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Good morning, and welcome to the Regal Beloit Fourth Quarter 2019 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note, this event is being recorded.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Rob Cherry, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, operator. Good morning, and welcome to Regal Beloit's Fourth Quarter 2019 Earnings Conference Call. Joining me today are Louis Pinkham, our Chief Executive Officer; and Rob Rehard, our Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Before turning the call over to Louis, I would like to remind you that the statements made in this conference call that are not historical in nature are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees since there are inherent difficulties in predicting future results, and actual results could differ materially from those expressed or implied in forward-looking statements. For a list of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from projected results, please refer to today's earnings release and our SEC filings.
On Slide 3, we state that we are presenting certain non-GAAP financial measures in this presentation. We believe that these are useful financial measures to provide you with additional insight into our operating performance, and for helping investors understand and compare our operating results across accounting periods and, in the same manner, as management. Please read this slide for information regarding these non-GAAP financial measures, and please see the appendix for reconciliations of these measures to the most comparable measures in accordance with GAAP.
Now let me briefly review the agenda for today's call. Louis will lead off with his opening comments and an overview on the quarter. Rob will then provide our fourth quarter financial results in detail and provide an outlook for 2020. We will then move to Q&A, after which, Louis will have some closing remarks.
Now I will turn the call over to Louis.
Thanks, Rob, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our Fourth Quarter Earnings Conference Call and thank you for your interest in Regal. We continued to experience tough macro conditions in the quarter. Our fourth quarter financial results reflected the ongoing slowdown in industrial markets particularly in the U.S. and China due to the ongoing global trade uncertainties, weakness in the industrial distribution channel and inventory destocking in the HVAC and pool pump markets. Regal posted negative 9.3% organic growth in the quarter, of which approximately 1.7% was from our 80/20 account pruning efforts.
Overall orders were down 2.8% in the quarter. Excluding a onetime blanket project order, orders were down 5.7% for the company. This compares to down 10% in Q3. Orders were relatively flat in the quarter for the industrial business, but down mid- to high single-digit for the other 3 segments, excluding the unusual blanket order.
Despite this challenging sales environment, we generated an adjusted EPS of $1.25 and delevered well below our normal rate at 12.2%. I am proud of our Regal teams that have been driving 80/20, lean, productivity and supply chain improvements, along with SG&A reductions to simplify our business. We are still in the early stages of executing on these tools and efforts, but the benefits are already showing in our results.
Our full year deleverage rate was 15.5%. You can see this improvement in our sales per employee metric, which was up approximately 7% over 2018. As is clear from our earnings release, we made a strategic decision to reorganize into 4 reporting segments. Climate and PTS will remain unchanged. D&I has been split into 2 segments: Commercial Systems and Industrial Systems. All 4 segments currently have a president who reports directly to me with the previously disclosed retirement of the Regal COO. This new segment alignment will improve transparency, focus and accountability, while placing a greater spotlight on performance, in particular with the Commercial Systems and Industrial Systems businesses.
Back to Q4 2019 performance. Rob is going to provide more detail on segment performance, but I will share my high-level perspective. In the Commercial Systems and Industrial Systems businesses, the market headwinds from the overstocking in the pool pump market, the general industrial slowdown and the ongoing weakness in China from trade uncertainty all continued to weigh on sales. In both businesses, we have been reducing SG&A costs and are deploying 80/20 techniques. As a result, both businesses delevered at lower than historical rates. Our rigorous cadence, including weekly and monthly business unit and presidents' operating reviews is starting to pay off.
However, there is no question that our industrial business, in particular, is underperforming. But we have taken clear actions that will drive margin improvement in 2020, even with the lower sales levels. This will be accomplished through 80/20 SKU reduction, a new line of cost competitive motor and generator solutions for the North American market, as shown on this slide.
Site consolidation, improving our supply chain management and focusing on our highly valued customers. Our Commercial Systems business also has significant self-help opportunities that will improve performance in 2020. In addition, we are excited about the growth that will come from the 2021 pull pump energy efficiency regulation and are currently developing differentiated product to meet this requirement.
In addition, we are accelerating global growth of our air handling solution by expanding our portfolio and entering into new markets, and we are bringing new technology into the market in our high-speed motor offering. We feel confident that our investments in product and technology will pay off in the future.
Climate and PTS performed solidly given the market conditions. Climate improved operating margin by 240 basis points and PTS improved by 120 basis points. This was achieved despite headwinds from weather and continued inventory destocking, which drove mid-single-digit organic sales declines in both segments.
I am especially proud of our Climate and PTS teams that even with the sales declines, both improved operating profit year-over-year. I am also excited about the organic growth initiatives in both of these businesses that will impact 2020.
In Climate Solutions, two examples of this are the FER legislation that went into effect on July 1, 2019, driving higher energy efficiency in gas furnace products in the North American market. And while we gained $5 million incremental revenue in 2019 with forecasting market demand, we expect $35 million incremental in 2020. The second example is our premix boiler solution, which assists in efficient, clean burning of natural gas to heat water. Regal is a leader in this product category in the domestic market and has significant opportunity for growth in the global hydronic heating and water heating segments, which expands Regal into unserved spaces with highly differentiated product. This is a global opportunity of over 10 million units, and we have already developed a pipeline of over $30 million of sales opportunities.
In our PTS segment, as an example, we are laser-focused on our unit material handling ModSort offering, where our sales opportunity funnel has tripled in the last 3 months. Our product is well-differentiated, provides cost savings to our customers, improve productivity, safety and ergonomics and has a less than 1-year payback. In addition, our renewable energy business continues to grow as we introduce additional solutions to this market. We more than doubled the business in 2019 and expect to be another year of double-digit growth. Both of these businesses have flourished in the decentralized organizational structure, have made compelling growth initiative investments and have their business unit leadership firmly in place.
For the total company, we have new leadership in 12 of our 25 business unit or sales leadership roles, hiring roughly 1/3 of the leaders from outside of the business. This mixture of tenured Regal leaders plus external hires creates a really solid team of business executives that are providing new ideas and perspectives to drive further performance improvements.
In addition, I want to share some more details on our 80/20 effort. In the fourth quarter, we pruned low-margin accounts with total sales of over $14 million, approximately 1.7% of sales. The 80/20 principle and methodology is quickly permeating the organization in our day-to-day activities.
To date, we have already trained over 900 Regal associates in 80/20 or 22% of our salaried workforce. 80/20 is clearly taking hold at Regal. For the fourth -- for the quarter, our free cash flow was $122.2 million, up $28.2 million from the same period of 2018. Through a continued data analytic approach to inventory management, our teams drove an inventory reduction of $47 million in the quarter. We finished the year with free cash flow of $316.1 million, up $31 million from 2018. It was an excellent year for cash management, and I can't thank our teams enough for their efforts.
As I have shared in all of our earnings calls, we are taking a non-biased approach at evaluating our portfolio. It is clear that our Industrial Systems segment, in particular, has opportunity for significant self-help, and I believe we have a clear path to drive shareholder value. Our focus is on improving earnings and ROIC. But in addition, we are considering acquisitions that could make us stronger, in particular, in our PTS and Climate Solutions businesses, where we can leverage Regal's core competencies of strong channel to market and our global footprint while driving significant cost synergies. However, with the current market conditions and inflated valuations, we will only make portfolio moves that are accretive to shareholder value. We will share more with you on our strategy at our Investor Day in March.
In summary, our reaction to market headwinds, the deleverage in the quarter, along with the strong free cash flow aligns with the improvements we are driving at Regal. We are well-positioned for growth when demand returns and destocking subsides. I am very excited about our future prospects.
And with that, I will now turn the call over to Rob, who will provide more details of our financial performance.
Thank you, Louis, and good morning, everyone. As Louis mentioned, we had some significant top line headwinds in the quarter that saw weakness in several end markets and regions. Despite these sales headwinds, Regal delevered at 12.2%, well below our normal rate, helping to minimize the volume impact to our operating profit.
I will start by providing comments on the segments and end with more detail on the total company and our guidance. As Louis mentioned, the company has realigned into 4 business segments, effective December 28, 2019. Those segments are Commercial Systems, Industrial Systems, Climate Solutions and Power Transmission Solutions. For the recast financial results related to this resegmentation, please see the tables in the appendix of our earnings release or this presentation.
Starting with Commercial. Organic sales in the fourth quarter were down 10.4% from the prior year. This segment saw double-digit declines in North American pool pump and in general industry, along with low single-digit declines in the China market. The decline in sales was also driven by our proactive approach to pruning low-margin accounts as we continue to execute on our 80/20 initiative. The impact of this pruning initiative was approximately 200 basis points over the organic sales decline. The adjusted operating margin in the quarter for Commercial was 7.5%, down 290 basis points compared to the prior year. This margin was largely down due to the volume decline, along with the impact of unfavorable mix, primarily in the pool pump distribution market. However, margins were also impacted by the fact that we allocated corporate expenses to Nicotra Gebhardt business within this segment in 2019, but did not allocate corporate expenses to this business in 2018, the year of acquisition. Despite these headwinds, we were able to partially offset the impact with favorable price cost and 80/20 actions. For the year, deleverage in the Commercial segment was 14.3% on an adjusted basis, well below the normal deleverage in this segment and a clear indication that the actions around 80/20 and productivity improvements are gaining traction.
Orders in Commercial for the quarter were down approximately 8%, reflecting weakness in a number of our end markets, along with continued destocking in pool pump. However, this is an improvement from the 11% reduction we saw in the third quarter.
Lastly, we are seeing some slight improvement in first quarter order rates, but it is still too early to determine if this improvement is sustainable. In Industrial, organic sales in the fourth quarter were down 14.2% from the prior year. The segment saw double-digit declines in power generation, North American general industrial motors and China industrial markets. The decline in power generation is primarily due to the continued project delays in the data center industry as well as weakness in oil and gas. The decline in sales was also driven by our proactive approach to pruning low-margin accounts as we continue to execute on our 80/20 initiative.
The impact of this pruning initiative was approximately 150 basis points of the organic sales decline. The adjusted operating margin in the quarter for Industrial was 1.2%, down 250 basis points compared to the prior year. The margin was primarily down due to the volume decline and the lower mix of power generation sales.
In addition, margins in the quarter were impacted by the ongoing impact of tariffs. However, despite the headwinds, we were able to partially offset the impact with SG&A cost reductions and our 80/20 initiative. Deleverage in the Industrial segment was 18.3%, significantly below the normal deleverage rate in this segment. While the margin in this segment is not where we want it, it did improve sequentially in each quarter of 2019. Orders in Industrial for the quarter were down approximately 1%, significantly improved from the 16% reduction in the third quarter.
Turning to Climate Solutions. Organic sales in the fourth quarter were down 6.5% from the prior year. The decrease was primarily driven by the mild start to the winter, and by the impact of the FER prebuy in the first half of the year. The decline in sales was also driven by our proactive approach to pruning low-margin accounts as part of our 80/20 initiative. The impact of this pruning initiative was approximately 200 basis points of the organic sales decline. On a positive note, we saw double-digit sales growth in our Asia Pacific region during the quarter. The adjusted operating margin in the quarter for Climate was 17.1%, up 240 basis points compared to the prior year. The margin expansion was driven by productivity improvements, SG&A reductions and actions around our 80/20 initiative. These efforts allowed us to beat -- to more than overcome the margin headwind from the sizable volume decline. Operating profit grew by 8.6% despite the 6.5% organic sales decline in the quarter.
Orders in the Climate segment for the quarter were down approximately 7%, which was a deterioration from the down 2% rate we saw in the third quarter of this year. As previously mentioned, the warm start to winter, along with the impact of the FER prebuy in the first half of the year, dampened our residential HVAC demand in the quarter.
Lastly, as we enter the first quarter, order rates continue to be weak from a year-over-year perspective, but it is still early and very dependent on weather conditions.
Turning to Power Transmission Solutions. Organic sales in the fourth quarter were down 7.2% from the prior year. The primary headwind in this segment was the continued slowdown in oil and gas, both midstream and upstream. In fact, in the second half of 2019, we essentially received no new orders for frac pump gearboxes. We also continued to be impacted by weakness in North American industrial markets in the distribution channel, along with weakness in the beverage conveying market. The decline in sales was also driven by our proactive approach to pruning low-margin accounts as part of our 80/20 initiative. The impact of this pruning initiative was approximately 100 basis points of the organic sales decline. Partially offsetting these challenges was significant positive growth in the renewable energy end markets.
The adjusted operating margin in the quarter for PTS was 13.3%, up 120 basis points compared to the prior year. Favorable price cost, improved productivity, SG&A cost reductions and 80/20 actions more than offset the significant volume decline. Operating profit grew by 1.6% despite the 7.2% organic sales decline in the quarter.
Orders in PTS for the quarter were up approximately 8%, a reversal of the down 16% in the third quarter. However, the improvement was primarily driven by activity in the renewable energy space where customers are buying ahead of reduction of a tax credit in 2020. Looking at standard product order rates in the quarter, which would exclude the engineered-to-order solutions, we saw a decline of approximately 8%, slightly improved from the third quarter decline, but still negative. As we enter the first quarter, we continue to see weakness in distribution and expect orders to be relatively flat to the fourth quarter.
Now I will summarize a few key financial metrics for the fourth quarter. Our capital expenditures were $15.1 million in the quarter. The total for the full year was $92.4 million. We continue to be focused on ensuring that we deploy capital that drives returns above our average -- weighted average cost of capital and ultimately improve shareholder value. Our simplification and footprint consolidation activities resulted in $18.1 million of restructuring and related costs in the quarter. The full year restructuring and related costs totaled $31.3 million.
We expect our 2019 restructuring actions to result in more than $38 million in annualized savings, an additional $6 million of savings above what we communicated last year -- last quarter, excuse me. The adjusted effective tax rate in the quarter was 22.2%. The higher effective tax rate in the quarter was due to an unfavorable true-up of a tax on our distribution between 2 of the company's foreign subsidiaries, partially offset by the favorable impact of higher-than-expected earnings in lower tax regions.
We provided a table in the appendix of this presentation to reconcile the GAAP ETR to the adjusted ETR. Our full year adjusted ETR was 19.9%. Our total debt was $1.137 billion, and our net debt was $806 million. Our net debt was down $101.8 million from the end of the third quarter and down $252.4 million from the end of last year. We ended the quarter with our net debt-to-adjusted EBITDA ratio at 1.7, down from 1.9 last quarter and well within our comfort zone of 1.5 to 2.0. We received -- we achieved $122.2 million of free cash flow in the quarter, up $28.2 million from the fourth quarter of 2018. This was driven in part by a $47.3 million inventory reduction in the quarter. For the full year 2019, we achieved $316.1 million of free cash flow, up $31 million from 2018. Again, most of this improvement was driven by the trade working capital improvements made throughout the year. Also in the fourth quarter, we purchased approximately 181,000 of our shares for $15 million. This brings our year-to-date purchases to approximately 2.2 million shares as we continue to execute on our balanced capital allocation strategy.
Now I will provide our full year guidance for 2020. Our updated guidance assumes organic sales growth to be flat to slightly down. We expect to see stronger headwinds in the first half of the year, with some recovery in the second half, barring any further significant macroeconomic challenges. We are expecting our full year 2020 GAAP EPS to be in a range of $5.35 to $5.75. On an adjusted EPS basis, we are expecting a range of $5.65 to $6.05, an increase of roughly 7% at the midpoint. On the bottom of this slide, you can find our other guidance assumptions for 2020.
Although we are not anticipating much sales growth, we continue to expect to see benefits from our reorganization, restructuring and 80/20 efforts, allowing us to operate more efficiently, help mitigate the soft sales growth and set us up for future profitable growth.
Operator, we are now ready to take questions.
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Mike Halloran with Baird.
So why don't we just start with the guidance side and talk about a couple of things here? One, the sequential trends into the first quarter seemed like they're stable, if not improving in specific areas. Maybe just touch a little bit on that. And then also, how much of an improvement are you embedding in guidance? Is this slight improvement? Something more significant? And how would you compare to normal seasonality?
Sure. Mike, this is Rob. I'll take that one. So first of all, from a cadence standpoint, going into the first quarter, let's talk about top line first. We certainly are seeing some headwinds, especially in our Climate segment. We talked about that a little bit as we talked about order rates entering the quarter. All of our segments are certainly seeing some pressure as we enter the first quarter. The first half of the year, we do expect to be pressured from a top line perspective and from a bottom line perspective. From a margin -- switching down to margins now. We see that on a year-over-year basis, we'd expect that Commercial would be down slightly, Industrial up slightly along with Climate and PTS relatively flat. But again, the top line headwinds in the first quarter are certainly fairly significant. And in light of everything that's going on in the economy right now, we do see that pressure continuing at least through the first quarter, if not through the first half.
Was that -- I was more referring to kind of a sequential trend first -- fourth to first, Rob. Do you think there's stability on that side? But I do certainly appreciate the incremental color.
Yes, there is certainly -- I think that from a fourth-to-first standpoint, we will continue to see pressure on the top line, again, especially in the Climate segment. But from a margin perspective, we would expect the margins to be relatively flat for most of our segments from fourth-to-first perspective. Although we don't provide, as you know, guidance from a quarterly perspective. That's just a little bit of color on how it should work sequentially.
And then the embedded back half recovery? Just some comments on that.
Yes. So we've got savings that we've talked about throughout 2019 to the tune of $32 million. Part of that is related to the reorganization at $15 million on an annualized basis. Plant rationalization at about $17 million. And then we just announced another benefit as a result of restructuring of about $6 million. So we have about $30 million -- $38 million of annualized benefit. The -- we do expect that we would see a fair amount of that come into 2020, more back-half weighted. The reorg, the $15 million we would expect to see throughout the year and at the full run rate of the $15 million. However, the plant simplification activities, we talked about it in third quarter -- second and third quarter, we would expect to see that more back-half weighted as we go into 2020. And we'd expect the other restructuring we just announced of $6 million to be more back-half weighted with about half of that coming in 2020.
So most of the benefit of the savings that we're talking about is coming through the second half with the exception of the original $8 million to $15 million we talked as a result of the reorg.
And then just a comment on demand assumptions front half versus second half and why there's confidence in the acceleration? And how -- what kind of magnitude are you talking about contextually?
Yes, Mike. So this is Louis. Let me take this one. So we're certainly coming out of the fourth quarter. Orders weren’t down as much in Q3, but certainly down. The expectation going into the first half is that first quarter is going to be light in year-over-year perspective and then recovery through the year with the second half being stronger. That second half stronger is really driven by 3 things: one is a little bit better comps to compare against; plus, as I talked about in my commentary, we've got some really solid commercial initiatives that we're driving, in particular, in the Climate and PTS business that we're gaining some momentum on; and then we just expect an overall improvement in -- a slight improvement in market that's going to make the second half stronger than the first half.
Our next question comes from Julian Mitchell with Barclays.
Lucky to get a question in after that barrage. Maybe just the first question around the inventory levels. Maybe if you could just characterize how you see those at your channel partners and customers across the different segments, particularly, I guess, the progress in Industrial?
Yes. So I'm happy to -- I'll take that one, Julian. So -- but I'm going to start with PTS and tell you -- and we see the channel inventories. I would tell you, we worked through those inventories in Q4 from a PTS perspective. So we did not see destock a significant -- we do not expect a significant change from a destocking perspective in Q1 of this year. However, we still see destocking in both the Commercial and Industrial, into that matter in Climate, especially with OEMs going through this quarter. We've seen the inventory levels come down from Q3 to Q4, but we still expect to have to work through that -- through this quarter. We expect to be through destocking by the end of Q1.
That's helpful. And then my follow-up, maybe focused on the Industrial Systems segment. So in Q4, you had that 1.5 points sales impact from 80/20 pruning. Should we expect that number to get larger in 2020 as you sort of get your arms around the business? And maybe any color at all you could give on the sort of margin range of the assets inside the segment? There are some that are very high-margin and then a mass of sort of breakeven-ish profits or losses? Maybe give us some broad-brush comments on that.
Yes, sure. Happy to, Julian. So you're absolutely right. 80/20, we saw pruning in fourth quarter of about 1.5%. We're open to sharing that we expect around 2% for total Regal in 2020 of further pruning. Now I would expect more in the Industrial Systems business, but we're not really ready to give that guidance. We are digging deep. This is what 80/20 helps you with as it allows you to segment the data, understand your highly valued customers, your valued customers, your A products, your B products, and then determine what's the best path forward. For Industrial Systems, we do expect to continue to see pruning in 2020.
From a margin perspective, Julian, we don't really give specific gross margins within a segment. What I can tell you is that we have clear path to improve the performance of margins in that segment. 80/20 is going to help. SKU reduction is going to be significant. We're launching a new line of motors and generators for the North American market that are much more cost competitive. So again, our view is, this is a segment that there is real value-creation opportunities through cost reduction that don't need to occur with volume either.
So we're pretty bullish on our ability to improve margins in this segment.
Our next question comes from Christopher Glynn with Oppenheimer.
So I was just curious on the restructuring savings coming through in 2020. Broad stroke way to think about the geography of that among the segments?
Yes. So this is Rob, Chris, I'll take that one on. So certainly, as you've seen in the past, we have put a lot of our restructuring dollars towards C&I. That was because we had readily-actionable projects. And as a result, Commercial delevered well in 2019 and held margins around 9%. And now we're actively taking the same approach with Industrial. But there are clear restructuring activities in each of our segments and all of our segments have opportunities. So although we are shifting some of the focus now towards Industrial to get that margin profile up to what we'd like it to be, there are certainly opportunities in all segments. And so it's fairly evenly weighted with the exception of Climate, you don't need as much in Climate, the margin profile. We've done a lot of restructuring in our past in the Climate segment. And so it's not as much restructuring dollars allocated to Climate in 2020.
Okay. And on the $17 million savings annualized related to the plants that's second half weighted, should we anticipate kind of full annualized run rate in the back half?
You would expect something close to an annualized run rate in the second half of the year with the full run rate coming in '21. But certainly, yes, on an annualized basis, that would be your second half assumption.
Okay. And then on Industrial Solutions, is relative scale serving those markets a competitive issue at all with channels and end customers?
Yes. I'll take that. Our position is not as strong in the Industrial Systems business as it is in some of our other segments. But we have differentiated products and solutions that have strong -- our associates and our leaders in those businesses have strong application knowledge of how they get deployed in those markets. And so there are parts of that business that we're very bullish on that can still grow. I'd say in -- so again, those niche segments that we like a lot. And then the other part of that business is standard motors that we need to be more cost competitive. And that's exactly why we're coming out with the new line of motors and generators to be more cost competitive in the segment.
Okay. And did you give a free cash flow guidance?
We didn't on the page, but we would expect free cash flows to exceed 100% of adjusted net income in the year.
Our next question comes from Chris Dankert with Longbow Research.
I guess, to pull the thread a little bit more on Julian's question. Historically, the big focus was get C&I to 10% EBIT margin, and maybe we have to wait until March, but I'm going to try here anyway. Is it fair to assume Industrial EBIT margin is significantly higher, but probably less than 10% and maybe Commercial is above 10%? Can we kind of get that bigger than a bread basket sort of quantification?
Here's what I'll tell you, Chris, and this is Louis. We see an absolute path to get our Industrial business return on invested capital over our weighted average cost of capital for Regal. And that's our focus. Now this is not going to be an overnight activity, it's going to take time. But with the approach that we're taking to this business around driving cost competitiveness, 80/20, we're very confident in our ability to improve shareholder value through that effort. Now Commercial is further along. And we're excited about doing even more with Commercial and it will come quicker. So I think for now, that's how I'd like to summarize the response on C&I.
Got it. That's helpful. And again, the new restructuring, very exciting. Not to get greedy, but it seems like you guys are moving quick. So is there more to be announced yet from a restructuring or a plant footprint perspective? And I'm not looking at quantification there, but just can we expect there is still work to be done from a big picture perspective there?
Yes. So I'll take that one as well, Chris. Absolutely. There is a path. Our -- and honestly, our square footage utilization is not where it needs to be. And we've got some more work to do there. I don't know that we'll be providing a lot more guidance in March. But we'll be giving an overview over the next few years and our thought process around capacity and utilization. But there is certainly a path to further simplification.
Our next question comes from Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Just to kind of comment the C&I in a different way. So I think, Louis, when you came in, you had talked about there being some noncore businesses. And just wondering if that informed kind of how you split the 2 businesses here? And just kind of how you balance kind of getting the margins up versus saying, hey, some of these businesses are noncore, and we should just move on?
Yes. It's a good question, Jeff. I'm actually -- and I hope I didn't say it this way, I'm not a believer necessarily in core versus noncore. I'm a believer in businesses that I think can be positioned well for future success and have good returns and shareholder value creation. So it is not -- I'd say that's a bit of a strategic change for Regal, honestly, since I've started. So no, I don't -- the split of Commercial and Industrial wasn't because of core, noncore. It really was all about getting a higher level of visibility, providing a greater sense of transparency and a major focus on what we need to do to drive improvement in the performance of the business. So I wouldn't actually read into core versus noncore with this action.
Okay. And then, I think you mentioned a couple of times the climate weakness in the order rates. Do you have a sense of what's going on there? Is it just the milder weather? Or is it -- there's some heavy destocking going on? Just maybe speak. And then as you look at that FER opportunity, like are we done kind of through the prebuy, and we just get the full $35 million? Or is there an offset with destocking?
Yes. No, I think you kind of hit the nail on the head with the first 2 parts of your answer, which is, certainly, mild weather has had an impact on average, the cooling days were down 6% to norm, and that has certainly had an impact. And we are also seeing inventory adjustments at our OEMs that are having an impact. But we're not -- we don't expect this to continue beyond the first quarter. Now there is the FER overhang, which -- a $9 million prebuy in the first half of the year that we're still working through. But we -- barring any significant changes from a macroeconomic perspective, we still expect incremental $35 million of sales of the FER solution in 2020.
Okay. And then just one final one. The pool pump destocking, do you think that's done? Or is there more to go there?
Through this quarter is our expectation.
[Operator Instructions] Our next question will come from Joe Ritchie with Goldman Sachs.
Maybe just following on that thread. And just to make sure I understand it. On FER for Q1, is Q1 going to have less of an impact or more of an impact than 4Q had in terms of prebuy?
In terms of prebuy. So the prebuy ended at the end of Q2 of last year. And what you're asking us is how we worked through that full prebuy? And are we back to normal demand levels for Q1? And I would say not quite yet.
Right. I would add on that the overhang will linger into the first quarter, certainly not to what we experienced in the fourth quarter, but we are seeing the mix up to higher-efficiency motors.
Got it. Okay. That's clear. And then I know there's been obviously a lot of discussion on the margin opportunity within Commercial and Industrial. But the performance this quarter in both Climate and in PTS, just given the volume declines, I thought was pretty impressive. And so how do you think about the longer-term margin entitlement for those 2 businesses given that we're basically sitting here at record margins for both of those businesses today?
Yes. Let me take that on. First of all, and I agree and just incredibly proud of our teams, Climate and PTS had a really solid Q4, and for that matter, solid in 2019, even given the tough sales impacts of macro conditions. These are both very well-performing businesses. And we're actively looking to invest in driving growth. Now how do I think about the business? Climate, I think, margin potential is roughly where it is. And so we're looking to grow. PTS still has some room to improve our bottom line performance, but we're also looking to grow there. So when I compare that to Commercial and Industrial, we are strictly focused on margin improvement in Commercial and Industrial. And so from a strategic approach, our emphasis is, in 2020 is that Climate and PTS will grow. And we've also weighted that our team's incentive plans to growth, while Commercial and Industrial are weighted to margin improvement. All of our incentives at Regal are aligned to the strategic imperatives of the segment. So hopefully, that gives you a sense of how we're thinking about the 4 segments.
This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Louis Pinkham for any closing remarks.
Thank you, operator. To summarize, in the quarter, we faced some difficult and challenging end market conditions. We feel that we met those challenges and delevered well as we improved performance in consecutive quarters. Looking forward, we are providing adjusted earnings guidance for 2020 in the range of $5.65 to $6.05. This approximate 7% increase at the midpoint over 2019 will mainly be driven by our ongoing 80/20 and cost-out initiatives. We are not forecasting a strong rebound of markets in 2020, and expect the first half of the year to continue to be challenged, but believe we will see some recovery in the second half.
Overall, we are forecasting flat to slightly negative sales growth in 2020. We are energized about our reorganization and resegmentation, executing 80/20 and driving improvement in profitability through cost-out and supply chain efficiencies, while staying laser-focused on exceeding customer needs with differentiated products, solutions and services while ultimately driving profitable organic growth.
I hope to see you all at our Investor Day in New York City on March 3. Thank you for joining the call and your interest in Regal.
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.