Guillermo Novo
Analyst · Mizuho Securities
Thank you, Kevin, and please turn to Slide 15. I'd like to take a few minutes to recap Ashland's very strong results in the recently completed fiscal '22. We experienced strong resilient demand from our consumer-focused end markets following the global pandemic impact of 2020 and 2021. Given the strong demand, we are largely sold out across many product lines, resulting in capacity constraints for our segments.
Our commercial and operations teams were able to continue with a stated strategy of mix improvement and we're also able to drive productivity improvements. Global supply chain and logistics challenges remain elevated throughout the year, though are now showing some encouraging signs of easing. Cost inflation, particularly for raw materials, freight and energy, were significant throughout the year, and our teams did an excellent job on recovering inflation and maintaining our overall margins. Our operations team executed at a high level to drive robust plant loading and operating discipline.
Innovation has been a central theme of our strategy and of who we are as a company. During the year, we launched a record number of new products, which also have significantly higher sales growth potential, in line with our goal of increasing innovation, speed and impact. And we are aligned -- and they are all aligned with our sustainability goals. It is very rewarding and encouraging to see these new technologies receive so many awards and recognition from our customers and the industries we serve.
In addition to these factors, changes in the global economy and the strengthening of the U.S. dollar drove significant unfavorable foreign currency impact to both sales and earnings. In spite of the challenges faced, Ashland delivered sales and earnings growth for the year that surpassed our original expectations.
Furthermore, Ashland completed numerous steps this year to further strengthen and enhance our balance sheet. We closed the sale of the Performance Adhesives business earlier in the year and used the proceeds to repurchase a significant number of our shares and reduced our outstanding debt. As a result, we now have low net leverage with no floating debt outstanding, and we remain with significant liquidity.
Also substantial cost inflation resulted in an increase in working capital balances and lower ongoing free cash flow for the year, we expect those trends to moderate next year, enabling cash flow generation more consistent with our stated targets. As we've discussed on past earnings calls, we began numerous large capital investments to increase capacity for key product lines to support our Pharmaceutical, Personal Care and Architectural Coatings businesses. These expansions are well underway, and we continue to expect production to come online towards the end of calendar year 2023 and into 2024.
And finally, we continue to work to rebuild inventory levels in key regions, not only in response to the supply chain challenges, but also in preparation for some of the challenges the global marketplace has experienced. In summary, Ashland's balance sheet gives us a strong footing in an uncertain world, and we have the flexibility and discipline to execute our growth strategy and reward our shareholders. We continue to strengthen our internal innovation portfolio management to both accelerate the pace of new product launches and to ensure that those launches create the most value for our customers and for Ashland.
Please turn to Slide 16. Before I turn to our financial outlook later in the call, I'd like to review key financial highlights for the year. Ashland sales grew 13% for the year to nearly $2.4 billion. Each of our operating segments returned double-digit sales growth. As discussed, these strong results were driven by resilient end market demand, mix improvements among capacity constrained assets and disciplined cost inflation recovery, partially offset by significant foreign currency headwinds of $77 million.
Please turn to Slide 17. Earnings growth also greatly outperformed our prior fiscal year. Ashland adjusted EBITDA grew $95 million or 19% to $590 million was well above our outlook at the beginning of the year. All segments grew adjusted EBITDA by at least double digits, reflecting early cost recovery action, sustained quality margins and continued mix improvement by our commercial teams. And as I stated before, our operations team executed at a high level running our facilities efficiently and productively.
And as with sales results, adjusted EBITDA for the year was partially offset by significant foreign currency headwinds of $38 million. Adjusted EPS, excluding acquisition amortization for the year was up -- was $5.70, up 52% from prior year.
Please turn to Slide 19. Our priorities remain focused on growing our business while maintaining its quality, driving profitable growth opportunities, margin and free cash flow expansion while leveraging ESG as a core value and enabler. From all the comments I've shared, our teams continue to demonstrate strong progress on all fronts, demonstrating operating resilience, strategic focus, innovation and growth, and capital allocation discipline.
Please turn to Slide 20. We opened our call this morning with a video that coincides with the launch of Ashland's inaugural ESG report, materiality matrix and experiential web pages. You can access the material, which includes many videos from our leadership team on our website. The report is a manifestation of our commitment and execution behind our global, environmental, social and governance activities and includes an interactive materiality matrix, which transparently shows Ashland's agenda relative to ESG and that we consider a key competitive advantage.
The report underscores our company's transformation and rightsizing, the integration of ESG into our strategy and within the lenses of the business and profitable growth. It is also the holistic convergence of everything, interconnecting, environmental, social and governance as well as sourcing, operations and solutions. The report and many supporting web pages show how everyone in the company fits into Ashland's ESG program. As previously mentioned, Ashland is in the process of setting science-based targets and we expect to share more information in early 2023.
Please turn to Slide 22. As we think about Ashland's operations and results for fiscal year '23, we recognize that there are many known macroeconomic dynamics impacting not only our company but our customers, suppliers, competitors and the consumer. While some of these factors could be negative, some could also be positive.
Known dynamics include global recessionary trends, continued inflation, supply chain and logistics challenges, European energy cost and availability, pricing arbitrage in certain areas of the globe, rising interest rates and higher cost of capital, global currency volatility and a decelerating M&A environment. We also recognize that there are known factors about how Ashland is positioned in this environment. This includes a portfolio that is focused on serving resilient consumer-focused end markets, with cohesive and disciplined teams. We have a number of capacity constraints until new investments come on stream.
Our strong operation performance and pricing momentum and reduced exposure to petrochemical-linked raw materials have been important during this period of rapid cost inflation. We also maintain a strong balance sheet and are able to pursue growth capital investments, many of which are well underway.
Furthermore, we acknowledge that there are risks and uncertainties in the world today that are difficult to assess and quantify. The more significant -- a more significant global recession, the war in Ukraine, regional weather impacts, energy availability and cost, COVID, government-mandated lockdowns and continued currency volatility are all factors that could have an impact over the coming years. And these risks could impact us in different ways, both positive and negative.
As in the past, we do not see significant value in trying to forecast very uncertain events. We will focus on the things we can control and prepare contingency plans to address these bigger uncertainties, if or when they happen. As such, we are not factoring in these high risk, high uncertainty events into our outlook. If and when they occur, we will update our outlook accordingly.
Please turn to Slide 23. Our financial outlook for fiscal '23 takes into account the known macro operating environment and Ashland's unique position within that landscape. Although we're expecting a recessionary environment during 2023, our businesses and markets we serve have historically demonstrated resilience. We do not have any indication that this resilient profile has changed. We believe our core markets will remain relatively strong even in this recessionary environment.
We have continued pricing and mixed carryover into this year based on the actions taken during fiscal year '22 and we will take additional actions as needed to recover any additional cost inflation. We expect to be capacity constrained this year until new capacity comes online in late calendar year 2023 and into 2024. In line with this -- with our demand outlook, we expect no changes in our underlying operating performance, and we do not expect -- and we do expect some improvement in specific raw material availability and costs despite some lingering challenges in Europe.
In terms of potential headwinds, we have factored in several risks. Although resilient, we are not immune to some softening of consumer demand from a global recession. We expect to see some customer destocking in several markets and regions during the early part of the year. While energy and labor inflation will be more broad-based, raw material inflation will vary by technology. As such, there will be more supply and pricing arbitrage in certain parts of the world. We also expect continued negative impact from unfavorable foreign currency.
Given these risks and the potential for increasing volatility, we are providing a broader-than-usual guidance range. Taking these factors into account, for fiscal year '23, we expect sales in the range of $2.5 billion to $2.7 billion, which represents nearly 9% growth at the midpoint, with inflation recovery and mix improvement remaining the major growth drivers. We also expect adjusted EBITDA in the range of $600 million to $650 million, which represent a 6% growth at the midpoint and close to 10%, excluding currency impact. These outlook ranges do not incorporate all unknown risks and uncertainties.
Let me be clear, as we have done in the past few years when uncertainty was high, we're being pragmatic and focusing on the things we can control and forecast. For what we cannot control, we will focus on planning and building resilience. We do not see a lot of value in being overly optimistic or pessimistic based on external factors we cannot control or forecast. This would only create more noise in our planning process.
As external developments become clear, we will maintain our current level of transparency and we'll communicate any changes in our outlook as appropriate. Ashland is well positioned. We have confidence in the company's business portfolio, market focus, global teams and our plans and actions that we are taking. We have demonstrated strong sales and earnings growth during the last 2 years and we are confident that we will maintain that resilience in 2023 and beyond.
Please turn to Slide 25. Over the last decade, Ashland's journey of transformation has sharpened our focus as an additives and specialty ingredients company. As we systematically identify and tackle the thorniest problems, we concentrate on areas rich in opportunities to innovate and drive value for our customers, where innovation and expertise in one business can be leveraged across others.
In closing, I want to thank the Ashland team once again for their leadership and proactive ownership of their business in an uncertain environment. We have solidified our portfolio as a global additives and specialty ingredients company with exceptional businesses that have leadership position in resilient high-quality consumer-driven markets. I'm pleased by the resilience and execution demonstrated by our people and our businesses, and I look forward to the opportunities that lie ahead.
Thank you, everyone, for joining us. And Bella, let's move to Q&A.