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DATE

  • Wednesday, July 23, 2025, at 9:30 a.m. EDT

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chairman and Chief Executive Officer — Lorenzo Simonelli
  • Chief Financial Officer — Ahmed Moghal

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RISKS

  • Ahmed Moghal stated, "We are maintaining the previously communicated estimate of $100 to $200 million net EBITDA impact for the year" from tariffs, noting this does not account for potential escalation or retaliatory measures.
  • Management indicated oil-related upstream spending is anticipated to be "subdued," with international spending expected to decline toward the upper end of the mid- to high-single-digit range this year while North American spending is projected to decline by low double digits in 2025, assuming no further deterioration in EVA or trade escalation.
  • Ahmed Moghal reported a net tariff impact of approximately $15 million to EBITDA for Q2 2025, with a sequential increase expected in the second half of 2025 as new tariffs take effect and supply chain surcharges are implemented.

TAKEAWAYS

  • Adjusted EBITDA: $1.21 billion, rising 7% year-over-year for Q2 2025, reflecting a 170 basis point year-over-year margin improvement.
  • Orders: Total company orders of $7 billion for Q2 2025, with $3.5 billion attributable to Industrial & Energy Technology (IET).
  • IET Margin Expansion: Segment EBITDA margin grew 190 basis points year-over-year, reaching 17.8% in Q2 2025, despite tariff headwinds of roughly 40 basis points.
  • IET Backlog: Reached a record $31.3 billion, up 3% sequentially in Q2 2025.
  • Free Cash Flow: Generated $239 million during Q2 2025.
  • Shareholder Returns: Returned $423 million, including $227 million in dividends and $196 million in share repurchases for Q2 2025.
  • Portfolio Optimization Transactions: Announced joint venture with Cactus, contributing surface pressure control, sale of precision sensors and instrumentation for approximately $1.15 billion, announced during Q2 2025 and agreement to acquire Continental Disc Corporation for approximately $540 million during Q2 2025.
  • Data Center Power Solutions: Booked over $550 million in power generation equipment orders for data centers in Q2 2025, with more than 70% of 69 NovaLT turbines allocated to that market.
  • New Energy Orders: Booked $1 billion in new energy orders for Q2 2025, bringing the year-to-date total to $1.25 billion and positioning the company to exceed the $1.4 billion–$1.6 billion guidance range for the year.
  • Guidance (Full-Year): Reaffirmed total company EBITDA midpoint at $4.675 billion for full-year 2025; raised IET revenue midpoint to $12.9 billion and EBITDA to $2.35 billion for full-year 2025 guidance; OFSE revenue midpoint at $14.2 billion and EBITDA at $2.625 billion for full-year 2025 guidance.
  • Tariff Impact: Estimated $100 million–$200 million net EBITDA impact for the year, with $15 million realized in the second quarter and higher impacts expected in the second half.
  • OFS & Equipment Margin: EBITDA margin expanded 90 basis points sequentially to 18.7% in Q2 2025, despite market pressures.
  • Strong Service Orders: Year-to-date GTS orders up 28% versus last year, upgrades increased 165% for the same period, and transactional orders up 20% year to date; Cordon Solutions orders up 16% year over year.
  • Capital Allocation: Net-debt-to-EBITDA ratio of 0.6x and $3.1 billion in cash as of Q2 2025 provide flexibility for investments and acquisitions.
  • Data Center Pipeline: Management anticipates meeting or exceeding the $1.5 billion three-year target for data center power solutions revenue earlier than planned.

SUMMARY

Baker Hughes (BKR 11.79%) management highlighted sequential and year-over-year improvements in profitability and backlog driven by structural cost actions, technology diversification, and operational discipline. The company announced strategic portfolio moves, monetizing noncore assets and reinvesting in margin-accretive businesses, which are projected to deliver about $1 billion in net proceeds upon closing, as announced in Q2 2025. Data center and digital infrastructure demand are accelerating, with management reporting rapid scaling of orders and partnerships across hydrogen-ready solutions and service contracts. Energy transition momentum is reflected in new energy order flows, with year-to-date bookings totaling $1.25 billion -- already matching last year's total -- and guidance indicating the company will outperform the $1.4 to $1.6 billion order range. The company reiterated a disciplined capital allocation approach, signaling robust liquidity and an ongoing strategy of targeted acquisitions and organic investment. Full-year guidance incorporates expected margin progression, revenue growth in IET, and mitigation of tariff headwinds through internal actions.

  • Ahmed Moghal stated, "The combination of the PSI divestiture and CDC acquisition is a clear example of our portfolio strategy in action," noting value unlock and capital redeployment toward higher margin, recurring-revenue businesses.
  • Management expects LNG order strength to build in the second half, supporting the $12.5 billion–$14.5 billion IET orders guidance range for full-year 2025.
  • Lorenzo Simonelli noted "margin accretion is the name of the game," with clear confidence in achieving the 20% target for IET margins and ongoing margin focus in OFSE, independent of market share considerations.
  • Tightened upstream spending in international and North American markets is assumed in guidance and risk estimates, with any deterioration in trade or market volatility flagged as potential downside factors.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • NovaLT: A series of hydrogen-ready gas turbines designed for distributed, flexible lower carbon power --frequently deployed in data center and industrial applications.
  • IET: Industrial & Energy Technology segment of Baker Hughes, comprising equipment and service solutions for power generation, process industries, and digital applications.
  • GTS: Gas Tech Services within IET, focused on upgrades, services, and recurring contracts for gas turbine and related infrastructure.
  • CTS: Climate Technology Solutions within IET; delivers decarbonization, carbon capture, and emissions reduction technologies.
  • Cordon Solutions: Baker Hughes’ digital solutions for asset performance management, monitoring, and predictive analytics across energy and industrial assets.
  • CCS: Carbon Capture and Storage; technology or services used to capture CO₂ emissions and store them underground to reduce atmospheric release.
  • FIDs: Final Investment Decisions -- commitments to proceed with large-scale energy infrastructure projects, often cited regarding LNG capacity expansion.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Lorenzo Simonelli: Thank you, Chase. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us. First, I'd like to provide a quick outline for today's call. I will begin by discussing our strong second-quarter results and recently announced transactions. I will then highlight key awards and technology developments announced during the quarter, and provide some thoughts on the macro backdrop. After this, I will share an update on the exciting progress we are making in the distributed power space. We have particular focus on data centers. Ahmed will then cover our financial performance, followed by an overview of our portfolio optimization strategy and our outlook. Finally, I'll provide a quick recap before opening the line for questions.

Let's now turn to the key highlights on slide four. We delivered another strong set of results, maintaining the trend of meeting or exceeding the midpoint of our EBITDA guidance for the tenth consecutive quarter. Adjusted EBITDA rose to $1.21 billion reflecting a 170 basis point year-over-year improvement in margins. This was driven by the impact of structural cost actions and stronger operational execution. We continue to make clear progress in scaling our business system, a standardized platform that enables consistent strategy execution and delivers differentiated outcomes. These efforts are driving structural margin improvement, strengthening the resilience of our earnings, and laying the foundation for long-term value creation.

This performance reflects strong execution across both segments, amid ongoing macro and industry-related headwinds. Oilfield services and equipment delivered 90 basis points of sequential margin improvement driven by stronger international and subsea and surface pressure systems revenue as well as meaningful progress on cost-out initiatives. In industrial and energy technology, margins expanded by 190 basis points year-over-year, supported by the continued deployment of our business system which is enhancing operational discipline and execution. IET orders continue to demonstrate strong momentum, totaling $3.5 billion in the quarter. Notably, this was achieved with no material LNG equipment orders, once again highlighting the strength and versatility of our technology portfolio as we further expand across energy and industrial end markets.

This diversification is reflected in the growing demand for our data center solutions. During the quarter, we booked more than $550 million in power generation equipment orders for data centers. In addition, we experienced another strong quarter for gas tech services, upgrades, and transactional bookings as customers focus on improving performance and extending the life of equipment. IET backlog grew 3% sequentially reaching a new record of $31.3 billion, reinforcing the durability of our growth outlook. Following a strong first half, and a positive outlook for the second half awards, we are confident in achieving IT's full-year order guidance range of $12.5 to $14.5 billion.

Looking beyond this year, we see continued momentum for power solutions, sustained growth in new energy, and a robust pipeline of LNG and gas infrastructure opportunities, all of which support a constructive outlook for orders. During the quarter, we generated free cash flow of $239 million and returned a total of $423 million to shareholders, including $196 million in share repurchases. Turning to Slide five, we also announced three strategic transactions in the quarter to advance our portfolio optimization strategy, reinforcing efforts to enhance the durability of earnings and cash flow while creating long-term value for shareholders.

First, regarding divestitures, we entered into an agreement to establish a joint venture with Cactus, contributing surface pressure control in exchange for approximately $345 million while maintaining a minority ownership stake. Additionally, we announced the sale of precision sensors and instrumentation to The Crane Company for approximately $1.15 billion. These proceeds will provide the company with increased flexibility to reinvest in higher growth, higher return opportunities, supporting further margin expansion and enhancing overall returns. Next, from a strategic acquisition perspective, we signed an agreement to purchase Continental Disc Corporation, a leading provider of pressure management solutions for approximately $540 million.

CDC represents a high-quality bolt-on acquisition within IAT, adding a highly complementary offering to our existing valves portfolio that expands our presence in the pressure and flow control market and brings margin-accretive life cycle-based revenue. As we advance our portfolio optimization initiatives, we remain focused on executing a strategic and disciplined capital allocation approach to maximize long-term shareholder value. Overall, we made strong progress on multiple fronts during the quarter, and each of these actions supports our commitment to profitable growth, continuous margin expansion, and improving quality of earnings.

Turning to Slide six, we continue to build strong commercial momentum across new and existing markets, with growing synergy opportunities across our portfolio that enhance how we deliver value to customers while expanding our market presence. During the quarter, IET secured two significant data center awards. First, we received our largest data center award to date, for 30 NovaLT gas turbines. These units will deliver almost 500 megawatts of power to data centers in The United States and operate on a blend of natural gas and hydrogen, supporting both reliability and lower carbon operations.

Second, we received an order for sixteen NovaLT gas turbines representing up to 270 megawatts of power for deployment of Frontier's data centers in Wyoming and Texas. This award is the first phase of the previously announced enterprise-wide agreement with Frontier to advance power solutions and large-scale carbon capture and storage. These awards reflect the accelerating long-term demand for distributed lower carbon power in support of digital infrastructure. This trend is also unlocking greater commercial synergies across our power and decarbonization portfolios, reinforcing the potential for sustained data center and new energy growth. In total, IET booked 69 NovaLT units this quarter, with more than 70% allocated to data center projects.

Year to date, we have secured almost 1.2 gigawatts of NovaLT capacity for data center applications, highlighting our expanding role in enabling the growth of digital infrastructure through flexible, lower carbon power solutions. We are also expanding our future digital infrastructure opportunities. At the recent Saudi US Investment Forum, we signed an MOU with Datavault for data center projects globally, which includes plans to power data centers in the kingdom with our NovaLT turbines using hydrogen from NEOM. Beyond data centers, we continue to see strong demand in gas infrastructure. In Saudi Arabia, we secured an award for four NovaLT turbines to support Aramco's master gas system free pipeline.

Also, in climate technology solutions, we signed a framework agreement with Innerjet to supply 16 reciprocating compressor packages, supporting an increase in biogas production while driving emissions reduction for gas infrastructure in Denmark. In GTS, we secured more than $300 million in contractual service agreements during the quarter, strengthening our backlog of recurring revenue. Key awards included a new maintenance agreement with Petrobras to improve uptime and reliability of critical turbomachinery equipment and a renewal of a multiyear service contract with Oman LNG featuring remote monitoring and diagnostic services delivered through our eye center. In New Energy, we continue to build momentum internationally, where we have historically seen the greatest concentration of orders.

During the quarter, CTS secured one of the largest CCS orders to date, providing compression technology for a large CCS hub in The Middle East. In geothermal, we successfully drilled Lower Saxony's first productive deep exploration well in Germany. This project highlights the strength of our integrated well construction and production solutions capabilities supported by advanced digital solutions that optimize performance. In OFFE, we maintain strong momentum in production and mature asset solutions, booking several meaningful awards. Notably, we signed a significant master services agreement with Aramco for installation and maintenance of electric submersible pumps across the kingdom.

We also received two large multiyear contracts to help optimize production, throughput, and reliability for two major operators in offshore Angola and The US Gulf Coast, leveraging our chemicals, artificial lift, and digital solutions. In Norway, Equinor awarded us a contract to industrialize offshore plug and abandon operations in the Oseberg Eastfield, which followed the announcement of a new multiyear framework agreement for integrated wealth services. OFFE also secured a multiyear contract to provide drag-reducing chemicals to be deployed on two major offshore pipeline systems operated by Genesis Energy. To support this agreement, we will expand our chemicals manufacturing footprint and deploy Luciepa, our digitally automated fuel production solution.

Also for Lucipe, we received an award from Repsol for next-generation AI capabilities and entered into a new agreement with ENI for ESP optimization and AI-driven predictive analytics in The Middle East. Continuing on digital, Cordon Solutions secured a notable contract with a large NOC to deploy asset performance management for several compressor stations in The Middle East. Gordon Solutions was also awarded a contract with Nova Chemicals to optimize maintenance and maximize production across multiple petrochemical facilities, leveraging APM's asset strategy and asset health digital offerings. Overall, it was another strong quarter both from a commercial and technology engagement perspective.

We are building strong order and technology pipelines that extend beyond our traditional oil and gas markets, creating additional life cycle growth opportunities that further enhance our earnings and cash flow durability. Turning to the macro on Slide seven, amid continued macro uncertainty, I want to take a moment to reaffirm the strong long-term fundamentals underpinning our business. Global energy demand continues to grow, supported by durable secular macro trends that are shaping the future of the energy landscape. Population growth, particularly in emerging markets, is driving baseline demand for energy across residential, mobility, and infrastructure. At the same time, continued economic development and industrialization are expanding energy needs across critical sectors such as manufacturing, transportation, and technology.

Urbanization and the global push for electrification are accelerating the build-out of modern energy systems. This includes both expanding access to reliable electricity and supporting new demand drivers like data centers and industrial decarbonization. Amid this backdrop, there is a global push for lower carbon solutions as countries advance their emission reduction goals. In response, we are seeing increased investment in clean power, CCUS, emissions abatement, geothermal, and hydrogen. These markets require scalable and efficient energy solutions, capabilities that are core to Baker Hughes and essential to enabling a lower carbon economy. Consistent with this trend, we booked $1 billion in new energy orders during the quarter, bringing year-to-date bookings to $1.25 billion, already matching our total for last year.

As a result, we now anticipate exceeding the high end of our $1.4 to $1.6 billion order range for this year. This performance reflects increasing global demand for lower carbon solutions and reinforces our confidence in achieving our $6 to $7 billion order target by 2030. Collectively, these macro trends support a strong long-term outlook for the global energy landscape. As customers increasingly prioritize efficiency, reliability, and sustainability, it is an environment aligned with our strength and one that positions us to capitalize on the significant opportunities ahead. Now turning to natural gas, we continue to see growing divergence between oil and natural gas fundamentals. Its abundance, low cost, reliability, and low emissions set gas apart from other fossil fuels.

This view is increasingly being validated across policy and market dynamics. While we expect significant growth from renewables, scaling these technologies at the pace required to meet growing energy needs remains a challenge, particularly in light of supply chain constraints, permitting delays, cost inflation, and less favorable policy support. These challenges further reinforce the long-term outlook for natural gas. By 2040, we expect natural gas demand to grow by over 20% with global LNG increasing by at least 75%. This growth outlook creates a favorable environment for Baker Hughes.

We are already seeing strong momentum, booking $2.9 billion in gas infrastructure equipment orders over the past six quarters, a trend we expect to continue as countries turn to natural gas to support power generation and industrial development. In LNG, approximately 60 MTPA of additional FIDs are needed over the next eighteen months to reach our three-year target of 100 MTPA, which would bring the global installed base to our long-held target of 800 MTPA by 2030. Beyond this, we see continued growth in the installed base as energy demand and emission reduction efforts converge. This year, LNG demand continues to grow rapidly, up 5% year-over-year as softness in China is more than offset by strength in Europe.

This increase in demand is driving sustained momentum in LNG contracting activity. For example, Wood Mackenzie reports 49 MTPA of long-term LNG offtake contracts have been signed in the first half of the year, positioning 2025 to exceed the record 81 MTPA signed last year. Now turning to oil markets, this year has been marked by heightened volatility, with Brent prices ranging from a low of $60 per barrel in early May to a high of $77 per barrel in June, with continued volatility into July. The market continues to navigate cross-currents, balancing weakening demand and rising OPEC plus production against persistent geopolitical risk in both The Middle East and Russia.

As we look into the second half of the year, we expect continued volatility as OPEC plus accelerates the return of its 2.2 million barrels per day of idled production into what we anticipate will be a soft market. Ultimately, until all excess OPEC plus barrels are absorbed by the market, we anticipate oil-related upstream spending will remain subdued. On global upstream spending, we maintain our outlook for a high single-digit decline this year. In international, we now expect spending to decline toward the high end of our mid to high single-digit range, given downward pressure in key countries such as Saudi Arabia and Mexico. In North America, we still project spending to decline in the low double digits.

These forecasts assume current oil prices hold and no further trade policy escalation. Any meaningful deterioration in EVA could present incremental downside. Longer term, we expect oil demand to grow beyond 2030. To meet that demand, significant investments will be required. In addition, we anticipate growing customer focus on mitigating reservoir decline and optimizing production efficiency. This underscores our strategic focus on mature asset solutions in OFSE. These technologies will improve production reliability, boost fuel performance, and expand our presence in more durable, OpEx-led production markets, increasing the resilience of our revenue base. Turning to Slide eight, I wanted to take a few minutes to discuss the opportunity we see in distributed power solutions, the data center market, and beyond.

Distributed power represents a compelling growth factor for Baker Hughes, growing on multiple parts of our enterprise, from industrial gas turbines and electric motors to geothermal and CCS technologies. This opportunity broadens our market exposure to digital infrastructure and reinforces the stability of our earnings and cash flow through life cycle-driven equipment and service revenue. According to the IAA, global energy consumption from data centers is expected to more than double, reaching 945 terawatt hours by 2030. In The US, electricity demand for data processing alone is projected to surpass the combined power needs of all energy-intensive manufacturing sectors, including aluminum, steel, cement, and chemicals.

To support this surge in power requirements, gas turbine manufacturers are experiencing robust order activity across both utility-scale and subutility-scale power applications. Our portfolio is well-suited for the subutility-scale, behind-the-meter solutions providing advanced technology and shorter deployment timelines with our hydrogen-ready NovaLT twelve and sixteen megawatt turbines, as well as brush electric generators. To meet rising demand, we continue to make targeted organic investments to enhance our NovaLT capabilities, including initiatives to increase power range and reduce start-up times. In addition, activities are underway to significantly increase our manufacturing capacity by 2027, capitalizing on strong order visibility.

In the utility-scale space, our geothermal solutions offer customers reliable and scalable baseload power, supported by IET's organic Rankin cycle steam turbine technologies and OFAs, subsurface expertise. More broadly, we are seeing expanded market opportunities to deploy advanced and enhanced geothermal technologies to deliver dispatchable, low-carbon power to data centers. Additionally, we are collaborating on the development of the utility and industrial-scale NetPower solutions, further expanding our power range and enabling near-zero emissions power generation. The growing frequency of grid disruptions is prompting with critical operations to seek more reliable on-site power solutions.

This shift is especially evident in sectors like energy, health care, data centers, airports, and other mission-critical infrastructure, where our distributed power offerings are well-positioned to meet this emerging need for behind-the-meter power. Building on the momentum from our recent data center-related awards, totaling more than $650 million year-to-date, we are making strong progress toward our three-year target of $1.5 billion. The pace of recent awards positions us to meet or exceed this target earlier than planned. Importantly, this excludes the substantial recurring revenue opportunity tied to aftermarket services, which typically generate one to two times the original equipment value over a twenty-year period.

In summary, the surging momentum in data center development is reinforcing IIT's fundamental demand drivers while also increasing the pipeline of enterprise-wide opportunities. We are expanding into attractive high-growth markets beyond our traditional oil and gas space, creating new avenues for growth while further strengthening the durability of our earnings and cash flow. To conclude, it was another strong quarter for the company, with significant progress on several fronts despite the challenges presented by the external environment. Our focus remains on the areas within our control, most notably the continued deployment of our business system across the enterprise, which is driving productivity and accelerating our efforts to be a leaner, more efficient company.

Baker Hughes is well-positioned to deliver sustainable growth and create long-term shareholder value. We are excited about the future as we advance into the next phase of our journey. With that, I'll turn the call over to Ahmed.

Ahmed Moghal: Thanks, Lorenzo. I'll begin with a review of our consolidated results and segment performance. I will then outline our portfolio optimization strategy and conclude with a summary of our outlook before turning it back to Lorenzo for final remarks. Starting on Slide 10, as Lorenzo highlighted, we delivered another strong quarter of orders, with total company bookings of $7 billion, including $3.5 billion from IET. This performance demonstrates continued customer confidence in our diversified portfolio and underscores the strength and breadth of our market-leading technologies and solutions. Adjusted EBITDA increased by 7% year-over-year to $1.21 billion despite lower revenue, driven by strong margin expansion across both segments.

This performance reflects the benefits of structural cost improvements and continued deployment of our business system, which is driving greater productivity, stronger operating leverage, and more durable earnings. GAAP diluted earnings per share were $0.71. Excluding adjusting items, earnings per share were $0.63, up 11% year-over-year. We generated free cash flow of $239 million. For the full year, we maintain our free cash flow conversion target of 45% to 50% with a typical stronger performance expected in the second half of the year. Turning to capital allocation on Slide 11, our balance sheet remains in a very strong position.

We ended the quarter with cash of $3.1 billion and a net debt to EBITDA ratio of 0.6 times and liquidity of $6.1 billion. We also returned $423 million to shareholders. This included $227 million of dividends and $196 million in share repurchases. We remain committed to returning 60% to 80% of free cash flow to shareholders. The portfolio optimization actions announced in the second quarter are expected to generate about $1 billion in net proceeds upon closure of these transactions, further strengthening our balance sheet and increasing flexibility for organic investments, shareholder returns, and value-accretive acquisitions. I will now highlight the results for both segments starting with IET on Slide 12.

During the quarter, we secured IET orders totaling $3.5 billion, including record bookings for both CTS and Cordon Solutions as well as a 28% year-over-year increase in GTS, driven by another strong quarter of upgrades and transactional orders. This brings our year-to-date total to $6.7 billion, which includes $1.9 billion in GTS, $1.4 billion for LNG and gas infrastructure, and more than $650 million for data center power solutions. These commercial achievements further underscore the versatility of our technology portfolio and our strategic positioning to benefit from multiple secular growth trends across the energy and industrial sectors. With a book-to-bill of 1.1 times for the quarter, IET achieved another record RPO of $31.3 billion.

This RPO level and a structurally expanding installed base provide strong revenue visibility in the years ahead. IET revenue increased by 5% year-over-year to $3.3 billion, led by a 9% increase in GTS and a 22% increase in CTS, partially offset by the expected softness in industrial tech. Segment EBITDA growth significantly outpaced segment revenue, increasing 18% year-over-year as margins expanded by 190 basis points to 17.8%, despite some tariff-related headwinds. This performance was driven by record gas tech equipment margins and strong execution in Cordon Solutions, partially offset by CTS. These results clearly highlight the benefit of our business system implementation.

Now in its third year, this disciplined operating model is focused on performance management, strategy deployment, and continuous improvement. Rooted in lean and Kaizen principles, it is equipping teams across the enterprise with tools to simplify workflows, eliminate waste, and improve execution, ultimately supporting progress towards our 20% EBITDA margin target. Turning to OFFC on Slide 13, OFSE revenue in the quarter was $3.6 billion, up 3% sequentially. In international markets, revenue increased 4% sequentially, led by Europe and The Middle East, excluding Saudi Arabia, where activity continued to trend lower. We also saw solid growth in Latin America driven by Mexico.

While upstream activity in Mexico remains subdued, we experienced strong growth in chemicals as refiners work to address rising crude quality challenges. In North America, revenue was up 1% sequentially. North America land revenues remained stable compared to the first quarter, outperforming the 3% decline in U.S. onshore rig activity due to our strong weighting towards production-related work. Driven by disciplined execution and a continued focus on cost efficiencies, OFSC delivered EBITDA of $677 million, exceeding the midpoint of our guidance range despite a challenging market. Importantly, EBITDA margins expanded 90 basis points sequentially to 18.7%.

Turning to Slide 14, I'd like to take a few minutes to highlight the progress we've made on portfolio optimization and how we are advancing the strategic priority as we transition from Horizon one, a period defined by significant operational improvement, into Horizon two, which will be characterized by continued execution discipline and an increased focus on strategic growth, particularly in industrial, new energy markets, and mature asset solutions. We have remained focused on reshaping the portfolio to drive higher and position Baker Hughes for more durable long-term growth.

Including the $1.5 billion of expected proceeds from the PSI and SP transactions, we will have generated over $2.5 billion in cash from a series of strategic actions since the merger in 2017. Our divested businesses will now be with owners where they are a stronger strategic fit, while enabling Baker Hughes to further streamline its portfolio and concentrate on higher margin recurring revenue opportunities. These transactions have unlocked significant value, strengthened our balance sheet, and enhanced our strategic focus and flexibility. We have also been disciplined in how we've redeployed this capital. Including the acquisition of CDC, we have reinvested approximately $1.8 billion to expand our industrial presence and align with long-term growth trends.

Other notable investments include brush electric motors, which expanded IET's driver and power generation offerings, and Altus intervention, which strengthened our capabilities within mature asset solutions. We have also made early-stage investments in decarbonization technologies that, once commercialized, could drive meaningful long-term growth. The combination of the PSI divestiture and CDC acquisition is a clear example of our portfolio strategy in action. We are monetizing noncore assets and unlocking significant value while reinvesting into higher margin recurring revenue businesses at attractive valuations that enhance returns. Collectively, these actions advance our strategy to reshape the portfolio for more resilient earnings and cash flows.

They demonstrate our disciplined approach, prioritizing strategic fit, exposure to growth markets, accretive margins and returns, and life cycle-based business models. Looking ahead, we'll continue to invest in opportunities that strengthen our industrial footprint and unlock meaningful synergies. Our ability to integrate acquisitions effectively is enabled by the strength of our business system. It provides the structure, discipline, and repeatability to execute with speed and consistency, accelerating synergy capture, and driving faster value creation. With a net leverage ratio of 0.6 times EBITDA, we have ample capacity to pursue value-accretive opportunities, including high-return organic investments, disciplined M&A, and continued capital return to shareholders.

This financial flexibility enables us to allocate capital with precision and purpose, with a clear focus on actions to accelerate revenue growth, enhance margins, improve returns, and strengthen our long-term position. Our ultimate objective remains the same: to maximize long-term shareholder value and position Baker Hughes for sustainable, differentiated growth. Turning to slide 15, I want to provide an update on the dynamic trade policy environment and our outlook. In the second quarter, we estimate that the increase in tariff rates negatively impacted our EBITDA by approximately $15 million. We executed a series of mitigation initiatives that helped limit the impact, and these actions will continue to play a critical role in managing ongoing exposure.

Since our trade policy update in our previous earnings call, there have been several changes, implemented and proposed, relative to the tariff rates assumed in our original analysis. At a high level, our updated analysis suggests that these developments largely offset each other. As a result, we are maintaining the previously communicated estimate of $100 to $200 million net EBITDA impact for the year. Note that this assumes recently announced tariffs are implemented as planned, no further trade policy escalation, including retaliatory tariffs, and continued success of our mitigation actions across both segments. We are tracking the risk for retaliatory tariffs in key regions.

While not currently reflected in our net tariff impact estimate, we remain prepared to implement additional mitigation initiatives to limit, where possible, any further impact on our global operations and financial performance. Beyond the direct impact of ongoing trade policy shifts, we continue to monitor potential secondary effects, such as more cautious customer behavior and signs of broader economic weakness. Next, I would like to update you on our outlook. The details of our third quarter and full-year 2025 guidance are also found on Slide 15. The ranges for revenue, EBITDA, and depreciation and amortization are shown on the slide, and I'll focus on the midpoint of our guidance.

While there's still volatility around trade policy developments, we have been successfully executing our mitigation plans, and our underlying business continues to perform well. In light of these factors and consistent with our commitment to transparency, we are reestablishing full-year guidance for both segments and the company overall. For the third quarter, we expect total company EBITDA of approximately $1.185 billion at the midpoint of our guidance range, led by continued strong growth in IET and resilient margins in OFS. For IET, we expect third-quarter results to benefit from continued productivity gains supported by the enhanced implementation of our business system, as well as strong revenue conversion from the segment's record backlog.

Overall, we anticipate IET EBITDA of $600 million at the midpoint of our guidance range. For OFSE, we expect third-quarter EBITDA of $65 million at the midpoint of our guidance range, which represents flat sequential margins on a slight revenue decline. Now turning to our full-year guidance, we see continued strength in IET fundamentals while OFSE remains challenged by subdued market conditions. Taking this into account, we expect total company EBITDA of $4.675 billion at the midpoint of our guidance range. In IET, we maintain the midpoint of our orders guidance range of $13.5 billion given our solid first-half orders performance and positive outlook for the second half, particularly in LNG.

Also, we are raising the guidance range for both revenue and EBITDA, increasing the midpoint for revenue to $12.9 billion from $12.75 billion and EBITDA to $2.35 billion from $2.3 billion. The major factors driving our third-quarter and full-year guidance ranges for IET will be the pace of backlog conversion in GTE, the impact of any aero derivative supply chain tightness in gas tech, foreign exchange rates, trade policy, and operational execution in industrial tech and CTS. For OFSE, we are reestablishing full-year guidance with midpoints of $14.2 billion for revenue and $2.625 billion for EBITDA, implying margin improvement despite lower revenue, driven by strong execution of our structural cost-out program and reinforcing the durability of our margins.

Factors driving our third-quarter and full-year guidance range for OFSE include execution of our SSPS backlog, the impact on near-term activity levels in North American and international markets, trade policy, and pricing across more transactional markets. We remain confident in our ability to deliver solid performance in 2025, with continued growth in IET helping to offset softness in more market-sensitive areas of OFSE, underscoring the strength of our portfolio and the benefits of our strategic diversification. In summary, we are pleased with the company's operational performance during the second quarter. OFSE delivered strong margin performance despite softness in the upstream market, while IET margins continued to progress towards our 20% target.

We remained focused on elements within our control, streamlining operations and driving efficiencies that will benefit us well beyond the cycle. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Lorenzo.

Lorenzo Simonelli: Thank you, Ahmed. Our strong second-quarter results clearly demonstrate the continued progress we are making in transforming our operations and streamlining the organization, even in a challenging and uncertain market environment. As you can see illustrated on Slide 17, we have evolved into a much more profitable energy and industrial technology company. At the midpoint of our 2025 guidance, Baker Hughes EBITDA margin will have increased by almost 600 basis points over the past five years. Additionally, EBITDA has more than doubled over the same period. The magnitude of this improvement speaks to the substantial progress we've made and reinforces our confidence in the strategic vision we set out when we formed the company.

We are entering Horizon two from a position of strength, with a clear path to drive further growth and enhanced margins, underscoring our commitment to delivering long-term value for our shareholders. Our business system is a critical enabler for continued success, driving operational discipline, improving productivity, and accelerating the consistency of execution. We are now complementing our operational efforts with additional portfolio optimization actions. These transactions announced in the second quarter serve as a clear blueprint for our strategy, unlocking value from noncore businesses and recycling that capital into higher margin opportunities aligned with our financial and strategic frameworks.

In addition to our operational and portfolio progress, our complementary and versatile technology portfolio supports our strong position in key growth markets, including natural gas, new energy, and mature basins. This enables us to capitalize on emerging secular trends, driving sustained order momentum into Horizon two and beyond. The opportunities emerging within these growth markets are fostering enhanced commercial integration throughout the company. By leveraging our enterprise-wide customer relationships, cross-segment sales channels, and integrated offerings, we'll be able to drive incremental growth and capture a greater share of our addressable market. To conclude, thank you to the entire Baker Hughes team for yet again delivering outstanding results.

As we continue our journey to take Baker Hughes and energy forward, we remain committed to our customers, shareholders, and employees. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Chase.

Chase Mulvehill: Operator, we can now open up for questions.

Operator: Thank you. If you have a question at this time, please press 11 on your touch-tone telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, simply press 11 again. As a reminder, we ask that you please limit yourself to one question. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. First question coming from the line of Scott Gruber with Citigroup. Your line is now open.

Scott Gruber: Yes, good morning.

Lorenzo Simonelli: Hi, Scott.

Scott Gruber: Morning. So the margin performance across both segments was impressive and the outlook in OFS was better than we expected given the backdrop. Can you just unpack the drivers of the margin performance a bit more? And as we start to think about 2026, your confidence level in hitting the 20% mark in IET, and then thinking about OFS, you know, given your internal drivers, do you think you can grind those margins a bit higher in a soft market, or is a kind of flat assumption a good starting point for us?

Ahmed Moghal: Yeah, Scott. Look. Obviously, we're pleased with the way the teams have executed in the first half, and also in the second quarter. With that, progress and continuous improvement despite the external headwinds. So I think it's helpful as we think about it by segment. So in OFFC, you know, the EBITDA margins, as we pointed out, expanded by around 90 basis points sequentially to 18.7%, and that was on the back of sequential stronger revenue, as well as the progress we've made on cost efficiency. So by cost efficiency, really, we're looking at a few things. We continue to streamline our cost structure, so rightsizing and making sure we understand the current activity levels.

And, you know, simple things like removing duplication across the segment, which we've been doing for over a year. So I think that's one piece on cost, but then also on price. We remain disciplined.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, please stand by. So on line is Maven's technical difficulties. Again, please stand by.

Ahmed Moghal: Sorry. So that's so sorry. We may have lost you for a second, but I was on IET EBITDA margins. So, we the margins expand by 190 basis points close to 18% despite some tariff-related headwinds. And that impacted margins, to be clear, by around 40 basis points in IET. So the drivers of the performance are, you know, record margins in GTE. Cordon Solutions also contributed to solid performance, and that's underpinned by our business system, which we've had in place for, you know, coming into its third year. And, I'd point out also OFFC and IET continue to work together to implement the best practices on business system across the company.

So lastly, I'd say, you know, going forward, as we look at additional efficiency opportunities, we see if there In IT, we're confident on the 20% margin target. In OFFC, similarly, we are closing the margin gap to our peers. And, you know, we're focused on margins and not and nonmarket share. So overall, pretty strong setup, and the way the teams have been to make sure we have continuous improvement.

Lorenzo Simonelli: Yeah, Scott. I'm not sure how much cut out there, but, really, if you look at it from a trajectory of going forward, again, as Ahmed said, margin accretion is the name of the game. It's what we've stated with regards to the progression going forward. Great progress across both segments even with some of the headwinds we see in the marketplace, in particular, OFFC and the performance that they've been able to demonstrate. And as we go forward, we aim to continue that margin progression into 2026.

Operator: Thank you. And our next coming from the line of David Anderson with Barclays.

David Anderson: Hi. Good morning, Lorenzo and Ahmed.

Lorenzo Simonelli: Hi.

David Anderson: I was wondering if you could just expand a little bit more on the IET order performance this quarter. Gas tech equipment was a bit light, but services was surprisingly strong. I was just wondering how you think these components should trend the rest of the year, and maybe what gets you to the high end of that order guide that you had reiterated. And also while we're here, if you could provide some insight into how these orders are starting to shape up for 2026, particularly the data center orders on page two, what looks to be far exceeding your prior targets there. Thank you.

Lorenzo Simonelli: Dave, yeah, I'm very pleased with the order progress made in IET. And as you saw, bookings of $3.5 billion of orders in the quarter, taking the year to date to $6.7 billion. So we're trending towards our midpoint of the full-year guidance, as, again, stated as $13.5 billion. And this is as a result of strength and the strong visibility on orders and the back half of the year. Confident in achieving that and continue to see strength in the overall market. As you look at orders to date, it's been driven by non-LNG markets, gas infrastructure, data centers, GTS upgrades, and Cordon solutions.

So if you look into the second half, we do anticipate strengthening LNG orders and a number of the projects that we've mentioned in the past coming through and that we've been working on. So as we look at the strength of our orders in the first half, touching on data centers, it's quickly emerging as a strong growth area. We've received several awards for our NovaLT turbines. Year to date, we booked over 70 LTE NovaLT turbines for the data center market, providing 1.2 gigawatts of power. Notably, you know, the award includes our largest single order to date of 30 NovaLTs for a customer in The US data center projects and 16 Nova LTs for frontier infrastructure projects.

So both great examples of the increasing connectivity between the surging digital infrastructure demand and also the increasing need for lower carbon solutions. As we look forward, you know, we continue to see opportunities to leverage our hydrogen-ready capabilities on the Innovel T turbines, as well as providing CCS solutions such as the frontier projects. And, you know, as we look at new energy, again, these orders, as you look at our second quarter new order New Energy orders, over a billion dollars, which was a new record, and we're positioned to meet or exceed the target as we go forward for the year.

So as you think about data centers in particular, you know, we stated preorder target of $1.5 billion. We do anticipate being able to meet that earlier than planned on the back strength that we see within the marketplace. Outside of some of the equipment side, as you mentioned, GasTech services, we booked several CSA agreements totaling more than $350 million. Also experienced strong quarter for both transactional and upgrade orders, extending the life of the equipment that we have out there installed. And year to date, we booked $1.9 billion of GTS orders, which is up 28% versus last year. And, also, upgrades very strong with orders up 165% for the same period. And transactional orders increased by 20%.

So very strong performance by the services side on the gas technology and also on the digital cordon solutions. Achieving record orders as you look at Cordon orders, up 16% year over year. Record software orders, which rose by 56%, and we see a long runway for continuous growth within Cordant. As customers continue to increase the adoption and our large installed base that we've got as an opportunity as well as balance of plant to go after from third-party equipment. And we keep on gaining traction on our eye center. Major milestone in the quarter is over 2,000 critical turbomachinery assets now connected. So looking at the second half, again, feel good about that midpoint of the range.

We expect LNG orders to strengthen. The projects are there. We see further strength in GTS orders. And also, as we look to the second half opportunities in the FPSO market, that will start to materialize. And for 2026, you know, we see secular tailwinds across many of the end markets. Continue to strengthen. So we expect solid momentum across LNG, and we expect 2026 IT orders to be consistent with 2025 levels. So in summary, feeling good about the start to the year, feeling good about the second half, and also the visibility we have into 2026 and beyond.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Arun Jayaram with JPMorgan.

Arun Jayaram: Yeah. Good morning. You guys have had a, called, a more muscular approach to the portfolio more recently. With the three transactions announced in June, I was wondering perhaps for Ahmed, if you could discuss perhaps the net impact from these three transactions as we think about sharpening our pencil on 2026. Perhaps top line or EBITDA thoughts? And maybe thoughts, Lorenzo, on further portfolio moves and you expect some of these moves to be focused in IET, OFSC, or both?

Ahmed Moghal: Yeah. Hi, Arun. So, look, I think, so on the impact, the first thing I'd highlight is that these transactions, you know, we've never intended them to drive progress towards the OFF and IET 20% margin target. So that's an important point. And so when you take the three transactions in aggregate that we announced in the second quarter, there is gonna be a very modest to both segment margins. And then when you roll that forward in terms of when we expect things to close and so forth and you look at the net EBITDA impact from these three transactions in 2026, we expect that to be just over $100 million.

Lorenzo Simonelli: And, Arun, adding to you know, the aspect of going forward. First of all, we're very pleased with the transactions we announced. Excited about the prospect of welcoming CDC into the family. And, also, also, you know, we exited businesses that are no longer aligned with the strategic priorities or return expectations, then they're going to better owners and better strategic fit for the future. So what we've been able to do is unlock significant value and get some good valuations and redeploy that into accretive assets that come into the portfolio.

And as you look at it, that's really what we've highlighted within the prepared remarks about portfolio optimization continuing to be a key part of our strategy, and we've been doing that since we came together in 2017, and it's fair to assume that we're gonna continue doing that as we strengthen the portfolio through additional acquisitions and continue to look at the right divestitures. If you think about, you know, the two segments, we have over 30 businesses that are competing for capital. And so we're really concentrating on looking at where the stronger margin profiles are, the recurring revenue potential, and the long-term growth opportunities across all of the 30 and across the two segments.

And we do a rigorous assessment of each of the businesses. And it's natural to think that over time, there'll be evolution that takes place, and certain businesses may no longer align with our strategic priorities. On the further acquisitions, you know, we'll continue to target opportunities that strengthen our industrial footprint and unlock meaningful synergies. We like businesses that offer margin-accretive, life cycle-driven revenue. And are poised to drive IT towards leading margins. In OFSE, we'll continue to focus on strengthening our leading franchise and production solutions and mature asset solutions, increasing our exposure to more resilient, focused end markets.

So with a leverage ratio of 0.6 times, and an additional billion dollars in net proceeds from the transactions that are yet to close, you know, we have ample capacity to pursue value-accretive opportunities to strengthen the portfolio. So, overall, you know, the ultimate objective remains maximize shareholder value maintaining strategic and financial discipline, strengthening the earnings durability, and really continuing to position Baker Hughes for sustainable differentiated growth.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question coming from the line of Sarah Pant with Bank of America. Your line is now open.

Saurabh Pant: Hi. Good morning, Lorenzo and Ahmed.

Lorenzo Simonelli: Morning.

Saurabh Pant: I have a question on the tariff side of things. I don't know if, Lorenzo, you wanna take it or, Ahmed, you wanna take it, on the tariff side, your guidance, your outlook of $100 to $200 million potential impact, is the same as it was from three months back. Right? And we have probably seen a thousand headlines come out in the last three months. So maybe if you can just walk us through the puts and takes of what has happened over the past three months and what businesses are impacted. And maybe as a follow-up, I think if I heard you correctly, Ahmed, you said $15 million impact in the second quarter. Right?

So it sounds like you are baking in higher impact in the back half of the year. But if you can just walk us through that, the implied second-half expectations, that would be helpful.

Ahmed Moghal: Yeah. I'll let Ahmed take that one. Yeah. Yeah. Sure. So look. I think, I'll break it out between, you know, obviously, what we saw in the second quarter and then how we've underwritten our second-half outlook. So maybe starting with the second quarter, the net tariff impact was approximately about $15 million to EBITDA, and that was primarily US, China, and Europe. And you know, the split between the two segments was predominantly IET.

But, you know, as you sort of stated, you know, when we look into the second half, we expect that the total net EBITDA impact to at this stage, likely exceed $100 million in the second half with sequential increases in the third quarter and then again in the fourth quarter. And that linearity really is driven by, you know, the way the actual inventory rolls through our balance sheet. And also any surcharges that come by, through our supply chain partners, you know, that actually comes through in the second half. So but, you know, to be clear, those type of impacts are clearly reflected in our guidance.

But what it does not include are any potential, you know, escalation of trade policies and also assumes that US China tariffs remain at today's levels. So you know, as we look at the actual mitigation actions and going forward, you know, in the second quarter, we made significant progress. And then on some of the dynamics that, we've seen in the overall environment, you know, we saw positive developments in May with the temporary easing of the tariffs between US and China. But then those developments were, I'd say, largely offset by several recent negative tariff-related announcements.

So as an example, in early June, you know, The US announced and implemented an increase on steel and aluminum tariffs to 50%. Then in July, The US announced a 50% tariff on copper imports, scheduled to take effect, you know, sometime August 1. And then, also in July, The US announced increased tariffs on US from various countries, including Brazil, Canada, Mexico, and the EU, and, also those were are set to take effect on August unless, you know, there's a trade deal that's reached beforehand.

As we take all of these different variables and, recognizing their dynamic, you know, we have confidence in our mitigation actions that we put in place immediately, and you know, we have, as you know, a flexible global supply chain. And so we maintain our previously communicated, of the $100 to $200 million net EBITDA impact for the year. But just as a reminder, you know, this does not, this assumes the recently announced tariffs, are implemented as scheduled, but it does not assume any further trade policy escalation, including retaliatory tariffs. So, hopefully, it gives you a good framework of how we're underwriting, the balance of the year. Thank you.

Operator: And ladies and gentlemen, that was our last question. I will now hand you back to Mr. Lorenzo Simonelli, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer to conclude the call.

Lorenzo Simonelli: Yeah. Thank you to everyone for taking the time to join our earnings call today. I look forward to speaking with you all again soon. Operator, you may now close out the call.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today's conference. This concludes the program, and you may all disconnect.