AIT (2025 - Q4)

Release Date: Aug 14, 2025

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Stock Data provided by Financial Modeling Prep

Current Financial Performance

AIT Q4 2025 Financial Highlights

5.5% YoY
Revenue Growth
$2.80
EPS
+5.9%
12.5%
EBITDA Margin
$138.2M
Free Cash Flow

Key Financial Metrics

Gross Margin

30.6%
0.1%

Operating Expense Growth

10.5%

Cash on Hand

$388M

Net Leverage

0.3x EBITDA

Period Comparison Analysis

EPS

$2.80
Current
Previous:$2.57
8.9% YoY

Free Cash Flow

$138.2M
Current
Previous:$114.9M
20.3% YoY

Net Leverage

0.3x EBITDA
Current
Previous:0.4x EBITDA
25% QoQ

Gross Margin

30.6%
Current
Previous:30.5%
0.3% QoQ

Service Center EBITDA Margin

13.6%
Current
Previous:14.7%
7.5% YoY

Engineered Solutions Sales Growth

20.7%
Current
Previous:13.5%
53.3% YoY

Earnings Performance & Analysis

Q4 EPS vs Guidance

Actual:$2.80
Estimate:$2.67
BEAT

Hydradyne EBITDA Contribution

$7M

Q4 2025

Share Repurchases

656,000 shares for $153M

Fiscal 2025

Financial Health & Ratios

Key Financial Ratios

30.6%
Gross Margin
12.5%
EBITDA Margin
128%
Free Cash Flow Conversion
0.3x EBITDA
Net Leverage
24%
Dividend Increase

Financial Guidance & Outlook

Fiscal 2026 EPS Guidance

$10.00 - $10.75

Sales Growth Guidance

4% - 7%

Including 1% - 4% organic growth

EBITDA Margin Guidance

12.2% - 12.5%

LIFO Expense Guidance

$14M - $18M

CapEx Guidance

$30M - $35M

Surprises

Record Gross Margin Surpassing 30%

Gross margin expanded nearly 50 basis points, surpassing 30% for the first time

Gross margins expanded nearly 50 basis points and surpassed 30% for the first time in our history.

Hydradyne EBITDA Contribution Exceeds Expectations

$7 million EBITDA contribution in Q4

Hydradyne contributed just over $7 million of EBITDA in Q4 and is on track to meet or exceed the $0.15 EPS accretion target.

Free Cash Flow Growth of 34%

$465 million free cash flow, up 34% year-over-year

We generated over $465 million of free cash, up 34% to a new record on both an absolute basis and as a percent of sales.

Q4 EPS Exceeds Guidance by Nearly 5%

EPS of $2.80, up 5.9% year-over-year

Reported earnings per share of $2.80 was up 5.9% from prior year EPS of $2.64 and exceeded the high end of our guidance by nearly 5%.

Service Center Segment Organic Sales Decline Narrows

0.4% organic sales decline in Q4, improved from 1.6% decline in Q3

Service Center segment sales decreased 0.4% year-over-year on an organic daily basis, improving from last quarter's 1.6% decline.

Engineered Solutions Segment Organic Growth Returns

1.8% organic daily sales growth in Q4

Engineered Solutions segment sales increased 20.7% over prior year quarter with 1.8% organic daily sales growth, first positive growth in 7 quarters.

Impact Quotes

Our fiscal 2025 performance showcases the more durable and differentiated growth profile we continue to shape across Applied.

We believe our customers' capital investment decisions will be active, given heightened considerations around reshoring and industrial production infrastructure expansion.

Hydradyne contributed just over $7 million of EBITDA in Q4 and is on track to meet or exceed the $0.15 EPS accretion target in the first 12 months.

Structural mixed tailwinds should strengthen as sales recover, and we remain constructive on EBITDA margin potential beyond our 13% intermediate target.

Our technical industry position and manufacturing domain expertise provide a compelling long-term growth and margin expansion opportunity.

We expect LIFO expense of $14 million to $18 million in fiscal 2026, reflecting inflationary increases and inventory levels.

Notable Topics Discussed

  • Applied Industrial Technologies achieved new records for sales, EBITDA, and EPS in fiscal 2025, demonstrating strong operational resilience.
  • Full year EPS growth of 4% exceeded initial guidance, highlighting effective management despite a muted demand environment.
  • Gross margins expanded nearly 50 basis points, surpassing 30% for the first time in the company's history, indicating margin improvement.
  • The company generated over $465 million of free cash flow, a 34% increase, enabling significant capital deployment including acquisitions and share buybacks.
  • The strategic acquisition of Hydradyne, its largest in 6 years, contributed over 400 basis points of inorganic growth and was a key driver of the record performance.
  • The Engineered Solutions segment saw organic sales increase by 1.8% sequentially, with a 20.7% rise year-over-year driven by recent acquisitions and demand growth.
  • Order momentum in the segment increased by high single digits, with positive growth in industrial and mobile OEM fluid power orders after previous headwinds.
  • Growth in data centers, semiconductor manufacturing, and automation supported the segment's expansion, reflecting industry tailwinds.
  • The segment's underlying sales performance improved significantly, with 2-year stack trends showing strong execution and demand recovery.
  • The company is optimistic about the segment's future, citing ongoing investments and a pipeline of projects in key verticals like technology and automation.
  • Hydradyne contributed over $7 million of EBITDA in Q4, with a 30% sequential sales increase, indicating rapid integration success.
  • The acquisition is expected to be $0.15 accretive to EPS within 12 months, and early signs suggest it may exceed initial expectations.
  • Synergy realization is ahead of schedule, with integration costs similar to Q3, and ongoing cross-selling opportunities are being capitalized.
  • Hydradyne's EBITDA margin contribution improved over 30% sequentially, reflecting effective cost management and operational efficiencies.
  • The company expects Hydradyne's positive impact to continue into fiscal 2026, supporting margin expansion and growth.
  • The company is managing a dynamic tariff environment, with increased price increase notifications from suppliers during Q4.
  • Limited direct exposure to foreign procurement helps mitigate some tariff impacts, but overall price pressures are expected to increase gradually.
  • Ongoing inflationary pressures and structural mix tailwinds are being countered through pricing analytics, supply chain management, and gross margin initiatives.
  • The company has limited impact from outside U.S. product sourcing, but tariff-related costs are expected to influence pricing and margins in 2026.
  • Management remains confident in their ability to execute supply chain strategies despite macroeconomic uncertainties.
  • Despite a challenging demand backdrop, recent trends show modest improvement, with some end markets stabilizing or growing.
  • Order momentum in Engineered Solutions and positive activity in data centers and semiconductor markets signal a potential demand inflection.
  • The company sees signs of increased capital maintenance spending and project activity, especially in process flow markets.
  • Customer behavior indicates a shift towards reshoring and increased industrial investment, supporting a more favorable outlook.
  • Management emphasizes a prudent but optimistic view, expecting demand to strengthen as macro uncertainties diminish.
  • The technology vertical, including data centers and semiconductor manufacturing, contributed approximately 100 basis points to organic growth in Q4.
  • Ongoing build-out of infrastructure in these sectors expands the addressable market for fluid conveyance, flow control, and robotic solutions.
  • The company is leveraging its engineering capabilities and supplier relationships to capitalize on the transition to electric-powered fluid power systems.
  • Automation growth was mid-single digits, supported by projects with high return profiles and potential for accelerated depreciation benefits.
  • Management sees these verticals as key drivers for above-market organic growth in the Engineered Solutions segment.
  • The company plans to remain active in M&A, building on the momentum from four transactions in fiscal 2025.
  • Acquisitions contributed over 400 basis points of inorganic growth and are expected to continue driving sales and margin expansion.
  • Share repurchases were significant, with 656,000 shares bought back for $153 million, and the company increased quarterly dividends by 24%.
  • The balance sheet remains strong, with net leverage at 0.3x EBITDA, supporting ongoing capital deployment.
  • Management aims to leverage scale, technical solutions, and strategic relationships to sustain long-term growth and shareholder returns.
  • The company expects to improve EBITDA margins beyond the current target of 13%, supported by growth in Engineered Solutions and local customer accounts.
  • Structural mix tailwinds, including recovery across Engineered Solutions, are expected to strengthen margins.
  • Ongoing initiatives in pricing analytics, sales process optimization, and shared services are contributing to margin expansion.
  • Synergies from Hydradyne and growth investments in automation are expected to further enhance profitability.
  • Management remains optimistic about achieving high-teen EBITDA margins as growth and efficiency initiatives mature.
  • Despite a muted demand environment, the company demonstrated operational resilience with record sales and cash flow in fiscal 2025.
  • Strategic investments in technology, automation, and acquisitions have diversified revenue streams and enhanced competitive positioning.
  • The company is managing macroeconomic uncertainties, including trade policies and interest rates, with a prudent outlook and flexible execution.
  • Strong customer relationships and industry expertise support continued growth despite external headwinds.
  • Management emphasizes a long-term strategic focus on secular tailwinds and structural growth opportunities.

Key Insights:

  • Capital expenditures targeted at $30 million to $35 million for fiscal 2026 to support technology and growth investments.
  • EPS guidance range is $10 to $10.75 with EBITDA margins expected between 12.2% and 12.5%.
  • First quarter organic sales are projected to increase low single digits with EBITDA margins between 11.9% and 12.1%.
  • Fiscal 2026 guidance projects total sales growth of 4% to 7%, including 1% to 4% organic growth.
  • Free cash flow expected to remain strong but may decline year-over-year due to higher working capital investment.
  • Inorganic growth from acquisitions is expected to contribute approximately 300 basis points to sales growth, primarily from Hydradyne.
  • Management remains cautious due to ongoing trade policy and interest rate uncertainties but optimistic about secular growth tailwinds.
  • Pricing is expected to contribute 150 to 200 basis points to sales growth in fiscal 2026, ramping through the year.
  • Completed four acquisitions in fiscal 2025, including Hydradyne, the largest in six years, enhancing strategic growth.
  • Engineered Solutions segment showed positive organic growth for the first time in seven quarters, driven by technology and automation verticals.
  • Growth investments focused on flow control, fluid power, automation platform expansion, and new process infrastructure.
  • Hydradyne integration progressing well with synergy realization ahead of expectations and EBITDA contribution up over 30% sequentially.
  • Investments in technology platforms and distribution centers continue to support operational efficiency and capacity expansion.
  • Ongoing efforts to manage tariff impacts through supplier collaboration and pricing strategies.
  • Service Center segment benefited from sales force productivity initiatives, technology investments, and cross-selling momentum.
  • Share repurchases totaled 656,000 shares for $153 million, alongside a 24% increase in quarterly dividends.
  • CEO Neil Schrimsher emphasized the company's operating resiliency and value creation despite muted demand.
  • CEO views Applied’s compounding cash generation and balance sheet strength as key drivers for long-term double-digit earnings and dividend growth.
  • Commitment to continued M&A activity, share buybacks, and dividend growth to enhance shareholder returns.
  • Confidence expressed in the company’s ability to manage inflation and tariff-related cost pressures through pricing and mix improvements.
  • Focus on leveraging scale, engineering capabilities, and supplier relationships to drive above-market organic growth.
  • Leadership noted the strong market position in technical industrial solutions and the expanding addressable market in technology and automation.
  • Management highlighted the importance of secular and structural growth tailwinds, including reshoring and capital maintenance spending.
  • Management remains prudent on near-term outlook due to macro uncertainties but optimistic about accelerating growth as conditions stabilize.
  • AR provisioning impact was timing-related and expected to normalize; deferred compensation costs also affected Q4 margins but have offsetting income effects.
  • Hydradyne’s EBITDA contribution was $7 million in Q4, with synergy realization ahead of plan and expected to meet or exceed initial EPS accretion guidance.
  • Management sees potential stimulus from accelerated depreciation tax incentives supporting capital projects in automation and flow control.
  • Pricing contributed over 100 basis points to Q4 sales growth, expected to ramp to 150-200 basis points in fiscal 2026.
  • Service Center segment’s organic sales decline improved sequentially, with positive trends in national accounts and local customers.
  • Technology vertical growth driven by data centers and semiconductor manufacturing, with automation also showing mid-single-digit growth.
  • Capital maintenance spending showing early signs of pickup, especially in service centers.
  • Company benefits from structural mix tailwinds and self-help gross margin initiatives to counter inflation.
  • Deferred compensation cost fluctuations impact SG&A but are offset in other income and expense.
  • End market demand remains mixed with weakness in machinery, primary metals, utility, energy, aggregates, and chemicals.
  • Foreign currency translation and selling day differences had minor negative impacts on sales growth.
  • Order momentum in Engineered Solutions segment improved with high single-digit order growth year-over-year.
  • Positive demand trends in technology, pulp and paper, fabricated metals, food and beverage, and oil and gas verticals.
  • Tariff environment remains dynamic; company has limited direct exposure to non-U.S. procurement.
  • Average daily sales increased 4% sequentially in Q4, the first above-normal seasonal pattern in 10 quarters.
  • Engineered Solutions segment operating expense per day declined 5% organically, with EBITDA margins up 40 basis points excluding acquisitions.
  • Free cash flow generation over the past three years has compounded at 40% annually, fueling capital deployment.
  • Hydradyne’s EBITDA margin drag improved sequentially, with further synergy benefits expected.
  • Management highlighted the importance of AI and pricing analytics in margin expansion initiatives.
  • Sequential backlog in Engineered Solutions was down slightly, but book-to-bill ratio remained above prior year.
  • Service Center segment operating expense per day declined 1% organically for the full year, supporting margin expansion.
  • The company’s market cap exceeded $10 billion with total shareholder returns doubling primary benchmarks over 3 and 5 years.
Complete Transcript:
AIT:2025 - Q4
Operator:
Welcome to the Fiscal 2025 Fourth Quarter Earnings Call for Applied Industrial Technologies. My name is Carly, and I will be your conference operator for today's call. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Ryan Cieslak, Director of Investor Relations and Treasury. Ryan, you may begin. Ryan Dal
Ryan Dale Cieslak:
Okay. Thanks, Carly, and good morning to everyone on the call. This morning, we issued our earnings release and supplemental investor deck detailing our fourth quarter results. Both of these documents are available in the Investor Relations section of applied.com. Before we begin, just a reminder, we'll discuss our business outlook and make forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements are based on current expectations subject to certain risks and uncertainties, including those detailed in our SEC filings. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements. The company undertakes no obligation to update publicly or revise any forward-looking statement. In addition, the conference call will use non-GAAP financial measures, which are subject to the qualifications referenced in those documents. Our speakers today include Neil Schrimsher, Applied's President and Chief Executive Officer; and Dave Wells, our Chief Financial Officer. With that, I'll turn it over to Neil.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
Thanks, Ryan, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us. I'll begin today with perspective and highlights on our results, including an update on industry conditions and expectations going forward. Dave will follow with more financial detail on the quarter's performance and provide additional color on our fiscal 2026 guidance, I'll then close with some final thoughts. Before I discuss our fourth quarter results, I want to take a moment to acknowledge our Applied team. I'm extremely proud of what we accomplished in fiscal 2025 within a muted demand backdrop. We achieved new records for sales, EBITDA and EPS. Full year EPS growth of 4% exceeded the high end of our initial guidance. Gross margins expanded nearly 50 basis points and surpassed 30% for the first time in our history. We also delivered another record year of cash generation that enabled meaningful capital deployment. This included the strategic acquisition of Hydradyne our largest M&A transaction in 6 years. Overall, our performance in fiscal 2025 provides further evidence of our operating resiliency and value creation potential and builds on our compelling track record over the past 5 years. This includes compounded annual growth for EBITDA and EPS of 14% and 22%, respectively as well as gross margins and EBITDA margins expanding 130 and 330 basis points, respectively. I'm honored to be a part of our incredible Applied team and the financial performance we continue to deliver. Our progress in fiscal 2025 ended on an encouraging note with several positive trends developing. Fourth quarter sales and EPS exceeded our expectations. Our team once again executed well against an ongoing muted end market backdrop. Sales exceeded the high end of our fourth quarter guidance by 2.5% and returned to modest positive organic growth. Underlying organic sales trends strengthened across both segments as the quarter progressed, average daily sales increased 4% sequentially, which was ahead of normal seasonal patterns for the first time in 10 quarters. Upside compared to our expectations was primarily driven by stronger-than-expected Engineered Solutions segment sales, which grew organically year-over-year for the first time in 7 quarters. The segment's 2% organic daily sales increase was a notable improvement from mid-single-digit declines in recent quarters, with the underlying drivers encouraging on many fronts. Our ES teams capitalized on recent order strength as well as improving demand and business development efforts across several key growth verticals. This includes double-digit organic growth across our technology vertical and mid-single-digit organic growth across our automation platform during the quarter. Service Center segment trends were also encouraging, including exceeding normal seasonal patterns for the second straight quarter and returning to positive organic growth during the month of June. M&A sales contribution was also encouraging with progress continuing to develop at Hydradyne as well as initial contribution from our early May acquisition of IRIS Factory Automation. Taken together, our fourth quarter sales performance highlight solid execution combined with emerging growth tailwinds tied to our industry position and business pipeline. As it relates to underlying end market demand, trends remained relatively mixed during the quarter, though with some positive signs developing. Year-over-year trends across our top 30 end markets were relatively unchanged from last quarter, with 15 generating positive sales growth compared to 16 last quarter. Declines continued to cross several top markets, including machinery, primary metals, utility and energy, aggregates and chemicals. Consistent with prior quarters, declines were most pronounced across off- highway mobile, OEM verticals within our fluid power operations. This was offset by solid demand across our technology vertical, which we estimate contributed approximately 100 basis points to our consolidated organic growth rate during the quarter. Sales were also positive across pulp and paper, fabricated metals, food and beverage and oil and gas verticals. Further, capital maintenance spending started to slowly pick up during the quarter within our service center network, while project activity across various process flow markets strengthened later in the quarter. In addition, orders in our Engineered Solutions segment increased by a high single-digit percent year-over-year during the quarter, adding to the positive inflection we've seen in recent quarters. This includes positive growth in industrial and mobile OEM fluid power orders, an encouraging sign following notable headwinds in this area of our business over the past year. During fiscal 2025, reduced sales from industrial and mobile OEM fluid power customers negatively impacted our consolidated organic year-over-year sales growth rate by approximately 100 basis points as well as the Engineered Solutions segment organic growth rate by over 400 basis points. Overall, while end market visibility remains limited and mixed, we believe the underlying backdrop improved modestly from last quarter. In addition, based on our core indicators, including order momentum, business funnels and what we're hearing from our customers, we believe industrial activity and customer spending behavior are starting to pick up to some degree. It's also important to highlight the positive impact of our own initiatives and ongoing evolution are having. While our overall organic sales trends in fiscal 2025 were muted, average daily sales finished the full year down a modest 2%. This was directionally in line with the midpoint of our initial guidance despite a more challenging end market backdrop that was highly influenced by persistent uncertainty tied to the U.S. election, interest rates and eventually shifts in trade policy. The negative impact to many of our legacy manufacturing end markets was evident as reflected in the ISM hitting one of the longest contractionary stretches as well as notable pressure we experienced in OEM and machine-related verticals. This also followed double- digit organic compounded sales growth in the prior 3-year period. Considering this context, we believe our fiscal 2025 performance showcases the more durable and differentiated growth profile, we continue to shape across Applied. Of note, our Service Center segment benefited from ongoing sales force productivity initiatives, technology investments, and increased cross-selling momentum, which helped balance softer MRO customer spending during the year. In addition, growth investments across our flow control and fluid power operations, as well as the ongoing expansion of our automation platform have diversified our end market exposure and supported our Engineered Solutions segment. In particular, we benefited from encouraging growth tied to data centers, semiconductor manufacturing, new process infrastructure, advanced robotic solutions and calibration services as the year played out. This helped offset acute weakness in our legacy off-highway mobile markets and drove a return to positive segment organic growth during the fourth quarter. At the same time, we continue to expand gross margins while maintaining cost discipline in fiscal 2025, which helped drive modest EBITDA and EPS growth for the year. When excluding the impact from acquisitions, we achieved 10% decremental margins on low single-digit organic sales decline. This is inclusive of ongoing growth investment and inflationary pressures throughout the year. During the fourth quarter, gross margins increased sequentially and were in line with our guidance. As previously highlighted, year- over-year gross margin trends were impacted by a difficult prior year comparison, partially reflecting a LIFO layer liquidation benefit last fourth quarter. This fourth quarter also included higher-than-expected AR provisioning, which held back EBITDA margins to some degree, but is expected to normalize moving forward. Fiscal 2025 was also a year showcasing our cash generation and capital deployment capacity. We generated over $465 million of free cash, up 34% to a new record on both an absolute basis and as a percent of sales. Over the past 3 years, our business has generated a 40% compounded annual free cash growth which has culminated in meaningful capital deployment, including over $560 million deployed in fiscal 2025. We accelerated capital deployment on M&A closing four transactions in fiscal 2025, including the strategic acquisition of Hydradyne. Sales from acquisitions contributed over 400 basis points of inorganic growth in fiscal 2025, up 100 basis points from the prior year. At the same time, we were more active with share buybacks, repurchasing a total of 656,000 shares for $153 million as well as increasing our quarterly dividend by 24%. We also continued to invest in technology platforms, distribution centers and growth capacity. Overall, very compelling numbers that highlight the powerful flywheel effect of our operating model and strategy, including our consistency in generating elite levels of cash and shareholder returns long term. As it relates to the evolving tariff backdrop, we continue to work closely with our suppliers as they manage through the dynamic backdrop and the impact on supply chains. As expected, we received a greater level of price increase notifications from our suppliers during the fourth quarter. Our teams are proactively and effectively managing through this and in short, we remain highly confident in our ability to execute as the tariff backdrop continues to evolve. As a reminder, we have limited direct exposure to procuring products outside the U.S. We also have a strong track record of effectively managing inflation given our technical industry position, while structural mix tailwinds in various self-help gross margin initiatives, to provide strong countermeasures. The overall price impact to our sales was limited in the fourth quarter, but we expect it to slowly increase moving forward. as supplier price increases take effect. Next, I'd like to take a moment to provide some initial thoughts on our outlook as we enter fiscal 2026. First, we're highly focused on accelerating growth. We remain mindful of ongoing trade and interest rate policy uncertainty, which continues to impact broader demand visibility and could remain a gating factor to growth near term. That said, when we consider the underlying fundamentals beneath this on both a secular and structural basis, we believe a productive demand environment should develop as policy clarity continues to emerge. Recent U.S. trade agreements with several primary trading partners are a welcome development. In addition, the recent passage of tax reform legislation, including accelerated depreciation incentives and the potential for a more favorable U.S. interest rate policy could recatalyze U.S. business sentiment and capital investment. While it remains early, we're encouraged to see positive sales momentum continue into early fiscal 2026 with first quarter organic sales to date, up by an estimated 4% compared to prior year levels. Secular growth tailwinds also remain on firm footing. Our related exposure is high given our industry position, supporting U.S. manufacturing and deep technical knowledge of our customers' facilities. As macro and trade policy dynamics stabilize, we believe our customers' capital investment decisions will be active, given heightened considerations around reshoring. Technical service requirements will increase as break-fix MRO activity supports aged manufacturing equipment and as customers expand industrial production infrastructure across North America. Our service center segment is favorably positioned to benefit from these positive tailwinds. This could be particularly evident across heavy manufacturing, machinery, mining, metals, and aggregates given their break-fix intensive nature as well as potential incremental demand from U.S. trade and pro-growth policies. In addition, we expect additional benefits from technology investments, optimizing sales force productivity and new business sourcing. We're also focused on increasing our growth with local customers, through greater sales of ancillary products such as seals, material handling, fluid conveyance, chemicals, lubricants and safety as well as providing comprehensive service and repair solutions for their production assets. In addition, we're constructive on the growth opportunities developing across our Engineered Solutions segment considering ongoing positive order momentum and investments made in recent years. Underlying demand fundamentals are notable across key growth verticals including technology and discrete automation, which combined represent more than 25% of segment sales today. The ongoing build-out of data center and semiconductor infrastructure is expanding the addressable market for our fluid conveyance, flow control and robotic solutions. We have a growing business pipeline tied to the emerging transition to electric-powered fluid power systems, where we expect to play a significant role given our leading engineering capabilities and supplier relationships. Combined with the required flow control infrastructure investments across the U.S., our Engineered Solutions segment is in a strong position to drive above-market organic sales growth moving forward. We also expect acquisitions to remain an important element of our growth potential, and we look to build on the M&A momentum we achieved in fiscal 2025. Our pipeline is developing nicely, and we expect to be active in fiscal 2026 as we continue our strategic expansion. The value of our scale, broad technical solution portfolio, engineering capabilities, strategic supplier relationships and balance sheet capacity has never been stronger in our marketplace. Lastly, we're in a strong position to further expand margins as these growth tailwinds play out. Of note, structural mixed tailwinds should strengthen as sales recover across our Engineered Solutions segment, and local customer accounts. We also have ongoing opportunities tied to pricing analytics, optimizing sales processes, utilizing AI and expanding shared services while synergy benefits from our Hydradyne acquisition should ramp moving forward. Combined with leveraging recent growth investments and our scaling automation platform, we remain constructive on the EBITDA margin potential developing beyond our current intermediate target of 13%. At this time, I'll turn the call over to Dave for additional detail on our results and outlook.
David K. Wells:
Thanks, Neil. Just as a reminder before I begin, as in prior quarters, we have posted a supplemental presentation to our investor site for your additional reference. We hope that you will find this useful as we recap our most recent quarter performance and initial fiscal 2026 guidance. Turning now to details of our financial performance in the quarter. Consolidated sales increased 5.5% over the prior year quarter. Acquisitions contributed 6.5 points of growth, which was partially offset by a negative 40 basis point impact from foreign currency translation and a negative 80 basis point impact from the difference in selling days. Netting these factors, sales increased 20 basis points year-over-year on an organic daily basis. compared to a 3.1% decline in the third quarter. As it relates to pricing, we estimate the contribution of product pricing on year-over-year sales growth was over 100 basis points for the quarter and slightly above the contribution from last quarter. Moving to consolidated gross margin performance as highlighted on Page 7 of the deck, gross margin of 30.6% was down 9 basis points compared to the prior year level of 30.7%, but was directionally in line with our guidance and up 15 basis points sequentially. During the quarter, we recognized LIFO expense of $2.9 million, which was up slightly from the third quarter. In the prior year fourth quarter, we recognized LIFO expense of only $0.3 million which, as you may recall, was favorably impacted by a later liquidation benefit. On a net basis, this resulted in an unfavorable 21 basis point year-over-year impact on gross margins during the quarter which was directionally in line with our guidance. Excluding the adverse impact of LIFO, gross margins increased over the prior year, reflecting positive mix contribution from our recent Hydradyne acquisition as well as ongoing channel execution and benefits from our margin initiatives. This was partially offset by mix headwinds from lower sales across local accounts as well as tougher comps against prior year fourth quarter mix tied to higher- margin solutions sales. Price cost trends were relatively neutral in the quarter. As it relates to operating costs, selling, distribution and administrative expenses increased 10.5% compared to prior year levels. On an organic constant currency basis, SD&A expense was up a modest 0.3% year-over-year. SD&A expense included an unfavorable $4 million or 2% year-over-year impact from higher AR provisioning. We view the AR provisioning impact as more timing related and expected to normalize moving forward. Our provisioning requirements can fluctuate quarter-to-quarter based on various factors. In addition, the fourth quarter of last year included an AR provision benefit tied to recoveries achieved, reflecting our ongoing working capital initiatives and collection efforts. As further context, our DSO trends remain favorable and relatively unchanged from last year and our AR provision as a percentage of sales for fiscal 2025 was at the midpoint of our recent historical range. SD&A expense this quarter also includes an unfavorable 80 basis point impact from higher deferred compensation costs compared to the prior year. As a reminder, changes in deferred compensation costs and SD&A are primarily driven by market values of investments tied to our nonqualified deferred compensation plan. There's a corresponding offset to these fluctuations in other income and expense, which we report below net interest and income. When normalizing for the AR provision impact and higher deferred compensation costs in the quarter, we estimate SD&A expense on an organic constant currency basis will have declined by over 2% year-over-year, reflecting benefits from ongoing efficiency gains and solid cost control. Overall, encouraging sales growth trends and stable underlying gross margin performance were masked by the unfavorable prior year LIFO comparison and higher AR provisioning in the quarter. This resulted in EBITDA margin of 12.5%, declining 73 basis points to the prior year level, up 13.2%. This was modestly below our fourth quarter guidance of $12.6 million to 12.8%, primarily reflecting the higher than anticipated AR provision in the quarter, which was 20 to 30 basis points unfavorable to our guidance. Normalizing the AR provision and excluding the impact of LIFO, EBITDA margins would have been relatively unchanged year-over- year. In addition, reported EBITDA of $153 million was at the high end of our guidance range reflecting stronger sales trends in the quarter. Reported earnings per share of $2.80 was up 5.9% from prior year EPS of $2.64 and exceeded the high end of our guidance by nearly 5%. On a year-over-year basis, EPS benefited from a lower effective tax rate as well as a reduced share count tied to our buyback activity. This was partially offset by higher interest and other expense on a net basis. Turning now to performance by segment. As highlighted on Slides 8 and 9 of the presentation, Sales in our Service Center segment decreased 0.4% year-over-year on an organic daily basis. This excludes 30 basis points of contribution from acquisitions, a negative 80 basis point impact from the difference in selling days and a negative 60 basis point impact from foreign currency translation. The organic sales decline was primarily driven by muted MRO spending fully in the quarter, particularly across our international operations. That said, the trend improved from last quarter's organic decline of 1.6%. In addition, on a sequential basis, segment sales per day increased 1.5% from the third quarter which was above normal seasonal patterns for the second straight quarter. Sales growth remained positive across our national account base, partially reflecting benefits from our internal initiatives, including sales force investments and cross-selling actions. Segment trends were also supported by growth across Fluid Power MRO sales in our consumable vending and VMI offerings. Segment EBITDA decreased 8.3% over the prior year, while segment EBITDA margin of 13.6% was down 100 basis points. The year-over-year decline primarily reflects the unfavorable AR provisioning as previously discussed, which had an approximate 300 basis point negative impact to segment EBITDA growth, and a 50 basis point negative impact to segment EBITDA margin in the quarter. In addition, LIFO expense was approximately 100 basis points unfavorable to segment EBITDA growth in the quarter or 15 basis points to EBITDA margin, primarily reflecting the prior year layer liquidation benefit as previously discussed. Lastly, as highlighted earlier, higher deferred compensation costs, which are reported in our service center segment had an unfavorable 20 basis point year-over-year impact to segment EBITDA margin. On a full year basis, our Service Center segment delivered solid margin and cost control performance with operating expense per day down 1% on an organic basis and EBITDA margins up modestly against the low single-digit sales decline. Within our Engineered Solutions segment, sales increased 20.7% over the prior year quarter with acquisitions contributing a positive 19.7 points of this increase. On an organic daily basis, accounting for the difference in selling days segment sales increased 1.8% over the prior year. The prior year -- excuse me, year-over-year increase was primarily driven by solid growth across our Fluid Power pneumatic and conveyance solutions supporting the technology vertical as well as growth in our flow control business. In addition, organic sales in our automation operations increased by mid-single-digit percent over the prior year quarter while partially aided by easier prior year comparisons, the segment's underlying sales performance improved noticeably with 2-year stack trends improving across all primary business units, reflecting strong execution on recent order strength and firmer demand. The benefit from improved automation growth performance was partially offset by ongoing weakness across mobile fluid power OEM markets though the year-over-year decline eased from last quarter. Segment EBITDA increased 13.5% over the prior year, reflecting impact from our Hydradyne acquisition as well as solid cost management. Segment EBITDA margin of 14.8% was down roughly 90 basis points from prior year levels, so influenced by several dynamics. First, the prior year fourth quarter segment EBITDA margin of nearly 16% was a high and benefited from unusually strong mix tailwinds from higher Engineered Solutions sales. As a reminder, Hydradyne currently flows through at a lower EBITDA margin relative to the segment's average. This represented a 60 basis point year-over-year headwind in the quarter while LIFO was unfavorable by 30 basis points over the prior year. I will note that the Hydradyne EBITDA margin mix impact improved from last quarter, with further positive direction expected moving forward as we continue to work through our integration and synergy plans. Of note, Hydradyne's EBITDA contribution in the quarter was up over 30% sequentially from the third quarter compared to a 12% sequential increase in sales contribution. On a full year basis, our Engineered Solutions segment delivered solid underlying margin and cost control performance in fiscal 2025. Excluding the impact from acquisitions, segment operating expense per day was down 5% and segment EBITDA margins increased approximately 40 basis points against a 4% organic decline in average daily sales. Moving to our cash flow performance. Cash generated from operating activities during the fourth quarter was $147 million, while free cash flow totaled $138.2 million or 128% of net income. For the full year, we generated free cash of $465.2 million or 118% of net income. This was up 34%, reflecting more modest working capital investment compared to the prior year as well as ongoing progress with internal initiatives, and/or enhanced margin profile. From a balance sheet perspective, we ended June with approximately $388 million of cash on hand and net leverage at 0.3x EBITDA which is above the prior year level of 0.2x and down slightly from last quarter. In summary, our balance sheet is in a solid position to support our capital deployment initiatives moving forward. Turning now to our outlook, which is detailed on Page 12 of the presentation, we are establishing full year fiscal 2026 guidance, including EPS in the range of $10 to $10.75 based on assumptions for total sales increasing 4% to 7%, including 1% to 4% growth on an organic basis, as well as EBITDA margins up 12.2% to 12.5%. Our outlook takes into consideration sales trends through mid- August as well as ongoing economic uncertainty. At the midpoint of guidance, we assume ongoing tariff and interest rate uncertainty continues to impact end market demand through the first half of the year, followed by a more favorable underlying end market demand trends in the second half of the year. Guidance also assumes 150 to 200 basis points of year-over-year sales contribution from pricing as well as ongoing inflationary headwinds and growth investments. We expect inorganic growth from completed acquisitions to contribute approximately 300 basis points to sales growth in fiscal 2026, including approximately 600 basis points in the first half, primarily reflecting 2 quarters of contribution from Hydradyne which closed at the end of December 2025. Guidance does not assume contribution from future acquisitions or share buybacks. In addition, based on quarter-to-date sales trends through mid-August and prior year comparisons for the remainder of the quarter as well as ongoing trade policy uncertainty, we currently project fiscal first quarter organic daily sales to increase by a low single-digit percent over the prior year quarter. Our guidance also assumes fiscal first quarter EBITDA margins between 11.9% to 12.1%. From a margin and cost perspective, guidance assumes ongoing inflationary pressures and growth investments as well as $14 million to $18 million of LIFO expense. We expect stronger relative year-over-year EBITDA margin trends in the second half of the year, reflecting greater expense leveraging, Hydradyne synergy progress and easier comparisons. Lastly, we expect free cash generation to remain strong in fiscal 2026 but to potentially trend lower year-over-year, reflecting greater working capital investment tied to potentially stronger demand and growth opportunities. In addition, we expect ongoing organic investments supporting our strategy and technology investments with capital expenditures targeted in the $30 million to $35 million range for fiscal 2026. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Neil for some final comments.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
So to wrap up, fiscal 2025 was another meaningful year for Applied. We executed well in a slower demand environment while positioning the company for long-term success through several acquisitions and internal growth investments. The year culminated in significant capital deployment, enhancing our long-term earnings power while continuing to drive strong shareholder returns. Our market cap today exceeds $10 billion and we've delivered total shareholder returns that have more than doubled primary market benchmarks over the past 3 and 5 years. A strong testament to the power of the Applied team and our differentiated strategy. Moving into fiscal 2026. We're encouraged by recent sales momentum, which could accelerate given the underpinnings of various secular tailwinds and deferred customer spending the past 18 months. That said, we're taking a prudent approach to our initial outlook pending greater clarity on trade policy, interest rates and broader macro conditions. Our track record shows we can manage through various macro and trade scenarios as they develop and have company-specific growth and margin tailwinds that could strengthen into fiscal 2026. In addition, we expect to remain active in M&A, share buybacks and dividend growth. And lastly, our technical industry position, manufacturing domain expertise and aligned strategy provide a compelling long-term growth and margin expansion opportunity as various secular and structural tailwinds continue to develop across the U.S. industrial economy. We believe this backdrop, combined with our compounding cash generation algorithm and balance sheet capacity support double-digit compounded earnings and dividend growth long term. We look forward to building on our performance in fiscal 2026 and beyond as our evolution continues to unfold. With that, we'll open up the lines for your questions.
Operator:
[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Christopher Glynn with Oppenheimer.
Christopher D. Glynn:
I had a couple. Just first on Hydradyne, you talked about 12% sequential sales growth and 30% EBITDA. I don't know if that reflected integration costs that you incurred in the third quarter that diminished in the fourth? Or just wanted to dimensionalize that a little bit.
David K. Wells:
I think it's a combination. Relatively similar integration costs, if I think about Q3 versus Q4, Chris. So what it really points to is the kind of the leverage that we saw on the SD&A falling through to EBITDA. The stronger margin performance is obviously a contributing factor there as well as very pleased with the progress we've made to date in terms of quicker realization of synergy benefits. So we're actually ahead of where we anticipated at this point in terms of synergy realization and continue to work that angle. So really all those factors combined, I'd say the integration costs quarter-over-quarter were -- really didn't play heavily into that improvement.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
I would say, as we thought about synergies going in, we said roughly 80% from cost and margin and as well as 20% sales opportunity. And to Dave's point, we're pleased on both, including the interaction with the teams and the cross-selling opportunities, especially in service and repair opportunities throughout that Southeast geography as well as things that we can do in key growth verticals around data centers and the technology segment. So pleased about the performance and our start and look forward to continuing that momentum.
Christopher D. Glynn:
Great. And then just on the market for kind of break-fix MRO and idea of any kind of pent-up coming through. It sounds like you might be starting to see some of that with the national accounts, but not so much with the locals. So another thing just asking to dimensionalize a bit.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
Yes. So as we look at breakdown the sales, we were pleased in the last month on local accounts being positive as well as SA in the month of July. So I think that's a good indicator that things could be firming and build from here.
Christopher D. Glynn:
Okay. Great. And then just the midpoint of the year doesn't have any acceleration versus the first quarter at all, but you do have easy comps. I know there's a little shift when you get to the fourth quarter. And then the ADS halfway through the quarter, really outpacing the outlook. You referenced comps. I don't know if there's a major kind of hockey stick in the September comp a little bit. But is there just a couple of layers of prophylactic caution in there with potential month-to-month volatility around behaviors. Is that how we should think about the guide?
Neil A. Schrimsher:
Yes. There is a ramp in the prior September. And I just think overall, Chris, it's taken our view of, hey, kind of the right prudent approach given some of the macro, and we believe some of those firm up as we move through these summer months. But that's what comes into our approach to have a -- be prudent in the guide and the outlook and the specific detail we provide around the first quarter.
Operator:
Your next question comes from David Manthey with Baird.
David John Manthey:
My first question is related to pricing. I think you said 100 basis points in the quarter and an expectation that, that would slowly increase ahead. I'm hoping -- if you didn't, I didn't hear it, but could you scale that more narrowly for us and talk about sort of what benefit from price is baked into the first quarter guidance and the overall 2026?
Neil A. Schrimsher:
Yes. I would say, Dave, for the first quarter, I would say, to be similar, and we talked about a little over 100 basis points in the quarter. So in the first quarter, similar. But with the expectations that it ramps as we move through the year in the perhaps 150 to 200 basis points as we look at all of fiscal '26. And if the demand environment is strong and there's additional supplier inflation and increases of that, perhaps it will be higher than that number for '26.
David John Manthey:
Okay. Got it. And second, ES trends looking really good. You mentioned technology and automation. First question, and then I've got one after that. But could you give us examples of when you say technology as a vertical, can you talk about what you mean by that as an area you're seeing growth today?
Neil A. Schrimsher:
Yes. So that would include the data center. It would include semiconductor manufacturing in the side. So I think those would be the most significant components of that tech vertical. And we're broadening our participation. And so we've historically had a strong presence with Fluid Power. But today, we're doing more with fluid conveyance and also our automation business participates in that vertical well.
David John Manthey:
Okay. And then on automation, which you said grew mid-single digits. There, too, I guess you sort of touched on that as saying that data center and technology getting more applications in those verticals, but as it relates to ES overall, are you seeing a benefit? Are people talking about this bonus depreciation is helping mainly on the flow control side, which seems like a higher ticket maybe. I mean any color you can give us on that would be helpful in terms of -- you mentioned some of the growth tailwinds, and I'm just wondering if that's one of them that you're hearing about or not.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
And so as we think about where the businesses participate even in automation doing well in some other segments, be it food and beverage, life science and pharma, I would say, yes. We have a full pipeline of projects with customers. They have great return profiles. We've talked about in prior quarters, perhaps the approval process of those had elongated while still strong returns. And our view of customers are in a very good cash position. I think the opportunity for accelerated depreciation on those will be a further stimulus of those projects being acted and converted. So as we look out over '26, that could be a positive development for our pipeline.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Ken Newman with KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Ken Newman:
So maybe the first one, Neil, I just wanted to go back to the low end of the full year organic sales growth guide. I think it kind of implies that volumes at the low end are kind of assuming down 50 basis points year-over-year organic on what's a pretty easy comp throughout the entire year. I guess the question is you're assuming 1% to 2% of price contribution outside of maybe the timing of comps in the first quarter that you talked about, is there anything else structural that's kind of assumed within that low end of the guide or anything that we should kind of be aware of?
Neil A. Schrimsher:
I think, again, Ken, as we think about the full range of the guide, including the low end, we just want to be prudent in the approach given still some of the uncertainty that would be out. If we think about more the midpoint, that's going to assume some headwinds continue on the macro and the tariff environment and some of that uncertainty in the first half and then with those headwinds abating somewhat into the second half. And so that's when more of the approach and the consideration going in.
Ken Newman:
And then for my follow-up, maybe just help us fine-tune the comments about normalizing LIFO and AR provisioning through the year by segment. Obviously, ES EBIT margins kind of took a bigger hit sequentially year-over-year. I think part of that was the AR provisioning and Hydradyne mix. How should we think about segment margins implied at the midpoint of the 1Q guide and how that trends through the rest of the year?
David K. Wells:
Yes. Just a little bit of clarification in terms of our Q4. The majority of that AR provisioning was more skewed to the U.S. service centers as opposed to the engineered solutions. Again, that's a formulaic process kind of based on several variables in terms of credit ratings, age balances. I don't see anything problematic there. We had a couple of customers that were just kind of delayed on some payments. The -- if you look back, I look and kind of benchmark our -- as I said, our DSO has maintained stability. Our provisioning as a percent of sales for the year was at really the midpoint of right where we've been in the last 5-year average. So we've made some good progress in terms of the initiatives yielding some kind of improvements in terms of past dues and just this timing issue. Unfortunately, a lot of that unfortunately, I should say, maybe the -- a lot of that came back in like the first 2 weeks or so of July. So we'd see that normalize. In terms of the EBITDA margins, we talked about in the service centers, they are also impacted this past quarter by -- that's where the deferred comp mark-to-market adjustment hits and then gets offset in other income and expense. So that also distorts things. I would expect the margins to normalize as we talked about kind of as we think about '26, the LIFO will read through proportionately. And then we'll continue to see the mix up benefit from Hydradyne and improvement in the drag that it is right now on the Engineered Solutions segment EBITDA margins as we continue to realize the synergy benefits, which, as we discussed, are coming quicker than we had anticipated. So like the progress there.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
Yes. Ken, I'd just add, if we think about the quarter-over-quarter comparison, I mean if we reflect back last fourth quarter in Engineered Solutions, I mean, it was really strong, 16% record high. We benefited from strong mix of solutions going across. So I think that demonstrates the strong potential to Dave's point on Hydradyne. We're pleased with the progress but he touched on or talked about the 60 basis point headwind in EBITDA margins there. So if we think about the potential around Engineered Solutions on the full year, we were very cost accountable and OpEx and expense down 5% into that side, but with EBITDA margins up on lower organic daily sales of 4% in that side. So as we see an inflection coming in growth and that opportunity, we feel like, hey, we're well positioned.
David K. Wells:
And of course, that Q4 noise just really distorted some the underlying stronger performance between the AR provisioning, which I see getting back, obviously, as we move into '26, the deferred comp noise. And like I said, the -- if you look back at last year, the quarter performance on gross margins across the business Q4 was the only one that even started in the 30s, right? Everything else was -- started with less than a 3. So at 30.7% comp in the prior year quarter, that was a very, very challenging comp. And even with the LIFO that we rolled through this quarter versus the favorability last year, within 9 basis points of that, I think, was a pretty good story.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Sabrina Abrams with Bank of America.
Sabrina Lee Abrams:
You guys have given some helpful color on Hydradyne but maybe I guess what I'm just going to ask, could you disclose, I guess, Hydradyne contribution in dollars to EBITDA in the quarter? And maybe any color from either an EBITDA or EPS standpoint, what's in fiscal '26 guide?
David K. Wells:
In Q4, Hydradyne contributed just over $7 million of EBITDA, just to help frame it up. If we all-in factor and some lost interest income from financing that deal with cash on hand, about $0.03 contribution. We had said at the time of announcing the deal, we would expect to be $0.15 accretive to EPS in the first 12 months. So really right on track there when you think about still some integration costs at play. We have not framed up necessarily kind of that impact on '26. But here again, like the traction in terms of running ahead on expectations on the cost synergies as well as the kind of the traction that we are seeing on cross-selling. So I would expect it to certainly meet those first 12 months expectations as kind of frame it up as at least a guide for you, if not potentially beat that initial expectation we set for the first 12 months.
Sabrina Lee Abrams:
That's super helpful. Second point, I guess, second question for me. Maybe if you could give a little color. I know there was some comment on LIFO in '26. But maybe if you could just give some color on what is like the amount of LIFO expense embedded in guide in either dollars or bps. And anything else to sort of call out as we -- other than like, I guess, like organic incrementals as we look at the fiscal '26 margin guide?
David K. Wells:
Sure. We peg LIFO at $14 million to $18 million in the guidance. So that would kind of work across the guidance range. Obviously, that's a function of tied to obviously the inflationary increases that we see that impact indices as well as inventory levels. So it goes part and parcel with some of the work around the -- kind of what's happening in terms of pricing and inflationary impact.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
And then, Sabrina, I'd say on incrementals, at the midpoint, which would be 2.5% growth, we talked about low teens incrementals that includes M&A mix coming in lower in the side, some ongoing growth investments that we'll make into the business. And to Dave's point, that range of LIFO that we laid out. More at the higher end, we'd expect mid-teen incrementals of EBITDA margin on that. So when we think about the outlook, again, we just want to be prudent in the approach. But if we consider the business incrementals ex- M&A and ex-LIFO at the midpoint of our guidance, that's a high-teen incremental, which I think talks to our views, our outlook as we think about year ahead and ongoing business capabilities.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Chris Dankert with Loop Capital Markets.
Christopher M. Dankert:
I guess just to hold on ES for a second here, fourth quarter, as you mentioned in the remarks, up well ahead of typical seasonality in the fourth quarter. Just wanted to ask, do you feel like there was anything pulled forward or anything onetime in nature that came in, in the fourth quarter? Or is that a fairly clean kind of growth figure you think?
Neil A. Schrimsher:
Chris, I would say, hey, no big pull forward, did a nice job recognizing some of that order conversion that we had in doing it. I think is kind of normal as we move through to close the fourth quarter. Sequentially, backlog would be down a little bit. Book-to-bill slightly below 1 into the side, but this year is higher than the prior year in that. And then as we look forward at the start of the year, we're encouraged by the order rates around engineered solutions. So we feel like we've got a very good pipeline to work on and execute across fluid power, flow control and our automation businesses.
Christopher M. Dankert:
Got it. Super, super helpful there. And I guess just as a follow-up, you mentioned some softness in the international markets. Is that principally the Mexico market? Is it the domestic headwinds we've heard about there? Or is it something else going on? And I guess, does that impact kind of what you're seeing at the Grupo Kopar? Any color there would be great.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
Yes, Chris, I'd say more related maybe in Canada. And I think there's just a settling out of some tariff impact and what it means for flows of products but also in-country Canadian business industry of that. We feel like business is doing a very nice job. We're well diversified into that segment. But I'd say a little more in Canada than the other geographies.
David K. Wells:
Those headwinds did less as we moved across the quarter, which was encouraging.
Operator:
Your next question comes from Ken Newman with KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Ken Newman:
I just had one quick follow-up, more higher level. Neil and Dave, just curious, what's the thought on potentially kind of maybe adding back some of this intangible amort to the earnings power. It seems like obviously, Hydradyne was pretty solid for EBITDA and despite some of the negative mix in this part of the cycle. But I wonder how much you are maybe getting negatively comped just because some of your peers do add that back and your thoughts on potentially kind of normalizing that to make the earnings power apples-to-apples.
David K. Wells:
I'd say I think we're pretty transparent in terms of the way we break it out. And I'd prefer to kind of maintain the approach of being consistent there and just continuing to break it out, so you've got that visibility. I mean, to your point, a headline read would maybe skew things. But our focus is on continuing to improve it and make it not a talking point, right? And I think we're hard at work at that with the synergy realization we've seen and driving that cross-selling.
Operator:
At this time, I'm showing we have no further questions. I'll now turn the call back over to Mr. Schrimsher for any closing remarks.
Neil A. Schrimsher:
I just want to thank everyone for being with us today. We look forward to talking with you throughout the quarter. Thank you.
Operator:
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This concludes today's conference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.

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