Access earnings results, analyst expectations, report, slides, earnings call, and transcript.
The company exhibits a robust strategic plan, with expected revenue growth and operating margin expansion. The focus on nonresidential growth, particularly in data centers, and a strong acquisition strategy are positive indicators. The Q&A reveals confidence in the Waterworks sector and a promising M&A outlook for 2026. Despite flat margins due to normalization, the overall guidance is optimistic. Shareholder returns via share repurchases further enhance sentiment. While there are some uncertainties in management responses, the positive aspects outweigh them, suggesting a 2% to 8% stock price increase.
Revenue $31.3 billion, 5% increase year-over-year. Growth attributed to organic revenue growth of 4.5% and acquisition growth of 1%, partially offset by fewer sales days and adverse foreign exchange impacts.
Operating Profit $3 billion, 11.3% increase year-over-year. Improvement due to diligent management of gross margins and streamlined business operations.
Operating Margin 9.6%, 50 basis points expansion year-over-year. Driven by disciplined execution and supplier price increase timing.
Diluted Earnings Per Share (EPS) $10.58, 13.4% increase year-over-year. Growth driven by operating profit growth and share repurchases.
Operating Cash Flow $2.2 billion, $110 million increase year-over-year. Strong cash generation supported investments in growth areas and capital allocation priorities.
Return on Capital 31%, strong performance for the year. No specific reasons for change mentioned.
Net Sales in the United States 5% growth year-over-year. Residential revenue flat due to weak markets, while nonresidential revenue grew 11% driven by large capital projects and share gains.
Waterworks Revenue 13% growth year-over-year. Strength in large capital projects, public works, general municipal, and metering technology offset residential weakness.
Ferguson Home Revenue 1% growth year-over-year. Outperformance in challenging new construction and remodel market due to unified showroom and digital experience.
Residential Trade Plumbing Revenue 3% decline year-over-year. Impacted by headwinds in new construction and RMI construction.
HVAC Revenue 1% decline year-over-year. Affected by transition to new efficiency standards, weak new residential construction, and pressured consumer demand.
Commercial/Mechanical Revenue 18% growth year-over-year. Driven by large capital projects like data centers, partially offset by weaker traditional nonresidential projects.
Fire & Fabrication, Facilities Supply, and Industrial Customer Groups Growth year-over-year. Benefited from multi-customer group approach and market share gains.
EBITDA $3.2 billion, $338 million increase year-over-year. Growth supported by selective working capital investments and stable interest and tax expenses.
Free Cash Flow $1.9 billion, $100 million increase year-over-year. Resulted from strong operating cash flow and disciplined capital investments.
Revenue: Revenue of $31.3 billion, a 5% increase from last year.
Operating Profit: Operating profit of $3 billion, up 11.3%, representing a 9.6% operating margin.
Earnings Per Share: Diluted earnings per share of $10.58, a 13.4% increase.
Acquisitions: Welcomed associates from 8 acquisitions, continuing market consolidation strategy.
Residential Market: Residential revenue remained flat due to challenges in new housing starts and repair/maintenance activities.
Nonresidential Market: Nonresidential revenue grew by 11%, driven by large capital projects and strong bidding activity.
Waterworks: Waterworks revenue grew by 13%, supported by large capital projects and public works.
Commercial/Mechanical: Commercial/Mechanical customer group grew 18%, driven by large capital projects like data centers.
Cash Flow: Generated $2.2 billion in operating cash flow, enabling investments in growth and shareholder returns.
Gross Margin: Gross margin increased by 70 basis points to 31%.
Capital Allocation: Returned $1.6 billion to shareholders via dividends and share repurchases.
Market Positioning: Positioned as the largest value-added distributor of water and air solutions in North America.
Structural Trends: Focused on large capital projects, water infrastructure, climate systems, and aging housing stock as growth drivers.
Customer Group Integration: Integrated multi-customer group approach to provide end-to-end solutions for complex projects.
Residential End Markets: Residential end markets, which represent approximately half of revenue, remain challenged. New residential housing starts and permit activity were down on the prior year, and repair, maintenance, and improvement work also remained soft.
HVAC Segment: The HVAC segment declined by 1%, impacted by the industry's transition to new efficiency standards, weak new residential construction activity, and a pressured consumer environment.
Residential Trade Plumbing: Residential Trade Plumbing declined by 3% due to headwinds in both new construction and repair, maintenance, and improvement (RMI) construction.
Economic Environment: Price inflation was low single digits for the year, with improvement in finished goods pricing offset by deflation in certain commodity-related product categories. This mixed economic environment could pose challenges to profitability.
Skilled Labor Shortages: The industry faces a trade-starved environment with skilled labor becoming increasingly scarce, putting pressure on contractors to do more with less.
Aging Water Infrastructure: America's water systems are aging, underfunded, and in need of modernization, requiring significant investment to upgrade and replace critical infrastructure.
Residential Market Challenges: The residential market remains challenged in the short term due to aging housing stock and a housing shortage, which underpins strong demand but also creates operational challenges.
Regulatory and Efficiency Standards: The HVAC industry transition to new efficiency standards has created market disruptions and challenges for the segment.
Revenue Growth: The company expects low to mid-single-digit revenue growth for calendar year 2026.
Operating Margin: Operating margin is projected to range between 9.4% and 9.8% for 2026.
Market Conditions: Markets are expected to be broadly flat for 2026, with residential markets down low to mid-single digits and nonresidential markets up low to mid-single digits.
Capital Expenditures: Estimated CapEx for 2026 is approximately $350 million to $400 million.
Interest Expense: Interest expense is expected to be approximately $200 million in 2026.
Effective Tax Rate: The effective tax rate is projected to be approximately 26% for 2026.
Long-Term Revenue Growth: Over the long term, the company expects annual revenue growth of 6% to 11%, driven by market growth, share gains, and acquisitions.
Operating Margin Expansion: The company anticipates incremental operating margin expansion of 10 to 30 basis points annually over the long term.
Earnings Per Share Growth: Earnings per share growth is expected to be in the low double-digit to mid-teens range over the long term.
Revenue Milestone: The company aims to achieve $40 billion in revenue with over $4 billion in adjusted operating profit at over a 10% operating margin in the medium term.
Dividends declared: Quarterly dividend of $0.89 to be paid in April.
Total dividends returned to shareholders: $656 million returned to shareholders in dividends during the year.
Share repurchases: Repurchased 4.5 million shares for $902 million during the year.
Total shareholder returns: $1.6 billion returned to shareholders via dividends and share repurchases during the year.
The company exhibits a robust strategic plan, with expected revenue growth and operating margin expansion. The focus on nonresidential growth, particularly in data centers, and a strong acquisition strategy are positive indicators. The Q&A reveals confidence in the Waterworks sector and a promising M&A outlook for 2026. Despite flat margins due to normalization, the overall guidance is optimistic. Shareholder returns via share repurchases further enhance sentiment. While there are some uncertainties in management responses, the positive aspects outweigh them, suggesting a 2% to 8% stock price increase.
The earnings call summary and Q&A indicate several concerns: a slowdown in Q4 growth due to residential and HVAC market pressures, unclear guidance for early 2026, and vague responses regarding large projects and HVAC recovery. While there is optimism for long-term growth, the immediate outlook is uncertain, with only modest margin improvements expected. The negative sentiment is compounded by the lack of specific guidance and ongoing market challenges, suggesting a likely negative stock price reaction over the next two weeks.
The earnings call presents a mixed picture: financial performance and market strategy show positive growth in key areas like Waterworks and HVAC, but challenges in residential construction and remodel markets temper enthusiasm. While guidance indicates low to mid-single-digit growth, uncertainties in pricing, inflation, and residential sectors create a balanced outlook. The Q&A reveals healthy backlogs and strategic focus but lacks clarity on specific challenges, suggesting a neutral sentiment with potential for slight positive or negative adjustments.
The company's earnings call reflects positive financial performance, with strong organic growth, increased gross margin, and a significant rise in EPS. The strategic initiatives, such as acquisitions and share repurchases, are boosting shareholder value. Despite some uncertainties in the market and management's vague responses in the Q&A, the overall sentiment is positive, supported by a 5% increase in quarterly dividends and robust cash flow. The positive outlook in the HVAC and Waterworks segments also contributes to a favorable stock price reaction.
All transcripts are sourced directly from the official live webcast or the company’s official investor relations website. We use the exact words spoken during the call with no paraphrasing of the core discussion.
Full verbatim transcripts are typically published within 4–12 hours after the call ends. Same-day availability is guaranteed for all S&P 500 and most mid-cap companies.
No material content is ever changed or summarized in the “Full Transcript” section. We only correct obvious spoken typos (e.g., “um”, “ah”, repeated 10 times”, or clear misspoken ticker symbols) and add speaker names/titles for readability. Every substantive sentence remains 100% as spoken.
When audio quality is poor or multiple speakers talk over each other, we mark the section instead of guessing. This ensures complete accuracy rather than introducing potential errors.
They are generated by a specialized financial-language model trained exclusively on 15+ years of earnings transcripts. The model extracts financial figures, guidance, and tone with 97%+ accuracy and is regularly validated against human analysts. The full raw transcript always remains available for verification.