We see encouraging order activity across several industrial markets, and our backlog at the end of 2025 was up from the prior year. These trends support our expectation that customer demand will improve compared to 2025, and our outlook for organic sales to be up 2%. This reflects higher pricing and modest volume growth. Given the volatility of the ongoing trade situation, despite macro uncertainty, our team is operating with urgency to execute our strategic initiatives and fulfill our commitments to delivering stronger performance in 2026. We’re making good progress on our near-term strategic initiatives, including the 80/20 portfolio work.
Over time, we expect to exit underperforming businesses and prioritize our focus and resources on actions that will have the greatest impact on company margins and growth. Based on early results from this work, we have decided to extend the 80/20 discipline across our entire enterprise. This will include simplification of the portfolio and process optimization. We are still early in the process, but it has become clear that applying this 80/20 approach more comprehensively will be a major driver of value creation. I am very excited about the potential, but please keep in mind that it will take some time for the benefit to flow through to the bottom line.
As we shared last quarter, I see plenty of opportunity to raise Timken’s organic growth trajectory by focusing on the fastest-growing verticals and regions. We will also continue to integrate acquisitions and drive synergies through global expansion of our acquired business. To support this objective, we recently announced targeted strategic leadership appointments to better align the organization with our primary growth drivers and serve customers more comprehensively as one Timken. New positions include a Chief Technology Officer, Vice President of Marketing, and Regional President. These additions to our leadership team directly support our growth strategy, will fuel innovation, strengthen commercial execution, and position us to capture greater share in key markets, verticals, and regions.
Together, we’re energized by the many opportunities ahead to leverage Timken’s strength and create new ways to drive improved performance. With that, let me turn over the call to Mike for a more detailed review of the results and outlook.
Michael Discenza: Thanks, Lucian. And good morning, everyone. For the financial review, I’m going to start on slide seven of the materials with a summary of our fourth quarter results. Overall, total revenue for the quarter was $1.11 billion, which is up 3.5% from last year. Adjusted EBITDA margins came in at 16%, and adjusted earnings per share for the quarter was $1.14. Turning to slide eight, let’s take a closer look at our fourth quarter sales. Organically, sales were up 1.3% from last year. The increase was driven by higher pricing across both segments and higher volumes in the Industrial Motion segment, which more than offset lower demand in engineered bearings.
Looking at the rest of the revenue walk, foreign currency translation contributed more than 2% growth to the top line. On the right, you can see fourth quarter performance in terms of organic growth by region. In The Americas, our largest region, we were flat as growth in North America was offset by lower revenue in Latin America. In Asia Pacific, we were up 4% from last year, as growth in India and other parts of the region more than offset lower revenue in China. And finally, we were up 4% in EMEA, led by solid growth from the Industrial Motion segment. Turning to slide nine, adjusted EBITDA of $178 million was flat with the prior year.
Adjusted EBITDA margins came in at 16% of sales in the fourth quarter, compared to 16.6% of sales last year. Excluding the impact from currency, margins would have been nearly flat with the prior year. Let me comment a little further on a few of the different drivers on the EBITDA bridge you can see on this slide. Starting with the impact from mix, it was a notable headwind as OE shipments outperformed distribution in the quarter. And you may recall we were lapping favorable mix in our defense business in the prior year.
With respect to pricing in the quarter, it was positive $25 million and added more than 2% to the top line in the quarter, as we continue to put through pricing actions to mitigate the impact from tariffs. As you can see on the slide, tariffs were a $30 million headwind versus last year, and costs were also higher sequentially, as expected. Looking at material and logistics, costs were notably lower versus last year, driven mostly by savings tactics in the engineered bearings segment. Moving to the SG&A and other line, expenses were down from last year, driven by cost reduction initiatives and lower accruals for bad debt. Now let’s move to our business segment results.
Starting with engineered bearings on slide 10, engineered bearings sales were $714 million in the quarter, up 0.9% from last year. Currency translation added nearly 2% while organic sales were down 1%, as higher pricing was more than offset by lower volumes. Among market sectors, off-highway and renewable energy achieved the strongest gains versus last year. We also posted growth in aerospace and general industrial, while revenue was lower from last year across the distribution, on-highway, heavy industries, and rail sectors. Engineered Bearings adjusted EBITDA was $115 million or 16.1% of sales in the fourth quarter, compared to $122 million or 17.2% of sales last year.
Margins in the quarter were negatively impacted by unfavorable mix, as well as incremental tariff costs, which continue to disproportionately impact the segment. On the positive side, cost savings and the benefit of higher pricing helped mitigate these margin headwinds. Now let’s turn to Industrial Motion on slide 11. Industrial Motion sales were $397 million in the quarter, up 8.4% from last year. Organically, sales increased 5.6% driven by higher demand across most sectors and higher pricing, while currency translation was a benefit of 2.8%. The segment saw growth in the quarter across all product platforms, led by strong regional gains in The Americas and Europe. Among market sectors, automation and aerospace achieved the strongest gains versus the prior year.
We also generated growth in the off-highway and heavy industry sectors, while solar and distribution sales were down. The increase in segment margins reflects solid operational execution by the team in the quarter, as well as the impact of higher volumes and pricing, which more than offset incremental tariff costs and unfavorable mix. Moving to slide 12, you can see that we generated operating cash flow of $183 million in the fourth quarter. And after CapEx of $43 million, free cash flow was $141 million, up from last year. This brought our free cash flow to $406 million for the full year, an increase of $100 million from the prior year.
Looking at the balance sheet, we reduced net debt by over $130 million during 2025 and ended the fourth quarter with net debt to adjusted EBITDA at two times, which is at the middle of our targeted range. Now let’s turn to the outlook for full year 2026 with a summary on slide 14. Starting on the sales outlook, we’re planning for full year revenue to increase 2% to 4% in total. We’re planning for currency to contribute around 1% to our revenue for the year, which reflects the weaker US dollar. Organically, we expect revenue to be up 2% at the midpoint, driven by higher volumes and pricing in both segments.
On the bottom line, we expect adjusted earnings per share in the range of $5.50 to $6, up 8% at the midpoint versus 2025. For modeling purposes, think of the full year adjusted EPS outlook to be split roughly 54% in the first half and 46% in the second half. And the outlook assumes year-over-year earnings growth every quarter this year. This earnings outlook implies that our 2026 consolidated adjusted EBITDA margin will be in the high 17% range at the midpoint, up from 17.4% in 2025. Note that the midpoint of the ranges implies an incremental margin of approximately 30% for the full year.
For the first quarter, currency is estimated to add around 3% to the top line, while we expect organic sales and adjusted EBITDA margins to be relatively flat with last year. Moving to free cash flow, we expect to generate around $350 million for the full year or approximately 105% conversion on GAAP net income at the midpoint. On slide 15, we provide an initial view on our 2026 organic sales outlook by market and sector, which includes the impact of both volumes and pricing. As Lucian indicated, we are seeing increasing order activity across several of these industrial markets, which supports our outlook for organic sales to be up 2% at the midpoint.
Moving to slide 16, here we provide a bridge of the key drivers that walk our 2025 adjusted EPS to the 2026 outlook midpoint of $5.75. You can see the 25¢ positive impact from the organic sales change net of inflation, while currency is expected to add 5¢. And finally, we’re estimating a year-on-year positive impact from tariffs of approximately 10¢ to 15¢ per share. The trade situation continues to evolve, but we expect that our mitigation tactics will enable us to recapture the margin as we exit 2026. Please note that this estimate does not include potential impact from the announcement earlier this week related to the new tariff agreement with India.
Lucian Boldea: In summary, the company delivered better than expected fourth quarter results and the team is focused on generating stronger, top and bottom line performance in 2026. Let me turn it back over to Lucian for some final remarks before we open the line for questions.
Lucian Boldea: Thanks, Mike. Our team is executing with urgency to position Timken for stronger growth and higher margins in 2026. And we see significant opportunities to improve both our top line and bottom line performance. I look forward to sharing more details with you soon at our Investor Day event in May.
Michael Discenza: Thanks, Lucian. This concludes our formal remarks. And we’ll now open up the line for questions.
Emily: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question today, please do so now by pressing star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you change your mind or you feel like your question has already been answered, you can press star followed by 2 to remove yourself from the queue. Our first question today comes from Bryan Blair with Oppenheimer. Bryan, please go ahead.
Bryan Blair: Thank you. Good morning, guys.
Michael Discenza: Morning, Bryan.
Bryan Blair: To I guess, level set a bit on demand trends, it would be great to hear how orders progressed through Q4 whether there was any kind of a lull in December shipments you would somewhat guarded against that with guidance perhaps some of that hit took place in bearings. And then more importantly, how orders progressed into January and what your team is seeing on I guess, more of a real time basis?
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. Thank you, Bryan. So, look, I think it’s important to put this in context where we’ve come from. So you look at eight quarters of negative growth. Then Q3, we started seeing signs of life and green shoots. We said we don’t want to extrapolate on that. Q4, I would say, went a little better than expected, but I’ll also remind you that the comp was a little bit easier for Q4 when you compare to year over year. But I think if we look at your specific question inside and what gives us hope for 2026 is really the order book.
So the order book, when you look at where we ended the year, we ended the year up high single digits. Off highway, general industrial, wind, and aero were the big contributors. And then even the sequential order movement from Q3 to Q4, there was some decline because their seasonality, but really very, very low. You could almost call it flat. So from that standpoint, I think we feel good about it overall. As to how it progressed, inside I would say the difference was that we had a very weak December a year ago. We had a more normal December this time as far as revenue.
And I think the pacing of the orders was more steady throughout the quarter. As Mike mentioned earlier, there was a bit of a downturn in distribution, but that’s we view that more as timing. It was a low single digit kind of movement, and so that’s not a definitely wouldn’t call that a trend. And then general industrial was up. So overall, I think in the quarter, it was little better than expected, and it was fairly broad based regionally. We already commented that it was really Latin America and China were the only minuses. Everything else around the world was positive. And so that’s why we feel good going into going into Q1.
I think to your question on January, you know, we were giving a guide on Q1 based on what we see today. There’s still a lot of uncertainty. We read all the announcement that came out a couple of days ago in India tariff. We haven’t seen anything more specific on that yet, but it just illustrates that we still live in a pretty uncertain time. The guide that we gave, we looked at that carefully for Q1 and for where volume sits versus orders. And I would tell you that January, at least up to this point, is very consistent with that guide. So that’s where we are, Bryan.
Bryan Blair: Okay. Appreciate the color. And understood in terms of the maybe, uncertainty of the global backdrop, but it seems trends are pretty encouraging. If we think about your full year guide, maybe offer a little more color on segment contribution, top line and margin netting to the consolidated outlook. In Q4, there’s bit more divergent performance between engineered bearings and then industrial motion than we anticipated you know, in a good sense on the I’m side. Curious how your team is thinking about contemplating the moving parts going forward?
Michael Discenza: Yeah. So let me maybe start with the margins, Bryan, and then I’ll let Lucian comment more on the revenue outlook if you’d like. Just margins. So fourth quarter margins, you know, roughly in line with our expectations, and you noted the difference between industrial motion and engineered bearings. And I would say that was largely a mix issue inside of engineered bearings. You know, where that revenue came in.
I was a little more on the original equipment side, particularly on highway, a little stronger than we expected, and that contributed to the mix issue for us in the fourth quarter and that combined with the strength we saw on the Industrial Motion revenue side volume benefit plus the mix of the portfolio there. So that’s what kinda created that fourth quarter differential. As we look forward to margins, first, I want to note that we are taking margins up year on year. And we’re looking at you know, call it, a 30% incremental on our volume growth. So I would say a fairly typical, incremental, organic incremental for us.
Just a reminder, when, when things earn on us, when we start to see growth, we do tend to see incrementals at the lower end of our incremental range as we have headwinds like variable compensation, etcetera. So as we look forward to next year, I think we’ve still got, pricing actions that will benefit us. We are seeing the benefit of the cost savings tactics we implemented throughout the year, which we’re a little bit more heavily weighted to the end of 2025. So we benefit from those. And then we do see some favorable mix as we look forward to next year as well.
So you know, so that’s that’s what’s leading to our high seventeens guide on the on the margin range. And, know, with the with the actions we put in place, I feel pretty comfortable that we’ll be able to, to improve margins year over year. So and maybe I’ll have Lucian comment on the market trends.
Lucian Boldea: Yes. I think we talked about it by market here in your first question, but I think where we expect organic sales is at plus 2%. Midpoint. It’s both price and volume to get to that midpoint, but we are cautiously optimistic that demand will continue to improve. Again, the early signs are that would be the case, but at this point, this outlook only reflects modest volume growth just given all the uncertainty and the volatility that we’re still seeing today in the trade situation.
Bryan Blair: Understood. Thanks again, guys.
Lucian Boldea: Thank you.
Emily: Our next question comes from Rob Wertheimer with Melius Research. Please go ahead.
Rob Wertheimer: Hi. Just a couple of clarifications. So off highway was strong. There’s some mixed signals in trucks but it seems like that market is recovering. And then maybe auto’s lumped in there, accounting for some of the less positivity on the outlook. So I wonder if you could talk to what you’re seeing there. I think you touched on distribution a minute ago, but any headwinds from distribution inventories or anything else? Or should we expect to see that follow along if various cycles recover?
Michael Discenza: Sure. So let’s start with where you started. So the heavy truck market, I would say, we’re seeing a lot of life there, but as you know, combined with the automotive so the whole on highway sector, not really a sign of strength for us there. So on the off highway side, it’s a little bit we are seeing strength in the order book. Lucian we’re strengthening, I should say, improvement. Lucian referenced. But, really, if we look inside of there, it’s it’s not, entirely broad based. We still see agriculture, which is part of our off highway segment as, as being down.
So while we’re seeing some positive signs in mining, and construction, agriculture still is a is a weight in that, in that segment. And then lastly, on distribution, you know, we feel pretty good about where distribution inventories are. So, you know, we don’t see, we don’t see an issue. So really, selling through with the at the market rate there. Where we have visibility again. You know, we don’t have visibility across the entire distribution network, but where we do have visibility feel pretty comfortable with the inventory levels. And so, you know, so, again, see that being a some growth next year. I’ll say, you know, low single digit close to neutral growth.
But, comfortable with where the inventory is, so it should be a contributor next year.
Rob Wertheimer: Thank you.
Emily: Thank you. The next question comes from David Raso with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead, David.
David Raso: Thank you so much. Quick clarification of it. I didn’t hear it. Volume growth in 2026. Do you expect volumes to turn positive in the first quarter? I know for the whole company, they were still down slightly in the fourth quarter. Just making sure that’s that’s the starting point.
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. So let me roll along.
Michael Discenza: Yeah. So let me address the Q1 organic sales. We said that we expect those to be flattish year over year. And what that means, obviously, with pricing coming in up, that means volumes would be slightly lower. Again, there’s a function of just the comp that we’re talking about. We had a pretty strong volume in Q1 a year ago. The some timing on a couple of market segments, renewable being one of them. That drove that comp to be a little more challenging. So a down volume up pricing, and then flat year over year organic growth. And then from an from an EBITDA standpoint, also flat year over year. From a margin standpoint.
David Raso: Okay. Thank you. So my real question, you made the comment about 80/20 across the portfolio exiting some underperforming businesses, but you made the comment you know, but remember, it could take some time. When I look at the bridge for ’26, you pull out the tariff relief separately, you pull off you pull out the currency. Seems like you’re implying only mid-twenty percent incrementals on the organic piece. Right? The 25¢ in the bridge on slide 16. Are there costs embedded into your actions that are weighing on those margins? And just give us a sense of what you meant by take some time. I’m just trying to make sure I understand Is 26 a year of cost?
And we don’t see benefits till ’27. I’m just trying to get a sense of the cadence Yeah. Of what you were implying.
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. Okay. I appreciate the question. And so, you know, we introduced 80/20 in the last conference call as really being directed at the portfolio. And the idea there was let’s critically examine the portfolio, and look at where do we want to double down on investment. Again, the intent is to invest more in growth but with a finite set of resources, that also means walk away from certain things. And so that process is well underway. We’ve identified the parts of the portfolio that we want to deemphasize. Obviously, to deemphasize those, there’s really two ways of doing that.
You’re either having to extract yourself or exit a piece of business, or you have to go through an M&A transaction. In any event, those need to be handled confidentially. And, obviously, when we have something to announce publicly, then we will. What we’ve also communicated this morning was that we’re expanding that 80/20 discipline now the entire enterprise. And so what that means is really now looking at our operation. So looking at not only our customer and product mix, and how do we simplify that, looking at our supply chain, our footprint, how do we simplify that.
The latter part, so this broader 80/20 naturally has an upfront investment and then has a benefit if you look at companies typically who have done this, I would say there’s a couple of quarters of cost then the benefits start. And so you’ve kinda have a couple of quarters of cost, a couple of quarters where the cost and the benefit may be neutralized each other, and then you get into net benefit. That’s usually what Now we’re very, very early in this process. We’re just using the experience of our partners that we work with.
We have an external firm that we’re working with, and their experience is very aligned with what I’m saying in terms of the timing. But at this point, what I would say is there’s not a significant amount of cost or a significant amount of benefit baked into what we’re giving you today. Between now and Investor Day, we plan to have all this fleshed out, and so that’s one of the things that we do we do plan to communicate at that point. It’s really a road map not only on the portfolio, but also a road map on the cost actions that we’re taking and really the simplification. And, again, the motivation for the simplification is twofold.
One is think there’s opportunity for margin, but, two, really, to free up resources for growth.
David Raso: And at the meeting, would we expect or maybe you haven’t decided, to get multiyear targets when it comes to sales and earnings and I assume, obviously, some quantification around the savings you just discussed.
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. I can maybe foreshadow a little bit the table of contents because that much we know, I think we’re still working on the content. But we’re clearly now laying out a very disciplined transformation for the zero to thirty-six months time frame, and that involves the portfolio 80/20. That involves the simplification. That involves the doubling down regionally. To grow our acquisitions, that we already have. So that transformation road map will be very clearly laid out with the timeline, with what the objectives are. And then obviously, that’s the bridge to something, and then we also will share with you what that something is and how we envision the company transforming as we move forward.
So that second piece is a little more forward looking, but the first piece, that thirty-six months certainly will have not only growth algorithms for top line for bottom line, but then, obviously, financial targets for ourselves. But as much visibility and transparency as we can, we will give you so that you can follow along with us and obviously hold us accountable to delivering what we tell you.
David Raso: Alright. That’s great. I appreciate the color. Thank you.
Lucian Boldea: Sure.
Emily: The next question comes from Stephen Volkmann with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Stephen Volkmann: Thank you. Thank you. Good morning. Maybe I’ll just run with that for a second. The evolution, I don’t know if you’re if you’re willing to comment on this, but, you know, a lot of 80/20 and sort of simplification does involve exiting certain products and maybe even certain businesses and you know, the PLS impact of 80/20 is kinda usually the first step. And, you talked about the cost but I’m just wondering, is there a scenario where there’s significant portion of revenue that gets exited as part of this process before we go forward?
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. Thanks for the question. If we look at sizing, even what’s in scope, so if you start with the portfolio itself, you know, we’re talking about a single digit percentage of the company that we’re considering. Some of the product lines that we’re talking about, you know, we’ve we’ve communicated before. Our intent to look at our auto OEM business. So that would be part of that total. So you know, in the end, we’re we’re not looking to shrink to the perfect company. That’s for sure. We’re looking to grow the company. So the entire objective of 80/20 is to reposition ourselves, simplify ourselves, lean ourselves out, have really robust processes for growth.
If you look at the organizational announcements, that’s we’ve made the first thing we put in place was the Chief Technology Officer, head of marketing, to really look at macro trends, what happens in the industry, and how do we align our portfolio for growth, how do we align ourselves with higher growth verticals than maybe where we’ve been historically that ultimately will align our M&A portfolio as well. With that. But the answer to your question is no. We don’t don’t intend to shrink significantly, and we intend to also work very hard on these regional growth opportunities that we have in the short term to offset some of those exits to the extent that it possible.
Again, we’ll have to get the timing just, just right, and sometimes you don’t control that. But in the end, it’s not the intent to shrink.
Stephen Volkmann: Got it. That’s helpful. And then just to pivot as you’re thinking about 2026, I mean, it sounds like you’re fairly optimistic and your slide 15 shows a fair amount of growth end markets there. But you have this 2% organic growth target. I would think you could do, frankly, better than 2% just on pricing. So I guess I’m a little surprised that are you do you think about this as conservative? Is there some reason that pricing would be this low as you start to capture things like steel costs and, tariffs and so forth. It just feels like I would have expected more than that.
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. Look. I’ll let Mike walk you through the through the waterfall in a minute, but let me maybe make a few high level comments. So I think if you look at the price and what we’ve said with price around tariff cost, we said that we will recapture the margin by the end of the year. So when you’re looking at a whole year versus a whole year, that obviously doesn’t show you the true run rate picture of where we’re gonna end 2026. It just gives you the area under the curve. And so there’s that comment I would have on pricing. And, certainly, we’re all awaiting or where the Supreme Court decision comes on tariffs.
And so all those things certainly have an impact in what additional pricing is warranted or not depending on where we where we end up with the with pricing as the year progresses. So you know, on volumes themselves, you know, we’re where we sit today, I would say, is what we see. As we look we look out, as far out as we can see. The visibility into the back half of the year, obviously, is way more limited, and we can all speculate on scenarios or look at history where our recovery would have been better. But this, we view as realistic based on what we see today.
I’ll also remind you that there is a limit to how fast whether it’s ourselves or the entire supply chain, can ramp up with increased demand because everybody has kind of rightsized their operations to the demand. So if you see a big snapback, then that certainly will result in some growth on the more growth on the order book but the translation into revenue will also take a little bit of time. And ramp up. So that’s where that’s where it sits. You know? Is it is it conservative? Is it not? I would say we’ve done our best to try to be try to be realistic, but we’re also cautious here given the dynamic environment.
So, Mike, if you wanna comment on the margin, maybe Yeah. Well, just maybe elaborating a little more on price volume. I think you know, we say 1%, and I would say 1% plus pricing. And I the important thing to know is that we have consistently over time achieved solid pricing. And, we expect another year of solid pricing, and we’ll continue to push price higher, where and when we have the opportunity. So, you know, so as Lucian said, starting the year, maybe, with what we have visibility to, both on the volume and pricing side, but, it doesn’t mean that, we’re not gonna continue to look for opportunities throughout the year.
So I would that’s how I’d characterize that. Cautious, with what we can see and, continuing to look for opportunities as we move forward.
Stephen Volkmann: Got it. Okay. Appreciate the color.
Emily: Our next question comes from Angel Castillo with Stanley. Please go ahead.
Angel Castillo: Just wanted to continue on the price cost conversation a little bit. Obviously, you talked a lot about uncertainty with tariffs and a lot of moving pieces there that we won’t know for a little bit. But just can you talk about the other buckets, whether it’s labor or materials and just your general kind of strategy in terms of how we should be thinking about any kind of material headwinds? Again, outside of tariffs?
Michael Discenza: Sure. Thanks, Angel, for the question. So maybe just answering that last part first, the material. We look for there will be material inflation. So, it is a inflationary environment. But we talked about cost savings in 2025. And some of those cost savings were absolutely built around material cost savings tactics. And so we’d look for those to continue, and while we expect some logistics headwinds, I would say material and logistics costs should be a positive for us, heading into next year. We do have labor inflation across both our manufacturing and SG&A footprint. So labor inflation will be a headwind next year. Well as variable compensation.
I referenced in an earlier comment, variable compensation is a is a headwind for us as well. You know, as we as we inflect to a year where we’re projecting growth. That’s typically what happens for us. So we do have inflationary pressure. We have cost savings tactics. You know, net, we will be a positive price cost And, as you saw on the walk, tariffs will be a positive for us. And then on the overall price cost, we see a net positive. So overall, contributing to that 30% incremental you know, is cost savings tactics to offset the inflation combined with pricing, and that’s how we get there.
Angel Castillo: Thank you. And then maybe just switching over to industrial automation. I think you talked about strong growth there in the fourth quarter. Can you just talk about what your order books are showing kind of exiting the year or I guess into January? Terms of the growth in automation and how that kind compares to the maybe the mid single digit outlook that you provided for the full year. And then Lucian, you don’t mind just maybe commenting maybe bigger picture, know? Given your background, I guess, do you kind of see the longer term strategic role of automation within the business as we think about accelerating growth? Your overall kind of portfolio strategy, M&A, etcetera?
Lucian Boldea: Yes. Look, I appreciate the question. And I made a comment earlier that we’re certainly very interested in aligning our portfolio a little bit better, and that’s why we have a new CTO. That’s why we have a new head of marketing with macro trends and then markets really are driven by those macro trends. And if you think about that, electrification, automation are kinda the top of the list. Of macro trends that we are already aligned with and need to further align with. So to answer the first part of your question, certainly, automation was a driver for us.
In terms of increases we see, especially our exposure there on the industrial motion, linear motion in particular, where we’ve benefited from that. That’s actually a big driver. And one of the things we talked about is taking these acquisitions. So I’ll remind you that our linear motion business is primarily a European business historically. We’ve invested significantly in resources in The Americas to grow that, and we’re we’re up 20% in that business, it’s off of a smaller base, but we’re up 20% in The Americas in that business as a result of that effort and investment. So certainly, shows that there’s opportunity, and a lot of that is in automation.
As to your bigger question on the automation of the market itself, look. Think humanoid has gotten a disproportionate amount of press because it’s obviously exciting. At some point, it will be part of our future. We are participating in that as well. We share in that excitement. Working with OEMs on key programs, and, you know, we’re we’re certainly looking forward to, to success in that, in that market. But I would say that’s still our leaks, It’s still at the at the prototyping, at the designing phase. But what is not at the prototyping and designing phase is industrial automation overall.
And I think when you look at how we participate there, there’s a lot of product lines where we participate. So you think about our automated lubrication systems that we have in our industrial motion portfolio. If you think about where we participate with the drive with harmonics, with our linear actuators in factory robots. Think about our medical robots through our CGI. Acquisition, our cone drives going to autonomous guided vehicles, and then, last but not least, humanoids. So really a broad product portfolio here. Across the enterprise that positions us very nicely.
So you might see this as a as a topic at Investor Day where we would we would cover this in a little more detail, but we’re certainly overall excited. This is a trend. This trend and then electrification utilities, power gen are certainly two that early looks says that there’s a opportunity here for us to align ourselves better and to have a more comprehensive offering because we just have so much content and bringing that together into a customer solution, into an engineer solution is really the way forward. Maybe, if I could just add a reminder, and Lucian referenced CGI, but for most of 2025, CGI would have been in our acquisitions, inorganic bucket.
That flipped at the end of the year and now is part of our automation segment. And, we’ve seen very strong growth from that acquisition and, very happy with where it is. So Lucian referred to it, but I just wanted to from a modeling perspective, remind you that it’s now part of automation.
Angel Castillo: Very helpful. Thank you.
Emily: The next question comes from Steve Barger with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Christian Zyla: Good morning, everyone. This is Christian Zyla on for Steve Barger. Thanks for taking the questions.
Michael Discenza: Good morning, Christian.
Christian Zyla: You mentioned at times on this call. Morning. You’ve mentioned a few times on this call about the CTO and executive appointments. So maybe this is a follow-up to that previous answer. But can you just talk more specifically about how those new appointments will translate to innovation and sales growth Like, what specifically will you be doing differently with these new appointments? And what parts of your business are you focusing on initially? Is that inward facing, or is that more market facing?
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. Absolutely market facing. So first thing we’re trying to do is create the appropriate ecosystem and the framework and the processes and the discipline to be able to invest more. So if you look at what we invest today, in R&D, know, there is room there is room for, for increasing that potentially, but what you have to have for that is really clear, really good alignment on what are the focus areas. Be very clear with you as to what macro trends are we following, what are our focus industries where we try to bring solutions, and then that drives our innovation portfolio, and it also drives our M&A. Portfolio.
And so, really, the early days of both the CTO and the head of marketing is really to establish the growth processes, establish the growth framework, and really clarify those across the company so that we have one set of metrics, one set of language that we can compare apples to apples. We can track timelines. We can execute. And like with all innovation, we can fail fast, and pivot and move to success. So that’s the that’s the intent of the early days.
By Investor Day, we hope to share with you what those focus areas are, what the macro trends are, and then, as we give you our multiyear outlook, then we’ll also be able to give you some glimpse into what the investment and what the outcome can be from that effort. But, you know, we’re I’ll remind you, this is not a new muscle. This is a hundred and twenty-five year company that’s built on technology that built on innovation, that’s built on patents.
So this is this is really doubling down on our roots just focusing a little better on macro trends and recognizing that we need to align our growth a little better with high growth verticals, as we do the portfolio work and exit some of the more challenging verticals.
Christian Zyla: Fair enough. And then just my second question. Kind of on M&A. M&A backdrop looks favorable, interest rate environment is positive, yet you guys haven’t really added anything to your portfolio, which seems uncharacteristic for Timken. You feel your portfolio is in a good spot, or is the greater priority or 80/20? Just has this fallen down the priority list Just any thoughts there. Thank you.
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. I would say it’s not down on the priority list. But maybe a couple of comments. So definitely, it’s not because, you know, we were solely on delevering. I think I think that was certainly just the effect of good cash generation and good discipline and the opportunities that we had. What we what we do want to do and maybe the reason there was a little bit of a of a pause on M&A is really roll out a strategy very clearly and doing that at Investor Day. And then really rolling out that road map of what’s what’s in play, what’s not, and then how we look what is our philosophy, how do we look at M&A.
And I think I shared this in a in a prior call know, we look at this universe of good businesses, then inside of that, when businesses are transactable, And then inside of those two circles, is where are we the natural owner. So how do we define that for you so that when we explain an M&A transaction or we announce an M&A transaction, it’s very clear that we’re the natural owner here. I think there is still a very active pipeline that we have. We’re working on that pipeline. There is a there new areas that we’re looking to focus as we flesh out our strategy, so that exists.
And then there’s always the list of acquisitions that will fill our portfolio very nicely we’ve had for some time. Those are more of I would characterize those opportunistic because we know they fit, but it’s a matter of, when are they available, when are they transacting, So in that case, call that a little more opportunistic. But, activity is not down on M&A.
But I think there is more now on defining what it needs to be defining what we want, and then also, frankly some focus on the portfolio 80/20, what are the pieces that, that maybe are on the on the other side of the of the ledger, not on the acquisition, but maybe on the on the divestiture.
Christian Zyla: Appreciate the color. Thank you.
Emily: The next question comes from Kyle Menges with Citi. Kyle, please go ahead.
Kyle Menges: Thanks for taking the question, guys. I was hoping if you just provide a little more color on the auto and truck outlook, just in terms of what you’re seeing in the end markets for 2026? And then how is the auto OE pruning factoring into that outlook?
Lucian Boldea: Yes. So I think let me start with Q4. So I think if you look at the Q4, auto and truck was down, and it was as Mike said earlier, both heavy truck and automotive OE was down aftermarket was more flattish. We don’t see big changes to that, as we head into Q1 at this point, and no reason to call that very different. I think as to the pruning of auto you know, a lot of progress, I would say, in the last ninety days. Give you a little bit of color of where we are. So, you know, these are long standing customer relationships with customers that we’ve done business with for quite some time.
And so we had to work with them to find appropriate outcomes that work for both as we as we do this exit. And so those conversations are mostly complete, some still ongoing, but mostly complete. And I really have to express my appreciation to our customers they work with us, and I think we’re headed to some outcomes that work for both. By Investor Day, we hope to have those finalized so that we can communicate with you a specific time line, but I can give you a little bit of color now.
Know, the arrangements that we’re looking at will have us see more significant revenue decline in 2027 but both in ’26 and in ’27, expect to have some margin uplift from these negotiations. So again, I think that’s a that’s a good outcome for all the parties involved. And it will position us to give you visibility in a way that you can track our progress on how we’re doing with that pruning.
Kyle Menges: Helpful. Thank you. And I it would be helpful to hear a little bit more color on expanding the 80/20 philosophy across the entire enterprise and maybe the impetus for that as you look more now at the operations and supply chain footprint. I guess, is that because you see some low hanging fruit there to go after? And, yeah, maybe just talk a little bit about what you could execute on as you as you look to implement 80/20 across the entire enterprise and how maybe the timing would look as well.
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. I mean, look. What I can tell you at this point is we’re we’re a few weeks, maybe a month into this in the broadening the effort away from just the portfolio to the to the overall operation. So you can more refer to what is typical for a company our size and what you can expect. And I mentioned in terms of timing, a couple of quarters of heavy analysis, heavy training, the organization on the discipline, You know, picture big training. This is little bit like lean where you really go through pretty extensive training. You collect a lot of data that has very specific metrics. We have done some of that. We’re starting pretty broad training.
Here in another week. And that’s that’s global around the world. So we’re that is the early phases of it. The early insights from the analysis would tell you no surprise, when you apply to a portfolio this big, that the product complexity is quite high and a disproportionate amount of revenue rest on very few customers or very few product lines and then you have to ask yourself a couple of questions, which is do you really need to spend a lot of energy on a fragmented tail in the market? Or is that really valuable to customers? And can you collect more price on that? Is there another way to create value?
But in the end, it is about simplifying. And the reason to simplify is to get little more margin, but also to free resources for growth. Because in the end, the not only theory, but vast experience of firms that have done 80/20 firms like Strategix who we’re working with, who are very versatile. Is as you double down on that focus on your top customers, top products, top market, you can actually create offerings for them where you can grow way more there. Than you would lose on the other side by shedding some more fragmented business that really has a higher cost to serve than maybe your accounting ledger would say. So that’s where we are.
Again, early, in the days for me to give you anything definitive. I’m just trying to provide color more on what is our process and where we are and what is typical in 80/20. And so far, our data says that there’s no reason to believe we would be vastly different from what is typical. And so we’re we’re very, very excited about it. Which is why we’re making this, this investment right now.
Kyle Menges: Good to hear. Thank you.
Michael Discenza: Sure. Thank you.
Emily: The next question comes from Joe Ritchie with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Joe Ritchie: Thank you. Good morning, guys.
Lucian Boldea: Morning.
Joe Ritchie: Morning. I wanted to hey. Morning. Yeah. I just wanna get a clarification on the 2026 Outlook bridge. The 10 to 15¢ that you have in there for tariffs, I’m assuming that includes the pricing that you put through for those tariffs already. And then and then also because you’ve kind of had this, you know, two to three quarters a headwind, is the expectation that you’ll see most of this benefit in the first half of the year as well.
Michael Discenza: Yeah. Sure. Thanks for the question. Yes. The answer is in that $0.10 to $0.15 It does include the price benefit of that, and we are, as you noted, putting in price actions, which were more heavily weighted in the second half. So on a year over year comp basis, will look a little more favorable in the in the first half than the second half. Having said that, we are going to continue to put pricing in throughout the year. And as we’ve committed to previously, we will recapture the margin on the tariffs, but we don’t expect to do that until we’re, exiting 2026.
So from modeling, the pricing benefit you know, because, we were getting that towards the second half, we’ll, we’ll come in stronger in the first half, and then, and then exiting the year, we’ll we’ll be at call it, margin neutral on price tariff.
Joe Ritchie: Okay. Great. Thanks, Mike. And then and then the question the other question I have is Lucian. I know that the business is short cycle. I also I also know that, you know, you don’t have a lot of volume growth baked into your expectations. But, look, it was interesting to see the ISM print over fifty you know, just this past week. I’m just curious just, like, as you’re looking at kind of, like, leading indicators across your business on where you potentially see an inflection?
Like, what are you looking at really closely, and, like, where is you know, where do you see maybe some potential sources of optimism you know, given the backdrop seems to be getting a little bit better?
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. I think when you look at the order book in general, you know, off highway, general industrial, renewables, wind, not solar, but wind and aerospace, those are certainly areas that would tell us to be to be optimistic. General industrial, we expect the sector to be up mid single digits versus 2025. So that’s that’s still strong. I think where you still see is these later in the cycle businesses, Oil and gas is kind of the poster child of that tends to be the last one that rebounds. So those are those are businesses that are still slower.
Think, as I said, heavy industries, power gen, strong, aggregate, strong, but oil and gas and metals are still is still slow, and that weighs down that entire sector. So that’s the that’s kinda overall if you step back and look at the look at the segments. And then by region, as we mentioned, Europe was actually the pleasant surprise in Q3, and we almost didn’t believe it. In Q4, it continued to do well. And US is doing okay. LATAM is down in China. Continues to be down, and solar is a big contributor to China being down. But India’s India’s more than making up for so we’re we’re certainly excited about that.
Joe Ritchie: Okay. Thank you.
Lucian Boldea: Sure.
Emily: The next question comes from Tom O’Sano with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Tomo O’Sano: Hello, everyone. Hello?
Lucian Boldea: Hi.
Tomo O’Sano: Thank you for taking my questions. Question to Lucian. While we understand that the more details will be shared at the main Investor Day, could you share how you have spent your first one hundred you know, plus days as CEO, especially, like, on a process side, what approaches or activities have you undertaken to identify opportunities for organizational transformations and in what areas do you see the greatest potential for, improvement, please?
Lucian Boldea: Yeah. Thanks for the question, Tomo. So if I just look back at the last hundred days, the first thing I usually do when I try to learn new business is visit the factories. And so I’ve spent a lot of time trying to see how we operate, how we make it teaches you a lot about the business. It teaches you about the sources of differentiation. It teaches you about how unique you are how easy is it for somebody to do what you’re doing because, ultimately, strategy has do with your competitive advantage. So I would say I overinvested there to try to understand our operations. Likewise, you alluded to it. Understand the business processes.
And what I would say is both on the operations side and on the business processes side, I found opportunities And what I found opportunities is not to invent something new, but to really do a better job at translating best practices across, across the enterprise. So this company has gone through a lot of acquisitions over the last few years and, really, almost anything you think about, somebody in Timken is doing it very well, but how do we institutionalize that across the, across the enterprise? And I would say that was probably the first sixty, eighty days, and then the last thirty to sixty was okay. So what? So now what do we do?
And what we are working on now is really a very disciplined operating model that’s based on a single version of the truth transparency, accountability, metrics that are simple enough, leaned out enough that, that they’re not burdensome, and they’re reflective of the size company we are. But at the same time, really rigid enough that you can operate a business of this complexity at scale operate it efficiently. So a lot of work going on right now. On the operating model. At the same time, work on 80/20 as I said, on simplifying the operations, simplifying the supply chain.
So, really, tackling the entire operation tackling it so that it’s nimble, it’s lean, it’s quick, And then as we do the 80/20 and we focus our growth into our macro trends, into our growth areas, then we can operate with agility and speed.
But that’s that’s really been the first, first hundred and twenty days, and I can tell you I’m very, very excited about what I found because rarely do you find a combination of a very strong balance sheet very strong cash generation, tremendous heritage in terms of technology, excellent customer reputation and relationships, a very willing and engaged team that I’m working with, a very willing and engaged workforce overall that’s very proud and very, very ready to take this to the next level. So we’re really excited about May 20 to share with you what we have so far and where we’re headed. And, and so yeah. Can’t wait to be able to share that.
Tomo O’Sano: Thank you, Lucian. And just one follow-up Free cash flow generation was pretty strong in Q4, and what are the major drivers behind this performance? And as I look forward to 2026 with the $350 million free cash flow target. Which areas will we focus on achieve this? And do you see any potential upside?
Michael Discenza: Yeah. Sure. Thanks, Tomo. This is Mike. Yeah. So really, in the in the fourth quarter fourth quarter is typically a strong free cash quarter for us anyway. And across the board, excellent performance in working capital. The team’s you know, brought in AR, reduced days. So, really, it was working capital management on top of you know, the earnings that contributed to the fourth quarter. You know, looking forward to next year, it’s you know, it’s another year of, with improved earnings, and then we are expecting CapEx in the, call it, three and a half percent range. Which is on the low end of our of our typical range.
So that doesn’t help with cash flow, but, obviously, spending on the lower end, taking less free cash flow. Or less operating cash flow. So know, so that’s what we’re looking for next year is just, I’ll say, continued working capital performance. And leveraging the earnings.
Tomo O’Sano: Thank you, Mike.
Michael Discenza: Thank you, Tomo.
Emily: Thank you. We have time for one more question. And so our final question today comes from Chris Dankert with Loop Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Chris Dankert: Morning. Thanks for squeezing me in here, guys. Appreciate it. Morning. I guess, Lucian, as you’ve been looking around the enterprise, manufacturing footprint has been on kind of a long term move to cost optimized regions, I’m thinking Mexico, U.K, what have you. As 80/20 kind of really kicks in, are you seeing further opportunity in the manufacturing footprint How impactful are tariffs in terms of thinking about that realignment? Maybe just what the opportunity is on manufacturing footprint would be helpful.
Lucian Boldea: So the one word answer to your question is yes. We see we see opportunity. The manufacturing footprint of the future or at least of present is very different from what it’s been in the past. You know, not too many years ago, was put it in one place, have a lot of scale, and there forever. And the name of the game now is agile and nimble. And because of tariffs, primarily because of geopolitics, because of supply chain potential supply chain disruptions. And so we’re very fortunate to have that nimble footprint right now, very nicely globally spread, as you said.
You know, if you look at our flagship factories, there’s one in every region that is very strong or more than one, frankly, in every region. We have very strong in India. We have a strong footprint in China, a good one in Eastern Europe, good one in North America. So and that’s both across engineered bearings and industrial motion. But in the end, it is also about efficiency. So what that means is as we look at certain markets, and these are not general purpose factories necessarily. They’re more aligned with certain industries. As we look at doubling down in certain industries and then pulling away in others, then that also creates some opportunity.
But what I want to also tell you is another way we look at this is to say what export opportunities within that macro region does our footprint create. So our India footprint has certainly been instrumental in us gaining share in India. What does it do as a base for exports in emerging regions, whether that in Sub Saharan Africa, whether that’s in Central Asia, whether that’s in The Middle East, whether that’s in Southeast Asia, likewise, our China footprint. Really thinking about those businesses, that’s why we appointed those regional leaders too. Thinking about those almost like a local business that’s looking at the regional export markets and trying to leverage that footprint, that cost position.
So it’s a it’s an exciting opportunity. Our regional leaders are certainly very excited about that to have a little more of that entrepreneurial spirit. But to do that, you really have to have, back to the earlier question, have to have that global framework. You have to have the processes. You have to have the operating model in place so that you can allow that, call it, global systems, regional autonomy, and decision and empowerment and, and allow that balance to happen. So that’s that’s what has me most excited is how do we leverage the footprint, but we also have room to simplify what we have, and, really, that will help us with our margins.
Chris Dankert: Yeah. I mean, sounds like you’re really thinking about things holistically. So looking forward to hear more about that at the Analyst Day, and I’ll I’ll I’ll leave it there, but best of luck on ’26, guys.
Lucian Boldea: Thank you. Thank you. We appreciate it. Thank you very much.
Emily: Thank you. This concludes the Q&A session. Sir, do you have any final comments or remarks?
Neil Frohnapple: Thanks, operator, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. If you have any further questions after today’s call, please contact me. You, and this concludes our call.
Emily: Thank you for participating in The Timken Company’s fourth quarter earnings release Conference Call. You may now disconnect.
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Timken (TKR) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript was originally published by The Motley Fool
