ZBRA earnings call for the period ending September 30, 2024.
Zebra Technologies (ZBRA 5.80%)
Q3 2024 Earnings Call
Oct 29, 2024, 8:30 a.m. ET
Contents:
- Prepared Remarks
- Questions and Answers
- Call Participants
Prepared Remarks:
Operator
Good day, and welcome to the third quarter 2024 Zebra Technologies earnings conference call. [Operator instructions] After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mike Steele, vice president, investor relations.
Please go ahead.
Michael Steele — Vice President, Investor Relations
Good morning, and welcome to Zebra’s third quarter earnings conference call. This presentation is being simulcast on our website at investors.zebra.com and will be archived there for at least one year. Our forward-looking statements are based on current expectations and assumptions and are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially, and we refer you to the factors discussed in our SEC filings.
During this call, we will reference non-GAAP financial measures as we describe our business performance. You can find reconciliations at the end of the slide presentation and in today’s earnings press release. Throughout this presentation, unless otherwise indicated, our references to sales performance are year-on-year and on a constant currency basis. This presentation will include prepared remarks from Bill Burns, our chief executive officer; and Nathan Winters, our chief financial officer.
Bill will begin with a discussion of our third quarter results. Nathan will then provide additional detail on the financials and discuss our fourth quarter and revised full year outlook. Bill will conclude with progress on advancing our strategic priorities. Following the prepared remarks, Bill and Nathan will take your questions.
Now let’s turn to Slide 4. I hand it over to Bill.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Mike. Good morning, and thank you for joining us. Our teams executed well in the third quarter delivering sales and earnings results above the high end of our outlook. For the quarter, we realized sales of almost $1.3 billion, a 31% increase compared to the prior year, an adjusted EBITDA margin of 21.4%, a 980 basis point increase; non-GAAP diluted earnings per share of $3.49, which was four times the prior year and delivered strong free cash flow.
As we discussed on our last earnings call, during the second quarter, we began to see early signs of recovery across our end markets with mobile computing return to growth. In the third quarter, we were encouraged to see the recovery broaden with data capture and printing also returning to growth. We realized double-digit growth across all our primary end markets and broad-based growth to customers of all sizes as we began to cycle significant destocking activity in the second half of last year. We are seeing indications of customer spend generally improving in the second half including expectations for higher year-end spending in North America and EMEA across most end markets.
That said, the manufacturing sector is still lagging as the goods economy continues to recover. Additionally, as we look ahead to 2025, visibility remains limited regarding the timing of large deployments. Another highlight was our improved profitability primarily due to improved gross margin driven by volume leverage and business mix. With the recent consolidation of our North American distribution centers into a single Chicago area facility, we have successfully completed our restructuring actions to deliver $120 million of net annualized operating savings.
Given our third quarter performance, improved momentum in demand recovery and our focus on profitable growth, we are raising our full year outlook for sales, profitability, and free cash flow. I will now turn the call over to Nathan to review our Q3 financial results and discuss our revised 2024 outlook.
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Bill. Let’s start with the P&L on Slide 6. In Q3, total company sales grew 30.6%, reflecting continued recovery in demand across our major product categories. Our asset intelligence and tracking segment grew 25.8% primarily driven by printing and RFID.
Enterprise visibility and mobility segment sales increased 33% with strong growth in mobile computing and data capture solutions. Our services and software recurring revenue businesses grew 4% in the quarter. We realized double-digit sales growth across our regions. In North America, sales grew 22%, led by mobile computing and printing.
EMEA sales grew 47%, with strength in Northern Europe. Asia Pacific sales grew 24% led by momentum in Southeast Asia and India, along with stabilization in China. And sales grew 42% in Latin America with particular strength in Mexico and Brazil. Adjusted gross margin increased 430 basis points to 49.1% due to volume leverage and favorable business mix and adjusted operating expenses as a percent of sales improved by 580 basis points.
This resulted in third quarter adjusted EBITDA margin of 21.4%, a 980 basis point increase versus the prior year and a 90 basis point sequential improvement from Q2. Non-GAAP diluted earnings per share was $3.49, a greater than 300% year-over-year increase. Turning now to the balance sheet and cash flow on Slide 7. In the first nine months of 2024, we generated more than $650 million of free cash flow as EBITDA improved, and we continue to drive significant improvements in working capital.
We ended the quarter at a 1.6 times net debt to adjusted EBITDA leverage ratio, which is within our target range. We resumed share repurchase activity in Q3 and now have increased flexibility given our improved cash flow, lower net debt, and $1.5 billion of capacity on our revolving credit facility. Let’s now turn to our outlook. We entered the fourth quarter with a solid backlog and pipeline of opportunities and expect sales growth between 28% and 31%.
This outlook assumes continued recovery across our major product categories with an improved level of year-end spending by our customers, including several large North American retail projects. We continue to cycle easier comparisons across the business due in part to significant destocking activity by our distributors during the second half of last year. Q4 adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be approximately 22%. And non-GAAP diluted earnings per share are expected to be in the range of $3.80 to $4.
Our fourth quarter outlook translates to full year sales growth of approximately 8%. Our full year adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be approximately 21% and non-GAAP diluted earnings per share is expected to be in the range of approximately $13.30 to $13.50 based on our Q4 guidance. This represents stronger profitable growth in our prior outlook, supported by increased momentum in demand recovery and continued focus on our cost structure. Free cash flow for the year is now expected to be at least $850 million.
We continue to drive profitable growth while improving our working capital levels, including rightsizing our inventory. Please reference additional modeling assumptions shown on Slide 8. With that, I will turn the call back to Bill.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Nathan. Turning to Slide 10. We remain well positioned to benefit from secular trends to digitize and automate workflows with our comprehensive portfolio of innovative solutions, including purpose-built hardware, software, and services. We empower frontline workers to execute tasks more effectively by navigating constant change in real time to advance capabilities, including automation, prescriptive analytics, machine learning, and artificial intelligence.
Zebra continues to demonstrate market leadership through innovation. We have consistently reinvested approximately 10% of our revenues into research and development to advance our vibrant core and bring new innovative solutions to market. At recent customer events we hosted in North America and EMEA, the unveiled solutions that underscore our commitment to innovation. These include the latest version of our work cloud software utilizing advanced AI and machine learning and new rugged tablets for demanding environments.
We also highlighted a Zebra kiosk solution offering self-checkout, including tap-to-pay capabilities, which enhance the customer experience and enables frontline associates to focus on higher value tasks. This launch enables us to expand Zebra’s addressable market with near adjacent technology that leverages our core software platform. Additionally, we are developing a generative AI mobile computing solution designed to assist frontline workers with sales, merchandising, and operating procedures, which we will feature at the National Retail Federation trade show in January. As you see on Slide 11, our customers leverage our solutions to optimize workflows across a broad range of end markets.
We empower enterprises to drive productivity and better serve their customers, shoppers, and patients. Our relentless focus on innovation continues to drive our competitive differentiation and secure wins. In the second half of this year, we are seeing momentum in large Zebra deployments in North American and EMEA across retail, e-commerce, and logistics. Our customers are beginning to increase investment in our solutions as they absorb the supply chain capacity they’ve built out during the pandemic and look to drive increased productivity.
Recent key wins include a technology modernization project at a large e-commerce customer mobile computing upgrade at a large retailer to enable the latest software applications, the grocers initiative to replace desktop computers with their mobile devices to drive several front-of-store use cases and a luxury retailer will deploy work cloud software to optimize in-season pricing. Additionally, a logistics customer in EMEA selected Zebra’s new wearable mobile computers to replace the competitor’s voice picking solution. This customer expects to improve accuracy and increase employee and customer satisfaction with our solution. Last quarter, I highlighted our success and traction and selling the benefits of enterprise-grade devices in healthcare.
Our ease of integration into electronic medical record systems has been a competitive differentiator, and we recently secured mobile computing and printing wins at large North America hospitals. Our solutions will improve workflows and enable enhanced visibility and tracking of assets, equipment, and specimen. Now turning to Slide 12. We realized double-digit sales growth across all vertical markets as demand recovers.
Our confidence in sustainable long-term growth is underpinned by several themes that we expect to drive investment in our solutions, including labor and resource constraints, track and trace mandates, increased consumer expectations, and the need for real-time supply chain visibility. In closing, we are seeing a broadening of demand recovery in the second half of this year with a more normalized seasonality in sales volumes as we enter the fourth quarter and into 2025. As we look longer term, we maintain strong conviction in the opportunity for Zebra as we elevate our strategic role with our customers through our innovative portfolio of solutions. Our sales and cost initiatives have positioned us well for profitable growth as our end markets continue to recover.
I will now hand it back to Mike.
Michael Steele — Vice President, Investor Relations
Thanks, Bill. We’ll now open the call to Q&A. We ask that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up to give everyone the chance to participate.
Questions & Answers:
Operator
[Operator instructions] The first question comes from Andrew Buscaglia with BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.
Andrew Buscaglia — Analyst
Good morning, guys.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Andrew.
Andrew Buscaglia — Analyst
So, obviously, demand seems to be picking up quite a bit. You’re facing some easy comps, but also you had some commentary around some larger North America retail project wins, I believe. If you could comment on that, what are you seeing in that market specifically? And how do you see that playing out into next year?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Andrew, I would say that certainly, we’re seeing that the quarter ended where we were pretty happy with the results, and, ultimately, the teams executed well. I would say that we saw a broadening recovery across all vertical markets, not just retail in Q3, which certainly was encouraging. From a retail perspective, I would say retail and e-commerce outperformed across all product categories really in Q3, and we expect that to kind of extend into Q4. As you mentioned, easier compares from a year ago, but we’ve also been able to see some year-end spending, which inject some more normalized seasonality, which we have seen in past years, certainly at year-end with larger orders from e-commerce, retail, and transportation and logistics, specifically North America and EMEA.
So this is what we normally see at year-end. We hadn’t seen that last year, of course, and now we’re seeing that return to more normalized levels. So we feel good about retail customers beginning to spend again. Clearly, their focus continues to be investments in e-commerce, omnichannel continue to drive that market.
We’ve got a solid pipeline of opportunities as we enter Q4. I’m going to continue to win in that market against competition as we’ve got a differentiated portfolio hardware and software serving the retail market. So we feel good about what we’re seeing across retail in Q3 and Q4 and the seasonality coming back where we see some year-end spending across North American EMEA. So we feel pretty good about retail at the moment.
It was the first to recover, right? If you think back to the beginning of the year, retail was the first to decline and the first to recover, and we’re seeing that continue across retail throughout the year.
Andrew Buscaglia — Analyst
Yes. OK. And then can you just comment on what you’re seeing with distributors? And how are they going about their decisions to start to restock? And what kind of trends are you seeing with those customers?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Maybe I’ll start and hand to Nathan. I would say overall that our distributors are seeing the uptick in business that we’re seeing from our partner community I think that we’re working closely with them to make sure that they’ve got the right level of inventory to meet the increase in demand as we enter Q4, but that we continue to work closely with them to to make sure that across all product categories, we make sure that they’ve got the right level of stocking across each of the regions around the globe.
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. I think that checks. Again, when we look at it from an inventory perspective, they’re at a good amount of days on hand in terms of where we’d like them to be entering the fourth quarter. So, again, I think we feel, as Bill said, good about the overall inventory position here as we enter the quarter with the expectation for the year-end spend to come through.
Operator
The next question comes from Jamie Cook with Truist. Please go ahead.
Jamie Cook — Analyst
Hi, good morning. Congrats on a nice quarter. I guess just back to the large orders, can you help us understand how much of the large orders did that help the third quarter and sort of what’s implied in the fourth quarter and your confidence level that this continues into 2025? And then I guess my second question, the margins over the past two quarters, I mean, the gross margins were 49% plus, that’s implied 49% or so in the fourth quarter. I’m just wondering, based on the sales volume and benefits from some of the restructuring, the expectation that margins can at least be at that level in 2025 given the exit rate for 2024.
Thank you.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes. So Jamie, maybe I’ll start and then hand over to Nate around margin. I’d say if we kind of look back, right, to ’23 and kind of recap where we’re at, I would say overall that customers in ’23 were absorbing capacity and that they build out the pandemic, we clearly were — they were scrutinizing budgets, sweating assets, right? And that drove significant distributor destocking in that time frame. And in fourth quarter last year, we saw really no large deal — no large order activity in the end of fourth quarter of ’23.
So I would say that, that’s what’s really different this year is that ultimately, as we entered ’24 in the first half, we saw early signs of recovery really in mid-tier and run rate businesses that we talked about in the first half and really focused on mobile computing and retail, but large orders really remain below historic levels in the first half. As we got into second half, what we’re seeing is broader recovery across all regions, in most end markets. We’re still seeing manufacturing, for instance, lag, but we’re seeing the return of year-end spending and larger orders by retail and logistics customers in North America and EMEA. We’re also seeing some probably mid-tier orders, I would call it, from healthcare.
So healthcare has also been a strength, which has allowed us to raise our guide. So I think more normalized seasonality that we’re seeing where typically, fourth quarter is an uptick in demand as our customers spend more in the fourth quarter as they move into next year. I would say the other thing we saw was that a comment on kind of large orders is probably the fact that we saw capex increased throughout the year. So I think as customers got more confidence in the macro environment around them and what we’re seeing across their business.
The increased capital spending, especially in retail throughout the year and injecting again, more seasonality that we expect to happen in the fourth quarter and then continue injecting seasonality back into our business in 2025. I’d say from a ’25 perspective, while we’re clearly not guiding to ’25, we’re optimistic that the recovery continues into ’25. Certainly, based on the strong second half, we’d expect, again, normalized seasonality to really be injected back into the business in fourth quarter just like we’d expect in ’25. So I’d say the one caution would be, we’re seeing a little bit of uncertainty across the customer base, and I would say that what that means is really manufacturing lagging the other segments.
I would say each customer is in a different phase of whether it’s refresh or new product investment or new investment across their business and new applications. We’re seeing some P&L customers still absorbing capacity. So we’ve got a bit of limited visibility to large projects on when they’re going to happen in ’25. So again, we’d expect the recovery to continue, but a bit uneven across some of the end markets is the only thing I’d say from a caution perspective.
Maybe Nate can comment on margins.
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
So Jamie, if you look at our gross margin in the third quarter, just over 49%. That’s the highest gross margin we’ve had in recent history, but really benefited from lower large deal volume. Obviously, there was a bit of a return, but still lower than as a percent than what we’ve seen historically, but good scaling on our fixed infrastructure. We completed the consolidation of our distribution centers in North America.
That was some of the last piece of our restructuring actions midway through the quarter, so seeing that benefit flow through. The only thing I’d say is as you look at our, what’s implied in the Q4 EBITDA guide is we do expect a sequential decline in gross margin just as — again, based on the incremental large deal volumes coming through on the higher volume. And I’d say that’s still kind of the wildcard as you look into 2025 is what that large deal mix look like as we enter the year and as we go throughout the year as we think about kind of the gross margin dynamics.
Jamie Cook — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
The next question comes from Damian Karas with UBS. Please go ahead.
Damian Karas — Analyst
Hey, good morning, everyone. Nice work in the quarter.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Damian. God morning.
Damian Karas — Analyst
Yes. So you guys mentioned that you still have limited visibility around large deployments. Could you maybe just give us a sense for like why that is? And when you think about going into year-end and some of these kind of late capex budget-type decisions, is there — what have you baked into your guidance? Are you only kind of factoring in the larger deployments where you do have visibility and is there potential that after we get through the election, there could still be some kind of later year spend?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes. I would say, Damian, we feel good about the fourth quarter guide with a pipeline and visibility in all size orders really to support the guide. So I think we feel good about the guide for fourth quarter. I would say, overall, from a limited visibility perspective, I think as we look into ’25, what we saw in 2024 was customers start off with kind of a conservative view on capex spending and kind of ramp that spending through the year.
We’d expect that same thing to likely happen in ’25 is look, I think overall, there’s lots of positive momentum from a macro environment, whether that’s positive GDP, whether that’s e-commerce growth, the capital spending increase, as I said, throughout ’24. IT device spending is projected to be up in ’25. So that’s all good news for ’25. But I think you mentioned it, right? All the other things that are kind of weighing on the macro around the globe, including U.S.
elections, right? Interest rates are still high, inflation impacting consumers and their spending overall, which then creates a bit of caution on the part of our customers, longer sales cycles, more approvals, those kind of things as they kind of second-guess their capex. So I’d say overall, just while we see projects for ’25 at the moment, it’s just a bit early to have the visibility especially into large deployments and when they’ll actually happen throughout ’25, given that we’ve seen kind of the slow capex release in ’24. So I think we feel good about ’25. We feel really good about our guide for fourth quarter, but there is still uncertainty out there with a lot of things happening from a macro environment.
Damian Karas — Analyst
That makes sense. And then I was wondering if you could maybe just give us an update on the machine vision business. Is that still a drag on your financials at this point or maybe starting to see some signs of improvement there?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
I’d say that we still feel good about machine vision overall as being closely adjacent to our scanning portfolio overall and creating opportunity for us as our customers continue to look to automate supply chain and visibility across manufacturing from an inspection perspective and transportation logistics from a visibility perspective within their environment. And I think that — look, machine vision declined in the quarter. I think overall weakness in manufacturing has affected that market clearly. A good example of that would be electrical vehicle manufacturing kind of slowed.
We saw our semiconductor, which were kind of heavily weighted to, and that’s been one of our objectives all along is to diversify the business, the acquisition of Matrox beyond semiconductor. We’ve seen stabilization in semiconductor in the quarter. So that’s a positive sign. We are pleased with the software growth to machine vision in the quarter.
And we feel good that the diversification efforts we’re working on to diversify outside of semiconductor into broader manufacturing, into T&L will benefit us as the markets recover. And I think that ultimately, we feel good about the opportunity for not just software but our continued investment across go-to-market and some new investments around AI and deep learning that will benefit us as that market returns. So tough market at the moment, but we feel good about the long-term prospects of machine vision.
Operator
Next question comes from Tommy Moll with Stephens. Please go ahead.
Tommy Moll — Analyst
Good morning, and thank you for taking my questions. I wanted to start on the large order topic. I hear you loud and clear that the visibility on next year remains limited at this point. And then my question is, what would a typical planning cycle look like? And in a normal year, however you want to define that for large orders, how much advance notice do you have and when did the conversations really start to pick up where you get that kind of visibility about what’s coming? Thanks.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Tommy, I’d say typically six months. We typically have six months of visibility to larger projects from our customers. And I would say that then that planning cycle ultimately begins six months in advance as they think about what’s the next generation of device. What are the use cases they’re using devices for? Are they — the upgrades are always in the larger projects are always bigger than the last refresh, right, as they deploy more devices, they’ve used more use cases and typically when our customers refresh, they also look to add additional use cases along the way.
So all that gets discussed six months plus in advance, and then they go through their process of selecting what product, what solution, what vendor and then move forward. And then the ultimate timing of the project and when it gets ordered and deployed, sometimes relies on other factors. Like they’re rolling out new software on their side, for instance, in working with outside vendors to do that or whether they’ve got internal developments happening or they’ve got a rollout schedule, they want to go meet based on their seasonality of their business. So that all depends from a rollout perspective.
Sometimes they get delayed, sometimes they move faster. But typically six months of the visibility. And I think I would say — at the moment, we saw capex ramp through ’24. We kind of expect that in ’25.
In first quarter, we typically get more visibility to the first half projects in ’25. And then they typically move along through their process.
Operator
The next question comes from Brad Hewitt with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Brad Hewitt — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Hey, good morning, guys.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Brad.
Brad Hewitt — Wolfe Research — Analyst
So as we think about next year, aside from the year-end retail spending, are you seeing anything in the pipeline or the conversion rates that makes you more optimistic than you were last quarter about large orders returning in a more meaningful way in 2025? And then how much of a recovery in large order rates do you think we need to see for growth in 2025 to be in line with or better than your long-term growth framework?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Look, I’d probably say that, again, we’re trying not to guide for ’25. I’ll give you a little bit of color, right? Certainly, we’re optimistic is the recovery. We expect to continue into ’25 based on the strong results we’ve seen in the second half of the year and the continued ramp of capex by our customers. We’ve seen a bit of uneven results into the marketplace, right? Retail, first to recover, continue that recovery.
T&L green shoots in the second quarter now broader T&L recovery, but a bit uneven, meaning some customers are still using the capacity that they’ve built out during the pandemic and still working through that, but we’re seeing parcel volumes increased. Manufacturing, clearly lagging the other sectors. And then healthcare has been a positive over the last two quarters. But I’d say that while we’ve seen that, we also see some macro headwinds overall, which include all the challenges we’ve talked about already, manufacturing softness in China, limited budget visibility as we kind of get into ’25 as to when projects will happen across the business.
So we’d see continued recovery into ’25 on the strength of the second half. And right now, it’s just too early to have a lot of visibility into ’25 overall. We do believe that seasonality does come back into the business in 2025, though. So as we’re seeing seasonal effects of large orders at fourth quarter, we would expect that seasonality to really be injected back into the business in 2025.
Operator
The next question comes from Keith Housum with North Coast Research. Please go ahead.
Keith Housum — Analyst
Good morning, guys. Bill, perhaps you can provide a little bit of color from a geographical perspective. EMEA and Latin America were the standouts, obviously, this quarter. Was it a matter of easier compares for those geographies? Or is there some capping in those areas that perhaps we can think about as we go forward?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Keith, I’d say certainly double-digit growth across all major product categories, regions and end markets, right, was encouraging. But again, as you know, easier compares with a weak Q3 last year. So an aggressive distributor destocking at that point in time. I’d say EMEA, clearly easier compares than the other regions.
So I would say we feel good about all regions overall. EMEA had an even easier compare than the other regions. But that said, I would say, strength in Northern Europe clearly within EMEA, some larger projects in P&L moving forward and some wins in mobile computing. I would say, across EMEA, manufacturing remains challenging, particularly Germany as an example.
But I think that the story of EMEA is really easier comparison than the other regions. North America, I would say, improvement across all product categories, strength in retail, healthcare, T&L coming back, but a bit uneven as people are using the capacity, but the good news is we’re seeing parcel volumes continue to recover. Manufacturing is still a bit challenging overall and kind of lacking the other areas. Health care, two quarters in a row, is our fastest-growing market.
So that’s returned to what we’ve seen in the past around healthcare, especially in North America. I’d say Asia momentum in Southeast Asia. So Southeast Asia and India were kind of bright spots in the quarter. Stabilization in China, I’d probably say, and we’re not expecting a near-term kind of recovery or growth driver from China overall at the moment.
And I’d say Latin America strength in Mexico and Brazil, as you’ve kind of heard from us before. So I think we feel pretty good about recovery across all the regions. And I think the difference is more around vertical markets than it is the actual regions themselves.
Operator
The next question comes from Meta Marshall with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Meta Marshall — Analyst
Great. A couple of questions. Just on the healthcare strength that you guys are seeing. Is this new accounts that you guys are adding or just expansion of penetration or just kind of overall health and spend in that market after kind of some post COVID hangover within healthcare so just more in-depth on healthcare? And then second, I know a question was asked earlier just about some of the initiatives that you guys have enacted that had improved gross margins.
But just as we think about opex into 2025, are there initiatives that are — are all of the initiatives around some of the moves made earlier this year fully carried out? Or just how should we think about kind of opex into 2025? Thanks.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes, I’ll start with healthcare and then hand over gross margin to Nate. I would say that from a healthcare perspective, a combination of new customers and refreshes across the portfolio, but continued opportunities across healthcare. I would say we saw growth across all product categories. We have specific lines for printing, scanning, mobile computing specifically toward and focused on the healthcare market.
I’d say, overall, we improved productivity and healthcare providers of all sizes really enhance safety and be able to take information and put it into electronical medical record systems, which is important across healthcare, not just in North America but around the world. So I’d say overall, this idea of automating workflows, collecting digital information on patients, assets, what’s happening within the medical environment creates an opportunity for us in — across all segments of healthcare. So whether it’s clinical mobility or home healthcare, virtual care, all those have been opportunities for us. So I would say healthcare is our smallest vertical market at the moment and — but it’s the fastest growing in opportunities, both new and expansion across healthcare and not just North America, but global opportunities as well.
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. Meta, just when you look at it from an opex perspective, I’d say a couple of things. One, the full benefit of the restructuring is really embedded in the opex for the second half of the — in the P&L. Really the incremental gross — incremental restructuring benefits to go are primarily in gross margin and really related to the flow-through of the closure of the DC in North America.
So the team is really now focused on how do we scale and drive productivity across the opex infrastructure that we have. And there’s some really exciting things that teams are working around the use of AI to drive productivity in terms of supply chain forecasting, order management or how we leverage generative AI for technology support software code generation, again, all allowing us to scale on the — and drive efficiency of what we have today. So I think that’s really the focus is scaling on the structure that we have today with the tools and technology that are available.
Operator
The next question comes from Brian Drab with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Brian Drab — Analyst
Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. First one is just around the cadence of demand recovery that you saw the timing of demand recruit that you saw in the third quarter because that — just the tone is a lot different today I think in the second quarter, it’s a lot different even from touching base with you during the third quarter. So I’m just wondering, did you see an incremental pickup in demand in some of the end markets even as recently as October?
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Brian, let me start. I think, one, if you look back at our prior guide, we really assumed a similar level of demand from Q2 continuing into the second half with only really a modest increase for year-end spending. And what we wanted to see was the real commitments the POs starting to come through from our customers before embedding that in the guide. And I think that’s what we saw through the second half of the third quarter and here in the early part of the fourth quarter.
So really the conversion of that pipeline coming through, which is what we wanted to see to have the confidence to raise the guide as we are today. So I think that’s really the difference. It’s just that conversion of the pipeline really picked up in the later part of the third quarter and here in the early part of the fourth quarter where we had the confidence based on those commitments from our customers to raise the guide for the full year and see that year-end start to really come through here in the fourth quarter.
Brian Drab — Analyst
OK. That certainly makes sense. And then second question, depending on the outcome of the election here, it could be — there’s a concern that there could be significant tariffs that start to go into place. And I know that in the past Trump administration, you’ve established a tariff task force.
And I’m just wondering if you could describe what the activity that’s happening at Zebra right now to potentially position for that environment?
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Well, too early to speculate on the impact on all the various scenarios that could come out of next week’s election. But we have been focused on some of the new tariffs that have been planned for 2026 and how we build alternatives so we can respond accordingly. So the team is actively working on mitigation plans for some of the new tariffs that are coming into place. And we continue to actively work with our supply chain partners.
We’ve been doing this since 2019 to diversify the supply base to improve resiliency overall as well as prepare for any future tariff changes. So I’d say right now, it’s various scenario planning of what the different options could be, but our primary focus has been improved overall resiliency of our supply chain so that we can respond, whether it’s tariffs, geopolitical, or natural disasters, how we make sure we have that structure in place to respond accordingly, and that’s really been the focus of the teams. And then obviously, depending on the outcome of the election and policies coming from that will respond and pivot accordingly.
Operator
The next question comes from Rob Mason with Baird. Please go ahead.
Rob Mason — Analyst
Hi, good morning. The commentary around the gross margin has already been touched on and is performing really well. I’m just curious, again, we’re still somewhat early in the recovery. I’m sure business is competitive.
But has there been any change in Zebra’s promotional practices as we’ve gone about the recovery? Do you need to discount less either — just from your leadership position, the way you’ve built out the portfolio? Or anything that maybe structurally could carry forward from a promotional aspect?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Rob, I’ll take that. I would say that overall, look, our strong customer relationships, the deep vertical market expertise we have across each of the vertical markets we serve, the breadth and depth of the solutions portfolio that’s tailored to each market. I gave you an example before around healthcare, truly differentiates us from our competitors. And clearly, that our competitive advantages being the market leader around scale and investment in technology, our partner community around the world all gives us strength.
And I would say that we really haven’t seen really any meaningful change across the competitive landscape. I would say we’re confident that we continue to win in the market and that we’ll continue to extend our industry leadership through our investments in innovation. We talked about early on in the call. And continue to strengthen our strategic relationships with customers.
So we really haven’t seen much different from a competitive landscape perspective around the world at the moment, pretty much of the same.
Rob Mason — Analyst
I see. And just as a quick follow-up. We’ve talked about mobile computing leaving this recovery. Can you give any perspective just on how data capture and printing may follow that, whether you’re starting to see — and then now, we had good year-over-year growth against easier comps.
But are you starting to see accelerating momentum in those products as well?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Rob, I think that again, as you said it, mobile computing was kind of the first major category to recover in Q2, and we’re continuing to see broad-based demand for mobile computing in Q3 and in Q4 and then some of these larger deal activity really driven by mobile computing. But I’d say what we saw in Q3 was really broad-based growth across DCS, including all product categories within DCS and then across all regions. So I think that’s a good sign. And we’d expect that strength to continue into 2024.
Again, there’s been more variation in the first half of the year on print in DCS around supply chain not being available in ’23 and then recovery in ’24 and all the variations around it. But I think we’re seeing growth in DCS, same in print. So growth across most print categories, one of the strengths has been particularly mobile print. So again, ties back to mobile computing, right, strength across that.
There’s no opportunities in print. I would say things like eco-friendly linerless printing, so the idea that less waste is creating new opportunities within print. So we feel good about the broad-based growth across DCS and print. I would say me the last area may be worth mentioning because it hasn’t come up yet is RFID.
So strong growth in Q3 across RFID as we continue to see broad-based adoption of RFID in the quarter.
Operator
The next question comes from James Ricchiuti with Needham. Please go ahead.
Chris Grenga — Needham and Company — Analyst
Hi, good morning. This is Chris Grenga on for Jim. Thank you very much for taking the questions. Just to follow up on that RFID point.
There have been reports about new applications for RFID in grocery, first use case apparently being one involving bakery departments. First question is whether you might anticipate new opportunities for your RFID printing business as a result of these developments? And second, more broadly, how do you view the RFID growth opportunities over the next year and whether grocery could be a meaningful use case to go along with what we’re seeing in apparel, general merchandise, and logistics?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes, I would say that strong growth in Q3 for an RFID perspective and strong pipeline of opportunities across retail, T&L, manufacturing. As you said, Chris, broadening and retail beyond what originally apparel into general merchandise and now an opportunity that we’ve seen for some time and it’s been worked on across the industry as things like fresh, right, within the retail store and around the outside perimeter of the store where you see fresh goods and leveraging RFID there. So I think that clearly represents an opportunity for us, track and trace across supply chains, parcel, tracking, healthcare, all those also create an opportunity from Zebra’s perspective, we’ve got the broadest set of RFID solutions, including fixed and handheld readers, industrial and mobile printing, our software and labels to go along with that. So we feel good about the opportunity and the broadening of the opportunities out of RFID beyond, as you said, apparel and retail.
I would say the exciting piece that everybody is looking at in RFID is the tag adoption, right, and the growth of tags and those items that are source-tagged or tagged within a retail store, for instance, or a parcel inside P&L. The more items are tagged, the more readers there is, the more applications there are that allows more automated collection of information. So I think ultimately, we’re excited about the RFID market and continues to grow, and the pipeline of opportunities and applications continues to grow as well.
Operator
The next question comes from Joe Giordano with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.
Joseph Giordano — Analyst
Good morning. You touched on tariffs and what you’re doing. Can you just remind us like how much — I know you guys moved with your manufacturing partners moved a lot of stuff out of China last go around. Can you update us on like where we are and how much production is still there? Or how much can be moved, if necessary? And how much is like structurally has to be there?
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Yes. So we — if you look at an aggregate in terms of dollars, it’s almost close to 50% of finished goods production is outside of China, still a vast majority of the component supply chain remains within China, and that’s really the trickier or more stickier part of the supply chain to move just given how embedded it is within that market. So again, we moved a significant portion of the manufacturing up really to support North America into places like Malaysia, Vietnam back in 2019, that’s continued to ramp over the last several years. But I think it’s important to note, we didn’t move all North American volume out of China.
Some products, just given the relative volume or the return on investment still made sense to produce in China for the North American market, even with the higher tariffs. So that’s, again, the inflation, and we offset that with higher pricing, the pricing actions we took back then. So that’s the equation we’re working through now, which is what more can be move should be moved if and when any additional tariffs are enacted. So that’s what the team is scenario planning out, but also I want to make sure we make the right business decision that gives us long-term resiliency as well as follows where the supply chain is going because we do rely on, again, components and subassemblies and making sure that we’re not too far dislocated from where those source components are coming from.
So it’s a pretty complex equation that the team is working through. But we’re lucky that we have supply chain partners that in and around the region that we work with to work and solve that challenge.
Joseph Giordano — Analyst
That’s helpful. And then just I want to make sure I understand the seasonality discussion around next year. And I know you mentioned you don’t want to give 2025 guidance. I appreciate that.
And normally, your first quarter is a step down versus the fourth quarter. But now we’re in a situation where like big orders aren’t hitting in the fourth quarter, so like is it unreasonable to think that you just have kind of a continued moderate increase quarterly as you go through next year? Or do you still get like a step down even without kind of the project activity in the end of this year?
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
I think based on what we said earlier, I think the expectation is to be pretty — Q4 is maybe not back to a full recovery, but it’s still — there’s been a pretty big step-up in what we saw from Q2 to Q3 and Q3 to Q4 with year-end spend. There is several large deployments within the fourth quarter. So I would — that’s why we said we’d expect it to be more maybe like a historical seasonality as you go into next year because of the year-end demand we’re seeing and some of the larger deployments here in the fourth quarter.
Operator
The next question comes from Guy Hardwick with Freedom Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Guy Hardwick — Analyst
Hi, good morning.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Guy.
Guy Hardwick — Analyst
Congrats on the results, excellent performance. Obviously, Zebra has made great progress year-to-date in deleveraging, and I noticed that trade working capital has fallen materially as a percentage of sales. But now with the leverage ratio down at 1.6 times, at what point do you return to making acquisitions? And how would you balance those up against share repurchases? I believe you you return to share repurchases for the first time more than a year in Q3.
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, Guy, I think maybe just to start because we haven’t touched on it. So obviously, the free cash flow for the year to date, over $650 million, $850 million higher than from last year. So just really tremendous work by the team on working capital improvements. We’ve reduced inventory year-to-date by over $160 million.
So it’s great to see the actions that we put in place starting to flow through in the reduction in working capital and seeing that come through free cash flow. So it really puts us in a great position exiting the year and going into next year. And as you mentioned, we returned to share repurchases in slightly here in the third — back in the third quarter. And we’re continuing to take a systemic approach to share repurchases here in the quarter and as we go into next year.
But with the debt leverage ratio at 1.6 times, which is on the low end of the target range, overall comfortable with the net debt cash position, but puts us in a nice position to really return to either returning capital to shareholders or as you mentioned, giving us capacity for M&A opportunities as they arise.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Maybe just some comments on M&A. Overall, I would say that, as Nate said, returning capital to investors through share buybacks or M&A is to really good uses of capital for us. I would say that our M&A philosophy hasn’t changed. It’s really — overall, it’s to leverage and advance our vision and our strategy moving forward is how we think about it.
We target specific opportunities that are really closely adjacent and synergistic to what we do today. Clearly, as you pointed out, the strong balance sheet gives us optionality to return capital or look at opportunities within M&A. I would say that the bar is a bit higher today even with the increase in free cash flow from the idea of doing something larger certainly would entail higher interest rates. And there’s still a bit of uncertainty out there from a market perspective.
So if we were going to acquire something, we’d want to be assured kind of the revenue stream coming in. So a bit higher bar at the moment. I think we’re excited about our business as it exists today. And I think that disciplined M&A is how we think about it as a vector for long-term growth that we can use in addition to returning capital to shareholders through share buyback.
So both are an option. I think we continue to look and be inquisitive in the marketplace from an M&A perspective, but it’s got to meet our strategic vision.
Guy Hardwick — Analyst
And, Bill, just as a quick follow-up. I think in your prepared remarks, you referenced that the the AI-enabled enterprise mobile computers will be showing — you’ll be showing those at the NRF show early next year. Does that mean that you are closer to commercialization, perhaps you would have thought just a few months ago when you — we discussed this on the Q2 call?
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes. I would say, yes. So we demonstrated an early version of AI companion really on mobile devices at NRF last year. This will be a continued advancement along those lines at NRF this year, working closely with our partners of Qualcomm, Google and some of our customers to continue to advance that opportunity.
I think that this idea of a digital assistant on a mobile device, assisting the frontline worker that will drive productivity and really elevate the customer experiences. And we see this as being running the large language model on the device without requiring connectivities to the cloud. You can have connectivity cloud if you want or not. And a lot of our customers don’t have a lot of connectivity out of their environments, think of retail stores, think of warehouses and others.
So that’s an advantage. And I think it’s something that we’re focused on and likely in ’25, what we’ll see is some type of commercial offering from Zebra. We’re working through what that really means from us, but I think it bodes well for us moving forward from working closely with our customers, making sure we’re understanding how they’re using and building large language models and their data, how do they protect that, how do they upgrade that, how do they keep it current within the mobile devices, and we’re working closely with them to make that happen. So I think, yes, we’re getting closer, continue our investment there and continue to move ahead with the development cycle in that area.
And we’re going to show a refresh demo add NRF that takes kind of the next level this year.
Operator
Our last question comes from Brad Hewitt with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Brad Hewitt — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Thanks, guys, for sending me back in. It looks like you bumped up the Q4 implied sequential revenue growth by about 200 basis points. But you took down the implied sequential incremental EBITDA margins a little bit. So curious if there were any mix benefits in Q3 that you do not expect to occur in Q4? And how should we think about the puts and takes of the Q4 EBITDA margin line on a sequential basis?
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Yes, Brad, as you mentioned, so if you look at our EBITDA guide of 22%, it’s up just over 0.5 point sequentially from Q3. And again, primarily driven by the volume leverage. And I think the real change is just the deal mix overall with the higher mix of large deals and some of the large deployments in North America that somewhat of a drag sequentially on gross margin, driving that down a bit. And opex relatively flat just based on some of the project timing.
So and the majority of any incremental gross margin on a sequential basis is embedded within gross margin. So I think that’s really the — no other kind of — I think Q3 obviously came through stronger just seeing all the different actions flow through on the higher volume. And then the real change from Q3 to Q4 is just the mix within the portfolio.
Operator
This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Mr. Burns for any closing remarks.
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Yes. In closing, I’d just like to say thank you to our employees and partners for their continued support and delivering strong Q3 financial results. It was about 10 years ago — actually, 10 years ago this week, we closed the Enterprise acquisition. And I would say that our relentless focus on innovation and our continued commitment to our customers continues to drive differentiation for us in the marketplace and secure competitive wins.
And I would say we’re well positioned to advance our industry leadership as our end markets recover. So thank you. Have a great day, everyone.
Operator
[Operator signoff]
Duration: 0 minutes
Call participants:
Michael Steele — Vice President, Investor Relations
Bill Burns — Chief Executive Officer
Nathan Andrew Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Mike Steele — Vice President, Investor Relations
Andrew Buscaglia — Analyst
Nate Winters — Chief Financial Officer
Jamie Cook — Analyst
Damian Karas — Analyst
Tommy Moll — Analyst
Brad Hewitt — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Keith Housum — Analyst
Meta Marshall — Analyst
Brian Drab — Analyst
Rob Mason — Analyst
Chris Grenga — Needham and Company — Analyst
Joseph Giordano — Analyst
Joe Giordano — Analyst
Guy Hardwick — Analyst