John McNulty — Analyst, BMO
Sorry about that, was unmuted. Global architectural, if we can start with that. You know, the volumes were a bit on the soft side. The margins obviously came in a bit worse than that. I guess you gave a little bit of color on that around Europe maybe not being quite as recovering as maybe you'd hoped earlier. Mexico project still a little bit of a drag. I guess as you look through the rest here, it sounds like Mexico is going to get at least marginally better. What are your thoughts on Europe? Where were things maybe a little bit less robust or recovering than what you thought? How should we think about the margin impact there? It seems like the sales were light, but the volume impact really was maybe bigger than what we would have thought. How should we be thinking about that?
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yeah, thanks for the question, John. I'll start with Europe. We saw what we thought was the start of momentum at the end of Q1 and we expected that to continue to improve in Q2 and frankly it did not. Largely driven by Eastern Europe. We did see that positive momentum from late Q1 continue into the Nordics, which of course is our legacy Ticarilla business, and that's doing well now. We saw positive momentum in the U.K. and Ireland. We saw positive momentum in the Benelux. France, I would say, was okay, but the negative that we were not expecting at the end of Q1 was Eastern Europe. With architectural Europe, we're really expecting combined more of the same. As that happens, John, we continue to take more and more cost out and we're positioned well.
We track the share very closely and we're confident in our share position and we're gaining share in our larger markets. Any little stimulus of any kind will bode very well for us in margin and leverage. Moving on to Mexico, we did see retail recover, which was promising. I'll remind you that we were in Mexico for architectural. We were actually down in sales in Q1, minus low single digits. We're up in Q2, positive low single digits. We're starting to see that led by retail. Project work is sequentially improving and we expect that to play out through the rest of the year. Now, on the margin side, of course there's some effect by what I just described on volume. A couple other things that impacted our margin for the architectural coatings segment for Q2.
First of all, the FX, the imbalance in FX improvement in Europe versus Mexico led to a net negative for us in margin. The Mexico B2B volume still being down, that's very good margin business for us. You may have seen in the slide, we talked about a supply chain disruption that was an internal disruption in Australia that hit us for the quarter that's transitory and behind us. Finally, that divestiture was above segment margin. It's a combination of all those things that led to a lower than expected margin for the quarter across architectural. John,
John McNulty — Analyst, BMO
Got it. Thanks very much for the call.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Hey, David. Yeah, we're proud, we're proud of what we did in volume for the first half of this year. Particularly as you know, as we see a bunch of other reports coming out and we expect that to accelerate in the second half of the year. Let's call it low single digits and moving up that low single digit ladder.
How's that as we move through the second half of the year, we feel quite confident on that and that's why you may hear a little kick in our step this morning is because we finally reached, if you remember back, you know, I think we started this at the end of Q3 of last year talking about share wins that we had and we were expecting 2H2025 to be much better for us and you know, it's here. We feel really good about both, both volume and frankly EPS growth as we move through the second half of the year.
Michael Sison — Managing Director, Wells Fargo
Hey guys, nice quarter for performance coating. You know the only blemish looks like refinish is down. You know, all the other segments had a really nice year-over-year improvement. Just curious on, you know, the outlook for refinish for the next couple quarters for volumes as well into 2026 and then how sustainable is the double-digit growth you saw in protective and marine? That seemed to be pretty impressive.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Thanks Mike. Refinish, you know, yeah, it was down, it was down low single digits but, you know, I think we're flat for the year through the first half of the year and everybody on the call knows that your collision claims have been down high single digits for, you know, for the first half of the year. So we're pretty proud of being flat at the midway point now as we move forward.
I did say that we're expecting Q3 to be soft because our strength in the first half of the year was driven by share gain and some distributor order patterns and we expect the share gains to continue, but we do expect, you know, swinging of that distributor order pattern for Q3. I would expect Q3 to be a bit soft, Q4 to be more normalized. Really we're not expecting industry recovery of claim rates and body shop work likely until 2026. There's a bunch of factors here on affordability of insurance, people not submitting claims, a number of other factors that we expect to play out through the remainder of 2025 and we'll get in like a more normalized like down low single digits on, on volume and claims up a couple of points on price as the normalized model and we expect that to return in 2026.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah, Mike, this is Vince. In addition to the core paint volumes Tim's talking about, just a reminder, we do have a subscription model with our out of the can MoonWalk LINQ ecosystem. That's helping us buffer versus the industry claims. That subscription model certainly continues to grow as Tim alluded to in the prepared remarks. That's a unique item for PPG that benefits us.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yeah. Look, at the end of the day, this is a world-class marquee business for PPG for the midterm, long term. And even today in this challenged claims and body shop activity environment, it's still a marquee and outstanding business for us, and we'll continue to grow in it even more so as things normalize next year. Now, a PMC business. Nine straight quarters of solid growth. Super strong in EMEA and Asia Pacific in particular. Not weak in the United States. Doing okay here too. We see that continuing to do well into the rest of this year and at least through 2026. We've got some really advantaged technologies in that business that have really taken hold in the areas of marine aftermarket, in the dry dock space, some fire protection and other technologies that we've been launching over the last couple of years.We're bullish on that business certainly for the foreseeable future when it comes to PMC.
Duffy Fischer — Analyst, Goldman Sachs
Good morning guys. When you compu versus the others that have released already, you look really good across most everything. One area that seems like others are doing a little bit better is on raw materials, where you guys are still seeing inflation and others are kind of calling it flat to down in some instances. Can you walk through? Is that just a different footprint of what you buy? Is it a different footprint geographically? Why is it that your raw materials seem to be a little bit more inflationary than peers?
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yep. Thanks, Duffy. Happy to take that question. I would point to two things. Number one is because of the size of our business in Mexico, we buy a lot more there than any of our peers. FX impact affects the raw material inflation because a lot of that is purchased in dollars. That is one.
The second piece, depending on who you are talking about. If you are largely an architectural coatings company, you do not buy a whole bunch of epoxy. Epoxy is one piece of the basket that has actually gone up. This was pre April 2. There were some tariffs already put in on epoxy that affected pricing and we had that built into our guide from the beginning of the year. I would say depending on who you are comparing us to, those would be the two big differentiators
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
And on the Mexico situation. Similar to other businesses in Latin America, our business is able to price through that inflation. It is not as impactful on the bottom line. Again, if you are comparing us price and raw materials, we feel we are certainly holding our own.
John Roberts — Analyst, Mizuho
Thank you. Your buyback activity moderated a bit in the June quarter. What should we be thinking about for the second half? Do you see any M and A? Competing with buyback?
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Hey, John, on the buybacks, you know, I've been pretty consistent since I took the job and I hope I've gotten some credibility there that, you know, we're not going to let cash build on the balance sheet. I said that when I took over. We repaid some debt and now for seven straight quarters we've been doing buybacks. You know, there was a bit of a step down in Q2 only, I'm sorry, in Q2 only, because Q1 we had the divestiture cash. So that changed the calculus a bit as far as how much we would buy in that quarter. That's what drove the step down.
We assess it at the end of every month, frankly, and to the extent I don't have a better use of cash to drive shareholder value, you should expect me to continue to behave as I have over the last seven quarters now. M and A, you know, the only super hot one out there is the one we all know about coming out of Germany, you know, and we're only interested in one piece of that and that's not consistent with their playbook on how they want to move forward with it with a transaction. Beyond that, we're looking at very small things as they come along, but nothing material that would affect our cash playbook here on the foreseeable, at least short term horizon. John, you should expect to see the same behavior out of me that you've seen since I took the job.
John Roberts — Analyst, Mizuho
Thank you.
Kevin McCarthy — Partner, Seaport Research Partners
Yes, thank you and good morning, Tim. Nice to see greater volume traction building here throughout the year. Listening to your comments, I think share gains are a meaningful part of that. I was wondering if you could talk through the performance segment and maybe help us conceptualize the gains that you've had in packaging and perhaps also protective and marine. I think on the industrial side you quantified the gains as $100 million and just trying to level set or benchmark against that figure on the performance side of the house?
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Sure. The $100 million I said, most of it is automotive OEM. Second place would be industrial coatings, and as you know, packaging is in industrial, so packaging would be third place, packaging specifically. There was some share shift that we knew coming into the year in the U.S.
would be in the opposite direction for us because we picked up some temporary business over last year. We had that built in, that was known. We've more than offset that with share gains in Europe and some share gains here with some of our new BPA NI technology. The net net is we've been net winning despite that known share shift that would happen here in the U.S. On the protective and marine, I mentioned a little bit about it. That is really being driven by a couple of new technologies that we've launched in the last few quarters. You probably saw one of them at the investor day in Sigma Glide. Another one, another marine dry dock product called SailAdvance, which is copper free, is starting to take off. We've got some really great fire protection products that we've launched in the last year or so, Kevin.That is much more technology driven, and those things are really starting to get some momentum. Hopefully that's given you enough insight there.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
I'll pick up the rest of the performance side. Kevin, this is Vince. We're well above traffic, you know, U.S. Canada industry volumes. We're probably 2x what we're seeing in the industry, and it's a very strong industry right now as infrastructure continues to take place. No question in aerospace we're continuing to serve a very hot market. Our performance there, including some of our debottlenecking, is allowing us to outperform that market. As Tim alluded to earlier, we've outperformed in refinish very clearly. We talked about that. If you look at our performance segment in Q2, all four of our businesses outgrew their market. As we said in the prepared remarks, in Q3 we expect in our industrial segment all three of those businesses to outperform market.
Ghansham Panjabi — Analyst, Baird
Yeah, thank you, operator. Good morning, everybody. You know, just following up on the last question as it relates to more specifically the industrial coatings segment, clearly you're benefiting from, you know, market share that's going to build through the back half of the year for basically all three major verticals within that segment. In terms of base market conditions for industrial coatings, how are you thinking about the outlook for the back half of the year relative to your view the last time you reported, you know, in context of still significant uncertainty with tariffs, et cetera?
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yeah, thanks, Ghosh. Of course, it's a very uncertain market. That uncertainty probably hits outside of Mexico, the issues there. It probably hits the industrial segment the hardest. That confidence that you're hearing from us for the second half is entirely share gain driven, the actual segment demand, and it does change every day, as we all know. The actual segment demand, I would say, is flat to stable in most of our end markets. Some of them being a little bit depressed, of course, like auto builds in the U.S. and Europe, some consumer products in the industrial space coming from Asia that were exported to the U.S., of course those are a bit depressed. Heavy duty equipment's a bit depressed. The aggregate, I'd say, is flat to slightly down from an industry standpoint. It's our share gains that are already launching, some of them launched and some of them launching as we speak, that give us the confidence across all three segments.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah, gosh, all three businesses. I'm sorry, I could just add to that. In most of these businesses we're talking about here, we do not see a stacking of inventory in the chain. We're certainly not, we're certainly beholden to the global macro and the tariff discussion, but there's not a big inventory reaction that we would expect either way, regardless what happens with tariffs.
Frank Mitsch — Analyst, Fermium Research
Thank you, Vince. If I could just follow up on that. I mean, the U.S. GDP numbers came out this morning pretty robust, suggesting that there was some pre buying. So perhaps you're not, you suggest you're not seeing much in the way of inventories of your customers, but can you talk about the order patterns that you saw throughout the second quarter and what you're seeing so far here in the third quarter from your customers that may be anomalous or perhaps not. Also what the FX impact on 2Q, what was that and what are your expectations for 2025? Thank you.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah, Frank, as we look again, the most sensitive segment for us as it relates to the global macro and near term is that industrial segment. We did obviously in early April and we talked about this on our April call. We did see some customer concerns around the tariffs. As we progressed through the quarter, we saw a normal order pattern return. We did not see it was not jagged, etc. I think most people, what most people absorbed psychologically the impact of the tariffs and we move forward. Again, no significant changes throughout the quarter in order patterns. Tim talked about it earlier, a little softer in Europe than we wanted, some softening in Asia again to be expected. Beyond that, no significant impacts. On a currency basis we were negative, Frank, in Q1. On a translation basis that reverted to much less negative in Q2. We expect the back half of the year to offset what happened in Q1. On a year to date basis we are closer to zero. As we exited the quarter on volumes, we did not see any pull forward into Q2.
James Hooper — Analyst, Bernstein
Hi, good morning and thank you very much. Much for taking my question. My question is around the share gains and margins from them. Now clearly your competitors have acknowledged that you are the coming force and gaining share in the markets. Not just you, but I was interested to see whether the share gains you've made have had any impact on the incremental margins from gaining share and whether there's a part of these margins increasing once you've kind of consolidated the share gains going forward? Thank you.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Thanks James. I think the way to think about it is the share gains that we've had. You should expect them to be at segment average from a gross margin standpoint, but the volume element of it as we launch them will improve our net margin obviously with the fixed cost leverage that we'll get from them, the manufacturing efficiencies so that share gain launch as we move through the second half of the year, you'll see not only the top line growth from that, but you'll see the net margin expansion as we move through the next two quarters.
Patrick Cunningham — Analyst, Citigroup
Hi, good morning. Aerospace continues to be quite strong over two or three year stack. You know, how should we think about gross levels over the next few years given pricing actions for a longer cycle business, you know, whether that starts to normalize and then the debottlenecking and new capacity you have potentially allowing you to serve more volume there.?
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yeah, Patrick, so we are, we are anticipating, you know, high single digits and double, double digit depending on what quarter? You're lapping high single digits and double digit growth, frankly, for the foreseeable future. I meet with a lot of the CEOs of these companies and every one of them, whether it's military, general aviation or commercial aviation, is, you know, their forecasts are extremely strong.
When you combine those through, you kind of get this exponential impact on us because we get the top line margin and the leverage across, across the whole business. You know, that's why we are. You see us investing both Opex and CapEx so much. You know, we just announced a new aerospace factory in the United States this past quarter at about $380 million CapEx cost and we continue to invest in debottlenecking. You know, I don't see an end to this high single digits, low double digits kind of growth trajectory for at least as many quarters as we're projecting.
Vincent Andrews — Managing Director, Morgan Stanley
Hi, good morning everyone. I'm wondering if you can speak a little bit more about the Mexico architectural market in particular, both. Hi, I'm unmuted, can you not hear me?
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yeah, we can hear you now. Hello? Yes, we hear you, Vince. Yes
Vincent Andrews — Managing Director, Morgan Stanley
You can hear me. Okay, great. Sorry, I don't know what happened, but just curious if you could speak a little bit about the. Okay, terrific. If you could speak a little bit about the Mexico architectural market and in particular, you know, sort of what you're hearing from customers that's giving you confidence that there'll be a pickup in the large project volume, you know, in 3Q and presumably more so in 4Q. What, you know, to that end, have you baked into the guidance, you know, for the full year for that? Thank you.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Sure. What we're hearing, as you would expect, given the reach of our business down there, we're pretty well connected, you know, not only to the key government entities but to the large project owners, the project managers, the contractors. As far as the sequential improvement, Vincent, there are a lot of these projects that are already in flight and so they're kind of dialing back rather than a complete stop on the spending. As we move forward here, the initial pause from April, you know, they're starting to complete and move forward with completion of some of those projects that were already in flight. Beyond that, there's a high degree of confidence from the folks that we talk to on the ground in Mexico that once our two presidents come to some kind of agreement that will open the floodgates and, you know, there will be some tariff.
I'm sure I have no idea any more so than anyone else does of what that end game will be. The advantage that Mexico has and will always have is proximity. Even if there's some tariff that adds cost to goods coming from Mexico to the United States relative to all the other alternatives who are also getting tariffed, it's still in a significantly advantaged position. It's got a strong workforce, a well-educated workforce, a highly productive workforce, and proximity, and tariffs can't put an ocean between us and Mexico. I guess the combination of projects in flight starting to restart and this pretty high level of confidence that wherever the two governments end up, Mexico will still be in an advantaged position.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah. Vincent, just to get to your second question, what's built into our guide? You look at again Q2, organic growth in Mexico was low single digits. Again retail up, our project business down. You look at the second half holistically, we have that business up modestly to mid single digits. It is not a significant step up in terms of total PPG, but again a step up sequentially from first half to second half for the project work and continued growth in retail.
Arun Viswanathan — Analyst, RBC
Great, thanks for taking my question. I guess you've shown now a few quarters of consistently improving volume growth. You know, as you just answered, aerospace is definitely contributing to that, but you are showing some better growth in some of the industrial verticals. Maybe you can just give us your outlook as you look into specifically auto OEM? I know you've answered a few questions there already, but I mean, I guess is it really production that you'd expect that would drive you further next year? Is there any other initiatives, whether it be EV growth in China or maybe some Europe customer mix, what else would you point that would maybe help continue to drive, maybe a turnaround in auto OEM? Thanks.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yeah. Hey Arun, it's a number of the things that you mentioned. I'll try to talk about each one of them. Clearly we have the share gain momentum that's kicking in now. That's one piece. The longer term fundamentals for this industry and growth are still there. There's still a deficit in new vehicles. You've got a fleet age, you've got car park per capita in places like India and China. So the fundamentals are still there. Especially given that the whole world has been pretty much under producing since COVID. Longer term the fundamentals are there. You've got this short term share gains and we do expect to start to see stabilization and increase in builds as tariff dynamics and inflation and other affordability and macro conditions get more confidence in the consumer.
There's just a, until we get through some of this period of uncertainty, there's an overall lack of confidence that's holding back auto purchases.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah. And we said in our prepared remarks, you know we're at industry in terms of volume demand and we certainly expect in the second half of the year continuing into 2026 US to outperform the industry share gain. Part of that, a couple customer specific issues that we're seeing that were negative to us in the back half of last year will be beneficial to us in the back half of this year. Those, and we still have very good positioning in China where retail sales were up double digits in the second half and production didn't match that.
Matt Dyer — Director, Bank of America
Thank you. Can we talk through the puts and takes on price raws and cost cuts. n the second half? Because if I look back to some of the prior calls, I think it's like $75 million of self-help actions and cost savings would hit 3Q and you know in a vacuum that should be able to really get you more than what you're expecting as it relates. To margin improvements year-over-year. What's kind of diluting that?
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah, Matt, just some clarification. The restructuring benefits we earmarked for this year were $75 million full year growing throughout the quarter or going to growing throughout the year. We're about a $30 million clip through the first half. We will still grow incrementally in the second half beyond what we saw in the first half. It is not an incremental $75 million. Again as we look at price cost we still expect the same inflation, raw material inflation rate. We do expect some incremental pricing to benefit us in the second half versus the first half as we put some price increases in in the second quarter in certain businesses.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Thanks. Yeah, I think, Ryan, I think that, you know, it's certainly doing better than the rest of the world as far as production outlook, you know, and that drives, given the lack of volume in the rest of the world, that drives a competitive dynamic.
You know, our technologies are really productivity focused and we do get an appreciation of that from our customers in the automotive OEM space. You know, EVs are doing better in China and one company in particular, who we are number one with, is doing better than the rest of industry. You know, about one out of every three cars produced in the world comes from China. You add all those up and China is actually acting as a buffer to us in auto OEM relative to what's happening in the U.S. and Europe.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah. One other thing I would add, Ryan, is if you look at exports from China, they're up about 10% through the first half of the year on a year-over-year basis. That's another growth element coming out of China which is driving auto production.
Josh Spector — Executive Director of Chemicals Equity, UBS
Yeah, hi, good morning. I wanted to follow up just on the conversation around architectural margins. I think, you know, Vince has highlighted earlier you had almost 100% negative incremental. You talked about some things with FX translation but the reported for the segment was zero and you talked about some costs. If I kind of put this together, if I think about a normal 40% incremental margin, correct me if I'm wrong, there's about $30 million of maybe higher costs that hit you. Can you maybe bucket those up between the supply chain issue versus FX and then as you look at the second half, should we expect this higher decremental to persist or does it go back to normal? Thank you.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
As we talked about earlier, Josh, a couple factors at play here. Most meaningful is the mixed difference between Mexico and our non-Mexico business. With Mexico B2B down, there is a mix impact. As we talked throughout the call today, we expect that to become less of an issue as we progress through the year. The FX impact normalizes in the back half of the year. Both on raw materials as well as there is an FX impact between just Europe and the Mexican peso, we did have a transitory issue in Australia. To put that in order of magnitude, that hurt our volume on a year-over-year basis by half a turn, so 50 basis points. It was impactful on our bottom line as well. As Tim alluded to earlier, that was primarily contained to Q2. Those are the big impacts. I think you will see us return to a normal incremental margin in the back half of the year as some of these FX and one-time events fall by the wayside.
Chris Parkinson — Analyst, Wolfe Research
Great, thank you so much, Tim. When you sit down with David and you think about the outlook for the company over the next, let's say, 16, you know, 6 to 18 months or so, you know, it seems like aerospace and PNM are kind of the leaders. You have some new products in both, especially PNM, you know, and then within that, I know you have some new things in auto and throughout. But where would you have the greatest confidence over the next year and a half or perhaps even longer in terms of your ability to significantly outgrow markets to the point where your confidence, the investment community will surely take notice? Yeah. Hey Chris, we're outperforming and we'll continue to outperform in aerospace. Refinish. You did not mention that one. I'm guessing that's because it's, you know, you were focused on the chemistry related innovations.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
But refinish, we will continue to launch innovations outside the can, some of which you would have seen when you were here, that drive shop productivity and digital tools, et cetera. We expect to continue to outperform there, you know, our traffic business, now that we've got it cleaned up and it's only focused on the country where we have a super strong position, we'll continue to perform and outperform there. As you know, as highway projects and infrastructure are invested in protective and marine, you know, as I said earlier, no end in sight to particularly our outperformance in the areas of fire protection and marine aftermarket.
This packaging dynamic in Europe, of Europe, increasing BPA regulations, that plays to our advantage and that'll play out in the next couple of years 2026 and 2027, you know, COMEX, PPG, Mexico will, you know, once we get through this transitory issue with project spending being paused, that'll continue to be an area of outperformance for us, I think share gains in industrial coatings where we frankly across many of our segments, where we have a strong product and service offering but are underrepresented in shareholders. As we focus more acutely on the areas where we have a strongest right to win, you'll see that business outperforming.
At the end of the day, Chris, our algorithm for growth combination of our talented people, our much more focused and sharper kind of future facing portfolio, much more disciplined around our enterprise growth strategy and where we invest and where we have the strongest right to win. Our three new crisply defined operating segments that drive distinct missions, distinct value propositions, distinct investment criteria. The three-pronged innovation approach that you heard about when you were here. Between chemistry inside the can, digital productivities outside the can and then the use of AI not only for productivity internally, but also customer-facing use cases and the key enablers of a lot of work that we're doing on OpEx and commercial excellence. The outcoming of that is we are committed to what I laid out two years ago, which was ongoing.
A 2-4% organic growth company that delivers an 8-10% EPS growth every year and a billion dollars of adjusted free cash flow. That's kind of our growth algorithm. When you take everything I described in each of the businesses plus what we're doing to build this organic growth in margin machine, we're comfortable that those commitments that we've made to the investment community are in fact what we'll deliver.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah, and that's pretty casual number again, as everybody recalls, includes the deduction for capital spending.
Jeffrey Zekauskas — Analyst, J.P. Morgan
Thanks very much. Two part question for Vince. Cash flow from operations was $370 million or so for the first couple of quarters. Last year you did $1.4 billion. Do you expect cash flow from operations? This year to be the same as last year or higher or lower? For Tim, the results in performance coatings were good. That is, volume growth was plus 3% and price was plus 3%. Your operating income was up maybe 9% or $30 million. I can imagine it being up double that with that kind of price and volume. Were you satisfied with the performance coatings results or was there something that's been holding the margins back? Your incrementals were in the low.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
Yeah, Jeff, sorry Jeff. Yeah, this is Vince. We are tracking ahead of prior year in cash from operations. Certainly as you're well aware, most of our cash flow because of the seasonality of our businesses is back half weighted. We still have our normal blocking and tackling to do as it relates to inventory management as we come out of the peak seasons, collections from our customers. Our expectation is for our cash to grow on a year-over-year basis. Our cash from operations to grow on a year-over-year basis.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yeah, Jeff, on the margin question, of course I would have wanted the net margin for performance coatings to drop more, you know, EBIT, EBITDA and cash to the bottom line. But we made a conscious decision coming into the year. I mean this segment is, I mean, 25.7% EBITDA segment, strong, strong growth of mid single digits in a very difficult operating environment. It is a shining star right now and we want to capture as much of that value as we can for the future for our shareholders. We made a conscious decision to make some fairly significant investments, particularly in aerospace and protective and marine and some digital investments in Refinish so that we can keep this thing running like it is and growing into the future.
Jeff, we made a conscious decision to spend more on Opex, growth-focused Opex for things like debottlenecking in aerospace, digital initiatives in Refinish and, you know, feet on the street and penetration initiatives in protective and marine.
Aron Ceccarelli — Analyst, Berenberg
Hello, good morning and congrats on the good quarter. You slightly revised down your organic sales growth guidance for both architectural paints and industrial coatings. I take the point that Q2, perhaps on the volume side, was a bit softer than expected in architectural paints. Could you please break down the contributing factors in terms of volumes and pricing for the second half for these two segments, particularly because from what I see you are quite positive on the outlook for industrial coatings. Thank you.
Tim Knavish — Chairman and CEO, PPG Industries
Yeah, so I'll take the first part of it on. You know, on architectural, we did adjust down our outlook, particularly for Europe. You know, we were disappointed in Europe that the momentum that we saw in late Q1, you know, didn't continue into Q2. We thought the prudent thing to do going forward was to assume that it would be, you know, kind of current state plus our share gains that would drive and did not count on any market recovery. The flip side of that, Aaron, is that any stimulus, any catalyst, whether it be the impact of a tariff agreement, whether we see some progress in Ukraine, whether we see some progress in the Middle East, anything that would give a little bit of consumer confidence in Europe would be a positive to what we have guided in our revised guide for Architectural Europe.
Because actually, the household balance sheets are pretty strong, generally speaking. It's much more about consumer confidence.
Vincent Morales — SVP and CFO, PPG industries
On industrial, very modest decrement to our prior guide, really relating to what we saw in Q2 in China. Just carrying forward again, I would call it more rounding in terms of percentages.
Alex Lopez — Director of Investor Relations, PPG Industries
Thank you, Carly. We appreciate your interest and confidence in PPG. This concludes our Second Quarter Earnings Call.