Annual / Quarterly Financial Statement • Mar 31, 2025
Annual / Quarterly Financial Statement
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at 31 december 2024


| Corporate bodies 5 | |
|---|---|
| Separate financial statements and notes thereto | |
| as at and for the year ended 31 December 2024 7 | |
| Statement of financial position 9 | |
| Statement of profit or loss 10 | |
| Statement of comprehensive income 10 | |
| Statement of cash flows 11 | |
| Statement of changes in equity 12 | |
| NOTES TO THE SEPARATE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AT 31 DECEMBER 2024 13 | |
| Basis of measurement 18 | |
| Notes to the statement of financial position 31 | |
| Notes to the statement of profit or loss 59 | |
| Other information (note 33) 69 | |
| Annexes to the separate financial statements | |
| as at and for the year ended 31 December 2024 77 | |


| Board of directors | Chairperson | Luigi Rossi Luciani |
|---|---|---|
| Executive deputy chairperson | Luigi Nalini | |
| Chief executive officer | Francesco Nalini | |
| Executive director | Carlotta Rossi Luciani | |
| Independent director | Cinzia Donalisio | |
| Independent director | Marina Manna | |
| Independent director | Mario Cesari | |
| Independent director | Laura Rovizzi | |
| Independent director | Gianluigi Vittorio Castelli | |
| Board of statutory auditors | Chairperson | Paolo Prandi |
| Standing statutory auditor | Saverio Bozzolan | |
| Standing statutory auditor | Gianna Adami | |
| Alternate statutory auditor | Fabio Gallio | |
| Alternate statutory auditor | Elena Angela Maria Valenti | |
| Independent auditors | Deloitte & Touche S.p.A. | |
| Audit, risk and sustainability committee |
Chairperson | Marina Manna |
| Member | Cinzia Donalisio | |
| Member | Mario Cesari | |
| Remuneration committee | Chairperson | Cinzia Donalisio |
| Member | Marina Manna | |
| Member | Mario Cesari | |
| Supervisory body pursuant to | Chairperson | Alberto Berardi |
| Legislative decree no. 231/2001 | Member | Arianna Giglio |
| Member | Alessandro Grassetto |

Carel Industries Group Separate financial statements at 31 December 2024



Carel Industries Group Separate financial statements at 31 December 2024


| (in Euros) | NOTE | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Property, plant and equipment | 1 | 37,589,160 | 34,804,514 |
| Intangible assets | 2 | 12,477,058 | 10,766,366 |
| Equity investments | 3 | 410,777,917 | 386,674,659 |
| Other non-current assets | 4 | 34,261,785 | 37,199,253 |
| Deferred tax assets | 5 | 3,922,445 | 3,163,322 |
| Non-current assets | 499,028,365 | 472,608,114 | |
| Trade receivables | 6 | 47,034,727 | 56,097,211 |
| Inventories | 7 | 27,299,088 | 33,602,400 |
| Current tax assets | 8 | 2,245,910 | 1,658,017 |
| Other current assets | 9 | 9,549,529 | 7,788,315 |
| Current financial assets | 10 | 9,553,816 | 11,721,622 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 11 | 28,797,275 | 91,619,429 |
| Total current assets | 124,480,345 | 202,486,994 | |
| TOTAL ASSETS | 623,508,710 | 675,095,108 | |
| Equity | 12 | 360,535,881 | 359,041,056 |
| Equity | 360,535,881 | 359,041,056 | |
| Non-current financial liabilities | 13 | 95,877,160 | 131,713,125 |
| Provisions for risks | 14 | 1,319,731 | 1,284,506 |
| Defined benefit plans | 15 | 3,140,243 | 4,318,847 |
| Deferred tax liabilities | 16 | 212,206 | 577,108 |
| Other non-current liabilities | 17 | 11,203,667 | 17,139,948 |
| Non-current liabilities | 111,753,007 | 155,033,534 | |
| Current financial liabilities | 13 | 72,449,612 | 60,726,077 |
| Trade payables | 18 | 59,007,750 | 66,800,047 |
| Current tax liabilities | 19 | - | - |
| Provisions for risks | 14 | 2,982,409 | 2,949,857 |
| Other current liabilities | 20 | 16,780,051 | 30,544,537 |
| Current liabilities | 151,219,822 | 161,020,518 | |
| TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY | 623,508,710 | 675,095,108 |


| (in Euros) | NOTE | 2024 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 21 | 232,010,346 | 285,268,391 |
| Other revenue | 22 | 5,727,260 | 9,605,403 |
| Costs of raw materials, consumables and goods and change in | |||
| inventories | 23 | (137,752,390) | (158,970,064) |
| Services | 24 | (37,950,944) | (41,997,979) |
| Capitalised development expenditure | 25 | 2,651,601 | 881,984 |
| Personnel expense | 26 | (50,994,879) | (53,654,187) |
| Other expense, net | 27 | (1,554,203) | (1,360,817) |
| Amortisation, depreciation and impairment losses | 28 | (11,448,842) | (10,525,112) |
| OPERATING PROFIT | 687,949 | 29,247,619 | |
| Net financial income | 29 | 33,695,429 | 17,483,827 |
| Net exchange gains (losses) | 30 | 501,215 | 193,045 |
| Net impairment gains on financial assets | 31 | (9,575,526) | 2,287,870 |
| PROFIT BEFORE TAX | 25,309,067 | 49,212,361 | |
| Income taxes | 32 | (2,144,220) | (4,697,812) |
| PROFIT FOR THE YEAR | 23,164,847 | 44,514,549 |
| (in Euros) | NOTE | 2024 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| PROFIT FOR THE YEAR | 23,164,847 | 44,514,549 | |
| Items that may be subsequently reclassified to profit or loss: | |||
| Fai value losses on hedging derivatives | 12 | (349,825) | (1,130,686) |
| Related tax | 12 | 83,958 | 271,364 |
| Total items that may be subsequently reclassified to profit or loss | (265,867) | (859,322) | |
| Items that may not be subsequently reclassified to profit or loss: | |||
| IAS 19 - Actuarial gains (losses) on post-employment benefits | 12 | 16,970 | (112,993) |
| Related tax | 12 | (5,018) | 33,412 |
| IAS 19 - Actuarial gains (losses) on post-term of office benefits for directors | 12 | (42,465) | 12,404 |
| Total items that may not be subsequently reclassified to profit or loss | (30,513) | (67,177) | |
| COMPREHENSIVE INCOME | 22,868,467 | 43,588,050 |

| (in Euros) | NOTE | 2024 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Profit for the year | 23,164,847 | 44,514,549 | |
| Adjustments for: | |||
| Amortisation, depreciation and impairment losses | 28 / 31 | 21,024,368 | 8,237,242 |
| Accruals to/utilisations of provisions | 6,591,791 | 7,477,990 | |
| Other (income) expense, net | (8,891,944) | 7,109,654 | |
| Financial (income) expenses, net | (26,884,780) | (24,640,086) | |
| Income taxes | 32 | 2,144,220 | 4,697,812 |
| Gains on the sale of non-current assets | (37,440) | (26,919) | |
| Changes in working capital: | |||
| Change in trade receivables and other current assets | 7,605,660 | (4,303,534) | |
| Change in inventories | 7 | 2,561,797 | (5,740,128) |
| Change in trade payables and other current liabilities | (12,258,200) | 5,200,237 | |
| Change in non-current assets | 178,656 | 790,455 | |
| Change in non-current liabilities | (1,362,662) | (449,141) | |
| Cash flows from operating activities | 13,836,313 | 42,868,131 | |
| Net interest paid | (5,488,924) | (6,241,999) | |
| Income taxes paid | (238,779) | (3,100,445) | |
| Net cash flows from (used in) operating activities | 8,108,610 | 33,525,687 | |
| Investments in property, plant and equipment | 1 | (9,146,733) | (8,701,999) |
| Investments in intangible assets | 2 | (6,455,046) | (4,596,159) |
| Disinvestments of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets | 248,555 | 58,178 | |
| Investments in investees | (44,395,895) | (169,124,356) | |
| Cash flows used in investing activities | (59,749,119) | (182,364,336) | |
| Capital increases | - | 196,468,844 | |
| Repurchase of treasury shares | - | (1,041,927) | |
| Dividend distributions | 12 | (21,373,642) | (17,998,856) |
| Dividends collected | 29 | 28,154,760 | 29,826,749 |
| Interest collected | 2,545,908 | 1,678,380 | |
| Increase in financial liabilities | 20,726,034 | 261,655,241 | |
| Decrease in financial liabilities | (43,019,536) | (259,256,272) | |
| Decrease in lease liabilities | (2,018,196) | (1,871,413) | |
| Increase in financial assets | (3,703,367) | (19,584,695) | |
| Decrease in financial assets | 7,506,394 | 11,943,658 | |
| Cash flows from (used in) financing activities | (11,181,645) | 201,819,709 | |
| Change in cash and cash equivalents | (62,822,154) | 52,981,060 | |
| Cash and cash equivalents - opening balance | 91,619,429 | 38,638,369 | |
| Cash and cash equivalents - closing balance | 11 | 28,797,275 | 91,619,429 |


Carel Industries Group Separate financial statements at 31 December 2024
| Share capital |
Legal reserve |
Hedging reserve |
Actuarial reserve |
Income related reserves and other reserves |
Equity related reserves |
IFRS reserve |
Treasury shares |
Stock grant reserve |
Retained earnings |
Profit for the year |
Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) 31 December 2022 |
10.000.000 2.000.000 1.252.157 | 59.306 | 66.660.574 | 10.397.335 2.145.495 | (339.490) | 864.932 | 476.149 | 44.508.486 138.024.944 | ||||
| Share capital increase | 1.249.921 | 195.218.924 | 196.468.845 | |||||||||
| Allocation of prior year profit |
||||||||||||
| - dividend distributions | (11.543) | (17.987.313) (17.998.856) | ||||||||||
| - other allocations | 26.521.173 | - | - (26.521.173) | - | ||||||||
| Movements in stock | ||||||||||||
| grant reserve | (864.932) | (864.932) | ||||||||||
| Repurchase of treasury shares |
(1.041.927) | (1.041.927) | ||||||||||
| Assignment of treasury | ||||||||||||
| shares | (355.304) | 1.220.236 | 864.932 | |||||||||
| Profit for the year | 44.514.549 | 44.514.549 | ||||||||||
| Other comprehensive | ||||||||||||
| income | (859.322) | (67.177) | - | (926.499) | ||||||||
| 31 December 2023 | 11.249.921 2.000.000 | 392.835 | (7.871) | 92.814.900 205.616.259 2.145.495 | (161.181) | - 476.149 | 44.514.549 359.041.056 | |||||
| Share capital increase | - | - | ||||||||||
| Allocation of prior year profit |
||||||||||||
| - dividend distributions | (21.373.642) (21.373.642) | |||||||||||
| - other allocations | 249.984 | 22.890.923 | - (23.140.907) | - | ||||||||
| Movements in stock grant reserve |
- | |||||||||||
| Repurchase of treasury shares |
- | |||||||||||
| Assignment of treasury shares |
- | |||||||||||
| Reclassification of reserves |
121.026 | (120.838) | (188) | - | ||||||||
| Profit for the year | 23.164.847 | 23.164.847 | ||||||||||
| Other comprehensive | ||||||||||||
| expense | (265.867) | (30.513) | - | (296.380) | ||||||||
| 31 December 2024 | 11.249.921 2.249.984 | 126.968 | 82.642 115.584.985 205.616.259 2.145.307 | (161.181) | - 476.149 | 23.164.847 360.535.881 |

Carel Industries S.p.A. (the "company") is an Italian company limited by shares, with registered office in Via Dell'Industria 11, Brugine (PD). It is registered with the Padua company registrar.
Carel Industries S.p.A. provides control instruments to the air-conditioning and commercial and industrial refrigeration markets and also produces air humidification systems.
These separate financial statements were prepared in accordance with the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and cover the year from 1 January to 31 December 2024.
The company prepared its separate and consolidated financial statements in accordance with the IFRS issued by the International Accounting Standards Board and endorsed by the European Union on 1 January 2015 (the transition date).
The company's board of directors approved the separate financial statements at 31 December 2024 on 13 March 2025.
The separate financial statements were prepared in accordance with the updated accounting records.
The separate financial statements at 31 December 2024 were prepared in accordance with the IFRS issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and endorsed by the European Commission with the procedure set out in article 6 of Regulation (EC) no. 1606/2002 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 19 July 2002.
The IFRS include all the standards as well as the interpretations of the International Financial Reporting Standards Interpretations Committee (IFRS IC), previously called the Standing Interpretations Committee (SIC), endorsed by the European Union at the reporting date and included in the related EU regulations published at that date.
The separate financial statements include the statement of financial position, statement of profit or loss, statement of comprehensive income, statement of changes in equity, statement of cash flows and these notes. They were prepared using the historical cost principle and assuming the company will continue as a going concern. The company assumed that it could adopt the going concern assumption pursuant to IAS 1.25/26 given its strong market position, very satisfactory profits and solid financial structure.
The separate financial statements were prepared in Euros, which is the company's functional and presentation currency as per IAS 21, unless indicated otherwise.
The company availed itself of the option allowed by article 40.2-bis of Legislative decree no. 127 of 9 April 1991, as amended by Legislative decree no. 32 of 2 February 2007, which provides for the preparation of a single directors' report for the separate and consolidated financial statements of Carel Industries S.p.A..


Statement of financial position Assets and liabilities are presented as current or non-current as required by paragraph 60 and following paragraphs of IAS 1.
An asset or liability is classified as current when it meets one of the following criteria:
All other assets and liabilities are classified as non-current.
Statement of profit or loss The company has opted to present the statement of profit or loss classifying items by their nature rather than their function, as this best represents the transactions undertaken during the year and its business structure. This approach is consistent with the company's internal management reporting system and international best practices for its sector. Following adoption of revised IAS 1, the company decided to present the statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive income in two separate statements.
Statement of comprehensive income This statement, prepared in accordance with the IFRS, presents other items of comprehensive income that are recognised directly in equity.
Statement of cash flows The company prepares this statement using the indirect method. Cash and cash equivalents included herein comprise the statement of financial position balances at the reporting date. Interest expense and income taxes are included in the cash flows generated by operating activities and interest income are included in cash flow generated by investing activities. The company presents cash flows from operating activities and investing activities and changes in non-current financial position, current liabilities and current financial assets separately. If not specified, exchange gains and losses are classified in the operating activities as they refer to the translation of trade receivables and payables into Euros.
Statement of changes in equity This statement shows changes in the equity captions related to:

Business combinations are treated using the acquisition method. The consideration is recognised at fair value, calculated as the sum of the acquisition-date fair values of the assets transferred and liabilities assumed by the acquirer and the equity interests issued in exchange for control of the acquiree. Transaction costs are usually recognised in profit or loss when they are incurred.
The assets acquired and the liabilities assumed are recognised at their acquisition-date fair value, except for the following items which are measured in line with the relevant IFRS:
Goodwill is calculated as the excess of the aggregate of the consideration transferred for a business combination, the amount of any non-controlling interest in the acquiree and the acquisition-date fair value of the acquirer's previously held equity interest in the acquiree and the net of the acquisition-date fair value of the assets acquired and liabilities assumed. Goodwill is only recognised after its recoverability has been tested by analysing its future cash flows.
If the acquisition-date fair value of the assets acquired and liabilities assumed is greater than the consideration transferred, the amount of any non-controlling interest in the acquiree and the acquisitiondate fair value of the acquirer's previously held equity interest in the acquiree, the resulting gain is recognised immediately in profit or loss.
The amount of any non-controlling interest in the acquiree at the acquisition date is the pre-combination carrying amount of the acquiree's net assets.
Contingent consideration is measured at its acquisition-date fair value and included in the consideration exchanged for the acquiree to calculate goodwill. Any subsequent changes in fair value, which are measurement period adjustments, are included in goodwill retrospectively. Changes in fair value which are measurement period adjustments are those that arise due to additional information becoming available about facts and circumstances that existed at the acquisition date and was obtained during the measurement period (that cannot exceed one year from the acquisition date). Any subsequent change in contingent consideration is included in profit or loss.
The separate financial statements at 31 December 2024 were prepared in accordance with the IFRS issued by the IASB, endorsed by the European Union and applicable at the reporting date. They are presented in Euros, which is the company's functional currency, i.e., the currency of the primary economic environment in which it mainly operates. Amounts are rounded to the nearest unit.
The separate financial statements at 31 December 2024 present the company's financial position and performance in accordance with the IFRS.
They were prepared using the historical cost criterion, except for derivative financial instruments hedging currency and interest rate risks and available-for-sale financial assets, which were measured at fair value as required by IFRS 9 Financial instruments: recognition and measurement.
Preparation of separate financial statements under the IFRS requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts in the financial statements and the notes. Actual results may differ from these estimates. Reference should be made to the "Use of estimates" section for details of the captions more likely to be affected by estimates.

Following its decision to adopt the IFRS starting from the separate financial statements at 31 December 2017, the company referred to the standards applicable from 1 January 2017 to prepare its separate financial statements at 31 December 2024, in accordance with the provisions of IFRS 1.
The company applied the following standards, amendments and interpretations for the first time starting from 1 January 2024:
The company applied the amendments starting from 1 January 2024. The adoption of these standards and amendments did not affect the separate financial statements.
The following IFRS accounting standards, amendments and interpretations have been endorsed by the European Union but are not yet mandatorily applicable and have not been adopted early by the company at the reporting date:
• On 15 August 2023, the IASB issued Lack of exchangeability (Amendments to IAS 21) to require an entity to apply a consistent methodology to determine whether a currency is exchangeable into another and, when this is not possible, how to determine the exchange rate to be used and the related disclosures. The amendments are effective for reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2025, but earlier application is permitted.
The directors do not expect the amendment will significantly affect the company's separate financial statements.

At the reporting date, the EU's relevant bodies had not yet completed the endorsement process for adoption of the following amendments and standards:
In addition, IFRS 18:
IFRS 18 applies to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2027, but earlier application is allowed. The directors are currently evaluating the possible effects of the introduction of this new standard on the company's separate financial statements.
IFRS 19 applies to annual periods beginning on or after 1 January 2027, but earlier application is allowed. The directors do not expect the amendment will significantly affect the company's separate financial statements.
The amendments are effective for reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2026, but earlier application is permitted.
The directors do not expect these amendments to significantly affect the company's separate financial statements.


Revenue is measured based on the fee contractually-agreed with the customer and does not include amounts collected on behalf of third parties. The company recognises revenue when control of the goods or services is transferred to the customer. Revenue is recognised to the extent it is probable the company will receive the economic benefits and it can be measured reliably. Most contracts with customers provide for commercial discounts and discounts based on volumes, which modify the revenue itself. In defining the amount of the variable consideration that may be included in the transaction price, the company calculates the amount of variable consideration that cannot yet be considered realised at each reporting date.
Revenue from the sale of HVAC products and services refer to sales of products for air control and humidification in the industrial, residential and commercial segment (heat ventilation and air conditioning), while refrigeration revenue refers to sales to the food retail and food service segment. The sales in both markets can be divided into the following three macro channels: (i) OEM (Original Equipment Manufacturers), (ii) Dealers and (iii) Projects. Non-core revenue is earned on products that do not make up the company's core business.
The warranties related to these categories of products are warranties for general repair and in most cases, the company does not provide extended warranties. The company recognises warranties in compliance with IAS 37 Provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets.
There are no significant services provided for a lengthy period of time.
Advertising and research costs are expensed in full as required by IAS 38 Intangible assets. Revenue from services is recognised when the services are rendered.
Revenue and expenses are recognised on an accruals basis in line with the interest accrued on the carrying amount of the related financial assets and liabilities using the effective interest method.
They are recognised when the shareholder's right to receive payment is established, which normally takes place when the shareholders pass the related resolution. The dividend distribution is recognised as a liability in the separate financial statements of the period in which the shareholders approve such distribution.
They reflect a realistic estimate of the company's tax burden, calculated in accordance with the current regulations; current tax liabilities are recognised in the statement of financial position net of any payments on account.
Deferred tax assets and liabilities arise on temporary differences between the carrying amount of an asset or liability pursuant to the IFRS and its tax base, calculated using the tax rates enacted or reasonably expected to be enacted in future years. Deferred tax assets are only recognised when their recovery is probable while deferred tax liabilities are always recognised as required by IAS 12 Income taxes. The company does not net current and deferred taxes. Deferred tax liabilities on untaxed reserves are accounted for in the year in which the liability to pay the dividend is recognised.
Income taxes relative to prior years include prior year tax income and expense.

Foreign currency financial assets and liabilities are translated into Euros using the transaction-date exchange rate. Any gains or losses when the foreign currency financial asset is collected or the financial liability settled are recognised in profit or loss.
Revenue, income, costs and expenses related to foreign currency transactions are recognised at the spot rate ruling on the transaction date. At the reporting date, foreign currency assets and liabilities are retranslated using the spot closing rate and the related exchange rate gains or losses are recognised in profit or loss. Non-monetary items are recognised using the transaction-date exchange rate.
They are recognised at historical cost, including ancillary costs necessary to ready the asset for the use for which it has been purchased.
Maintenance and repair costs that do not extend the asset's life and/or enhance its value are expensed when incurred; otherwise, they are capitalised.
Property, plant and equipment are stated net of accumulated depreciation and impairment losses calculated using the methods described later in this section. The depreciable amount of an asset is allocated on a systematic basis over its useful life, which is reviewed once a year. Any necessary changes are applied prospectively.
The depreciation rates of the main categories of property, plant and equipment are as follows:
| Rate | |
|---|---|
| Buildings: | |
| - Light constructions | 10.00% |
| - Industrial buildings | 3.00% |
| Plant and machinery: | |
| - Generic plant | 10.00% |
| - Automatic operating machinery | 10.00%-15.50% |
| Industrial and commercial equipment | 25.00% |
| Other items of property, plant and equipment: | |
| - Office furniture and equipment | 12.00%-20.00% |
| - Hardware | 20.00% |
| - Cars | 25.00% |
| - Telecommunication systems | 20.00% |
| - Other items of property, plant and equipment | 20.00% |
| - Right-of-use assets | Contract term |
Land has an indefinite useful life and therefore is not depreciated.
Assets held under lease are recognised as right-of-use assets at the present value of the lease payments.
The liability to the lessor is shown under financial liabilities. The leased assets are depreciated over the lease term.
Lease payments for short-term leases or leases of low-value assets are recognised in profit or loss over the lease term.
When the asset is sold or there are no future economic benefits expected from its use it is derecognised and the gain or loss (calculated as the difference between the asset's sales price and carrying amount) is recognised in profit or loss in the year of derecognition.
Leasehold improvements that are not economically separable from the assets in use are depreciated over the useful life of the costs incurred, from the moment they are incurred or when the asset become available for use.


These are identifiable, non-monetary assets without physical substance that are controlled by the entity and from which future economic benefits are expected to flow to the entity. They are initially recognised at cost when this can be reliably determined using the same methods applied to property, plant and equipment.
These assets are subsequently presented net of accumulated amortisation and any impairment losses. Their useful life is reviewed regularly and any changes are applied prospectively. Costs incurred to internally generate an intangible asset are capitalised in line with the provisions of IAS 38.
Their estimated useful life is between three and ten years.
Gains or losses on the sale of an intangible asset are calculated as the difference between the asset's sales price and its carrying amount. They are recognised in profit or loss at the sales date.
This is the excess of the aggregate of the consideration transferred for a business combination, the amount of any non-controlling interest in the acquiree and the acquisition-date fair value of the acquirer's previously held equity interest in the acquiree over the net of the acquisition-date fair value of the assets acquired and liabilities assumed. Goodwill is not amortised but is tested annually for impairment or whenever a trigger event occurs. For the purposes of impairment testing, goodwill is allocated to each of the company's cash-generating units that is expected to benefit from the business combination.
This is incurred for the development of new products and the improvement of existing products and for the development and improvement of production processes. It is capitalised in accordance with IAS 38 if the innovations introduced create processes that are technically feasible and/or marketable products provided that they are aimed at completing development projects and the resources necessary for the completion and the costs and economic benefits of such innovations can be reliably measured. The expenses that are capitalised include internal and external design costs (including personnel expense and the cost of the services and materials used) reasonably attributable to the projects. As development expenditure is an intangible asset with a finite useful life, it is amortised in line with the period in which the economic benefits are expected to be obtained, generally identified as five years. The expenses are adjusted for impairment losses that could occur after first recognition. Amortisation begins from the moment that the products become available for use. The useful life is reviewed and adjusted in line with the expected future use.
Assets with an indefinite useful life are not amortised but are tested for impairment once a year to check whether their carrying amount has undergone impairment.
The board of directors adopted a policy that defines the criteria for the impairment test, the controls to be carried out to guarantee the reliability of the process and the procedure to approve the test, in line with Consob (the Italian Commission for listed companies and the stock exchange) recommendation no. 0003907 of 15 January 2015.
Amortisable assets are tested for impairment whenever events or circumstances suggest that their carrying amount cannot be recovered (trigger events). In both cases, the impairment loss is the amount by which the asset's carrying amount exceeds its recoverable amount, which is the higher of the asset's fair value less costs to sell and its value in use. If it is not possible to determine an asset's value in use, the recoverable value of the cash-generating unit (CGU) to which the asset belongs is calculated. Assets are grouped into the smallest identifiable group of assets that generates cash inflows that are largely independent of the cash inflows from other assets or groups of assets. The company calculates the

present value of the estimated future cash flows of the CGU using a discount rate that reflects the time value of money and the risks specific to the asset.
If an impairment loss on an asset other than goodwill subsequently decreases or no longer exists, the carrying amount of the asset or the CGU is increased to the new estimate of its recoverable amount which will not, in any case, exceed the carrying amount the asset would have had if no impairment loss had been recognised.
Reversals of impairment losses are recognised immediately in profit or loss using the model provided for in IAS 16 Property, plant and equipment.
Investments in subsidiaries and associates are recognised as financial assets based on the acquisition cost criterion, including ancillary costs and are adjusted for impairment in accordance with IAS 36. Specifically, if there are indicators of potential impairment losses, an impairment test is carried out.
The carrying amount is adjusted for impairment, the effect of which is recognised in profit or loss as a reduction of the asset. If these losses no longer exist or they decrease, the carrying amount is increased in line with the new recoverable amount, which must not exceed the original cost. The reversal of impairment is recognised in profit or loss.
The fair value of any call options for the non-controlling interest in investees are included in the equity investment's carrying amount, as required by the IFRS.
They are initially recognised at their fair value and subsequently measured at amortised cost. Financial assets are initially recognised at their fair value increased, in the case of assets other than those recognised at fair value through profit or loss, by ancillary costs. When subscribed, the company assesses whether a contract includes embedded derivatives. The embedded derivatives are separated from the host contract if this is not measured at fair value when the analysis shows that the economic characteristics and risks of the embedded derivative are not closely related to those of the host contract.
The company classifies its financial assets after initial recognition and, when appropriate and permitted, reviews this classification at the reporting date.
It recognises all purchases and sales of financial assets at the transaction date, i.e., the date on which the company assumes the commitment to buy or sell the asset.
All financial assets within the scope of IFRS 9 are recognised at amortised cost or fair value depending on the business model for managing the financial asset and the asset's contractual cash flow characteristics.
Specifically:
When a debt instrument measured at FVTOCI is derecognised, the cumulative gain or loss previously recognised in other comprehensive income is reclassified from equity to profit or loss as a reclassification adjustment. On the other hand, when an equity instrument measured at FVTOCI is derecognised, the


cumulative gain or loss that was previously recognised in other comprehensive income is transferred to retained earnings, without affecting profit or loss.
Debt instruments subsequently measured at amortised cost or FVTOCI are tested for impairment.
Any impairment losses are recognised in profit or loss after use of the fair value reserve if this has been set up. Subsequent impairment gains are recognised in profit or loss except in the case of equity instruments for which the impairment gain is recognised in equity.
The company has zero-balance cash pooling contracts with certain European Carel Industries group companies. These instruments are intended to ensure optimal management of cash flows, allowing for the centralised management of the group's financial needs by transferring to a pooler, namely Carel Industries S.p.A., the credit and debit balances of current accounts of the individual group companies. The main aim is to use the cash surplus of one or more group companies to eliminate or reduce the bank debt exposure of the other companies. Following the transfer of the balances to the pool account, the individual companies must recognise a liability in the case of a negative balance and an asset in the case of a positive balance. Subsequently, the pooler recognises the individual transactions, sending a statement to the group companies on a regular basis. At the agreed expiry, the pooler settles the debit and credit balances.
The companies that take part in the cash pooling scheme are: Carel Industries S.p.A. (pooler) and its subsidiaries Carel U.K. Ltd, Carel France s.a.s., Carel Deutschland GmbH, Carel Control Iberica Sl; Carel Adriatic D.o.o., Alfaco Polska Sp.z.o.o, HygroMatik GmbH, Recuperator S.p.A., Enginia S.r.l. and Klingenburg International Sp. Z.o.o..
They are measured at the lower of purchase and/or production cost, calculated using the weighted average cost method, and net realisable value. Purchase cost comprises all ancillary costs. Production cost includes the directly related costs and a portion of the indirect costs that are reasonably attributable to the products.
Work in progress is measured at average cost considering the stage of completion of the related contracts.
Obsolete and/or slow moving items are written down to reflect their estimated possible use or realisation through an allowance.
The write-down is reversed in subsequent years if the reasons therefor no longer exist.
They are initially recognised at fair value, which is usually the same as their nominal amount, and subsequently measured at amortised cost and impaired, if appropriate. Their carrying amount is adjusted to their estimated realisable amount through the loss allowance. The company has adopted a policy in order to consider the "expected credit losses" in the calculation of the allowance for doubtful accounts by considering both the historical trends noted in previous years and the expectations of future realization based on the geography of the receivables' recognition
Foreign currency trade receivables are translated into Euros using the transaction-date exchange rate and subsequently retranslated using the closing rate. The exchange gain or loss is recognised in profit or loss.
They include cash, i.e., highly liquid investments (maturity of less than three months) that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash and which are subject to an insignificant risk of changes in value.

This caption includes the Italian post-employment benefits ("TFR") and other employee benefits covered by IAS 19 Employee benefits. As a defined benefit plan, independent actuaries calculate the TFR at the end of each reporting period. The liability recognised in the statement of financial position is the present value of the defined benefit obligation at the end of the reporting period. These benefits are calculated using the projected unit credit method. Law no. 296/06 changed the Italian post-employment benefits scheme and benefits accrued after 1 January 2007 are now classified as defined contribution plans (using the terminology provided in IAS 19), regardless of whether the employee decides to have them transferred to the INPS (the Italian social security institution) treasury fund or an external pension plan. Benefits vested up until 31 December 2006 continue to be recognised as part of a defined benefit plan and are subject to actuarial valuation, excluding the future salary increase component. The company does not have plan assets. It recognises actuarial gains and losses in the period in which they arise. Pursuant to IAS 19 (revised), they have been recognised directly in other comprehensive income starting from 2015.
As required by IAS 37 Provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets, the company recognises a provision when (i) it has a present legal or constructive obligation to third parties as a result of a past event, (ii) it is probable that an outflow of resources embodying economic benefits will be required to settle the obligation and (iii) a reliable estimate can be made of the amount of the obligation. Changes in estimates from one period to another are recognised in profit or loss.
Where the effect of the time value of money is material and the payment dates of the obligation can be estimated reliably, the amount of a provision is the present value of the expenditures expected to be required to settle the obligation. Any subsequent changes arising from the passage of time are recognised as financial income or expense in the statement of profit or loss.
No provision is made for possible but not probable risks but the company provides adequate disclosure thereon in the notes.
Trade payables and other current liabilities which fall due within normal trading terms are initially recognised at cost, which equals their nominal amount, and are not discounted. When their due date is longer than normal trading terms, the interest is separated using an appropriate market rate.
They are classified as current liabilities unless the company has an unconditional right to defer their payment for at least 12 months after the reporting date. The company removes the financial liability when it is extinguished and the company has transferred all the risks and rewards related thereto. Financial liabilities are initially recognised at their fair value and subsequently measured using the amortised cost method.
This caption mainly includes the derivatives liabilities for the call option for a non-controlling interest. The call option was initially measured at its fair value at the acquisition date and it is remeasured at each reporting date. Any resulting fair value gains or losses are recognised in profit or loss under financial income or expense.
The other non-current liabilities are initially recognised at cost, which is equal to their nominal amount.


The company solely uses derivatives to hedge currency risk on foreign currency commercial transactions and interest risk on its medium to long-term debt.
Initial recognition and subsequent measurement is at the derivatives' fair value, applying the following accounting treatments:
When the conditions for application of hedge accounting are no longer met, the company reclassifies the fair value gains or losses on the derivative directly to profit or loss.
Preparation of the separate financial statements requires management to apply accounting policies and methods that, in certain circumstances, are based on complex and subjective judgements, past experience or assumptions that are considered reliable and realistic at that time depending on the related circumstances. Application of these estimates and assumptions affects the amounts recognised in the statement of financial position, the statement of profit or loss and the statement of cash flows as well as the disclosures. Actual results may differ from those presented in the separate financial statements due to the uncertainty underlying the assumptions and the conditions on which the estimates were based.
The captions that require the greater use of estimates and for which a change in the conditions underlying the assumptions may affect the separate financial statements are:
The value in use may change if the main estimates and assumptions made in the plan change and, hence, the impairment test. Therefore, the realisable value of the recognised assets may also change;

• fair value: IFRS 13 is the only reference source for fair value measurement and the related disclosures when this measurement is required or permitted by another standard. IFRS 13 defines fair value as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. This standard replaces and extends the disclosure required about fair value measurement in other standards, including IFRS 7 Financial instruments: disclosures.
IFRS 13 establishes a fair value hierarchy that categorises into three levels the inputs to valuation techniques used to measure fair value in hierarchical order as follows:
The method used to estimate fair value is as follows:
The fair value of financial instruments not quoted on an active market is calculated in accordance with valuation techniques generally adopted by the financial sector and specifically:
Reference should be made to the specific comments provided in the notes to the assets or liabilities for more information about the assumptions used to determine fair value.
The objective of IFRS 7 is to require entities to provide disclosures in their financial statements that enable users to evaluate:
The principles in this standard complement the principles for recognising, measuring and presenting financial assets and financial liabilities in IAS 32 Financial instruments: presentation and IFRS 9 Financial instruments: recognition and measurement.
This section presents the supplementary disclosures required by IFRS 7.
The accounting policies applied to measure financial instruments are described in the Basis of measurement section.

The company's operations expose it to a number of financial risks that can affect its financial position,
These risks include:
financial performance and cash flows due to the impact of its financial instruments.
The company's board of directors has overall responsibility for the design and monitoring of a financial risk management system. It is assisted by the various departments involved in the operations generating the different types of risk.
The units establish tools and techniques to protect the company against the above risks and/or transfer them to third parties (through insurance policies) and they assess the risks that are neither hedged nor insured pursuant to the guidelines established by the board of directors for each specific risk.
The degree of the company's exposure to the different financial risk categories is set out below.
The company operates on various national markets with a high number of medium and large-sized customers, mostly regional or local distributors. Therefore, it is exposed to credit risk in conjunction with its customers' ability to generate suitable cash flows.
The company's credit risk management policy includes rating its customers, setting purchase limits and taking legal action. It obtains periodic reports to ensure tight control over credit collection.
The company has a credit manager in charge of credit collection on sales made in its markets. Coordination between the group companies active in the same market (e.g., the Italian companies) is based on the electronic exchange of information about common customers and the coordination of delivery blocks or the commencement of legal action.
The loss allowance is equal to the nominal amount of the uncollectible receivables after deducting the part of the receivables secured with bank collateral. The company analyses all the collateral given to check collectability. Impairment losses are recognised considering past due receivables from customers with financial difficulties and receivables for which legal action has commenced.
Furthermore, the company did not modify payment terms applied to customers or its credit risk management policies, while it prudently reinforced monitoring of credit positions with customers.
The following table provides a breakdown of trade receivables and related loss allowance by ageing bracket:
| 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trade | Loss | Trade | Loss | |||
| (in Euro s) |
receivables | allowance | receivables | allowance | ||
| Not yet due | 26,866,314 | (870,108) | 31,771,968 | (828,210) | ||
| Past due < 6 months | 613,585 | (66,543) | 1,454,385 | (145,291) | ||
| Past due > 6 months and < 12 months | - | - | - | - | ||
| Past due > 12 months | - | - | 1,630 | (1,630) | ||
| Total third parties | 27,479,899 | (936,651) | 33,227,983 | (975,131) | ||
| Total intragroup | 20,491,479 | - | 23,844,359 | - | ||
| Total | 47,971,378 | (936,651) | 57,072,342 | (975,131) |

The company has a high level of liquidity and limited net financial debt. During the year, it had regular access to additional funding to support its operations. The company has shown itself to be consistently profitable and able to generate significant liquidity. Therefore, it is not believed that liquidity risk was increased by the international situation.
The company mainly deals with well-known and reputable customers. Its policy is to constantly monitor those customers that request payment extensions.
As required by IFRS 7, the next table shows the cash flows of the company's financial liabilities by maturity:
(in Euros)
| 31.12.2024 | TOTAL | Total cash | Within one | From one to | After five |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| flows | year | five years | years | ||
| - Bank loans at amortised cost | 23,589,788 | 24,025,288 | - | 24,025,288 | - |
| - Amounts due to bondholders | 59,507,536 | 67,479,000 | - | 26,085,200 41,393,800 | |
| - Lease liabilities | 12,241,332 | 12,852,610 | - | 6,913,293 | 5,939,317 |
| - Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 98,490 | 98,908 | - | 98,908 | - |
| - Other financial liabilities | 440,014 | 440,014 | - | 440,014 | - |
| Non-current financial liabilities | 95,877,160 104,895,820 | - | 57,562,703 47,333,117 | ||
| - Bank loans at amortised cost | 34,245,071 | 35,720,429 | 35,720,429 | - | - |
| - Amounts due to bondholders | 371,006 | 1,622,000 | 1,622,000 | - | - |
| - Lease liabilities | 1,807,609 | 1,981,493 | 1,981,493 | - | - |
| - Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 195,804 | 197,816 | 197,816 | - | - |
| - Intragroup financial liabilities | 35,830,122 | 36,125,394 | 36,125,394 | - | - |
| Current financial liabilities | 72,449,612 | 75,647,132 | 75,647,132 | - | - |
| 31.12.2023 | TOTAL | Total cash | Within one | From one to | After five | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| flows | year | five years | years | |||
| - Bank loans at amortised cost | 57,979,918 | 59,797,558 | - | 59,797,558 | - | |
| - Amounts due to bondholders | 59,427,259 | 68,741,000 | - | 14,407,800 54,333,200 | ||
| - Lease liabilities | 13,571,639 | 14,317,184 | - | 6,838,506 | 7,478,678 | |
| - Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 294,295 | 296,724 | - | 296,724 | - | |
| - Other financial liabilities | 440,014 | 440,014 | - | 440,014 | - | |
| Non-current financial liabilities | 131,713,125 143,592,480 | - | 81,780,602 61,811,878 | |||
| - Bank loans at amortised cost | 31,510,823 | 34,836,526 | 34,836,526 | - | - | |
| - Amounts due to bondholders | 371,005 | 1,622,000 | 1,622,000 | - | - | |
| - Lease liabilities | 1,728,489 | 1,909,795 | 1,909,795 | - | - | |
| - Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 194,248 | 197,816 | 197,816 | - | - | |
| - Intragroup financial liabilities | 26,171,512 | 26,970,396 | 26,970,396 | - | - | |
| - Other financial liabilities | 750,000 | 750,000 | 750,000 | - | - | |
| Current financial liabilities | 60,726,077 | 66,286,533 | 66,286,533 | - | - |

The next table shows the financial assets and liabilities recognised in accordance with IFRS 7, broken down by the categories established by IFRS 9 at 31 December 2024 and their fair value:
| (in Euros) | Fair value | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31.12.2024 | IFRS 9 category Carrying amount | Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 | |||
| Intragroup financial assets | Financial assets at amortised cost | 32,184,737 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Effective derivatives | FVTPL | 167,063 | 167,063 | ||
| Other non-current financial assets | 32,351,800 | ||||
| Securities at FVTPL | FVTPL | 3,027,997 | 3,027,997 | ||
| Intragroup financial assets | Financial assets at amortised cost | 6,525,819 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Other current financial assets | 9,553,816 | ||||
| Trade receivables | Financial assets at amortised cost | 47,034,727 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Total financial assets | 88,940,343 | ||||
| including: | FVTPL | 3,195,060 | 3,027,997 167,063 | - | |
| Financial assets at amortised cost | 85,745,283 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
| Bank loans | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (23,589,788) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Amounts due to bondholders | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (59,507,536) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Other loans and borrowings | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (538,504) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Lease liabilities | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (12,241,332) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Non-current financial liabilities | (95,877,160) | ||||
| Bank loans | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (34,245,071) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Amounts due to bondholders | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (371,006) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Other loans and borrowings | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (195,804) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Lease liabilities | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (1,807,609) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Intragroup financial liabilities | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (35,830,122) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Current financial liabilities | (72,449,612) | ||||
| Trade payables | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (59,007,750) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Total financial liabilities | (227,334,522) | ||||
| including: | Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (227,334,522) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |

| Financial assets at amortised cost | 32,679,826 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FVTPL | 516,888 | 516,888 | ||
| 33,196,714 | ||||
| FVTPL | 3,086,331 | 3,086,331 | ||
| Financial assets at amortised cost | 8,617,392 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| 11,703,723 | ||||
| Financial assets at amortised cost | 56,097,211 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| 100,997,648 | ||||
| FVTPL | 3,603,219 | - | ||
| Financial assets at amortised cost | 97,394,429 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (57,979,918) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (59,427,260) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (734,308) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (13,571,639) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| (131,713,125) | ||||
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (31,510,822) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (371,006) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (944,248) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (1,728,489) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (26,171,512) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| (60,726,077) | ||||
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (66,800,047) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| (259,239,249) | ||||
| Financial liabilities at amortised cost | (259,239,249) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. |
| FVTPL | - | - | - | - |
| IFRS 9 category Carrying amount | Fair value Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 3,086,331 516,888 |
As the company sells its products in various countries around the world, it is exposed to the risk deriving from changes in foreign exchange rates. This risk mainly arises on purchases and sales in currencies like the US dollar, the Polish zloty and the Japanese yen.
The company agrees currency hedges to set the exchange rate in line with forecast sales and purchases volumes to protect itself against currency fluctuations with respect to its foreign currency transactions. The hedges are based on the company's net exposure using currency forwards and/or plain vanilla options in line with the group's financial policy. The hedged risk is part of the global risk and the hedges are not speculative.
This is the risk that the fair value and/or future cash flows of a financial instrument will fluctuate because of changes in market interest rates.
The company is exposed to interest rate risk due to its need to finance its operating activities, both production and financial (the purchase of assets), and to invest its available liquidity. Changes in market

interest rates may negatively or positively affect the company's results and, hence, indirectly the cost of and return on financing and investing activities.
The company regularly checks its exposure to interest rate fluctuations and manages such risks through the use of derivatives, in accordance with its risk management policies. With regard to such policies, the use of derivatives is reserved exclusively for the management of interest rate fluctuations connected to cash flows and they are not agreed or held for trading purposes.
It solely uses interest rate swaps (IRS), caps and collars to do so.
The company's debt mainly bears floating interest rates. When deemed significant, the company agrees hedges to neutralise fluctuations in interest rates and agrees a set future expense to cover up to 100% of its future cash outflows.
Given its ample liquidity, it has an immaterial liquidity risk with respect to its short-term deadlines and, therefore, this risk principally refers to its medium to long-term financing.
The derivatives used to hedge such risk are generally cash flow hedges in order to set the interest to be paid on financing and obtain an optimum blend of floating and fixed interest rates applied to its financing.
The counterparties are major banks.
Derivatives are measured at fair value.
The company is subjected to increasing competitive pressure due to the entry of new players into the OEM market (large international groups) and the development of new organised markets which constantly push prices down, especially in the electronics sector.
Demand for the group's products is also affected by fluctuations affecting the distribution channels of products and applications which, as noted, are mostly the OEM operating indirectly in the construction sector and operators linked to the food distribution sector (for the refrigeration business).
The company protects itself from the business risks deriving from its normal involvement in markets with these characteristics by focusing on technological innovation and geographical diversification and expansion leading to the company gaining international status as it is active on all the continents either directly or through exclusive third party franchisees.
The production sites in Italy, China, Brazil, the United States, Croatia, Poland and Germany aim to optimise production. They will also act as potential disaster recovery centres to deal with catastrophes that shut down production at the main site in Italy, where the company has its registered office. The company's strategy is also to base its production near its markets and customers to provide faster timeto-market services and increase its production output to serve the rapidly growing markets.
The continuing production structure reorganisation, the related cost savings, geographical diversification and, last but not least, the company's constant commitment to searching for innovative technological solutions make it easier to be competitive.
In 2024, the group dedicated considerable efforts to addressing ESG matters and prepared a new sustainability plan for the 2025-2028 period approved by the parent's board of directors on 19 December 2024.
The group continued to identify and assess the new risks and opportunities related to climate change as they materialise, by revisiting its procedures annually.
During the year, the group mainly focused on preparing a plan to reduce both direct and indirect CO2 emissions by setting specific targets, which were also validated by the Science Based Target Initiative (SBTi) in early 2025.

In the section Corporative Sustainability Reporting (CSRD) of directors' report the above analyses and results are described in more detail.
The changes shown below are calculated using the balances at 31 December 2023 related to the statement of financial position and for 2023 with regard to the statement of profit or loss. As already mentioned, amounts are in Euros.
The following table provides an analysis of the changes in property, plant and equipment over the two years:
| Buildings | Light construction s |
Plant and machinery |
Industrial and commercial equipment |
Other items of property, plant and equipment |
Assets under construction and payments on account |
Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | |||||||
| Historical cost | 2,581,759 | 13,389 | 17,360,201 | 36,089,783 | 11,090,405 | 1,592,681 | 68,728,218 |
| Historical cost right of use | 18,199,546 | 1,624,727 | 19,824,273 | ||||
| Accumulated depreciation and impairment | |||||||
| losses | (128,355) | (8,504) (11,097,770) | (30,527,775) | (7,211,567) | (48,973,971) | ||
| Accumulated depreciation and impairment | |||||||
| losses right of use | (3,955,242) | (818,764) | - | (4,774,006) | |||
| Balance at 31 December 2023 | 16,697,708 | 4,885 | 6,262,431 | 5,562,008 | 4,684,801 | 1,592,681 | 34,804,514 |
| Changes in 2024 | |||||||
| Investments | 76,266 | 10,530 | 1,644,275 | 6,589,016 | 538,426 | 179,522 | 9,038,035 |
| Investments in right-of-use assets | - | - | - | - | 465,511 | 465,511 | |
| Restatement of right-of-use assets | 79,956 | - | - | - | - | - | 79,956 |
| Capitalised internal costs | - | - | - | 108,698 | - | - | 108,698 |
| Reclassifications | - | - | 118,400 | 1,332,969 | - | (1,451,369) | - |
| Termination of investments in right-of-use | |||||||
| assets | - | - | - | - | (329,020) | - | (329,020) |
| Disinvestments - cost | - | (579) | (427,274) | (692,399) | (216,854) | (42,012) | (1,379,118) |
| Disinvestments - accumulated depreciation | - | 244 | 421,249 | 543,911 | 216,388 | - | 1,181,792 |
| Depreciation | (128,613) | (1,447) | (955,344) | (2,711,345) | (954,806) | - | (4,751,555) |
| Depreciation of right-of-use assets | (1,585,412) | - | - | - | (367,521) | - | (1,952,933) |
| Termination of investments in right-of-use | |||||||
| assets - Acc. depr. | - | - | - | - | 323,280 | - | 323,280 |
| Total changes | (1,557,803) | 8,748 | 801,306 | 5,170,850 | (324,596) | (1,313,859) | 2,784,646 |
| Balance at 31 December 2024 | 15,139,905 | 13,633 | 7,063,737 | 10,732,858 | 4,360,205 | 278,822 | 37,589,160 |
| including: | |||||||
| Historical cost | 2,658,025 | 23,340 | 18,695,602 | 43,428,067 | 11,411,977 | 278,822 | 76,495,833 |
| Historical cost right of use | 18,279,502 | - | - | - | 1,761,218 | - | 20,040,720 |
| Accumulated depreciation and impairment | |||||||
| losses | (256,968) | (9,707) (11,631,865) | (32,695,209) | (7,949,985) | - (52,543,734) | ||
| Accumulated depreciation and impairment | |||||||
| losses right of use | (5,540,654) | - | - | - | (863,005) | - | (6,403,659) |
The variations in the historical cost of buildings refer to:

Plant and machinery include generic and specific plant related to production lines for a total of €7,064 thousand. Increases in generic plant include the installation of a photovoltaic system on buildings in use (€303 thousand), the replacement of boilers and heat pumps (€302 thousand), new electrical systems for the repairs, valve production and welding departments (€149 thousand) and a new fire detection system (€34 thousand).
The increases in specific plant include the purchase and upgrading of welding machines (€452 thousand).
The increase in industrial and commercial equipment mostly relates to testing machines and other production equipment. Specifically, it comprises costs for the construction of a laboratory with climatic chambers (€2,421 thousand), a compact inverter test station (€446 thousand), new product moulds (€307 thousand), a semi-automatic assembly line (€352 thousand), two new carbon dioxide dispensing machines (€313 thousand), a new washing system for printed circuits (€125 thousand) and a new screen printing machine (€70 thousand).
Increases in other items of property, plant and equipment mainly include new right-of-use assets relating to leased vehicles of €378 thousand, new furniture and fittings of €116 thousand and office and electronic equipment of €398 thousand.
Assets under construction include payments on account and self-constructed machinery not yet completed at the reporting date.
Depreciation amounts to €6,704 thousand and was calculated on all depreciable assets at 31 December 2024, applying the criteria and rates indicated in the section on Property, plant and equipment.
The company's property, plant and equipment were not mortgaged or pledged at 31 December 2024. They are suitably hedged for risks deriving from losses and/or damage thereto through insurance policies taken out with leading insurers.
Lastly, in line with previous years, the company did not capitalise borrowing costs.
The following table provides an analysis of the changes in intangible assets over the two years.
| Development | Software | Goodwill | Assets under | Other assets | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| expenditure | development and | |||||
| payments on | ||||||
| (in Euros) | account | |||||
| Historical cost | 27,568,109 | 26,141,491 | 1,618,357 | 1,867,255 | 80,216 | 57,275,428 |
| Accumulated amortisation and | ||||||
| impairment losses | (24,449,489) | (20,719,592) | (1,259,765) | - | (80,216) | (46,509,062) |
| Balance at 31 December 2023 | 3,118,620 | 5,421,899 | 358,592 | 1,867,255 | - | 10,766,366 |
| Changes in 2024 | ||||||
| Inv estments |
- | 3,681,785 | - | 121,660 | - | 3,803,445 |
| Internal cost capitalisation | 80,287 | 36,545 | - | 2,534,769 | - | 2,651,601 |
| Reclassifications | 82,826 | 1,012,732 | - | (1,095,558) | - | - |
| Amortisation | (1,568,289) | (3,176,065) | - | - | - | (4,744,354) |
| Total changes | (1,405,176) | 1,554,997 | - | 1,560,871 | - | 1,710,692 |
| Balance at 31 December 2024 | 1,713,444 | 6,976,896 | 358,592 | 3,428,126 | - | 12,477,058 |
| including: | ||||||
| Historical cost | 27,731,222 | 30,872,553 | 1,618,357 | 3,428,126 | 80,216 | 63,730,474 |
| Accumulated amortisation and | ||||||
| impairment losses | (26,017,778) | (23,895,657) | (1,259,765) | - | (80,216) | (51,253,416) |

Development expenditure: in 2024, the company capitalised development expenditure of €163 thousand related to projects developed internally, of which €80 thousand related to 2024 and €83 thousand related to projects that were ongoing at the previous year end and were completed in 2024.
Amortisation is applied over the estimated useful life of five years.
Capitalised development expenditure refers entirely to the development of projects for the production of new innovative products or substantial improvements to existing products. The capitalisation is based on feasibility studies and business plans approved by management.
Software refers to management programs and network applications. Investments of the year mainly related to new implementations of the Oracle management system to support the relevant departments. Moreover, the company acquired the PLM programme (for the management of production, organisation and marketing processes) for €1,818 thousand.
Goodwill refers to the goodwill arising on the merger of the wholly-owned Carel Applico S.r.l. on 1 September 2015.
The increase in assets under development and payments on account may be analysed as follows:
Lastly, intangible assets were not revalued during the year, nor in previous years and the acquisition cost does not include borrowing costs.
This caption may be broken down as follows:
| Subsidiaries | Associates and other | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euro s) |
companies | |||
| Initial cost: | 390,752,186 | 85,120 | 390,837,306 | |
| Impairment losses | (4,162,647) | - | (4,162,647) | |
| Balance at 31 December 2023 | 386,589,539 | 85,120 | 386,674,659 | |
| Changes in 2024 | ||||
| Initial cost: | ||||
| Increases | 34,091,792 | 1,500 | 34,093,292 | |
| Other changes | (414,508) | - | (414,508) | |
| Impairment gains | 202,474 | - | 202,474 | |
| Impairment losses | (9,778,000) | - | (9,778,000) | |
| Total changes | 24,101,758 | 1,500 | 24,103,258 | |
| Initial cost: | 424,429,470 | 86,620 | 424,516,090 | |
| Impairment losses | (13,738,173) | - | (13,738,173) | |
| Balance at 31 December 2024 | 410,691,297 | 86,620 | 410,777,917 |

Changes in the carrying amount of equity investments during the year refer to the following investees:
| (in Euro s) |
2024 |
|---|---|
| Subsidiaries | |
| CFM Soğutma v e Otomasy on Anonim Şirketi |
33,991,792 |
| Carel RUS Llc | 100,000 |
| Sauber S.r.l. | (414,508) |
| Associates and other companies | |
| Fondazione ITS Academy "Mario Volpato" |
1,500 |
| Total increases | 33,678,784 |
On 19 March 2024, the non-controlling investor in CFM Soğutma ve Otomasyon Anonim Şirketi ("CFM") exercised its put option for its 49% stake of CFM. In accordance with the agreement for the company's acquisition of a 51% investment in CFM signed in May 2021, the consideration has been calculated using a specific multiple applicable to the investee's average gross operating profit over the three years prior to the year when the option is exercised and adjusted to take into consideration the investee's net financial position.
The transaction became effective on 20 March 2024 and the consideration paid for 49% of CFM's share capital totalled €44,294 thousand. The company recognised €33,992 thousand as an increase in the investment's carrying amount while the remainder of €10,302 thousand offset the liability recognised under "Other current liabilities", which reflected the option's fair value at the option's exercise date. Specifically, the option's fair value of €12,636 thousand at 31 December 2023 was recalculated with the assistance of an independent expert on 20 March 2024 and amounted to €10,302 thousand. The company has recognised the fair value gain of €2,334 thousand under "Other financial income".
At the reporting date, the company has recognised part of the consideration agreed for the acquisition of 51% of CFM in May 2021 (€440 thousand) as a non-current financial liability as per the acquisition agreement as a warranty and to cover any possible contractual risks to be borne by the seller. This amount will be paid in instalments when certain contractually-agreed events occur.
On 30 October 2024, the company injected €100 thousand into Carel Russia LLC for a future capital increase to provide the investee with the funds necessary to meet its operating costs related to personnel costs and rents.
Under the acquisition agreement for a 70% stake of Sauber S.r.l. signed in July 2022, the investment held by the non-controlling investors is subject to mutual put and call options. Assisted by an independent expert, the company measured its option's reporting-date fair value and has recognised an asset of €908 thousand, reduced the equity investment's carrying amount by €415 thousand and recognised the difference under "Other financial income".
The directors compared the carrying amount of the equity investments to the company's share of each investee's equity. Since the carrying amount of the following equity investments that underwent impairment in previous years exceeded the company's share of their equity, the directors decided to recognise an impairment gain thereon as they believed the investees will continue to recognise a profit in the coming years:
| (in Euro s) |
2024 |
|---|---|
| Subsidiaries | |
| Carel Middle East DWC Llc | 202,474 |
| Total impairment gains | 202,474 |
At the reporting date, the directors tested the investments, (carrying amounts of €22,044 thousand, €68,499 thousand, €176,272 thousand and €57.216 thousand respectively) in the subsidiaries Recuperator S.p.A., CFM Soğutma ve Otomasyon Anonim Şirketi, Kiona Holfing AS and HygroMatik GmbH for impairment in accordance with IAS 36 Impairment of assets, after having identified a so-called trigger event.

The recoverable amount of equity investments is determined by calculating their value in use.
The methods and assumptions underlying the impairment tests of the CGUs included:
The main parameters used to test each CGU were as follows:
| Plan horizon | Growth rate | WACC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recuperator S.p.A. | 2025-2028 | 1.90% | 9.70% |
| CFM Soğutma ve Otomasyon Anonim Şirketi | 2025-2028 | 3.40% | 14.40% |
| Kiona Holding AS | 2025-2034 | 2.00% | 12.00% |
| HygroMtik GmbH | 2025-2028 | 1.90% | 9.70% |
The values in use, calculated using the discounted cash flows, showed the following:
The value in use, calculated using the discounted cash flows, confirm the carrying amount for Kiona Holding AS and HygroMatik GmbH. Although the directors believe that the assumptions used are reasonable and represent the most probable scenarios based on the available information, the result of the test could differ should the above assumptions significantly change.
Accordingly, stress tests were carried out, related, in particular, to:
The stress tests show that for the following investees, the cover is reduced to zero even if the gross operating profit decrease or the WACC increases as set out below:
| Subsidiaries | EBITDA +/- | WACC +/- |
|---|---|---|
| Kiona HoldingAS | -3.00% | 0.30% |
| HygroMatik GmbH | -13.00% | 1.25% |
Therefore, there was no need to impair the above equity investment.
At 31 December 2024, the company has not accrued a provision for equity investment risks under the non-current provisions to meet its obligations to recapitalise the investees.
The following table provides a breakdown of the equity investments at the reporting date:


| 31.12.2024 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Historical cost Acc. impairment | Carrying | Historical cost | Acc. impairment | Carrying | ||
| (in Euro s) | losses | amount | losses | amount | ||
| Subsidiaries: | ||||||
| Recuperator S.p.A. | 25,743,625 | (6,454,000) | 19,289,625 | 25,743,625 | (3,700,000) | 22,043,625 |
| Carel Deutschland GmbH | 138,049 | - | 138,049 | 138,049 | - | 138,049 |
| Carel Adriatic D.o.o. | 7,370,289 | - | 7,370,289 | 7,370,289 | - | 7,370,289 |
| C.R.C. S.r.l. | 1,600,000 | - | 1,600,000 | 1,600,000 | - | 1,600,000 |
| Hy groMatik GmbH | 57,216,335 | - | 57,216,335 | 57,216,335 | - | 57,216,335 |
| Carel France Sas | 91,469 | - | 91,469 | 91,469 | - | 91,469 |
| Carel Sud America Ltda | 5,396,848 | (26,850) | 5,369,998 | 5,396,848 | (26,850) | 5,369,998 |
| Carel U.K. Ltd | 1,624,603 | - | 1,624,603 | 1,624,603 | - | 1,624,603 |
| Carel Asia Ltd | 1,761,498 | - | 1,761,498 | 1,761,498 | - | 1,761,498 |
| Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co. Ltd | 9,276,379 | - | 9,276,379 | 9,276,379 | - | 9,276,379 |
| Carel Controls Iberica SL | 4,330,149 | - | 4,330,149 | 4,330,149 | - | 4,330,149 |
| Carel RUS Llc | 260,936 | 260,936 | 160,936 | 160,936 | ||
| Carel USA Llc | 34,264,136 | 34,264,136 | 34,264,136 | 34,264,136 | ||
| Carel Nordic AB | 60,798 | 60,798 | 60,798 | 60,798 | ||
| Carel Middle East | 1,060,614 | (233,323) | 827,291 | 1,060,614 | (435,797) | 624,817 |
| Alfaco Polska Sp.z.o.o. | 3,820,413 | - | 3,820,413 | 3,820,413 | - | 3,820,413 |
| Carel Japan Co. Ltd | 475,003 | - | 475,003 | 475,003 | - | 475,003 |
| CFM Sogutma v e Otomasy on A.S. | 68,488,752 | (7,024,000) | 61,464,752 | 34,496,960 | - | 34,496,960 |
| Arion S.r.l. | 1,766,333 | - | 1,766,333 | 1,766,333 | - | 1,766,333 |
| Sauber S.r.l. | 2,790,496 | - | 2,790,496 | 3,205,004 | - | 3,205,004 |
| Klingenburg GmbH | 3,948,301 | - | 3,948,301 | 3,948,301 | - | 3,948,301 |
| Klingenburg International Sp. Z.o.o. | 11,844,903 | - | 11,844,903 | 11,844,903 | - | 11,844,903 |
| Eurotec Limited | 4,114,529 | - | 4,114,529 | 4,114,529 | - | 4,114,529 |
| Carel Kazakhstan Llc | 20 | 20 | 20 | 20 | ||
| Kiona Holding AS | 176,271,519 | - | 176,271,519 | 176,271,519 | - | 176,271,519 |
| Carel Sy stem Spzoo | 713,473 | 713,473 | 713,473 | 713,473 | ||
| Total | 424,429,470 | (13,738,173) | 410,691,297 | 390,752,186 | (4,162,647) | 386,589,539 |
| Associates: | ||||||
| - | - | - | - | |||
| Total | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Other companies: | ||||||
| CONAI | 45 | - | 45 | 45 | - | 45 |
| SMACT Societ‡ Consortile per azioni | 51,075 | - | 51,075 | 51,075 | - | 51,075 |
| Fondazione ITS Academy "Mario Volpa | 15,500 | - | 15,500 | 14,000 | - | 14,000 |
| Fondazione di comunita della Saccisic | 20,000 | - | 20,000 | 20,000 | - | 20,000 |
| Total | 86,620 | - | 86,620 | 85,120 | - | 85,120 |
| Total equity investments | 424,516,090 | (13,738,173) | 410,777,917 | 390,837,306 | (4,162,647) | 386,674,659 |

| Registered office Currency | Share/quota capital (in currency) |
Equity (Euro) Profit/loss for the year (Euro) |
Investment percentage | Carrying amount (Euro) |
Equity diff. % and carrying amount (Euro) |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (valori in Euro) | Diretta | Indiretta | |||||||
| Controllate: | |||||||||
| Carel Deutschland GmbH | Francoforte-DE | EUR | 25,565 | 2,094,414 | 1,083,831 | 100.00% | 138,049 | 1,956,365 | |
| Carel Adriatic d.o.o. | Labin-HR | EUR | 7,246,665 | 46,019,834 | 1,350,635 | 100.00% | 7,370,289 | 38,649,545 | |
| C.R.C S.r.l. | Bologna-IT | EUR | 98,800 | 7,632,844 | 1,560,312 | 100.00% | 1,600,000 | 6,032,844 | |
| Carel France Sas | St. Priest, Rhone-FR | EUR | 100,000 | 3,695,389 | 436,459 | 100.00% | 91,469 | 3,603,920 | |
| Carel Sud America Instrumentacao Eletronica Ltda |
San Paolo-BR | BRL | 31,149,059 | 8,416,556 | 1,910,514 | 53.02% | 46.98% | 5,369,998 | (907,540) |
| Carel U.K. Ltd | Chessington-GB | GBP | 350,000 | 4,154,779 | 1,241,705 | 100.00% | 1,624,603 | 2,530,176 | |
| Carel Asia Ltd | Honk Kong-HK | HKD | 15,900,000 | 2,809,976 | 644,198 | 100.00% | 1,761,498 | 1,048,478 | |
| Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co. Ltd | Suzhou-RPC | CNY | 75,019,566 | 56,093,598 | 12,945,957 | 100.00% | 9,276,379 | 46,817,219 | |
| Carel Controls Iberica SL | Barcellona-ES | EUR | 3,005 | 6,564,031 | 916,486 | 100.00% | 4,330,149 | 2,233,882 | |
| Carel RUS Llc | St. Petersburg-RU | RUB | 6,600,000 | 69,909 | (279,499) | 99.00% | 1.00% | 260,936 | (191,726) |
| Carel Usa Llc | Manheim-USA | USD | 33,000,000 | 68,031,176 | 10,212,588 | 100.00% | 34,264,136 | 33,767,040 | |
| Carel Nordic AB | Hˆgan‰s-SE | SEK | 550,000 | 793,919 | 175,971 | 100.00% | 60,798 | 733,121 | |
| Carel Middle East | Dubai-UAE | AED | 4,333,878 | 827,291 | 156,244 | 100.00% | 827,291 | - | |
| Alfaco Polska Sp.z.o.o. | Wrocław-PL | PLN | 420,000 | 20,442,348 | 3,073,398 | 100.00% | 3,820,413 | 16,621,935 | |
| Recuperator S.p.A. | Rescaldina-IT | EUR | 500,000 | 10,313,098 | 509,307 | 100.00% | 19,289,625 | (8,976,527) | |
| HygroMatik GmbH | Henstedt-Ulzburg-DE | EUR | 639,115 | 10,630,704 | 3,972,957 | 100.00% | 57,216,335 | (46,585,631) | |
| Carel Japan Co. Ltd | Tokyo-JP | JPY | 60,000,000 | 909,253 | 194,693 | 100.00% | 475,003 | 434,250 | |
| CFM Soğutma ve Otomasyon Anonim | |||||||||
| Şirketi | Izmir-TR | EUR | 78,565 | 17,857,790 | 6,111,006 | 100.00% | 61,464,751 | (43,606,961) | |
| Arion S.r.l | Bogare-IT | EUR | 100,000 | 1,685,016 | 54,497 | 70.00% | 1,766,333 | (586,822) | |
| Sauber S.r.l | Mantova-IT | EUR | 100,000 | 1,873,641 | 610,675 | 70.00% | 2,790,496 | (1,478,947) | |
| Klingenburg GmbH | Gladbeck-DE | EUR | 38,400 | 4,152,555 | (2,546,007) | 100.00% | 3,948,301 | 204,254 | |
| Klingenburg International Sp. Z.o.o. | Świdnica-PL | PLN | 50,000 | 13,562,497 | 413,988 | 100.00% | 11,844,903 | 1,717,594 | |
| Eurotec Limited | Auckland-NZ | NZD | 450,000 | 2,044,198 | (68,854) | 100.00% | 4,114,529 | (2,070,331) | |
| Carel Kazakhstan Llc | Almaty-KZ | KZT | 10,000 | 901,836 | 455,830 | 100.00% | 20 | 901,816 | |
| Kiona Holding AS | Trondheim-NO | NOK | 666,360 | 14,898,672 | 1,231,096 | 82.40% | 176,271,520 | (163,995,014) | |
| Carel System Spzoo | Warszawa-PL | PLN | 3,100,000 | 640,785 | (68,791) | 100.00% | 713,473 | (72,688) | |
| Totale | 410,691,297 | ||||||||
| Altre imprese minori: | |||||||||
| CONAI | EUR | 45 | - | ||||||
| SMACT Societ‡ Consortile per azioni | EUR | 51,075 | - | ||||||
| Fondazione ITS Academy "Mario Volpato" | EUR | 15,500 | - | ||||||
| Fondazione di comunita della Saccisica | EUR | 20,000 | - | ||||||
| Totale | 86,620 | ||||||||
| Totale Partecipazioni | 410,777,917 |
Carel Industries Group Separate financial statements at 31 December 2024

These amount to €34,262 thousand and can be analysed as follows:
| Variation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31.12.2024 | Increases | Reclassification | Decreases | 31.12.2023 | |
| (in Euros) | |||||
| Subsidiaries | 32,184,737 | 591,261 | (1,086,350) | 32,679,826 | |
| Substitute tax | 1,318,869 | (1,962,650) | - | 3,281,519 | |
| Other tax assets |
591,116 | 415,216 | (542,854) | (2,266) | 721,020 |
| Effectiv e hedging deriv ativ es |
167,063 | (349,825) | 516,888 | ||
| Total | 34,261,785 | 1,006,477 | (352,091) | 37,199,253 |
Amounts due from subsidiaries refer to:
The substitute tax was paid by the company on the higher values allocated and recognised in the consolidated financial statements at 31 December 2018, implicit in the carrying amount of the equity investment, pursuant to article 15.10-bis of Law decree no. 185/2008. The decrease is due to the reclassification of the portion related to 2025 to current assets.
The decrease in other tax assets refers to amounts accrued during the year (Industry 4.0 – Law no. 160/2019; Maxi-amortisation and depreciation – Law no. 178/2020; Ecobonus – Law no. 296/2006; tax credit for research and development and technological innovation activities - Law no. 160/2019 as subsequently amended and supplemented, the Ministerial decree of 26 May 2020, Law no. 178/2020) that will be offset against other taxes based on the timeframes set by the relevant laws, net of the reclassification of the portion offsettable in 2025 to current assets.
The effective derivative hedges recognised under non-current financial assets include the fair value of IRSs signed to hedge the interest rate risk of the loans. Specifically:
(in Euros)
| Notional | Positive fair | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Instrument | value | ||
| 29.06.2026 | 167,063 | ||
| 167,063 | |||
| Interest rate swap | Maturity amount 20,000,000 |

Deferred tax assets at 31 December 2024 were generated by the temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities and their tax bases calculated with reference to the tax rates expected to be enacted in the years in which the differences will reverse.
The company considered it appropriate to recognise the deferred tax assets arising on the temporary differences indicated below in the separate financial statements, as it is reasonably certain that they will be offset against taxable profits in the years in which the deductible temporary differences will reverse.
| 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | Tax base | Deferred tax | Tax base | Deferred tax | |
| assets | assets | ||||
| Allowance for inventory write-down | 10,774,421 | 2,585,861 | 7,032,906 | 1,687,897 | |
| Provision for product warranties | 499,100 | 147,584 | 500,000 | 147,850 | |
| Provision for complaints | 3,032,410 | 896,684 | 3,049,857 | 901,843 | |
| Provision for agents' termination indemnity and bonuses | 72,468 | 17,392 | 72,468 | 17,392 | |
| Unrealised exchange differences | - | - | 618,766 | 148,504 | |
| Deductible cash fees | 406,592 | 97,581 | 350,323 | 84,077 | |
| Amortisation of goodwill - transfer | 41,650 | 12,315 | 51,450 | 15,213 | |
| Substitute tax on goodwill (16%) | 41,650 | 6,665 | 51,450 | 8,233 | |
| Amortisation of goodwill - merger | 121,709 | 35,989 | 150,346 | 44,457 | |
| Substitute tax on goodwill (12%) | 121,709 | 14,613 | 150,346 | 18,052 | |
| Amortisation of goodwill - acquisition of business unit | 2,008 | 594 | 2,481 | 734 | |
| Difference between amortisation/depreciation for IFRS and tax pur | 336,454 | 99,490 | 301,219 | 89,070 | |
| Tax losses | 31,989 | 7,677 | - | - | |
| Total | 15,482,160 | 3,922,445 | 12,331,612 | 3,163,322 |
| 31.12.2024 | Recognised in | Recognised | 31.12.2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | profit or loss | in OCI | ||
| Allowance for inventory write-down | 2,585,861 | 897,964 | - | 1,687,897 |
| Provision for product warranties | 147,584 | (266) | - | 147,850 |
| Provision for complaints | 896,684 | (5,159) | - | 901,843 |
| Provision for agents' termination indemnity and bonuses | 17,392 | - | - | 17,392 |
| Unrealised exchange differences | - | (148,504) | - | 148,504 |
| Deductible cash fees | 97,581 | 13,504 | - | 84,077 |
| Amortisation of goodwill - transfer | 12,315 | (2,898) | - | 15,213 |
| Substitute tax on goodwill (16% ) | 6,665 | (1,568) | - | 8,233 |
| Amortisation of goodwill - merger | 35,989 | (8,468) | - | 44,457 |
| Substitute tax on goodwill (12% ) | 14,613 | (3,439) | - | 18,052 |
| Amortisation of goodwill - acquisition of business unit | 594 | (140) | - | 734 |
| Difference between amortisation/depreciation for IFRS and tax purposes | 99,490 | 10,420 | - | 89,070 |
| Tax losses | 7,677 | 7,677 | - | - |
| Total | 3,922,445 | 759,123 | - | 3,163,322 |


These amount to €47,035 thousand (€56,097 thousand at 31 December 2023) and can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Third parties | 27,479,898 | (5,748,085) | 33,227,983 |
| Subsidiaries | 20,466,400 | (3,349,100) | 23,815,500 |
| Subsidiaries of parents | 7,268 | (882) | 8,150 |
| Related parties | 17,811 | (2,898) | 20,709 |
| Total trade receivables | 47,971,377 | (9,100,965) | 57,072,342 |
| Loss allowance | (936,650) | 38,481 | (975,131) |
| Total | 47,034,727 | (9,062,484) | 56,097,211 |
Trade receivables in foreign currency were retranslated using the closing rate, adjusting the originallyrecognised amount.
Trade receivables, net of the loss allowance, refer to the following geographical segments:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Europe, Middle East and Africa | 39,002,088 | 44,525,393 |
| APAC | 4,809,065 | 7,569,098 |
| North America | 2,860,020 | 3,765,179 |
| South America | 1,300,204 | 1,212,672 |
| Total | 47,971,377 | 57,072,342 |
The company does not usually charge default interest on past due receivables. Reference should be made to the section on risks and financial instruments for details of the receivables that are not yet due and/or are past due.
The company's receivables are not particularly concentrated. It does not have third party customers that individually account for more than 5% of the total receivables at each maturity date.
The loss allowance comprises management's estimates about credit losses on receivables from end customers and the sales network. Management estimates the allowance on the basis of the expected credit losses, considering past experience for similar receivables, current and historical past due amounts, losses and collections, the careful monitoring of credit quality and projections about the economy and market conditions.
Changes in the allowance are shown in the following table:
| Variation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Impairment | |||||
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | losses | Utilisations | Reversals | 31.12.2023 |
| Loss allowance - trade receivables | 936,650 | (38,481) | - | 975,131 | |
| Total | 936,650 | - | (38,481) | - | 975,131 |

A breakdown of trade receivables from group companies is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Arion S.r.l. | 1,631 | 1,632 |
| C.R.C. S.r.l. | 65,585 | 59,007 |
| Recuperator S.p.A. | 192,685 | 181,023 |
| Enginia S.r.l. single-member company | 72,878 | 60,345 |
| Sauber S.r.l. | 94,833 | 83,442 |
| Carel U.K. Ltd | 961,444 | 1,366,492 |
| Carel France s.a.s. | 1,319,722 | 1,372,588 |
| Carel Asia Ltd | 607,031 | 1,424,518 |
| Carel Sud America Instrumentacao Eletronica Ltda | 1,190,730 | 958,039 |
| Carel USA Llc | 2,565,248 | 3,430,713 |
| Carel Australia Pty. Ltd | 7,404 | 1,418 |
| Carel Deutschland GmbH | 2,938,008 | 2,059,965 |
| Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co Ltd | 2,981,433 | 4,580,986 |
| Carel Controls Iberica S.L. | 1,549,538 | 1,627,733 |
| Carel ACR Systems India (Pvt) Ltd | 376,083 | 404,764 |
| Carel Controls South Africa (Pty) Ltd | 97,571 | 4,172 |
| Carel RUS Llc | 13,960 | 13,960 |
| Carel Korea Ltd | 28,454 | 58,685 |
| Carel Nordic AB | 3,312 | 8,418 |
| Carel Japan Co. Ltd | 30,430 | 106,434 |
| Carel Mexicana S.De.RL | 286,985 | 332,511 |
| Carel Middle East DWC Llc | 312,765 | 1,752 |
| Alfaco Polska Sp.z.o.o | 2,711,962 | 3,015,135 |
| Carel (Thailand) CO Ltd | 3,378 | 4,002 |
| Carel Adriatic D.o.o. | 1,190,888 | 1,991,698 |
| HygroMatik GmbH | 31,236 | 24,747 |
| Enersol Inc. | 2,849 | 1,955 |
| CFM Sogutma Ve Otomasyon San.Tic.A.S. | 557,130 | 566,887 |
| Klingenburg GmbH | 12,132 | 24,000 |
| Klingenburg International Sp. Z.o.o. | 25,997 | 20,286 |
| Senva Inc. | 4,938 | - |
| Eurotec Limited | 5,336 | - |
| Carel Kazakhstan Llc | 221,156 | - |
| Kiona Holding AS | - | 26,159 |
| Carel System Spzoo | 1,668 | 2,034 |
| Subsidiaries | 20,466,400 | 23,815,500 |
| Eurotest Laboratori S.r.l. | 3,698 | 4,580 |
| Arianna S.p.A. | 3,570 | 3,570 |
| Subsidiaries of parents | 7,268 | 8,150 |
| RN Real Estate S.r.l. | 15,623 | 19,208 |
| Carel Real Estate†Adriatic doo | 2,188 | 1,501 |
| Related parties | 17,811 | 20,709 |

These amount to €27,299 thousand. They are comprised as follows, net of the allowance for inventory write-down for slow-moving or obsolete items:
| (in Euro s) |
31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Raw materials and consumables | 24,466,967 | (857,897) | 25,324,864 |
| Allowance for inventory write-down | (8,014,478) | (2,570,248) | (5,444,230) |
| Total raw materials, consumable and supplies | 16,452,489 | (3,428,145) | 19,880,634 |
| Work in progress and semi-finished products | 1,855,404 | 49,170 | 1,806,234 |
| Allowance for inventory write-down | (251,219) | (56,655) | (194,564) |
| Total work in progress and semi-finished products | 1,604,185 | (7,485) | 1,611,670 |
| Finished goods | 11,243,609 | (2,259,969) | 13,503,578 |
| Allowance for inventory write-down | (2,508,724) | (1,114,612) | (1,394,112) |
| Total finished goods | 8,734,885 | (3,374,581) | 12,109,466 |
| Payments on account | 507,529 | 506,899 | 630 |
| Total | 27,299,088 | (6,303,312) | 33,602,400 |
Inventories, gross of the allowance for inventory write-downs, decreased by a total of €3,069 thousand. This was due to the decrease in both raw materials and semi-finished products (€858 thousand) in line with production trends and the reduction in finished goods (€2,260 thousand) due to the sales performance.
The company recognised an allowance for inventory write-downs to cover the difference between the cost and estimated realisable value of obsolete raw materials and finished goods. The write-downs were recognised in the caption Costs of raw materials, consumables and goods and change in inventories of the statement of profit or loss.
Inventories are not pledged or subject to property rights restrictions.
These amount to €2,246 thousand and can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| IRES | 1,833,107 | 372,678 | 1,460,429 |
| IRAP | 412,803 | 215,215 | 197,588 |
| Total | 2,245,910 | 587,893 | 1,658,017 |
The IRES (corporate income tax) and IRAP (local tax on production) assets arise from the calculation of the taxes.
The IRES asset refers to the domestic tax consolidation scheme and was calculated on the sum of the taxable profits of all participating group companies as per article 117 and following articles of the Consolidated Income Tax Act, net of withholdings paid and payments on account.

These amount to €9,550 thousand (€7,788 thousand at 31 December 2023) and can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other tax assets | 5,517,593 | 1,248,109 | 4,269,484 |
| Other assets | 4,031,936 | 513,105 | 3,518,831 |
| Total | 9,549,529 | 1,761,214 | 7,788,315 |
A breakdown of other tax assets at year end is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| VAT assets | 2,525,011 | 1,649,036 | 875,975 |
| Substitute tax | 1,962,650 | - | 1,962,650 |
| Tax assets | 1,029,932 | (400,927) | 1,430,859 |
| Total | 5,517,593 | 1,248,109 | 4,269,484 |
VAT assets relate to the accrued VAT asset at the reporting date.
The substitute tax shows the 2025 portion of the substitute tax paid to align the higher carrying amounts recognised at the time of the December 2018 acquisition against consideration of Recuperator S.p.A. (Italy) and HygroMatik GmbH (Germany) with the relevant tax bases, as per article 15.10-bis of Decree law no. 185/2008, as subsequently amended.
Tax assets are the portion offsettable in 2025 against other taxes and levies of amounts accrued during the year. These include Industry 4.0 – Law no. 160/2019 (€25 thousand), Maxi-amortisation and depreciation – Law no. 178/2020 (€499 thousand), Ecobonus – Law no. 296/2006 (€9 thousand) and tax credit for research and development and technological innovation activities - Law no. 160/2019 as subsequently amended and supplemented, the Ministerial decree of 26 May 2020 and Law no. 178/2020 (€497 thousand).
A breakdown of other assets at year end is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other prepayments | 2,703,743 | (278,712) | 2,982,455 |
| Other amounts due from subsidiaries | 257,226 | (105,849) | 363,075 |
| Advances to suppliers | 83,707 | (83,251) | 166,958 |
| Sundry assets | 78,719 | 72,376 | 6,343 |
| Other accrued income | 366 | 366 | - |
| Call options for non-controlling interests | 908,175 | 908,175 | - |
| Total | 4,031,936 | 513,105 | 3,518,831 |
Prepayments and accrued income refer to income or charges collected/paid before or after the year to which they pertain. They are recognised regardless of the payment or collection date when the related income and charges are common to two or more years and can be allocated over time.
Other prepayments include costs pertaining to the subsequent year including €1,670 thousand for software maintenance instalments, €492 thousand for insurance premiums and €105 thousand for fairs and exhibitions.

Other amounts due from subsidiaries relate to the taxable profits and tax losses, net of withholdings paid and payments on account for IRES purposes, transferred as part of the domestic tax consolidation scheme for 2022-2024 pursuant to article 117 and following articles of the Consolidated Income Tax Act. They refer to the following investees:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 |
|---|---|
| C.R.C. S.r.l. | 257,226 |
| Total | 257,226 |
Advances to suppliers refer to payments on account for services.
Call options for non-controlling interests show the fair value of the call options for the non-controlling interest in Sauber S.r.l. which will be exercised as from 2025. Reference should be made to note 3 for more details.
The derivative is remeasured at each reporting date and any resulting fair value gains or losses are recognised in profit or loss. The liability was discounted at 2.21% to approximate the cost of the company's debt. At the reporting date, the asset's fair value is €908 thousand.
These amount to €9,554 thousand (€11,722 thousand at 31 December 2023) and can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other financial assets | 3,027,997 | (58,336) | 3,086,333 |
| Cash pooling arrangement | 5,438,499 | (1,206,452) | 6,644,951 |
| Subsidiaries | 1,087,320 | (903,018) | 1,990,338 |
| Total | 9,553,816 | (2,167,806) | 11,721,622 |
Other financial assets include securities valued at FVTPL and temporary deposits of liquidity, including accrued interest income gross of tax withholdings, with major counterparties, aimed at managing part of the company's liquidity. The objective of these financial assets is the collection of contractual cash flows comprising payments of principal and interest at fixed rates at specific maturities.
The cash pooling arrangement includes the credit balances of the cash pooling account related to the cash pooling arrangements regarding the following group companies:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Carel Adriatic Doo | - | 3,547,830 |
| Recuperator S.p.A. | 628,175 | 1,513,395 |
| Alfaco Polska Sp.z.o.o. | - | 536,565 |
| Klingenburg International Sp. Z.o.o. | 4,810,324 | 1,047,161 |
| Total | 5,438,499 | 6,644,951 |
Amounts due from subsidiaries refer to:

This caption comprises temporary liquidity in bank accounts and petty cash and amounts to €28,795 thousand.
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank deposits | 28,790,411 | (62,820,521) | 91,610,932 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 6,864 | (1,633) | 8,497 |
| Total | 28,797,275 | (62,822,154) | 91,619,429 |
Cash and cash equivalents are not subject to any obligations or use restrictions by the company.
For more information about changes in such caption, reference should be made to the statement of cash flows.
Equity is comprised as follows and underwent the following changes:
| Variation | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Total changes |
Allocation of prior year profit |
Reclassification | Dividends | Comprehensive income |
31.12.2023 |
| Share capital | 11,249,921 | - | - | 11,249,921 | |||
| Share premium reserve | 196,086,274 | - | - | 196,086,274 | |||
| Revaluation reserves | 3,424,658 | - | 3,424,658 | ||||
| Legal reserve | 2,249,984 | 249,984 | 249,984 | - | 2,000,000 | ||
| Treasury shares | (161,181) | - | - | - | (161,181) | ||
| Hedging reserve | 126,968 | (265,867) | (265,867) | 392,835 | |||
| Other reserves | |||||||
| - Extraordinary reserve | 115,074,608 | 22,686,789 | 22,807,627 | (120,838) | - | 92,387,819 | |
| - Transfer premium reserve | 6,105,327 | - | 6,105,327 | ||||
| - Reserve for unrealised | 510,377 | 83,296 | 83,296 | - | 427,081 | ||
| exchange gains | |||||||
| - IFRS FTA reserve | 2,145,307 | (188) | (188) | 2,145,495 | |||
| - Actuarial reserve | 82,642 | 90,513 | 121,026 | (30,513) | (7,871) | ||
| Retained earnings | 476,149 | - | - | - | 476,149 | ||
| Profit for the year | 23,164,847 | (21,349,702) | (23,140,907) | (21,373,642) | 23,164,847 | 44,514,549 | |
| Total | 360,535,881 | 1,494,825 | - | - | (21,373,642) | 22,868,467 | 359,041,056 |
The company's share capital amounts to €11,249,921, is fully paid up and consists of 112,499,205 shares without a nominal amount.
The company's shares are not pledged as guarantees or liens.
The share premium reserve is composed as follows:
The revaluation reserve includes the revaluation, net of taxes, of property, plant and equipment acquired in 2009 following the transfer of the production business unit from the former parent.
The legal reserve has reached the minimum threshold set by article 2430 of the Italian Civil Code.

Treasury shares number 6,355 and are measured using the rolling FIFO method. The company did not repurchase or sell any treasury shares during the year.
The hedging reserve includes the fair value gains or losses, net of deferred taxes, on the effective portion of an IRS entered into to hedge the interest rate risk on floating-rate non-current loans entered into in 2021. The changes are shown in the following table:
| (in Euro s) |
|
|---|---|
| 31 December 2023 | 392,835 |
| Variation | |
| Fair v alue losses |
(349,825) |
| Deferred tax | 83,958 |
| Total changes | (265,867) |
| 31 December 2024 | 126,968 |
The increase in the extraordinary reserve is mainly due to the resolution passed by the shareholders in their meeting of 18 April 2024 which approved the separate financial statements at 31 December 2023.
The transfer premium reserve includes the residual balance of the reserve set up in May 2009 following the transfer of the operating business unit from the former parent.
In their meeting of 18 April 2024 called to approve the separate financial statements at 31 December 2023, the shareholders acknowledged the adjustment to the undistributable reserve for unrealised exchange gains as per article 2426-bis.8 of the Italian Civil Code.
The IFRS FTA reserve was set up upon the adoption of the International Financial Reporting Standards on 1 January 2015.
The actuarial reserve includes the effects of the discounting of the post-employment benefits. The reclassification is due to the full payment of the post-term of office benefits for directors during the year.
Retained earnings were recognised upon first-time adoption of the IFRS and relate to 2015 and 2016.
Equity captions are broken down by origin, possible use and distribution and their actual use in the past three years below:

| Use in the past three years | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ----------------------------- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| (in Euros) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amount | Possible use | Available | Distributable | To cover Distribution of |
||
| portion | portion | losses reserves |
||||
| Share capital | 11,249,921 | |||||
| Equity-related reserves: | ||||||
| Share premium reserve | 196,086,274 | A, B, C | 196,086,274 | 196,086,274 | ||
| Revaluation reserves | 3,424,658 | A, B, C | 3,424,658 | 3,424,658 | ||
| Transfer premium reserve | 6,105,327 | A, B, C | 6,105,327 | 6,105,327 | ||
| Reserve for treasury shares | (161,181) | |||||
| Income-related reserves: | ||||||
| Legal reserve | 2,249,984 | B | 2,249,984 | |||
| Extraordinary reserve | 115,074,608 | A, B, C | 114,913,427 | 109,893,518 | ||
| Reserve for unrealised exchange gains | 510,377 | A, B | 427,081 | |||
| IFRS FTA reserve | 2,145,307 | B | 2,145,307 | |||
| Actuarial reserve | 82,642 | 82,642 | ||||
| Hedging reserve | 126,968 | 126,968 | ||||
| Stock grant reserve | - | B | - | |||
| Retained earnings | 476,149 | B | 476,149 | |||
| Total (net of profit for 2024) | 337,371,034 | 326,037,817 | 315,509,777 | - | - | |
| Profit for 2024 | 23,164,847 | |||||
| Total equity | 360,535,881 |
A: share capital increases B: to cover losses C: dividends
Pursuant to article 2426.5 of the Italian Civil Code, start-up and capital costs and development expenditure pertaining to more than one year may be recognised as assets with the approval of the board of statutory auditors and they are amortised over not more than five years. Until the amortisation is complete, dividends may only be distributed if there are sufficient available reserves to cover the amount of non-amortised costs.
At 31 December 2024, development expenditure not yet amortised amounts to €5,019,909.


The following table provides an indication of the tax regime for the share capital and reserves at 31 December 2024 in case of their repayment or distribution:
| Non-distributable reserves and earnings |
Taxable share capital and reserves - |
Taxable share capital and reserves - |
Non-taxable share capital and reserves - company and |
Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | company | shareholders | shareholders | ||
| Share capital | 11,249,921 | 11,249,921 | |||
| Share premium reserve | 196,086,274 | 196,086,274 | |||
| Revaluation reserves | 3,424,658 | 3,424,658 | |||
| Legal reserve | 2,249,984 | 2,249,984 | |||
| Treasury shares | (161,181) | (161,181) | |||
| Hedging reserve | 126,968 | 126,968 | |||
| Other reserves | |||||
| - Extraordinary reserve | 115,074,608 | 115,074,608 | |||
| - Reserve for unrealised exchange gains | 510,377 | 510,377 | |||
| - Transfer premium reserve | 6,105,327 | 6,105,327 | |||
| - IFRS FTA reserve | 2,145,307 | 2,145,307 | |||
| - Actuarial reserve | 82,642 | 82,642 | |||
| Retained earnings | 476,149 | 476,149 | |||
| Total | 4,919,869 | - | 115,584,985 | 216,866,180 | 337,371,034 |
The earnings per share are calculated by dividing the profit attributable to the owners of the company by the weighted average number of outstanding ordinary shares. At 31 December 2024, the weighted average of outstanding ordinary shares was 112,492,850.
Earnings per share and the number of ordinary shares used to calculate basic and diluted earnings per share in accordance with IAS 33 are shown below:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Earnings per share | 23,164,847 | 44,514,549 |
| Average number of ordinary shares | 112,492,850 | 101,025,880 |
| Basic earnings per share | 0.2059 | 0.4406 |
The company's basic and diluted earnings per share are the same.
Non-current loans and borrowings can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts due to bondholders | 59,507,536 | 80,276 | 59,427,260 |
| Bank loans at amortised cost | 23,589,788 | (34,390,130) | 57,979,918 |
| Lease liabilities | 12,241,332 | (1,330,307) | 13,571,639 |
| Other financial liabilities | 440,014 | - | 440,014 |
| Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 98,490 | (195,804) | 294,294 |
| Total | 95,877,160 | (35,835,965) | 131,713,125 |

Current loans and borrowings can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank loans at amortised cost | 34,245,072 | 2,736,829 | 31,508,243 |
| Cash pooling arrangement | 26,747,606 | 2,205,560 | 24,542,046 |
| Other financial liabilities | - | (750,000) | 750,000 |
| Intragroup loans and borrowings | 9,082,516 | 7,450,470 | 1,632,046 |
| Lease liabilities | 1,807,609 | 79,120 | 1,728,489 |
| Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 195,804 | 1,556 | 194,248 |
| Amounts due to bondholders | 371,005 | - | 371,005 |
| Total | 72,449,612 | 11,723,535 | 60,726,077 |
Amounts due to bondholders refer to the issue and placement of non-convertible bonds subscribed by funds managed by Prudential Insurance Company of America (Pricoa). These bonds are part of a private shelf agreement whereby the company can ask Pricoa, on an uncommitted basis and over the next three years, to subscribe additional bonds up to a total maximum amount of USD150 million. They are guaranteed by the company and certain subsidiaries.
Fixed interest accrues on these bonds from the subscription date and repayment of principal will take place annually starting from the fifth year on a straight-line basis, with the first and last payment dates in May 2028 and March 2033, respectively.
A breakdown of bonds, net of the interest accrued at the end of the year (€371 thousand) and the residual amortised cost by due date is provided below:
| 31.12.2024 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | Currency | Original amount |
Maturity | Rate | Outstanding liabilities in Euros |
Current Non-current |
|
| Senior A bonds | EUR | 20,000,000 | 05/2032 | Fixed | 19,804,428 | 19,804,428 - |
|
| Senior B bonds | EUR | 20,000,000 | 05/2032 | Fixed | 19,804,239 | 19,804,239 - |
|
| Senior C bonds | EUR | 20,000,000 | 03/2033 | Fixed | 19,898,869 | 19,898,869 - |
|
| Total | 59,507,536 | 59,507,536 - |
The bonds are unrated and will not be listed on regulated markets. Compliance with the following covenants is checked every six months:
At 31 December 2024, such covenants were complied with.
A breakdown of bank loans and borrowings at amortised cost, net of the interest accrued at the end of the year and the residual amortised cost by due date is provided below:


| 31.12.2024 | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Currency | Original amount |
Maturity | Rate | Outstanding liabilities in |
Current | Non current |
||||
| (in Euros) | Euros | |||||||||
| Mediobanca – Banca di Credito | ||||||||||
| Finanziario S.p.A. loan | EUR | 20,000,000 | 06/2026 | Floating | 6,684,270 | 4,444,444 | 2,239,826 | |||
| Intesa San Paolo loan | EUR | 10,000,000 | 06/2026 | Floating | 4,994,997 | 3,333,333 | 1,661,664 | |||
| Intesa San Paolo loan | EUR | 20,000,000 | 06/2026 | Floating | 9,989,996 | 6,666,667 | 3,323,329 | |||
| CREDEM loan | EUR | 10,000,000 | 07/2026 | Floating | 5,415,353 | 3,400,058 | 2,015,295 | |||
| Intesa San Paolo loan | EUR | 5,000,000 | 08/2026 | Floating | 3,171,730 | 1,818,182 | 1,353,548 | |||
| Intesa San Paolo loan | EUR | 15,000,000 | 08/2026 | Floating | 9,515,189 | 5,454,545 | 4,060,644 | |||
| Cassa Depositi e Prestiti loan | EUR | 10,000,000 | 08/2026 | Floating | 9,979,330 | 5,000,000 | 4,979,330 | |||
| CREDEM loan | EUR | 15,000,000 | 10/2026 | Floating | 7,785,313 | 3,829,161 | 3,956,152 | |||
| Total | 57,536,178 | 33,946,390 | 23,589,788 |
During the year, the company did not enter into any new loan agreements and regularly repaid the financing instalments as per the repayment plan.
The following loans require compliance with covenants:
At 31 December 2024, such covenants were complied with.
Lease liabilities refer to the lease liabilities recognised following the adoption of IFRS 16.
Other non-current financial liabilities include the contingent consideration of €440 thousand due to the non-controlling investor in CFM Sogutma ve Otomasyon A.S. under the agreement for the acquisition of 51% of the investee signed in May 2021. This amount will be paid in instalments when certain contractually-agreed events occur;
31.12.2024 (in Euros) Currency Original amount Maturity Rate Outstanding liabilities in Euros Current Noncurrent MedioCredito Centrale Progetto Horizon 2020 EUR 1,489,851 06/2026 Fixed 294,294 195,804 98,490 Total 294,294 195,804 98,490
Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost are broken down by due date below:
The loan granted by Mediocredito Centrale refers to a research and development project accepted by the Ministry of Economic Development ("MISE") which falls within the scope of the Horizon 2020 EU framework programme.

The cash pooling arrangement includes the debit balances of the cash pooling account related to the cash pooling arrangements regarding the following group companies:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Carel Deutschland GmbH | 2,203,219 | 1,889,436 |
| HygroMatik GmbH | 5,252,682 | 4,853,622 |
| Carel Controls Iberica SL | 3,262,305 | 3,384,104 |
| Enginia S.r.l. | 5,911,088 | 4,249,899 |
| Carel U.K. Ltd | 425,985 | 826,682 |
| Carel France s.a.s. | 1,256,632 | 1,538,651 |
| Klingenburg International Sp. Z.o.o. | 8,329,174 | 7,799,652 |
| Carel Adriatic Doo | 106,521 | - |
| Total | 26,747,606 | 24,542,046 |
During the year, the company settled its liabilities with the former non-controlling investor in CFM Soğutma ve Otomasyon Anonim Şirketi (€500 thousand) and the non-controlling investor in Sauber S.r.l. (€250 thousand), which were classified under other current liabilities.
Intragroup loans and borrowings relate to:
The following tables show changes in current and non-current financial liabilities, comprising lease liabilities (including cash and non-cash changes):
| 31.12.2024 | Net cash | Fair value | Reclassi | 31.12.2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | flows | gains or | fication | ||
| Bank loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 23,589,788 | (435,675) | - | (33,954,455) | 57,979,918 |
| Amounts due to bondholders | 59,507,536 | 80,276 | - | - | 59,427,260 |
| Other financial liabilities | 440,014 | - | - | - | 440,014 |
| Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 98,490 | - | - | (195,804) | 294,294 |
| Non-current financial liabilities | 83,635,828 | (355,399) | - | (34,150,259) | 118,141,486 |
| 31.12.2024 | Net cash | Fair value | Reclass | 31.12.2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | flows | gains or | ification | ||
| Bank loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 34,245,072 | (31,217,627) | losses - |
33,954,456 | 31,508,243 |
| Cash pooling arrangement | 26,747,606 | 2,205,560 | - | - | 24,542,046 |
| Other financial liabilities | - | (750,000) | - | 750,000 | |
| Intragroup loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 9,082,516 | 7,450,470 | - | - | 1,632,046 |
| Other loans and borrowings at amortised cost | 195,804 | (194,248) | - | 195,804 | 194,248 |
| Amounts due to bondholders | 371,005 | - | - | - | 371,005 |
| Current financial liabilities | 70,642,003 | (22,505,845) | - | 34,150,260 | 58,997,588 |
| 31.12.2024 | Increases | Restatement of | Repayments Interest | Term | 31.12.2023 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| financial liabilities | ination of | ||||||
| contracts | |||||||
| (in Euros) | |||||||
| Lease liabilities | 14,048,941 | 465,510 | 79,955 | (1,979,816) | 191,213 | (8,049) | 15,300,128 |


Changes to the non-current and current provisions for risks can be broken down as follows:
| Variation | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31.12.2024 | Actuarial | Accruals | Reversals | Utilisations | Reclass | 31.12.2023 | |
| (in Euros) | losses | ifications | |||||
| Provision for agents' termination | |||||||
| benefits | 820,631 | (17,624) | 53,749 | - | - | - | 784,506 |
| Provision for product warranties | 499,100 | - | - | (900) | - | 500,000 | |
| Total - non-current | 1,319,731 | (17,624) | 53,749 | - | (900) | - | 1,284,506 |
| Provision for commercial complaints | 2,982,409 | - | 976,542 | (97,122) | (846,868) | - | 2,949,857 |
| Total - current | 2,982,409 | - | 976,542 | (97,122) | (846,868) | - | 2,949,857 |
| Total | 4,302,140 | (17,624) | 1,030,291 | (97,122) | (847,768) | - | 4,234,363 |
The provision for agents' termination benefits, accrued for the potential risks of the termination of agency contracts, considers the estimated liabilities related to contacts in place at year end. It is calculated by an independent actuary applying the closed group approach pursuant to IAS 37.
The provision for product warranties is related to the non-current portion of the liabilities, reasonably estimated based on the guarantees contractually granted to customers and past experience, connected to costs for spare parts and labour that the company may incur in future years for assistance to be provided for products, the sales revenue of which has already been recognised in profit or loss for the year or in previous years.
The provision for commercial complaints refers to the prudent accrual for costs to be incurred for commercial complaints from customers related to products sold.
The provision increased due to the estimated larger costs that the company might occur on claims with customers.
The use during the year relates to specific customer complaints.
The company revised the estimated costs to be incurred for specific customer complaints and released a portion of the provision.
This caption consists of the company's liability for post-employment benefits and post-term of office benefits for directors. These benefits qualify as defined benefit plans pursuant to IAS 19 and the related liabilities are calculated by an independent actuary applying the closed group approach in accordance with the accrued benefits methodology using the projected unit credit method envisaged in IAS 19.
As described in the Accounting policies (basis of measurement section), the actuarial gains or losses are recognised in a specific equity reserve through other comprehensive income.
Defined benefit plans and changes therein may be analysed as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Post-employment benefits | 3,140,243 | (223,269) | 3,363,512 |
| Post-term of office benefits for directors | - | (955,335) | 955,335 |
| Total | 3,140,243 | (1,178,604) | 4,318,847 |

Post-employment benefits at year end were as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Opening balance | 3,363,512 | 3,537,494 |
| Accruals | 2,256,891 | 2,135,057 |
| Transfers to pension funds | (2,243,783) | (2,123,058) |
| Interest cost | 103,232 | 121,150 |
| Employee benefits paid | (309,531) | (408,126) |
| Substitute tax | (13,108) | (11,998) |
| Actuarial (gains) losses | (16,970) | 112,993 |
| Closing balance | 3,140,243 | 3,363,512 |
Law no. 296/06 changed the Italian post-employment benefits scheme and they are now classified as defined contribution plans regardless of whether the employee decides to have them transferred to the INPS treasury fund or a supplementary pension plan. Benefits vested up until 31 December 2006 continue to be recognised as part of a defined benefit plan and are subject to actuarial valuation, excluding the future salary increase component.
The post-term of office benefits for directors at year end was as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Opening balance | 955,335 | 852,052 |
| Accruals | 45,036 | 84,042 |
| Interest cost | 9,394 | 31,645 |
| Benefits paid to directors | (1,052,230) | - |
| Actuarial (gains) losses | 42,465 | (12,404) |
| Closing balance | - | 955,335 |
The company also performed a sensitivity analysis for the post-employment benefit liability to assess reasonable changes in the main assumptions underlying the calculations. Specifically, it assumed an increase or decrease of 0.50% in the discount rate. The resulting change in the liability would be immaterial.


Deferred tax liabilities at 31 December 2024 were generated by the temporary differences between the carrying amount of assets and liabilities and their tax base calculated with reference to the tax rates that are expected to be enacted in the years in which the differences will reverse.
The deferred tax liabilities recognised in the separate financial statements refer to the following temporary differences:
| 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | Tax base | Change in deferred | Tax base | Change in deferred |
| Unrealised exchange differences | - | - | 1,176,157 | 282,278 |
| Fair value changes on derivatives | 167,063 | 40,095 | 516,888 | 124,053 |
| Dividends not collected | - | - | - | - |
| Diff. in amort/dep. calculated under IFRS FTA | 1,344 | 397 | 10,212 | 3,019 |
| Diff. in amort/dep. calculated under IFRS/OIC 2015 | 169,141 | 50,014 | 181,504 | 53,670 |
| Diff. in amort/dep. calculated under IFRS/OIC 2016 | 14,548 | 4,301 | 15,713 | 4,646 |
| Discounting of post-employment benefits and post-term of | ||||
| office benefits | 168,516 | 49,830 | 159,233 | 47,085 |
| Discounting of agents' termination benefits | 228,507 | 67,569 | 210,883 | 62,357 |
| Total | 749,119 | 212,206 | 2,270,590 | 577,108 |
The changes in deferred tax liabilities were as follows:
| 31.12.2024 | Recognised in | Recognised in OCI | 31.12.2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euro s) |
profit or loss | |||
| Unrealised exchange differences | - | (282,278) | - | 282,278 |
| Fair value changes on derivatives | 40,095 | - | (83,958) | 124,053 |
| Diff. in amort/dep. calculated under IFRS FTA | 397 | (2,622) | - | 3,019 |
| Diff. in amort/dep. calculated under IFRS/OIC 2015 | 50,014 | (3,656) | - | 53,670 |
| Diff. in amort/dep. calculated under IFRS/OIC 2016 | 4,301 | (345) | - | 4,646 |
| Discounting of post-employment benefits and post-term | ||||
| of office benefits | 49,830 | (2,273) | 5,018 | 47,085 |
| Discounting of agents' termination benefits | 67,569 | 5,212 | - | 62,357 |
| Total | 212,206 | (285,962) | (78,940) | 577,108 |

These amount to €11,204 thousand and can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Call options for non-controlling interests and earn-out | 9,237,114 | (6,160,082) | 15,397,196 |
| Other | 1,198,571 | 98,798 | 1,099,773 |
| Other deferred income | 767,982 | 125,003 | 642,979 |
| Total | 11,203,667 | (5,936,281) | 17,139,948 |
Call options for non-controlling interests and earn-out relate to the fair value of the call options for the non-controlling interests and the contingent consideration for the acquisition of non-controlling interests in the following investees:
Other non-current liabilities relate to the cash award liability to the beneficiaries of the cash-settled performance plan, which is detailed below:
| Variation | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Accruals | Reclassifications | 31.12.2023 |
| 2021-2025 LTI cash plan - 2022-2024 vesting period | - | - | (957,325) | 957,325 |
| 2021-2025 LTI cash plan - 2023-2025 vesting period | 1,045,686 | 903,238 | - | 142,448 |
| 2024-2028 LTI cash plan - 2023-2025 vesting period | 152,885 | 152,885 | - | - |
| Total | 1,198,571 | 1,056,123 | (957,325) | 1,099,773 |
Since the liability relating to the 2022-2024 vesting period will be settled in 2025, it was reclassified to other current liabilities.
For more information, reference should be made to the section on "Cash-settled and equity-settled payment arrangements" of note 33.


Other non-current deferred income refers to the accrued portion of tax assets that will be taken to profit or loss as follows:
| (in Euros) | |
|---|---|
| Year | Amount |
| 2026 | 310,863 |
| 2027 | 222,813 |
| 2028 | 86,596 |
| 2029 | 65,347 |
| 2030 | 56,821 |
| 2031 | 18,502 |
| 2032 | 7,040 |
| Total | 767,982 |
These amount to €59,008 thousand (€66,800 thousand at 31 December 2023) and can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Payments on account from customers | 1,943,733 | 293,860 | 1,649,873 |
| Third parties | 27,872,733 | (11,003,728) | 38,876,461 |
| Subsidiaries | 28,501,291 | 2,967,723 | 25,533,568 |
| Subsidiaries of parents | 46,336 | (63,478) | 109,814 |
| Related parties | 643,657 | 13,326 | 630,331 |
| Total | 59,007,750 | (7,792,297) | 66,800,047 |
Payments on account received from customers relate to supply contracts that entail future deliveries.
Trade payables relate to transactions with suppliers to purchase raw materials, consumables, processing and services. These activities are part of the normal procurement management. The decrease for the year reflects normal commercial dynamics combined with business growth.
Trade payables in foreign currency were retranslated using the closing rate, adjusting the originallyrecognised amount.
Trade payables refer to the following geographical segments:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Europe, Middle East and Africa | 48,392,474 | 56,543,882 |
| APAC | 9,609,451 | 8,726,986 |
| North America | 818,305 | 1,268,946 |
| South America | 187,520 | 260,233 |
| Total | 59,007,750 | 66,800,047 |

A breakdown of trade payables to group companies is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Arion S.r.l. | 510,780 | 125,841 |
| C.R.C. S.r.l. | 36,832 | 15,719 |
| Recuperator S.p.A. | - | 4,472 |
| Enginia S.r.l. | 6,715 | - |
| Sauber S.r.l. | 437,390 | 164,370 |
| Carel U.K. Ltd | 400,510 | 300,041 |
| Carel France Sas | 3,453 | 7,549 |
| Carel Asia Ltd | 6,440 | 56,108 |
| Carel Sud America Instrumentacao Eletronica Ltda | 117,371 | 210,111 |
| Carel USA Llc | 197,573 | 610,422 |
| Carel Australia Pty Ltd | 20,662 | 24,441 |
| Carel Deutschland GmbH | 4,349 | 5,281 |
| Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co Ltd | 9,283,430 | 8,305,839 |
| Carel Controls Iberica SL | 16,370 | 29,811 |
| Carel ACR Systems India (Pvt) Ltd | 136,285 | 122,584 |
| Carel Controls South Africa (Pty) Ltd | 22,986 | 856 |
| Carel RUS Llc | 16,393 | 16,393 |
| Carel Korea Ltd | 15,437 | 14,687 |
| Carel Nordic AB | 698,557 | 458,367 |
| Carel Japan Co. Ltd | 7,903 | 8,243 |
| Carel Mexicana S.De.RL | 4,500 | 4,231 |
| Carel Middle East DWC Llc | 334,117 | 339,530 |
| Alfaco Polska Sp.z.o.o | 20,591 | 17,559 |
| Carel Adriatic Doo | 15,768,602 | 14,311,514 |
| HygroMatik GmbH | 10,927 | 13,938 |
| CFM Sogutma ve Otomasyon A.S. | 225,880 | 153,159 |
| Klingenburg GmbH | - | 2,549 |
| Klingenburg International Sp. Z.o.o. | 23,898 | 22,336 |
| Carel Kazakhstan Llc | 173,340 | 187,617 |
| Subsidiaries | 28,501,291 | 25,533,568 |
| Associates | - | - |
| Eurotest Laboratori S.r.l. | 230 | 79,274 |
| Nastrificio Victor S.p.A. | 44,408 | 27,602 |
| Panther S.r.l. | 1,698 | 2,938 |
| Subsidiaries of parents | 46,336 | 109,814 |
| RN Real Estate S.r.l. | 613,698 | 610,193 |
| Other, minor | 29,959 | 20,138 |
| Related parties | 643,657 | 630,331 |


At 31 December 2024, the company had no outstanding income tax liabilities.
These amount to €16,780 thousand and can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other tax liabilities | 1,910,997 | (21,032) | 1,932,029 |
| Social security contributions | 4,590,948 | (194,842) | 4,785,790 |
| Call options for non-controlling interests and earn-out | - | (12,635,801) | 12,635,801 |
| Other | 9,827,935 | (721,573) | 10,549,508 |
| Accrued expenses and deferred income | 450,171 | (191,238) | 641,409 |
| Total | 16,780,051 | (13,764,486) | 30,544,537 |
Other tax liabilities can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Withholdings to be paid | 1,907,426 | (24,603) | 1,932,029 |
| Post-employment benefits substitute tax | 3,571 | 3,571 | - |
| Total | 1,910,997 | (21,032) | 1,932,029 |
Social security contributions can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| INPS | 1,769,968 | 115,052 | 1,654,916 |
| Social security contributions on deferred remuneration | 1,797,042 | (408,082) | 2,205,124 |
| Social security contributions on LTI plan benefits | 382,083 | 18,987 | 363,096 |
| ENASARCO | 16,839 | (1,636) | 18,475 |
| Others | 115,796 | 6,609 | 109,187 |
| Pension funds | 509,220 | 74,228 | 434,992 |
| Total | 4,590,948 | (194,842) | 4,785,790 |
In March 2024, the non-controlling investor in CFM Soğutma ve Otomasyon Anonim Şirketi ("CFM") exercised its put option for its 49% stake of CFM. Therefore, the liability for call options for non-controlling interests and earn-out recognised under Other current liabilities was settled.
With the assistance of an independent expert, the company redetermined the derivative's fair value was at the option's exercise date at €10,302 thousand. It recognised the fair value gain of €2,334 thousand under Other financial income.
Reference should be made to note 3 for more details.

Other liabilities can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 | Variation | 31.12.2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wages and salaries | 7,603,827 | (1,386,139) | 8,989,966 |
| LTI cash plan - employees | 1,278,351 | 50,560 | 1,227,791 |
| Directors' fees | 64,657 | 19,487 | 45,170 |
| LTI cash plan - directors | 216,731 | 27,087 | 189,644 |
| Other amounts due to subsidiaries | 638,665 | 563,863 | 74,802 |
| Other sundry amounts | 25,704 | 3,569 | 22,135 |
| Total | 9,827,935 | (721,573) | 10,549,508 |
Wages and salaries include €6,015 thousand related to bonuses and unused holidays at 31 December 2024. The remaining amount refers to December pay.
Other amounts due to subsidiaries relate to the taxable profits and tax losses, net of withholdings paid and payments on account for IRES purposes, transferred as part of the domestic tax consolidation scheme for 2022-2024 pursuant to article 117 and following articles of the Consolidated Income Tax Act. They refer to the following investees:
| (in Euros) | 31.12.2024 |
|---|---|
| Recuperator S.p.A. | 457,334 |
| Enginia S.r.l. | 181,331 |
| Total | 638,665 |
Accrued expenses and deferred income refer to income or charges collected/paid before or after the year to which they pertain. They are recognised regardless of the payment or collection date when the related income and charges are common to two or more years and can be allocated over time.
Other deferred income of €371 thousand refers to the accrued portion of tax assets that will be taken to profit or loss in the following year.
A breakdown of the caption is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue from sales and services | 232,010,346 | (53,258,045) | 285,268,391 |
| Total | 232,010,346 | (53,258,045) | 285,268,391 |
Revenue from sales and services, shown net of discounts and allowances, essentially relates to the sales of products to third parties and group companies and administration-commercial-financial coordination services provided to group companies. Specifically:

| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Third parties | 109,400,562 | (42,608,850) | 152,009,412 |
| Intragroup | 122,609,784 | (10,649,195) | 133,258,979 |
| Total | 232,010,346 | (53,258,045) | 285,268,391 |
Reference should be made to the disclosures on related party transactions provided in note 33 for a breakdown of revenue from subsidiaries.
In line with the decrease in sales to third parties, intragroup sales were pushed down principally by the contraction in the demand for heat pumps in the European markets.
The drop in revenue was mainly concentrated in Europe and in the HVAC market, mostly due to the reduction in sales in the residential sector (heat pumps). This was caused by a number of factors, including the reshaping of European incentives (particularly in Germany and Italy), the high stock levels throughout the supply chain and the macroeconomic scenario characterised by high interest rates.
Revenue from sales of goods and services to third parties amounts to €109,401 thousand, down on the €152,009 thousand in 2023. A breakdown of revenue by business segment is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|
| HVAC revenue | 74,473,051 | 108,294,025 |
| REF revenue | 34,404,706 | 42,896,198 |
| Non-core revenue | 522,805 | 819,189 |
| Total | 109,400,562 | 152,009,412 |
Revenue from sales and services may be broken down by geographical segment as follows:
| 2024 | 2023 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (in Euros) | % | % | ||
| Europe, Middle East and Africa | 192,655,890 | 83.04% | 242,745,784 | 85.09% |
| APAC | 20,351,958 | 8.77% | 25,228,643 | 8.84% |
| North America | 13,253,956 | 5.71% | 12,144,442 | 4.26% |
| South America | 5,748,542 | 2.48% | 5,149,522 | 1.81% |
| Total | 232,010,346 | 100.00% | 285,268,391 | 100.00% |
An analysis of the revenue trend is provided in the directors' report.

A breakdown of the caption is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grants related to income | 890,414 | (155,573) | 1,045,987 |
| Licence fees | 2,541,964 | (3,496,263) | 6,038,227 |
| Sundry cost recoveries | 1,995,470 | (219,417) | 2,214,887 |
| Compensation | 16,679 | (1,389) | 18,068 |
| Company canteen cost recovery | 134,782 | 17,783 | 116,999 |
| Other revenue and income | 187,951 | 16,716 | 171,235 |
| Total | 5,767,260 | (3,838,143) | 9,605,403 |
Grants related to income relate to the tax assets accrued during the year (Industry 4.0 – Law no. 160/2019; Maxi-amortisation and depreciation – Law no. 178/2020; Ecobonus – Law no. 296/2006; tax credit for research and development and technological innovation activities - Law no. 160/2019 as subsequently amended and supplemented, the Ministerial decree of 26 May 2020, Law no. 178/2020, energy and gas tax credit - Law decree no. 144/2022 and Decree Law no. 176/2022) and taken to profit or loss based on the relevant expense caption.
Licence fees relate to royalties only received from group companies.
Sundry cost recoveries mainly relate to the reimbursement of transport costs by third parties and group companies.
A breakdown of the caption is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchases of raw materials, supplies and goods | (129,095,285) | 30,347,572 | (159,442,857) |
| Purchases of consumables | (1,846,894) | 198,879 | (2,045,773) |
| Change in raw materials and goods | (3,428,145) | (2,121,428) | (1,306,717) |
| Change in finished goods and semi-finished products | (3,382,066) | (7,207,349) | 3,825,283 |
| Total | (137,752,390) | 21,217,674 | (158,970,064) |
Purchases of raw materials, consumables and goods refer to goods purchased for the company's normal production activities and can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchases of raw materials and semi-finished products | (45,860,263) | 29,881,535 | (75,741,798) |
| Purchases of goods held for resale | (80,466,951) | (694,179) | (79,772,772) |
| Purchases of other materials | (2,854,324) | 1,267,916 | (4,122,240) |
| Total | (129,181,538) | 30,455,272 | (159,636,810) |
| Returns, markdowns, bonuses and discounts | 86,253 | (107,700) | 193,953 |
| Total purchases of raw materials, consumables, | |||
| supplies and goods | (129,095,285) | 30,347,572 | (159,442,857) |


The intragroup purchases of raw materials, consumables, supplies and goods amount to €70,696 thousand in 2024 (€72,053 thousand in 2023).
The decrease in costs for raw materials, consumables, supplies and goods is proportionate to the sales trend.
The change in raw materials and goods refers to the acquisition of goods that will mostly be transformed rather than used, net of write-downs made to reflect obsolescence and the reduced usability of the products.
The change in finished goods and semi-finished products can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Work in progress | (16,553) | (361) | (16,192) |
| Semi-finished products | 9,068 | 299,233 | (290,165) |
| Finished goods | (3,374,581) | (7,506,221) | 4,131,640 |
| Total | (3,382,066) | (7,207,349) | 3,825,283 |
A breakdown of the caption is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Services | (36,816,615) | 4,257,503 | (41,074,118) |
| Use of third party assets | (1,134,329) | (210,468) | (923,861) |
| Total | (37,950,944) | 4,047,035 | (41,997,979) |
A breakdown of services is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maintenance and repairs | (7,700,448) | (1,197,506) | (6,502,942) |
| Agency contracts | (5,129,708) | 1,588,528 | (6,718,236) |
| Transport | (5,087,026) | 464,424 | (5,551,450) |
| Consultancies | (3,997,117) | 2,080,432 | (6,077,549) |
| Outsourcing | (3,982,490) | 1,028,684 | (5,011,174) |
| Other services | (2,224,376) | (972,703) | (1,251,673) |
| Fees to directors, statutory auditors and independent auditors | (1,927,473) | (201,183) | (1,726,290) |
| Personnel expense and temporary staff costs | (1,345,068) | 869,880 | (2,214,948) |
| Utilities | (1,267,215) | 324,509 | (1,591,724) |
| Insurance | (1,220,011) | (26,936) | (1,193,075) |
| Certifications | (1,058,017) | (258,693) | (799,324) |
| Business trips and travel | (854,697) | 204,741 | (1,059,438) |
| Marketing and advertising | (626,046) | 450,179 | (1,076,225) |
| Telephone and connections | (396,923) | (96,853) | (300,070) |
| Total | (36,816,615) | 4,257,503 | (41,074,118) |
Service costs decreased compared to the previous year. The main increases related to maintenance and repairs for the use of software licences and other service costs due to the new logistics hub in the Padua area. On the other hand, there was a reduction in consultancy fees, which are linked to the performance

of mergers and acquisitions, agency costs, due to the drop in sales, outsourcing costs and temporary work, due to the organic reduction during the year.
Intragroup services totalled €5,770 thousand (€7,243 thousand in 2023), including agency and sales assistance services of €4,248 thousand, administrative services of €810 thousand and software development services of €410 thousand.
Finally, during the year, the company incurred costs for non-recurring services of €960 thousand related to assistance with mergers and acquisitions (€2,471 thousand in 2023).
A breakdown of costs for the use of third party assets is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Car lease payments | (452,846) | (97,314) | (355,532) |
| Royalties on patents and trademarks | (327,269) | (53,711) | (273,558) |
| Other payments for the use of third party assets | (354,214) | (59,443) | (294,771) |
| Total | (1,134,329) | (210,468) | (923,861) |
Car lease payments mainly include the related ancillary costs.
Other payments for the use of third party assets mostly relate to the lease of internal means of transport and electronic office equipment which are exempted from the application of IFRS 16 as they are shortterm or low value leases.
This caption refers to expenditure for the year related to development projects capitalised under intangible assets and amortised over five years for projects completed by the reporting date or recognised as assets under development if not yet completed. The remainder relates to self-constructed equipment and machinery recognised under property, plant and equipment.
A breakdown of the caption is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Development expenditure | 2,615,056 | 1,760,533 | 854,523 |
| Software development | 36,545 | 36,545 | - |
| Self-constructed industrial and commercial equipment | - | (27,461) | 27,461 |
| Total | 2,651,601 | 1,769,617 | 881,984 |
In 2024, the company launched new product development projects in which the entire R&D department was heavily involved.


A breakdown of personnel expense is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wages and salaries | (37,898,937) | 2,526,224 | (40,425,161) |
| Social security contributions | (10,839,075) | 254,894 | (11,093,969) |
| Defined benefit plans | (2,256,867) | (121,810) | (2,135,057) |
| Total | (50,994,879) | 2,659,308 | (53,654,187) |
Wages and salaries include the entire personnel expense for employees, including merit increases, equity-settled and cash-settled payment arrangements, promotions, unused holidays and accruals based on laws and national labour agreements. €1,374 thousand relates to temporary staff (€3,042 thousand in 2023).
Social security contributions refer to social insurance and supplementary contributions, net of exemptions, and accident insurance. The decrease is directly related to changes in wages and salaries.
Defined benefit plans relate to the service cost accrued under IAS 19.
The workforce at 31 December 2024 and changes therein during the year are as follows:
| 31.12.2023 | Hires | Departures | Promotions | 31.12.2024 | 2024 average | 2023 average | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Managers | 26 | 3 | (1) | 2 | 30 | 28 | 26 |
| Junior managers | 73 | 1 | (4) | 5 | 75 | 73 | 68 |
| White collars | 420 | 31 | (26) | (7) | 418 | 422 | 404 |
| Blue collars | 237 | 2 | (9) | - | 230 | 233 | 242 |
| Total | 756 | 37 | (40) | - | 753 | 756 | 740 |
A breakdown of the caption is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gains on the sale of non-current assets | 48,412 | 19,894 | 28,518 |
| Prior year income | 282,660 | (1,312,359) | 1,595,019 |
| Other sundry income | 108,698 | 108,698 | |
| Other income | 439,770 | (1,183,767) | 1,623,537 |
| Accrual to the provisions for risks | (976,542) | 1,171,200 | (2,147,742) |
| Membership fees | (538,878) | (313,111) | (225,767) |
| Prior year expense | (200,315) | 48,982 | (249,297) |
| Other taxes and duties | (152,806) | (19,557) | (133,249) |
| Indemnities and compensation | (95,000) | (95,000) | - |
| Other costs | (19,460) | 7,881 | (27,341) |
| Losses on the sale of non-current assets | (10,972) | (9,372) | (1,600) |
| Impairment losses on loans and receivables | - | 199,358 | (199,358) |
| Other expense | (1,993,973) | 990,381 | (2,984,354) |
| Other expense, net | (1,554,203) | (193,386) | (1,360,817) |
Prior year income relates to non-existent liabilities and the recognition of income pertaining to previous years.

Prior year expense relates to non-existent assets and the recognition of expense pertaining to previous years.
The accruals to the provisions for risks relate to the prudent accrual for costs to be incurred for complaints from customers about products sold.
A breakdown of the caption is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amortisation | (4,744,354) | (57,916) | (4,686,438) |
| Depreciation | (6,704,488) | (865,814) | (5,838,674) |
| Total | (11,448,842) | (923,730) | (10,525,112) |
Depreciation includes €1,953 thousand (2023: €1,834 thousand) related to the right-of-use assets recognised under property, plant and equipment following the adoption of IFRS 16.
Reference should be made to that set out in the Accounting policies for information about amortisation, depreciation and impairment losses.
A breakdown of the caption is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income from investments in subsidiaries | 28,154,760 | (1,671,989) | 29,826,749 |
| Interest on loans granted to subsidiaries | 1,522,227 | 816,152 | 706,075 |
| Other financial income | 9,243,045 | 8,057,163 | 1,185,882 |
| Financial income | 38,920,032 | 7,201,326 | 31,718,706 |
| Interest and other financial expense to subsidiaries | (380,271) | (198,021) | (182,250) |
| Interest and other financial expense to others | (4,844,332) | 9,208,297 | (14,052,629) |
| Financial expense | (5,224,603) | 9,010,276 | (14,234,879) |
| Net financial income | 33,695,429 | 16,211,602 | 17,483,827 |
Income from investments in subsidiaries refers to dividends resolved during the year amounting to:

Interest on loans granted to subsidiaries chiefly relates to interest accrued on the loan granted to Kiona Holding SA (€1,255 thousand) and Recuperator S.p.A. (€194 thousand).
Other financial income can be broken down as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gains on derivatives | 8,295,596 | 8,295,596 | - |
| Interest income on current financial assets | 535,455 | (255,051) | 790,506 |
| Bank interest income | 221,091 | 122,199 | 98,892 |
| Interest income from cash pooling with subsidiaries | 130,203 | (23,383) | 153,586 |
| Fair value gains on financial assets | 60,300 | 72,000 | |
| Other interest income | 400 | (70,498) | 70,898 |
| Total | 9,243,045 | 8,068,863 | 1,185,882 |
Interest and other financial expense to subsidiaries mainly refer to interest accrued on the cash pooling account overrun in place with group companies.
Interest and other financial expense to others are as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interest and other financial expense on current and non-current | |||
| bank loans and borrowings | (4,326,650) | 2,547,233 | (6,873,883) |
| Losses on forwards | - | 17,600 | (17,600) |
| Lease interest expense | (183,165) | 8,557 | (191,722) |
| Losses on derivatives | - | 6,586,166 | (6,586,166) |
| Discounting expense on liabilities | (112,626) | 40,169 | (152,795) |
| Bank charges and fees | (221,731) | 8,716 | (230,447) |
| Other interest expense | (160) | (144) | (16) |
| Total | (4,844,332) | 9,208,297 | (14,052,629) |

A breakdown of exchange gains and losses is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Realised exchange gains | 1,971,933 | (1,099,532) | 3,071,465 |
| Unrealised exchange gains | 999,120 | (474,248) | 1,473,368 |
| Exchange gains | 2,971,053 | (1,573,780) | 4,544,833 |
| Realised exchange losses | (1,892,577) | 1,496,220 | (3,388,797) |
| Unrealised exchange losses | (577,261) | 385,730 | (962,991) |
| Exchange losses | (2,469,838) | 1,881,950 | (4,351,788) |
| Net exchange gains | 501,215 | 308,170 | 193,045 |
| Net realised exchange gains (losses) | 79,356 | 396,688 | (317,332) |
| Net unrealised exchange gains | 421,859 | (88,518) | 510,377 |
Exchange gains and losses are part of the company's normal performance.
Unrealised exchange gains and losses mainly relate to the US dollar, the Japanese yen and the Polish zloty.
Net unrealised exchange gains total €422 thousand (net unrealised exchange gains of €510 thousand in 2023).
Upon the allocation of the profit for 2023, the equity reserve distributable upon realisation as per article 2426.8-bis of the Italian Civil Code was adjusted to €510 thousand to be held until the subsequent realisation. Therefore, as part of the allocation of the profit for 2024, the company may reclassify €88 thousand from the undistributable reserve pursuant to article 2426.8-bis of the Italian Civil Code to an available reserve.
Net impairment losses of €9,576 thousand relate to:
Note 3 provides more details about the valuation of investments in the subsidiaries.


A breakdown of income taxes is as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | Variation | 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current taxes | (1,148,216) | 3,038,460 | (4,186,676) |
| Substitute tax | (1,962,650) | (1) | (1,962,649) |
| Change in deferred tax assets | 759,123 | (595,144) | 1,354,267 |
| Change in deferred tax liabilities | 285,962 | 337,541 | (51,579) |
| Prior year taxes | (78,439) | (227,264) | 148,825 |
| Total | (2,144,220) | 2,553,592 | (4,697,812) |
With regard to deferred taxes, reference should be made to the basis of measurement section and the information provided about deferred tax assets (note 5) and deferred tax liabilities (note 16).
A reconciliation of the theoretical and effective tax expense is provided below:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Profit before tax | 25,309,067 | 49,212,361 |
| Theoretical IRES | 6,074,176 | 11,810,967 |
| Lower taxes: | ||
| - ACE | - | (114,943) |
| - other prior-year income | (30,084) | (279,896) |
| - personnel expense and supplementary pension funds | (21,540) | (135,997) |
| - dividends from equity investments and gains on the sale of equity investments | (6,503,221) | (6,889,804) |
| - maxi-and hyper-amortisation and depreciation | (39,048) | (105,094) |
| - deduction franking intangibles purchase of partecipations | (2,960,237) | (2,960,237) |
| - impairment gain on equity investments | (48,594) | (549,089) |
| - patent box | - | (604,416) |
| - use of provisions for risks and charges | (203,464) | (58,450) |
| - tax asset on research and development | (204,077) | (224,157) |
| - other | (330,075) | (341,434) |
| Higher taxes: | ||
| - undeductible amortisation/depreciation | 30,233 | 25,500 |
| - accruals to provisions | 234,370 | 515,458 |
| - prior year expense | 4,893 | 4,295 |
| - impairment loss on equity investments | 2,346,720 | - |
| - write-down of inventories | 897,964 | 793,642 |
| - other undeductible costs | 269,550 | 118,324 |
| - other | 308,122 | 220,724 |
| - unused tax withholdings | 1,322,528 | 2,064,603 |
| - substitute tax | 1,962,650 | 1,962,649 |
| Total income taxes (IRES) | 3,110,866 | 5,252,645 |
| IRAP | - | 896,680 |
| Prior year taxes | 78,439 | (148,825) |
| Deferred taxes | (1,045,085) | (1,302,688) |
| TOTAL INCOME TAXES | 2,144,220 | 4,697,812 |

With reference to the application for renewal of the scheme for 2020 and following four years, in December 2024, the company signed a preliminary agreement with the competent Veneto tax office for the definition of the methods and criteria for calculating the economic contribution from the direct use of intangible assets.
The agreement defines the methods and criteria for calculating the economic contribution to the generation of profit (or loss) from the company's direct use of eligible intangible assets, with reference to 2020 and following four years.
As a result, the company filed the supplementary IRES and IRAP tax returns for 2020, recognising a greater amount of €8 thousand as tax assets. On the other hand, for the years subsequent to 2020, the company intends to file an application to the competent Veneto tax office to revise the signed agreement in order to jointly define the methods for calculating the economic contribution in the light of the changes introduced by article 6 of Legislative decree no. 146/2021, as subsequently amended by Law no. 234/2021.
The company and its subsidiaries Recuperator S.p.A., C.R.C. S.r.l. and Enginia S.r.l. opted to join the domestic tax consolidation scheme provided for by article 117 and following articles of the Consolidated Income Tax Act for 2022-2024 as they met all the relevant requirements of such legislation as well as those of the decree of the Italian Ministry of the Economy and Finance dated 1 March 2018. The scheme is governed by individual master agreements between the company and each subsidiary.
The company is the tax consolidator and it files a single tax return for the group of companies participating in the scheme, which thus benefits from the possibility of offsetting taxable profits with tax losses in a single tax return.
Each participating company transfers its taxable profit or tax loss for the year to the tax consolidator, which recognises an asset or a liability, respectively, with the transferor at an amount equal to the corporate income tax or benefit actually payable/offsettable calculated at group level. In turn, the transferor recognises a liability or an asset, respectively, with the company.
At 31 December 2024, the company does not have equity-settled performance plans.
At 31 December 2024, the company has the following cash-settled performance plans:
• On 4 March 2021, the company's board of directors approved the 2021-2025 cash-settled performance plan. The plan is reserved for the executive directors, key management personnel and employees of the company and its subsidiaries who play a key role in achievement of the group's objectives. The vesting period is divided into three rolling cycles and the performance objectives are pegged to the Group's cumulative adjusted EBITDA for each vesting period (weight of 50%), cash conversion - average value of the vesting periods (weight of 30%) and ESG targets - average achievement of a number of sustainability indicators (weight of 20%).
On 6 March 2024, when it approved the consolidated financial statements at 31 December 2023, the company's board of directors set the amount of the incentive plan due to beneficiaries at the end of the first cycle (2021-2023) at €1,649 thousand, plus social security contributions. The beneficiaries received this amount with their April remuneration, net of the amount that will vest in two years as per


the plan's regulation. The company paid out €1,213 thousand, as well as the social security contributions.
Both plans are reserved for the executive directors, key management personnel and employees of the company and its subsidiaries who play a key role in achievement of the group's objectives.
The term, vesting periods (three rolling cycles), beneficiaries and performance objectives (Group's cumulative adjusted EBITDA for each vesting period (weight of 50%), cash conversion - average value of the vesting periods (weight of 20%), ESG targets - average achievement of a number of sustainability indicators (weight of 30%)) are the same for both plans.
On 18 April 2024, the company's shareholders approved the 2024-2028 equity-settled performance plan for the free assignment of ordinary shares to the members of the boards of directors and/or employees, as described earlier.
On 7 November 2024, the company's board of directors resolved to execute just the LTI cash plan for the 2024-2026 vesting period as this plan is less complicated compared to the operating and tax management of the LTI share plan, both for the parent and its beneficiaries. The board of directors also established the percentage of gross annual remuneration for the cash benefit for each beneficiary for a total of approximately €2,050 thousand.
The cash to be actually paid to each beneficiary will be calculated at the end of the 2024-2026 vesting period depending on whether they have met the performance objectives established in the plan's regulation.
Pursuant to IAS 19 Employee benefits, cash-settled incentive plans qualify as defined benefit plans and, therefore, the liability was calculated by an independent actuary using the projected unit credit method as required by the standard. This method determines the average present value of the obligations accrued for the service provided by the beneficiary up to the valuation date.
The company recognised a cost of €1,719 thousand in profit or loss in 2024 for both the expired vesting periods for which the incentives will be paid subsequently and for those vesting periods which have not yet expired for both plans.
The company did not repurchase or sell any treasury shares during the year. At the reporting date, the company held 6,335 treasury shares, equal to 0.0056% of its share capital, for a total of €161 thousand.
Under IFRS 8, an entity shall disclose information to enable users of its financial statements to evaluate the nature and financial effects of the business activities in which it engages and the economic environments in which it operates. Based on the group's internal reporting system, the business activities from which it earns revenue and incurs expenses and the operating results which are regularly reviewed by the chief operating decision maker to make decisions about resources to be allocated and to assess its performance, the group has not identified individual operating segments but is an operating segment as a whole.

The fees paid, net of expenses, to directors, statutory auditors and key management personnel during the year were as follows:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Directors | ||
| - Remuneration and fees | 1,531,182 | 1,521,655 |
| - Other non-monetary benefits | 16,714 | 25,322 |
| - Other fees (1) | 1,052,230 | - |
| Total | 2,600,126 | 1,546,977 |
| Statutory auditors | ||
| - Fixed fees and fees for participation in committees | 121,721 | 90,000 |
| Total | 121,721 | 90,000 |
| Key management personnel | ||
| - Remuneration and fees | 1,338,443 | 1,522,719 |
| - Other non-monetary benefits | 25,022 | 21,864 |
| - Fair value of share-based payments | - | - |
| - Post-term of office benefits or termination benefits (2) | 119,459 | - |
| Total | 1,482,924 | 1,544,583 |
(1) The amount includes a one-off payment; post-term of office benefits
(2) In cash
The following table highlights the fees pertaining to the year for audit and non-audit services provided by the independent auditors:
| (in Euros) | 2024 | 2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Audit | 326,640 | 259,549 |
| Attestation services |
91,000 | 49,290 |
| Other services |
- | 361,000 |
| Total | 417,640 | 669,839 |
(Annual market and competition law)
In 2024, other than the tax credit for research and development and technological innovation activities - Law no. 160/2019 as subsequently amended and supplemented, the Ministerial decree of 26 May 2020, Law no. 178/2020, Industry 4.0 - Law no. 160/2019, maxi-amortisation and depreciation - Law no. 178/2020, Ecobonus - Law no. 296/2006, Energy and gas tax credit - Law decree no. 144/2022 and Law decree no. 176/2022 due for the year, the company did not receive any subsidies, grants, fees for paid positions or any type of economic benefits not of a general nature and that are not consideration, remuneration or compensation from the public administration and other parties as defined by article 35 of Law no. 34 of 30 September 2019, which replaced article 1.125 of Law no. 124/2017.
At the reporting date, the company has issued sureties of €1,397 thousand, including €133 thousand in favour of subsidiaries.


In order to limit the administrative requirements for some investees, the company has acted as guarantor of the liabilities to third parties recognised in the financial statements of the subsidiaries Carel Deutschland GmbH, HygroMatik GmbH and Klingenburg GmbH, as required by applicable local regulations.
A breakdown of the indirect investees at 31 December 2024 is as follows:
| Registered office | Parent | Currency | Share/quota capital (local |
Equity (deficit) |
Profit (loss) for the year (Euros) |
Indirect investment |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (valori in Euro) | currency) | (Euros) | (%) | ||||
| Controllate: | |||||||
| Enginia Srl | Trezzo Sull'Adda-IT | Recuperator S.p.A. | EUR | 10,400 | 8,800,774 | 347,600 | 100.00% |
| Carel Australia Pty. Ltd | Sydney-AU | Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co Ltd | AUD | 100 | 4,969,190 | 414,345 | 100.00% |
| Carel ACR Systems India | Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co Ltd | INR | 99.99% | ||||
| (Pvt) Ltd | Mumbay-IN | Carel France s.a.s. | 1,665,340 | 2,347,820 | 534,489 | 0.01% | |
| Carel Controls South Africa | |||||||
| (Pty) Ltd | Johannesburg-ZA | Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co Ltd | ZAR | 4,000,000 | 3,241,732 | 383,533 | 100.00% |
| Carel HVAC&R Korea Ltd | Seoul-KR | Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co Ltd | KRW | 550,500,000 | 1,096,727 | 465,381 | 100.00% |
| Carel South East Asia Pte. | |||||||
| Ltd. | Singapore-SG | Carel Asia Ltd | SGD | 100,000 | 561,826 | 79,180 | 100.00% |
| Carel Mexicana S.De.RL | Guerra, Tlalpan-MX | Carel Usa Llc | MXN | 12,441,149 | 1,432,617 | 668,183 | 100.00% |
| Carel Electronic (Suzhou) Co Ltd | THB | 2,244,915 | 335,949 | 50.00% | |||
| Carel (Thailand) CO Ltd | Bangkok-TH | Carel Australia Pty. Ltd | 16,000,000 | 30.00% | |||
| Carel Ukraine Llc | Kiev-UA | Alfaco Polska Sp.z.o.o. | UAH | 700,000 | 176,306 | 165,969 | 100.00% |
| Enersol Inc | Beloeil-CA | Carel Usa Llc | CAD | 100 | 426,592 | 103,736 | 100.00% |
| Klingenburg UK Ltd | Folkstone-GB | Klingenburg GmbH | GBP | 100 | 1,081,286 | 584,769 | 100.00% |
| Senva Inc | Beaverton-USA | Carel Usa Llc | USD | - | 30,516,381 | 3,657,930 | 100.00% |
| Kiona GmbH | Berlin-DE | Kiona Holding AS | EUR | 25,000 | 70,275 | 44,918 | 100.00% |
| Kiona A/S - Denmark | Copenhagen-DK | Kiona Holding AS | DKK | 500,000 | 95,660 | (1,734) | 100.00% |
| Kiona AS | Trondheim-NO | Kiona Holding AS | NOK | 100,000 | 3,225,840 | 1,034,285 | 100.00% |
| Kiona LT UAB | Kaunas-LT | Kiona Holding AS | EUR | 2,500 | (788) | (18,834) | 100.00% |
| Kiona Oy | Helsinki-FI | Kiona Holding AS | EUR | 2,500 | 262,421 | 26,243 | 100.00% |
| Kiona Sarl | Givisiez-CH | Kiona Holding AS | CHF | 20,000 | 98,222 | 37,409 | 100.00% |
| Kiona Sp Zoo | Gdansk-PL | Kiona Holding AS | PLN | 500,000 | 67,640 | 9,931 | 100.00% |
| Kiona Sweden AB | Kungsbacka-SE | Kiona Holding AS | SEK | 200,000 | 3,683,295 | 306,951 | 100.00% |
In order to satisfy the disclosure requirement of article 2427.1.22-bis of the Italian Civil Code, we note the following:

| 31.12.2023 | Assets and liabilities Revenue and costs |
||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loan assets | Trade | Financial | Trade payables/ | Sale of | Sale of | Total | Purchases of | Services | Other | Income from | Financial | Financial | |
| receivables/ | liabilities | Other | products | services | goods and | purchases | equity | income | expense | ||||
| Other assets | financial liabilities | materials | investments | ||||||||||
| (in Euros) | |||||||||||||
| Subsidiaries | |||||||||||||
| Arion S.r.l. | - | 1,631 | - | 510,780 | 397 | 5,016 | 611 | 2,100,367 | 755 | - | - | - | - |
| C.R.C. S.r.l. | - | 322,811 | - | 36,832 | 95,774 | 50,872 | 6,598 | 10,929 | 29,168 | - | 2,000,000 | - | - |
| Recuperator S.p.A. | 16,132,668 | 192,685 | - | 457,334 | - | 331,416 | 27,570 | - | - | - | - | 198,598 | - |
| Enginia S.r.l. | - | 72,878 | 5,911,088 | 188,046 | 6,712 | 200,000 | 36,949 | 345 | - | - | - | - | 24,543 |
| Sauber S.r.l. | 886,667 | 94,833 | - | 437,390 | 73,382 | 15,000 | 723 | - | 38,595 | - | - | 41,432 | - |
| Carel U.K. Ltd | - | 961,444 | 425,985 | 400,510 | 10,521,189 | 419,847 | 221,902 | 132,612 | 371,150 | 35,067 | 1,001,073 | - | 5,449 |
| Carel France s.a.s. | - | 1,319,722 | 1,256,632 | 3,453 | 14,349,610 | 106,201 | 285,088 | 33,676 | - | 3,045 | - | - | 9,789 |
| Carel Asia Ltd | - | 607,031 | - | 6,440 | 4,784,286 | 22,144 | 1,823 | 51,797 | 548 | 28,244 | 500,000 | - | - |
| Carel Sud America | |||||||||||||
| Instrumentacao Eletronica | |||||||||||||
| Ltda | - | 1,190,730 | - | 117,371 | 4,099,776 | 281,221 | 255 | 574,501 | 159,774 | - | 1,077,728 | - | - |
| Carel USA Llc | - | 2,565,248 | - | 197,573 | 11,937,400 | 778,319 | 1,025,647 | 278,948 | 300,942 | - | 8,445,495 | - | 64,111 |
| Carel Australia Pty. Ltd | - | 7,404 | 1,582,516 | 20,662 | - | 29,616 | - | - | 850 | 20,663 | - | - | 48,418 |
| Carel Deutschland GmbH | - | 2,938,008 | 2,203,219 | 4,349 | 26,794,755 | 232,690 | 489,873 | 24,751 | - | 479,154 | 2,000,000 | - | 16,106 |
| Carel Electronic (Suzhou) | |||||||||||||
| Co Ltd | - | 2,981,433 | - | 9,283,430 | 8,647,623 | 773,997 | 1,505,999 | 17,463,064 | 418,658 | - | 8,035,549 | - | - |
| Carel Controls Iberica S.L. | - | 1,549,538 | 3,262,305 | 16,370 | 13,120,419 | 85,296 | 262,502 | 12,554 | 154,376 | 901 | - | - | 14,075 |
| Carel ACR Systems India | |||||||||||||
| (Pvt) Ltd | - | 376,083 | - | 136,285 | 1,008,830 | 21,151 | - | 572 | 398,081 | - | - | - | - |
| Carel Controls South Africa | |||||||||||||
| (Pty) Ltd | - | 97,571 | - | 22,986 | 1,556,491 | 34,825 | - | 30,616 | - | 2,086 | - | - | - |
| Carel RUS Llc | - | 13,960 | - | 16,393 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Carel Korea Ltd | - | 28,454 | - | 15,437 | 548,151 | 17,124 | - | 4,299 | - | - | - | - | - |
| Carel Nordic AB | - | 3,312 | - | 698,557 | 4,866 | 40,120 | 767 | 1,360 | 1,472,394 | - | 621,918 | - | - |
| Carel Japan Co. Ltd | - | 30,430 | - | 7,903 | 353,925 | 3,263 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Carel Mexicana S.De.RL | - | 286,985 | - | 4,500 | 460,015 | 12,556 | - | - | - | 347 | - | - | - |
| Carel Middle East DWC Llc | - | 312,765 | - | 334,117 | 310,468 | 10,530 | 182 | 476 | 1,001,566 | - | - | - | - |
| Alfaco Polska Sp.z.o.o. | - | 2,711,962 | - | 20,591 | 10,394,695 | 123,730 | 1,136 | - | 560 | 1 | - | 1,005 | 20,591 |
| Carel (Thailand) CO Ltd | - | 3,378 | - | - | - | 13,512 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Carel Adriatic D.o.o. | - | 1,190,888 | 106,521 | 15,768,602 | 4,670,030 | 855,963 | 154,835 | 50,192,170 | 158,747 | 17,124 | - | 51,988 | 43,418 |
| HygroMatik GmbH | - | 31,236 | 5,252,682 | 10,927 | 746,476 | 66,408 | 76,970 | 21,703 | - | - | 4,000,000 | - | 28,450 |
| Enersol Inc. | - | 2,849 | - | - | - | 8,208 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| CFM Sogutma Ve | |||||||||||||
| Otomasyon | - | 557,130 | 7,500,000 | 225,880 | 3,062,118 | 33,331 | 1,398 | 14,985 | 303,556 | - | 472,997 | - | 122,188 |
| Klingenburg GmbH | 624,674 | 12,132 | - | - | - | 72,792 | - | - | - | 440 | - | 29,471 | - |
| Klingenburg International Sp. | |||||||||||||
| Z.o.o. | - | 25,997 | 3,518,850 | 23,898 | - | - | - | 377 | 104 | 256 | - | 72,418 | 111,243 |
| Senva Inc. | - | 4,938 | - | - | - | 56,877 | - | 397 | - | - | - | - | - |
| Eurotec Ltd | - | 5,336 | - | - | - | 16,008 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Carel Kazakhstan Llc | - | 221,156 | - | 264,600 | 99,406 | 221,156 | - | - | 778,450 | - | - | - | - |
| Kiona Holding AS | 16,183,696 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | 1,255,166 | - |
| Carel System Spzoo | 72,527 | 1,668 | - | - | - | 10,008 | - | - | - | - | - | 2,352 | - |
| Total subsidiaries | 33,900,232 | 20,723,626 | 31,019,798 | 29,231,216 | 117,646,794 | 4,949,197 | 4,100,828 | 70,950,499 | 5,588,274 | 587,328 | 28,154,760 | 1,652,430 | 508,381 |
| Subsidiaries of parents | |||||||||||||
| Eurotest Laboratori S.r.l. | - | 3,698 | - | 230 | - | 3,762 | 3,698 | - | 159,830 | - | - | - | - |
| Arianna S.p.A. | - | 3,570 | - | - | - | 5,016 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Nastrificio Victor S.p.A. | - | - | - | 44,409 | - | - | - | 118,816 | - | - | - | - | - |
| Panther S.r.l. | - | - | - | 1,698 | - | - | - | 3,873 | - | - | - | - | - |
| Total subsidiaries of | |||||||||||||
| parents | - | 7,268 | - | 46,337 | - | 8,778 | 3,698 | 122,689 | 159,830 | - | - | - | - |
| Related parties | |||||||||||||
| RN Real Estate S.r.l. | - | 15,624 | 13,126,746 | 613,698 | - | 5,016 | 13,074 | 10 | - | - | - | - | 150,850 |
| Other, minor | - | 4,069 | 440,014 | 564,047 | - | - | 2,188 | 1,393 | 21,759 | - | - | - | - |
| Total related parties | - | 19,693 | 13,566,760 | 1,177,745 | - | 5,016 | 15,262 | 1,403 | 21,759 | - | - | - | 150,850 |
| TOTAL | 33,900,232 | 20,750,587 | 44,586,558 | 30,455,298 | 117,646,794 | 4,962,991 | 4,119,788 | 71,074,591 | 5,769,863 | 587,328 | 28,154,760 | 1,652,430 | 659,231 |


No significant events have taken place after the reporting date.
The whole of 2024 was characterised by strong geopolitical instability, mainly due to the war between Russia and Ukraine and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The macroeconomic scenario was not uniform across the geographical areas where the group's presence is greatest, specifically, Europe, China and the United States.
In Europe, the inflation trajectory substantially stabilised at around 2%-2.5%, while four rate cuts were implemented between June and December for a total reduction of 100 bps. The signs from China were not particularly positive: while it achieved the GDP growth target of 5%, this was one of the lowest growth rates in decades. Finally, the US economy proved to be particularly resilient, achieving growth close to 3%.
The early months of 2025 present a year still characterised by great uncertainty, exacerbated by the prospects of trade wars with the imposition of significant reciprocal tariffs, particularly between the US and various countries.
Given this scenario, visibility about future results continues to be limited. Taking this into account and the fact that the positive trend in the order book, seen in the first few months of the year, needs some time to translate into results, the group expects revenue for the first quarter of 2025 to be close to that of the same period in 2024 and an acceleration in performance from the second quarter onwards.
However, the above expectations do not include the impact of recent and potential future developments on customs duties
Calling of the shareholders' meeting and proposed allocation of the profit for the year
Dear shareholders,
Carel Industries S.p.A.'s separate financial statements as at and for the year ended 31 December 2024 show a profit of €23,164,847.
It should be noted that:
We invite you to approve the separate financial statements and to allocate the profit for the year as follows:
• as dividends to shareholders equal to €0.165 per share outstanding at the ex-dividend date, excluding treasury shares. Total dividends are estimated at €18,561,320.25, taking into account the shares outstanding at 13 March 2025 (112,492,850);

Francesco Nalini
________________________________ CEO


3.1 the separate financial statements at 31 December 2024:
3.2 The directors' report contains a reliable analysis of the performance results and the position of the issuer [and group companies included in the consolidation scope and a description of the main risks and uncertainties to which the company is exposed.
3.3 the english version of the separate financial statements of Carel Industries constitute a non-official version with regard to the provisions of the Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2019/815.
________________________________ ________________________________
Brugine, 13 March 2025
Chief executive officer Manager in charge of financial reporting
Francesco Nalini Nicola Biondo


Carel Industries Group Separate financial statements at 31 December 2024




Carel Industries Group Separate financial statements at 31 December 2024

| CFM Sogutma ve Otomasyon Anonim Sirketi (CFM) | |
|---|---|
| Description of the key audit matter |
The financial statements as at 31 December 2024 include in "Equity Investments" the investments in Recuperator S.p.A for an amount of Euro 19 million, Kiona Holding AS for an amount of Euro 176 million and CFM for an amount of 61 million, net of the impairment losses of the year for Euro 10 million in total. |
| As required by IAS 36 "impairment of assets", the Directors identified potential loss indicators defined as "trigger event", and as a consequence they performed the impairment test as at 31 December 2024, in order to test the carrying amounts related to the equity investments. |
|
| In the disclosure, the Directors explain the main assumptions applied in performing the tests and provide the break-even analysis in relation to the main key factors of the impairment tests to evaluate the degree of sensitivity of the test to the changes in the key variables. The Directors explain that the process of performing the impairment test is based on assumptions related, among others, to the expectations in term of cash flows for the CGU and the determination of appropriate discount rates (WACC) and long-term growth r (g-rate). |
|
| The Directors report, also, that the assumptions used are reasonable and are the most probable scenarios based on the information available, but the output of the impairment tests may be different if any of the assumptions change significantly. |
|
| We have considered the significance of the amount of the equity investments mentioned, the subjectivity of the estimates underlying the determination of cash flows for the subsidiaries and the key variables of the impairment tests. As a result, we have assessed that the impairment tests represent a key audit matter for the audit of the Carel Industries financial statements. |
|
| Note 3 of the financial statements provides disclosure on impairment test and the effects of sensitivity analysis resulting from the changes in the key variables used in performing the impairment tests. |
|
| Audit procedures performed |
As part of our audit, among others, we performed the following audit procedures, supported by the experts belonging to our network: |
| · understanding of the process and of the relevant controls designed and implemented by the Directors in relation to the process of |








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