's really helped us. And we're seeing great success in terms of improvements, and all aspects of our business down there in terms of growing our higher-margin planter business, growing in grain and protein, improvement in our parts sales, all those things are really driving a lot of this improvement. We still have work to do in terms of our cost structure on our tractors and combines. We've talked a lot about how we brought in a new and localized some of our global designs, which is - the costs have been impacted a lot because we're importing more of the content, so we need to localize more of that and find ways to reduce those. And we're also putting a significant amount of pricing and to also offset a lot of this inflation this year. But hopefully, that will carry into improvements in margins going forward. So all that being said, we think we've got still opportunity and work to do in South America. Obviously, the markets helped us. But we expect South America to be in line with our other regions as we move forward.
Joel Tiss: Yes.
Eric Hansotia: Yes.
Joel Tiss: Okay.
Eric Hansotia: The expectation is we just had another view on that business with the Board. They are very pleased with the progress or, like Andy said, ahead of schedule from the plan that we presented them last time. And the mission for every business is to be above 10%, ultimately.
Joel Tiss: Okay. Thank you.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Chad Dillard with Bernstein. Go ahead please. Your line is open.
Chad Dillard: Hi. Good morning, guys.
Eric Hansotia: Good morning, Chad.
Andy Beck: Good morning, Chad.
Chad Dillard: So I wanted to go back to a comment on, that you guys made in your prepared remarks about low horsepower being above the prior peak. Just want to get your perspective. I mean, do you - are you seeing some sort of structural change in that business that would lead to higher mid-cycle, higher peaks? And just like, what's your view on like the medium term in terms of as demand continue to grow over the next couple of years within this business line?
Eric Hansotia: Chad, my - our expectation here is that, this is a, to some extent, a pull forward of demand. This is a peak largely tied to COVID root cause, where you have a lot of folks stuck in their home, looking outside and doing special projects. You see the same thing happening in home improvements, lumber prices, appliance availability and so on. There's not a structural change in refrigerators. We don't think there's a structural change in small horsepower tractors either. So, it's a surge in demand that is very, very high right now. But it's largely tied to COVID.
Chad Dillard: Got you.
Eric Hansotia: I wouldn't change the long-term perspective of the industry.
Chad Dillard: Got you, that's helpful. And then, can you just give us more color on the revenue contribution from your precision Ag business? I believe you called it out as a $400 million business. How are you thinking about that segment for this year? And what's embedded in guidance?
Andy Beck: Yes. In terms of - one thing we can report on is the Precision Planting aspect of that. Precision Planting sales, I think, were up close to 20% in the first quarter, so off to a really good start there. That's about half of that revenue. The rest of the growth is probably in line with what we've seen with our core business. So we're progressing well there. And we'll report maybe more specifically on that, hopefully, throughout the year.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jerry Revich with Goldman Sachs. Go ahead please. Your line is open.
Ashok Sivamohan: Hi. This is Ashok Sivamohan on for Jerry Revich. You mentioned expectations for a 250 basis point year-over-year improvement in margins in the second quarter, which implies flattish margins sequentially. Normal seasonality's for margins to be up around 300 basis points sequentially. So I'm just wondering are there any transitory items in the first quarter margins that, we should consider?
Andy Beck: In the first quarter margins?
Eric Hansotia: Its second, second quarter.
Andy Beck: Yes, second quarter. Well, the second quarter margins, I think the thing to keep in mind is that, we have a pretty significant ramp-up in engineering expenses. And also our SG&A expense is also expected to ramp back-up. Last year, in the second quarter, we really dialed down everything, because we were shut down, weren't producing anything. And so, we're kind of going back to a little more normal activity levels. So our second quarter engineering expense should be up somewhere 40% to 50% and our SG&A up in the 20% to 25% in the second quarter. So, I think that is part of it. And then also, again, there are some areas like particularly grain and protein where our pricing is lagging a little bit the surging steel prices on some of the product sales that we'll have in the second quarter, so a little bit tighter margins there. So, issues here and there on really price/cost would be the other thing that I'd highlight.
Ashok Sivamohan: Great. And in terms of the increased investments in smart farming and Precision Ag, I'm just wondering if you can provide extra details on the investments being considered and also how you think about organic versus M&A opportunities.
Eric Hansotia: Well, we've already talked to you about the - it's around $50 million extra in engineering expense. Largely, that's all aimed at Precision Ag type solutions. And so that's the organic portion. We're actively looking all the time at acquisitions that would fit in either as a product to fill in a Precision Ag portfolio or a capability. So, you saw 151 Research in our grain and protein business a little while back, provides intelligence to our grain business. Now, you can essentially get an MRI signal of the green pile. We've got other discussions underway. And so we're looking for a balance between the two to try and accelerate this as fast as we possibly can. Our vision is to become the trusted partner and industry-leading smart ag solutions, and we want to propel forward as fast as possible to deliver on that vision.
Andy Beck: The other piece of it, we're also investing and it doesn't show up in engineering is in our digital customer experience. We talked a lot about that at our analyst meeting. And when you think about our web presence and our ability to do business with our customers electronically, that's one of the areas that has been a key focus. And we think it's going to help us drive better penetration of some of our products and better service all to our customers going forward. So, that's another area that we're spending a lot of time and effort around.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Kristen Owen with Oppenheimer. Go ahead please, your line is open.
Kristen Owen: Thanks for taking the question. Really strong performance in grain and protein in the quarter. I believe you came into the year with a strong backlog there. So, can you talk about order trends for that business and what your market share expectations are for the year?
Andy Beck: For the grain and protein, order board is up about 80%, I think, versus a year ago. So, we have a good order backlog. Really varies a lot by region where we have seen significant orders increase in Asia-Pacific Africa, as we mentioned in our comments. There's a lot of interest in refreshing and improving the protein production capabilities of that market, so we have very strong demand there. South America, market's still strong. In North America, we're seeing very high orders and interest on the grain part of the business, so the silos and the conditioning equipment and handling equipment. But our orders are down and -- are down on the protein equipment. So, protein is, as we also commented, is where there's a lot of issues in terms of with the higher commodity prices, those are higher input costs. So their margins are challenged and also still a lot of disruption from the COVID situation in terms of protein production facilities. So they're not investing right now. So it's a little bit of a mix of what's going on, better in grain and worse in protein right now.
Kristen Owen: Okay. Thank you for that color. And then my follow-up question is really as it relates to the other side of the corn on commodities inflation. We are seeing a lot of tightness in crop protection that's driving up prices. So can you talk about any impact that that may be having on demand for some of your precision technologies? I think you mentioned some numbers around sprayer orders, but any additional color you can provide there?
Andy Beck: No, I think it's a great time for Precision Ag growth. There's a – for the reasons you said, Precision Ag, one of the roles of Precision Ag is to more efficiently apply inputs, seed and chemical. And so that's one driver. And then the second driver is general affordability of the farmer. And both of those are extremely positive right now. And so that's why I gave you those numbers of what we're seeing in terms of growth year-over-year on planter and sprayer technology. It's extremely strong, anywhere from 40% on rows, 60% on planters and 35% on our nozzles from 2019.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Rob Wertheimer with Melius Research. Go ahead please. Your line is open.
Rob Wertheimer: Yes. Hey, I just have a big quick picture question on where you would put Europe in the cycle. You show the Western Europe numbers. I don't know if the rest of EAME has been generally stronger over the last couple of years, whether that's structural or not. And do you have more granular detail on how much you sell in France and Germany and other places? Is 2021 fairly high cycle or where would you characterize it? And then the real question, I guess, is, the follow-up is, are you seeing farmers want to sustainably purchase more or accelerate trade-in especially in Europe due to Precision Ag cost out there? Thanks.
Eric Hansotia: We'd say Europe is close to mid-cycle. It just doesn't go through the same volatility swings that other markets do. One of the major reasons is that there's a higher subsidy level in Europe, so that provides more stability because a larger portion of the farmer income is subsidy-based. They don't have the highs and the lows that other markets do. So we see increased farmer sentiment, increased market demand, and that's generally based on really commodity price-driven today, and so those two are linked closely. Precision Ag is also a driver. It's of interest. We're growing our Precision Planting business in – throughout Europe. And it's growing – it doesn't grow quite as fast as we're seeing in North America and South America. Typically, those two markets lead. And one of the reasons is farm size, that the average farm size in Europe is generally smaller. Now in Eastern Europe, that's not the case. But in Western Europe, an average farm size is a little bit smaller, so Precision Ag adoption happens a little bit later than it does in North and South America.
Operator: And we have time for one last question. Our final question comes from the line of Brett Linzey with Vertical Research. Go ahead please. Your line is open.
Brett Linzey: Hey. Thanks for squeezing me in, and good morning everybody.
Eric Hansotia: Good morning, Brett.
Brett Linzey: Yes. I just wanted to come back to the order boards, really healthy. Appreciate all the color on some of the different technologies. Have you already opened order slots for next year? Is there customer indication they're looking to procure equipment looking into next year?
Eric Hansotia: No. We don't have order slots for next year yet. Those are just dealer forecasts and market forecasts.
Brett Linzey: Got it. And then just back to the production downtime. You noted suspending production in Germany. What is the duration there and what is the anticipated impact? And I guess, what is the gating factor to shuttering more capacity in other regions?
Eric Hansotia: Yes. So most of the shutdowns that we described, this one was week to 10 days, something like that. We've been – we've had plants – some plants not be affected so far. We've had some plants down two weeks so far. And what our manufacturing teams are working on is how to catch these lost days back up, working with unions and work councils to determine whether we can work on weekends, we can take vacation days, flex days, all sorts of mechanisms to get that capacity back in later in the year. So that's part of the challenge this year is constantly re-planning and re-forecasting and working on being as flexible as possible so that we can produce and meet all the demands that are out there. But a lot of these are a couple of days here and there or a week. And so that's what we're dealing with right now.
Operator: And with that, ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to turn the call back over to Mr. Peterson for some closing remarks.
Greg Peterson: Thanks, James. And we just want to thank everyone for participating today and for your interest in AGCO. We look forward to continuing to answer questions as we go forward in the coming days. Thanks, and stay well, everyone.
Operator: We thank you for joining the call today. This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.