Gregg Sengstack
Analyst · Seaport Global.
So, Walter, this is Gregg. What we'd say is that from the NOAA data is, they look back to last 130 years. We're in the 90th percentile for rain across the country. And it's really broad-based. It wasn't kind of -- it started in the West and then it moved to East and just hit all of our key markets. So, certainly, that put pressure on volumes. Although, we did see -- in our prepared remarks, you'll see that our groundwater business was up and leaning more heavily to the small pumping systems for residential, whereas more replacement market. You don't turn on systems, as you know, in ag markets when it's raining, and so, that's where, as you point out, we had some pressure on the volume side. And that's where we felt like we were seeing it drying out in the West starting in June. And as soon as it dries out here, we saw it in Europe, orders start coming in. So, that's why we're looking at the back half on a more positive basis. The volume decline is, as Jeff and I both mentioned, really relates to the cyclicality of the large dewatering pump market, which is more of a capital cycle exposure. These rental companies -- they bought a lot of products last year catching up from the pandemic and just had challenges getting it out in the field. And so, it's just been a delay there. They'll work through that. We still see strong indicators from the end markets that construction going to do well. But that's what addressed that piece of the market. But related to the ag piece, that was under some pressure because of just the wet conditions in Q2. And again, if we move to the back half census, things will dry out. If you follow El Nino and La Nina, it should be saying we're going to move to mild La Nina, it's generally favorable for us, but I'm not a weather predictor. So, I don't go any farther than that. I mean, Jeff may want to add on the margin side here. Jeff?