Karl Glassman
Analyst · Raymond James Financial. Please proceed with your question.
And Bobby to answer your higher level question, and you're right, we're not giving 2019 guidance. But we really do believe that most of the issues that the company and the industry has dealt with in 3Q and 4Q are transitory. Automotive is expected to rebound. We feel very comfortable with our call on the 1,000 basis points of growth greater than build. But we have an expectation, that most of the pricing issues that we've dealt with, based on the visibility than we have today, which is a caveat that I want to put on it, that the pass-through was taking place. As we said or I said in my prepared comments, we're mostly through that from a U.S. Spring, rod, wire value chain. That there was a little bit of a hangover in early 3Q, that we're past. Scrap jumped up a little bit in October, $10 to $20. Forecast is it'll jump up slightly in November. But in the big picture, that's kind of insignificant and the lag will catch up. The other points of raw material pass-through that we called out, European spring, we've enacted pricing increases. Usually European inflation is about a quarter behind U.S. inflation. So they're raising prices, difficult in a very soft bedding economy. And it feels like the consumers become more promotional in Europe with the macro uncertainty, but the pricing is going in play – in place, the mix might not be as attractive from a future perspective. We mentioned flooring products, there was a 24% increase in the cost of foam scrap early in the third quarter that we're passing through, double-digit price increases are being put in place. Fabric, same situation, there has been some inflation there. 4Q, we're passing through that. Furniture and consumer products, those businesses continue to be challenged. They will be healthier next year. They will probably be smaller, but they'll be healthier. So structurally, at a macro level again, not putting guidance on it – well, and one other thing I want to interject, this metal margin that we're dealing with in the steel mill, the supply chain, that should continue for the foreseeable future. So we're really optimistic about 2019. We'll obviously, on February 4, put some numbers around that. But we really do believe what we're dealing with right now, assuming that the macro economy is reasonable next year, we're outliers.