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DATE

Tuesday, February 3, 2026 at 4:30 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Surendralal Karsanbhai
  • Chief Financial Officer — Michael Baughman
  • Chief Operating Officer — Ram Krishnan

TAKEAWAYS

  • Underlying Orders Growth -- Up 9%, resulting in four consecutive quarters of strong order growth and a trailing twelve-month orders increase of 6%.
  • Underlying Sales Growth -- Increased 2%, led by 11% growth in Test and Measurement and broad-based 14% growth in identified verticals.
  • Adjusted Segment EBITDA Margin -- Reported at 27.7%, exceeding internal expectations; excluding a software renewal dynamic, up 40 basis points year over year.
  • Adjusted Earnings Per Share (EPS) -- Reached $1.46, a 6% increase, and full-year guidance raised to $6.40-$6.55 per share.
  • Free Cash Flow -- Delivered $202 million for the quarter with a 14% margin, positioning for full-year growth of approximately 10% and greater than 18% margin.
  • Backlog -- Ended at $7.9 billion, up 9%, with a book-to-bill ratio of 1.13, supporting sales through 2026 and into 2027.
  • Annual Contract Value (ACV) from Software -- Grew 9% to $1.6 billion; management expects 10%+ growth for the full year.
  • Regional Sales Performance -- U.S. sales rose 6%, Americas up 3%, Middle East and Africa up 9%, India up 22%, Latin America up 9%, while Europe was flat and China declined high single digits in orders.
  • Segment Performance -- Software and Systems underlying sales grew 3% (up 36% excluding software renewal impact), Test and Measurement up 11%, Intelligent Devices up 2%, Safety and Productivity up 1%.
  • AI and Software Innovation -- The next generation of Nigel.ai launched, advancing from “AI assistant to an AI author,” with management reporting accelerated LabVIEW adoption since Nigel’s initial introduction in 2025.
  • Major Project Wins -- Booked $450 million in automation content, 80% in growth verticals (power, LNG); Ovation business orders up 74% driven by large data center and utility fleet wins.
  • Shareholder Returns -- $250 million of share repurchase completed in the quarter; management reiterates commitment to $2.2 billion capital return in 2026 ($1.2 billion dividends, $1 billion buybacks).
  • 2026 Full-Year Guidance -- Maintained: 5.5% sales growth, 4% underlying sales growth, approximately 28% adjusted segment EBITDA margin; Q2 guidance set at 3%-4% sales growth, 27% adjusted segment EBITDA margin, and $1.50-$1.55 adjusted EPS.
  • Software Contract Renewal Dynamics -- Created a 1 percentage point drag on sales growth and 70 basis point margin impact in Q1; expected $110 million revenue drag in the first half and $120 million for the full year.
  • 2028 Value Creation Targets Presented -- Management reiterated targets: $21 billion revenue, 30% adjusted segment EBITDA margin, $8 adjusted EPS, 20% free cash flow margin, and $10 billion return to shareholders by 2028.

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RISKS

  • China and European markets remain weak, with continued softness in the chemical and automotive verticals. Management described China as turning "a little more bearish" and expects low single-digit negative growth in 2026.
  • Software contract renewal dynamic is expected to reduce adjusted EBITDA margin by approximately 40 basis points and adjusted EPS by $0.05 for the full year.
  • Intelligent Devices margin decreased 70 basis points year over year, attributed to geographic mix and unfavorable FX effects experienced in the prior period.
  • Safety and Productivity segment margin declined by 40 basis points year over year, due to lower volume partially offset by price and cost reductions.

SUMMARY

Emerson Electric (EMR +2.33%) entered the year with 9% underlying order growth and strong backlog momentum, which management stated supports guidance for mid-single-digit sales growth in the second half.

Multiple large-scale wins, particularly in power generation and LNG, and continued adoption of proprietary AI-enabled software were central to management's outlook. Confirmed capital returns and incremental improvements in earnings guidance signaled confidence in sustained cash generation and strategic execution.

  • CFO Baughman described the AI threat to Emerson Electric's software as "And really as a counterpoint, AI capability we're building into our software should frankly accelerate the growth."
  • Order momentum was highest in the U.S, with North America orders up 18% and India up 22%. Management cautioned that 18% growth rates are not expected to persist, but high single-digit growth in North America is anticipated.
  • Ram Krishnan reported DRAM supply chain extensions with manageable margin impacts. He emphasized availability rather than inflation as the key risk, primarily outside the sensors business.
  • Management stated, "We are reiterating our full-year guidance for sales, adjusted segment EBITDA margin, and free cash flow. We are raising the bottom and midpoint of our 2026 adjusted EPS guide and now expect $6.4 to $6.55."
  • Strategic innovations, including the upgraded Nigel.ai and DeltaV version 16, were highlighted as drivers for differentiated growth and customer adoption.
  • CFO Baughman projected margin leverage in the high 30s to 40s for the second half and affirmed that positive price and synergy realization would support targeted profitability improvements.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Ovation: Emerson Electric's platform for power generation automation and control.
  • DeltaV: Emerson Electric's process automation system supporting flexible architectures and advanced analytics.
  • LabVIEW: Graphical programming environment for test, measurement, and automation, originally developed by National Instruments.
  • ACV (Annual Contract Value): The annualized value of recurring software contracts.
  • MRO (Maintenance, Repair, and Operations): Non-capital expenses and activities related to maintaining and operating equipment.
  • PXI: PCI eXtensions for Instrumentation, a modular electronic instrumentation platform.
  • DRAM: Dynamic random-access memory, a type of semiconductor memory used in computing devices.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Surendralal Karsanbhai: Thank you, Doug, and good afternoon, everyone. Thursday, February 5, marks my fifth anniversary as Chief Executive of Emerson Electric Co. Over the five years, I have found the work challenging, motivating, and rewarding. The execution of our vision to transform Emerson Electric Co. into the world's leading automation company has been incredibly gratifying. We aligned the company to important secular drivers, which will experience outsized growth well into the future. Our customer engagement teams now deliver an unequaled software-enabled technology stack to solve the industry's biggest challenges. I am surrounded by the best management team in industrial tech and by 70,000 talented, engaged colleagues all around the world.

The Emerson Electric Co. management system will enable best-in-class execution led by growth, earnings, cash, and resulting in differentiated value creation. I remain ever grateful to Emerson Electric Co.'s Board of Directors, employees, and investors for their trust and support. Please turn to Slide 3.

In November, we hosted our first investor conference since completing our transformation, and it was energizing to present Emerson Electric Co. as the global automation leader, executing on our vision to engineer the autonomous future. In addition to highlighting our technology advancements and innovation, we introduced our value creation framework, which guides how we operate the company. Beginning with organic growth, Emerson Electric Co.'s automation portfolio is aligned to powerful secular tailwinds: electrification, energy security, and near-shoring and sovereign self-sufficiency. We expect these to drive growth over the next three years and beyond. We are also delivering innovation that enables customers to unlock significant value from automation. Operational excellence is a hallmark of Emerson Electric Co., and we have plans to further expand adjusted segment EBITDA margins by 240 basis points by 2028. Importantly, we plan to return $10 billion or 70% of cumulative cash to shareholders through $6 billion of share repurchase and $4 billion of dividend payout.

We remain confident in achieving our 2028 targets: the $21 billion top line, 40% incrementals that deliver a 30% adjusted segment EBITDA margin, $8 of adjusted EPS, and a 20% free cash flow margin. We believe this is a highly differentiated value creation framework, and we are excited for the future of Emerson Electric Co. Please turn to Slide 4.

2026 marks the fiftieth anniversary of National Instruments, which was founded in Austin, Texas, in 1976 by James Truchard, Jeff Kodowski, and Bill Nolan. The trio was frustrated by the inefficient tools they encountered while working in a test lab at the University of Texas and believed connecting instruments to a computer could revolutionize electronic test and measurement. They developed LabVIEW while working out of Truchard's garage, and since its release in 1986, LabVIEW has redefined productivity and engineering workflows through software-defined test. Today, Emerson Electric Co.'s NI is the leader in test automation systems, and two recent developments demonstrate how Emerson Electric Co. is still driving tests forward through software.

In January, our Nigel AI advisor was one of 13 products recognized as a 2025 product of the year by electronic product design and test. This UK-based trade publication focuses on electronic test validation and manufacturing, and their annual list highlights products that use innovation to achieve even greater levels of performance. Nigel provides intelligent workflows with AI-driven test design and orchestration to accelerate troubleshooting, optimize lab performance, and enhance decision-making. This award demonstrates Emerson Electric Co.'s leadership in AI-enabled test automation and reflects continued momentum as we move the industry towards autonomous test operations. Nigel.ai is purpose-built to support specific tasks engineers face throughout the different stages of the product life cycle.

Today, Emerson Electric Co. released the next generation of Nigel.ai, strengthening our capabilities in AI-enabled test. These upgrades deliver step-changing performance by moving Nigel.ai from an AI assistant to an AI author, accelerating code development to make engineering workflows more efficient from design and validation through production. Processes that previously took hours can now be completed in minutes. For our customers, this means engineers spend less time navigating tasks and more time focused on improving test outcomes. This evolution marks a clear step along our roadmap towards AgenTeq AI, software increasingly enhances productivity, and we are seeing accelerated user adoption of LabVIEW since the first launch of Nigel in 2025. Please turn to Slide 5.

Robust demand continued in the first quarter, with underlying orders growth of 9%. Customers are deploying capital in longer cycle projects in our growth verticals, with momentum building in North America, India, and The Middle East and Africa. I will discuss more details on demand on the next slide. Emerson Electric Co.'s first quarter results reflect disciplined execution. Underlying sales met expectations and were up 2% year over year. Momentum continued in Test and Measurement, up 11% year over year, and our 20%. Driven by the secular demand for power. Profitability exceeded expectations with adjusted segment EBITDA margin of 27.7% and adjusted earnings per share of $1.46.

Annual contract value of our software grew 9% year over year and ended the quarter at $1.6 billion. We remain confident in our plans for 2026, supported by a good start to the year and our proven track record of operational excellence. We are reiterating our guidance of 5.5% sales growth, 4% underlying sales growth, and an adjusted segment EBITDA margin of approximately 28%. We are also raising the bottom and midpoint of our adjusted EPS guide and now expect $6.4 to $6.55 per share. Emerson Electric Co. completed $250 million of share repurchase in the first quarter, and we are committed to our plans to return approximately $2.2 billion of capital to shareholders.

Finally, I want to highlight multiple key developments in technology and innovation at Emerson Electric Co. In January, Emerson Electric Co. was named the 2026 Industrial IoT Company of the Year by IoT Breakthrough, marking the fourth time in the past five years we have received this recognition. Over 4,000 companies were nominated globally for the 2026 competition, and Emerson Electric Co. was selected for having the most complete industrial IoT technology stack. Additionally, we released DeltaV version 16, which advances our software-defined automation vision and is an integral piece of our enterprise operations platform.

With flexible architecture and enterprise integration, DeltaV version 16 empowers customers to make smarter decisions by improving access and providing context to operational data to facilitate advanced analytics and AI optimization. Lastly, we strengthened our leadership position in life sciences through a strategic collaboration with Roche, underscoring how Emerson Electric Co. software dramatically improves and shortens the technology transfer process. The new DeltaV modality library enables life science customers to efficiently design, scale, and deploy new production processes with prebuilt and proven solutions that save months of development. Please turn to Slide 6.

Underlying orders were up 9%, marking four consecutive quarters of strong order growth. Breaking twelve-month orders are up 6%, providing the backlog to support sales in 2026 and into 2027. North America, India, and The Middle East and Africa continue to show robust demand, while we are seeing ongoing softness in Europe and China. Orders growth was most pronounced in our Software and Systems group, which was up 23% year over year. Broad-based strength in Test and Measurement drove orders growth of 20%, led by semiconductor, aerospace and defense, and the portfolio business. AI and digital transformation of manufacturing are leading customers to deploy significant capital towards greenfield and modernization projects for power generation, especially in The U.S.

Orders in our Ovation business were up 74%, driven by large project wins, including behind-the-meter data centers and fleet modernizations for major utility customers. We expect growth in the mid-teens for the year. We are also seeing healthy investments in grid digitization with ACB and AspenTech's digital grid management suite up 25% year over year. Secular tailwinds are driving substantial long-cycle project activity, and Emerson Electric Co. won approximately $450 million of automation content from our project funnel in the quarter. 80% of these wins came from our growth verticals, led by power and LNG.

Our funnel remains at $11.1 billion, replenished by new opportunities in our growth verticals, and I want to highlight a few projects that support our confidence in continuing to win at high rates. First, Emerson Electric Co. was chosen to automate on-site power generation for a new 1.7 gigawatt AI data center in The United States, helping to meet accelerated deployment timelines and mission-critical reliability. The project will leverage proven behind-the-meter power generation management software as part of the Ovation platform, enabling faster time to market for the customer.

Emerson Electric Co.'s recently announced strategic collaboration with Prevalon Energy played an instrumental role in our selection for this project, as the collaboration brings together Emerson Electric Co.'s automation and control expertise with advanced energy storage to help data center operators improve reliance, resilience, reliability, and efficiency in increasingly power-constrained environments. Next, Emerson Electric Co. was selected for Sempra Infrastructure's Port Arthur LNG Phase two project, which will add 13 million tonnes per annum in capacity to The U.S. Gulf Coast facility. Emerson Electric Co.'s DeltaV control system and severe service control valves were chosen based upon our reputation for strong operational performance in LNG applications and our local presence and support.

Lastly, Emerson Electric Co. won projects at multiple large new space customers. It will help develop, test, and validate complex communication links for their satellite-based programs to provide reliable, high-speed Internet around the world. The customers will use NI's leading test and PXI platform, which were selected due to their superior performance in reducing test times while providing best-in-class measurement accuracy. I will now turn the call over to Michael Baughman to discuss our results and 2026 guidance in more detail.

Michael Baughman: Thanks, Lal. Please turn to Slide 7 for a more in-depth look at our Q1 financial results. As a reminder, our first-half financial results are adversely affected by a software contract renewal dynamic that we detailed in our November earnings call. This impacted our Q1 year-over-year sales growth by approximately one percentage point, adjusted segment EBITDA margin expansion by 70 basis points, and earnings per share growth by $0.06. For Q1, and including the one-point drag, underlying sales growth was 2% with all segments reporting growth. Growth was led by software and systems, which was up 36% without the software contract renewal dynamic, while Intelligent Devices grew 2% and Safety and Productivity was up 1%.

I will provide more details on geographic and group performance on the next two slides. Price contributed three points to growth as expected. MRO for the company represented 65% of sales. Our backlog ended the quarter at $7.9 billion, up 9% year over year, and our book-to-bill was 1.13. Adjusted segment EBITDA margin of 27.7% came in above expectations. Favorable price cost and cost reductions, including synergies, outpaced inflation to benefit margin. Excluding the 70 basis point impact from the software dynamic, adjusted segment EBITDA margin was up 40 basis points. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $1.46, a 6% increase year over year.

Q1 free cash flow of $202 million with a margin of 14% came in slightly better than expected, positioning us well for our expected full-year growth of approximately 10% at greater than 18% margin. Overall, Q1 was a very good start to 2026. Please turn to Slide 8 for details on Q1 underlying sales by region.

As expected, underlying sales were strongest in The U.S. and The Middle East and Africa, while China remained soft. The Americas were up 3%, and The U.S. remained strong, up 6%, with sustained momentum in power and LNG while also benefiting from near-shoring with expansions in life sciences and semiconductor. North America's pace of business remained healthy with resilient MRO spend. Europe was up 3%, benefiting from the timing of projects in Eastern Europe, although the overall pace of business was subdued. 9% growth in The Middle East and Africa was driven by greenfield project activity. We are seeing broad-based momentum in our growth verticals, which collectively were up 14%.

Power led the strength, up 17%, with elevated activity across lifetime extensions, upgrades, and greenfield projects to support the unprecedented increase in electricity demand. Life Sciences also provided significant growth driven by GLP-one demand with greenfield and modernization products to support near-shoring and self-sufficiency in multiple regions. Ongoing strength in North America and The Middle East, as well as our growth verticals and sustained demand for automation, give us confidence in our full-year outlook. Please turn to Slide 9 for details on sales and margin performance for our three business groups.

Software and Systems underlying sales growth of 3% was led by broad-based strength in Test and Measurement, which was up 11% and helped offset a three-point drag from the software contract renewal dynamic in Q1. We saw significant growth in power, life sciences, semiconductor, and aerospace and defense. Software and Systems margin of 31.3% increased 20 basis points year over year, driven by strong profitability from Test and Measurement and the benefit of synergies offsetting a two-point headwind from the software contract renewal dynamic. Intelligent Devices underlying sales growth of 2% was led by Power, LNG, and North America MRO, offset by weakness in China.

The pace of business in Europe and China was light, although Q1 growth in Europe benefited from the timing of projects. Intelligent Devices margin of 26.9% decreased by 70 basis points year over year, driven primarily by mix and headwinds from FX due to a favorable impact last year. Safety and Productivity was up 1% underlying, driven by electrical products and stable project activity in North America, while European markets remain soft. Safety and Productivity's margin of 20.9% was down 40 basis points year over year due to lower volume offset by benefits from price and cost reductions. Please turn to Slide 10, where I will bridge Q1 adjusted EPS from the prior year.

Excluding the $0.06 impact of software renewals, operations delivered $0.10 of incremental EPS in Q1. Software and Systems contributed $0.08, reflecting strong operational execution, and Intelligent Devices added $0.02. Non-operating items added $0.04 from share count and tax rate benefits. Overall, adjusted EPS grew 6% year on year to $1.46. Please turn to Slide 11 for an overview of our Q2 and full-year 2026 guidance. We are reiterating our full-year guidance for sales, adjusted segment EBITDA margin, and free cash flow. We are raising the bottom and midpoint of our 2026 adjusted EPS guide and now expect $6.4 to $6.55.

We still expect to return approximately $2.2 billion to shareholders through $1.2 billion in dividends and $1 billion of share repurchase, of which we completed $250 million in Q1. Turning to the second quarter, sales growth is expected to be 3% to 4% with underlying sales growth of 1% to 2%. We expect adjusted segment EBITDA margin of approximately 27% and adjusted EPS of $1.5 to $1.55. I will provide additional details on guidance in the following two slides. Please turn to Slide 12 for our 2026 group underlying sales guidance.

We expect Software and Systems to be flat in Q2 and up 4% for the full year. Test and Measurement is planned to have high single-digit growth in both Q2 and the full year, while the Control Systems and Software segment is expected to be down low single digits in Q2 due to a $65 million headwind from the timing of software contract renewals. As a reminder, this accounting dynamic adversely affects GAAP revenues by $110 million in the first half and $120 million for the full year. We continue to see robust adoption of our software and expect ACV to grow 10% plus in 2026.

Intelligent Devices is projected to grow 2% to 3% in Q2 and 4% for the full year, with stable MRO led by strength in North America. Second-half growth is supported by backlog phasing and the timing of project shipments. Safety and Productivity is expected to grow 1% to 2% in Q2 and 2% to 3% for the full year. Growth is driven by North American markets and electric and utility strength but offset by continuing weakness in European markets.

Overall, Emerson Electric Co. expects to grow 1% to 2% in Q2 and approximately 4% for the full year. The second-half growth acceleration to approximately 6% is supported by our strong orders momentum and lapping of the software contract renewal dynamic. Excluding the impact of software contract renewals, Emerson Electric Co.'s growth rate is expected to be 3% to 4% for Q2 and 5% for the full year. Please turn to Slide 13 for additional detail on adjusted segment EBITDA margin and EPS guidance.

For Q2 2026, we expect operations to contribute around $0.05 to EPS with another $0.09 from non-operating items, primarily off FX, to offset a $0.09 impact from the software contract renewal dynamic. As a reminder, Q2 2025 adjusted EPS of $1.48 benefited from about $0.04 from the Total Energy's project that we discussed in our Q2 2025 earnings call. The lower volume from renewals in the Total Energy Energies deal impacts Emerson Electric Co.'s adjusted segment EBITDA margin by approximately 150 basis points compared to Q2 2025. We are guiding our Q2 2026 adjusted EPS at $1.5 to $1.55. For the full year, we are raising the bottom of our EPS guide by $0.05, reflecting the good performance in Q1.

The renewal dynamic reduces adjusted EPS by approximately $0.05 and adjusted segment EBITDA margin by approximately 40 basis points. We still expect operations to generate about $0.50 of incremental EPS with approximately 80 basis points of margin expansion from positive price cost and the continued benefit of synergy realization from AspenTech and Test and Measurement. With that, I would like to turn the call back to the operator.

Operator: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. We also ask each person in the queue to limit themselves to only one question and one follow-up to allow everyone a chance. Our first question comes from the line of Andrew Kaplowitz with Citigroup. Please proceed with your question.

Andrew Kaplowitz: Good afternoon, everyone. Hi, Andy. Lal, could you break down a bit more your 9% order growth in Q1 between process and hybrid? I think you said 74% Ovation growth, which was impressive. And I think you said the mid-teens growth in Power is expected this year. But could that higher level behind-the-meter power opportunities lead to a more extended run rate of power? And then generally, would you say your process in hybrid markets settling into sort of this mid-single-digit order growth rate despite some of the concerns that we hear out there?

Surendralal Karsanbhai: Yes. No, look, we were very let me start with Power, very energized with what we saw in the marketplace. It's, as you know, started to develop in 2025. But we saw certainly an acceleration in orders in the first quarter. And it's predominantly driven by two areas today, but there'll be a third that think starts to pick up steam as we go forward into the year. And the two areas are modernization of existing facilities and behind-the-meter power generated capacity of data centers. That's generally what drove the investment in the power generating capacity.

Of course, on the same line, we saw modernizations of the grid and investments in our and we saw that reflected in the ACV of our DGM business.

Michael Baughman: At Aspen. What we'll see I think, develop a little bit more further longer cycle, Andy, will be new generating capacity coming in.

Surendralal Karsanbhai: We see plans being put forward. We're really, right now, evergreen modernizations and behind-the-meter work. I'll also highlight in terms of the order drivers, the activity at test and measurement. Orders were up 20% in the Q And Andy, it was broad-based. Portfolio business, semiconductor and ADT all up between twenty percent and thirty plus percent. The one offset there continues to be the Transportation segment. Which is relatively challenged. But overall, great momentum in that business and we've seen very steady, consistent growth there. Ram, anything to add?

Ram Krishnan: Yes. Just to add, I'll give you geographic color.

Michael Baughman: On the 9%. Lal gave it to you by business. But North America was up 18%, reflecting many of the

Surendralal Karsanbhai: end markets that Lal described

Michael Baughman: certainly power, LNG, many of the t m T and M markets in North America were very strong. Middle East was up 6% for us. Latin America was up 9%. So those fundamentally drove the spring. India was up 22%. So consistent with the commentary where we thought we had strength, we demonstrated a lot of positive momentum that should continue. Certainly, Europe was down low single digits and China was down high single digits in the quarter from an orders perspective.

Surendralal Karsanbhai: Then the last thing I'll add, Andy, just

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: on the funnel and the projects. It was a significant, as we highlighted, 32,000,000 of wins that came from approximately 70 project wins. Onethree of those were in power. But they had heavy participation in LNG, and in semiconductor life science and ADG as well. With each of those, representing about 15% of the wins. So lots of broad-based activity, but of course, power generating transmission and distribution really driving the numbers right now.

Andrew Kaplowitz: Lal, that's very helpful. And then ACV growth was 9% in the quarter. Are you still talking about expected 10% plus growth for the year? As you know, there's angst regarding AI's on software. So I think you already spoke about Nigel.ai. I know you've talked about the greater vision of balanced automation. So maybe you can remind us

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: why AI could be complementary to growth for you guys in ACV and

Ram Krishnan: margin in your software businesses?

Michael Baughman: Yes. For us, from a software perspective, first off, all of our software offerings are built on first principle models. Very, very sticky and a lot of domain knowledge built into these simulation capabilities, not just at Aspen, but also our offerings. With Ovation, DeltaV and certainly the VI suite. So the threat of AI disrupting our software business is very minimal as we see it today. And really as a counterpoint, AI capability we're building into our software should frankly accelerate the growth.

So we see AI and all the AI capabilities we launched, not just with Nigel, but also the capabilities, innovation and DeltaV should be a net accelerator for software offerings, and that's really what we expect to see with continued ACV growth.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: Helpful, guys.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Nigel Coe with Wolfe Research. Please proceed with your question.

Nigel Coe: Thanks. Good afternoon.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: Going back to the order commentary, you obviously caught up LNG caught up

Surendralal Karsanbhai: power.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: Obviously, these are two very long cycle

Surendralal Karsanbhai: end markets. I'm just wondering if

Michael Baughman: of the orders we've seen, especially in power, are pushing beyond this year and into sort of multiyear phases.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: Yes, you're absolutely right. Certainly, it's given us the confidence not just in the back half of 2026 as we see the backlog timing. And but we start to gain confidence into our 2027 as we see those orders. And that timing of those shipments. But I also suggest, Nigel, that if you look at the test and measurement business, that's there are projects in that business, but there's a lot more of the short cycle activity, particularly in the portfolio business, and in elements of semiconductor as well.

Michael Baughman: Okay. And then a quick follow-up myself. Quick follow-up on the I guess, the Sensors is the new name. The Sensors margins were down, I think, 200 basis points year over year. I think you talked about FX benefits in the prior. Year quarter. Is there any impact of memory chip inflation here? Because if there's one area of Emerson Electric Co. where you might see some of this accumulation, think it might be there. So just maybe just touch on the margin weakness and then talk about the memory chip inflation as well.

Nigel Coe: Nigel, it's Mike. Yes, your memory is very good. We did last year have some FX benefits that were in that segment. That we don't have this year, which drove about one point of the year over year negative comparison of about two points. The other things going on there related to mix. There was geographic mix

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, please standby with the technical difficulties. Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your patience. We will resume. And you may continue.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: Nigel, that was such a great question. They just try to get in the call on that. Okay. It's Nigel. Seriously, I think I broke the system.

Michael Baughman: So Nigel, where did we drop? So we can where did we drop?

Nigel Coe: Think you were talking about geographic mix, and then I went to

Michael Baughman: Did I did I did I finish the DRAM explanation on

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: or not?

Nigel Coe: No. Not nothing on DRAM. Okay. Okay. Let's go back to you.

Michael Baughman: Let's go back to your question, Nigel, about sensors margins. And I was commenting that you were correct about the FX impact, which was about one point of the approximately two points that the sensor margin was down on a year over year basis. There was also some mix dynamics that the prior year had a stronger North America and some backlog dynamic going on that benefited them. And then there's some other regional mix that affected profitability that sensors business had a good quarter in Europe, which was largely project based, which had a negative effect on the comparisons as well in the net So that was about the other point of margin decline in that business.

As we look out to the full year, we expect some improvement on the 28.6% that, that business reported in the in the prior year. As for the second part of your question around the DRAM, from a profitability perspective, no impact, but I'll pass it to Ram to talk a little bit about that. So Nigel, we're obviously watching that carefully. We buy about $8 million of

Ram Krishnan: DRAMs that impact many product lines, but most in control systems and software and T and M The sensors, to your specific question, less than $1 million of DRAM exposure. Of that, most of our buy is really Gen three and Gen four, DDR3 and four. Where, yes, supply chains have extended. We're watching that carefully. We don't have a lot of exposure in Gen five DDRs, which is really the AI driven constraints and inflation that we're seeing. But net for us, the margin impact from the price inflation is something very manageable. We'll manage that within the scope of our P and L.

It's really the availability that we're watching very carefully and making sure that we're addressing this with our suppliers and ensuring that we have enough availability to cover the year and beyond.

Nigel Coe: That's great color. Thanks, guys.

Michael Baughman: Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Steve Tusa with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question.

Shigusa Kotoko: Hi, this is Shigusa Kotoko on for Steve. Thanks for taking my question. Just following up on the orders, the order trends are encouraging and the backlog is up quarter over quarter too. But just there's longer cycle orders in there too, as you mentioned, earlier. And so just how should we think about the cadence of these orders translating into sales? And what businesses specifically do as expect to hit the second half that supports the full year guidance?

Ram Krishnan: Yes. I mean so if you looked at the phasing of the back backlog, they're very supportive of hitting our second half sales. So these backlogs translate into the mid single digit growth, tell the percent growth that we've guided for the second half. Our trailing twelve month orders at 6% also substantiate that. Our backlog at $7.9 billion which is up 9% also phase into the second half and into the 2027. The backlog build is frankly across the board, certainly in our control systems and software business, both in power as well as our Delta V business. In Final Control, we have a balanced backlog position in our sensor business to support the second half.

So the build is across the board.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Sprague with Vertical Research Partners. Please proceed with your question.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: Thanks. Good afternoon, everyone. Well, congrats five years. Can't believe it. That's amazing. Time does fly. Sure, it only seems like four and a half to you. Right?

Michael Baughman: Just a just a couple quick ones from me. Mike, thanks for all those bridge items. One thing I was curious about, though, is just the drop in sequential margins Q1 to Q2 on what should be

Ram Krishnan: maybe a couple 100,000,000 higher revenues sequentially. Give us a little bit of insight on what would be driving that?

Michael Baughman: Yes, go ahead. Yes, it's

Ram Krishnan: primarily the impact of the software renewal dynamic even sequentially. I mean, the 65 over the 45 and the dilution driven by that is the fundamental driver. And frankly, unfavorable mix. And totality of the Jeff, that came through that was

Michael Baughman: another boost to the barrier that won't that won't be there.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: And thank you for that.

Michael Baughman: And those software numbers have moved around a little bit, right? I think you were thinking $50 million in Q1 and it's $40 million It like Q2 went up a little bit. Think you were saying $60 million That's correct. So just, yeah. Yes, just a little bit of movement there. Could you just also just address sort of the weak verticals and do you see stabilization? I'm thinking chem probably most notably, but some of these areas that have been just under a lot of secular pressure and this whole deindustrialization trend that's ongoing and Europe chemicals. Do you see any bottom there? Is that eroding your MRO activity?

And I don't know if there's any other verticals to kind of kind of talk about also.

Michael Baughman: Yes. Certainly, Jeff, you hit a very important point here. We're seeing continued flat activity in Europe for the year. Certainly, are industries such as automotive packaging, but certainly chemicals. In places like Benelux in Germany that are still very challenged. And then our outlook on China has turned a little more bearish as we navigated another quarter. We now believe that we'll be down low single digits for the year. Based, again, on lackluster activity in particularly the chemical sector. There are some green shoots in China, of course. There's activity that Test and Measurement is seeing that's very encouraging. There's power generation activity.

But a large chemical business, which we've had for and foster for many years, continues to be And we have not seen challenging and we've not seen recovery in that business in either one of those large world areas.

Ram Krishnan: And then certainly, the automotive segment, which is not as big as chemical for us, but certainly a meaningful part of

Operator: parts of safety and productivity and T and M is

Ram Krishnan: continues to remain soft in both Europe and China.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: Yeah.

Operator: Yeah.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: Okay. Great. Thanks for the color, guys. Good luck. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Julian Mitchell from Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Julian Mitchell: Hi,

Michael Baughman: Maybe just wanted to understand kind of your own perspectives on the order strength. So I guess, first off, was

Ram Krishnan: it a surprise to you what those orders did or it was sort of in the plan based on what you knew of the dollar value of orders a year ago that we really see on the outside? And I said I'm asking that just because you didn't change your organic sales guide for the year. In the second quarter, we don't seem to see a sort of short cycle pull through into intelligent devices revenue growth, for example, from these orders?

Michael Baughman: Yes. I mean, I think what this now, obviously, I we didn't expect a

Surendralal Karsanbhai: plus 9%. So there were some projects from Q2 that we got into Q1. But certainly,

Michael Baughman: the last 44%, plus 4%, plus 6%, plus nine on a trailing three month plus 6% is consistent. The mid single digits is consistent with how we thought about how first half of this year will unfold. And provide the needed momentum to deliver on the second half shipments. So I wouldn't say we're necessarily surprised by the level of order activity. It's consistent with how the funnel has manifested and these growth initiatives in LNG power semis, aerospace and life science is playing out.

Jeffrey Todd Sprague: I think you bring up a good point in intelligent devices, Julien. We've been certainly, we had a phenomenal year as we worked through backlog in that business in 2024 and 2025. We're now at a point where we've been a little challenged over the last few quarters in the business. We'll see that accelerate in the second half. As we work our way out of it, but it will be another softer quarter in Q2, and that will be largely behind us.

Julian Mitchell: Thanks very much. And then just my follow-up on the margin. So you've clarified second quarter, but second half of the year, I think you're dialing in kind of 40s type operating leverage year on year. So just wanted to make sure that's roughly the right ballpark and when you're thinking about that, is there any risks to it around price cost for example? Or do you think that's a good kind of you're confident in it and it's a good run rate going into the following fiscal year?

Michael Baughman: Yes. We feel good about that leverage. You're correct, it's the expectation for the year is in that high 30s which again is affected by the software renewal dynamic. But we do feel good about that. The leverage for the quarter of 20% when you adjust for that software renewal is back up in the mid-30s. So, yeah, I think as we move forward and think about the profitability and the growth and the leverage that we should see from the growth, we feel good about the expected leverage for the year in the back half.

Ram Krishnan: And the other way to look at the leverage is obviously on a sequential basis, half two to half one will be up mid to high single digits from a growth perspective, and that should lever in the forties. So you can look at it year over year. You can look at it sequentially, and I think you'll calibrate that the second half margins will trend towards that 28% plus in terms of EBITDA margins.

Michael Baughman: Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Obin with Bank of America. Please proceed with your question.

Andrew Obin: Yes, good afternoon. Hi, Andrew. Hey, how are you? Just on the 3% pricing

Michael Baughman: what should we be thinking about for the second half?

Scott Reed Davis: How should it flow?

Ram Krishnan: 2% approximately in the second half or about 2% for the full year.

Scott Reed Davis: Got you. Thank you. And just going back to this 18% North America order number, it's very, very impressive. Can we just I know you've sort of talked about it, but it's just a nice acceleration and you know, I know you sort of talked about sort of pull forward and people have tried to see what's going on. But maybe can you just describe to us how did it go through the quarter? What are we seeing? Are we seeing this rate of orders sustainable? And what do you think has changed in North American economy to drive orders like this? And I appreciate that you have behind the meter.

I understand that you're a number of sort of high growth industries. And there are sort of idiosyncratic stories, but 18% is just very, very impressive.

Michael Baughman: Thank you, Andrew. I'll try to give a little color and Ram can jump in as well. So look, I believe and we're seeing it reflected in the customer activity that the industrial policy of the administration is benefiting five specific sectors that just happen to be our growth verticals. Electrification and power generation data centers, investments in AI, modernization of our grid and generating capacity, near shoring impacting life sciences, and semiconductor, a robust open energy policy that enables the development of shale gas and the export of LNG to our partners. And lastly, a defense policy that continues to modernize the American military apparatus, and we benefit from that through NIH.

So that industrial policy as holistically falls incredibly well in The United States and aligns to our technology stack serves incredibly well.

Ram Krishnan: Yes. And just to break it down,

Michael Baughman: on the 18%, a large majority of the $450 million in project wins came in North America from a power and LNG perspective. We indicated our Ovation business was up 74% in orders. A lot of it was in North America. T and M was up 20% in orders up close to 30% in North America. So the elements of LNG power semiconductors, aerospace, defense, life sciences, augmented with a strong MRO, which was up mid to mid to high single digit from an orders perspective drove the strength in North America.

Now we don't expect the 18% to continue through the quarter, but I think we're very confident that high single digit growth in North America is something we would bake into the plan.

Scott Reed Davis: Thank you for the full year.

Michael Baughman: Thank you very much. Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Scott Davis with Melius Research. Please proceed with your question.

Scott Reed Davis: Hey, good afternoon guys. Scott, how are you?

Michael Baughman: I'm good.

Scott Reed Davis: I have to ask this question even though I'm not sure

Ram Krishnan: going to be able to answer it with much precision. But on the opportunity out there in Venezuela and there's to be just a lot of old aging equipment in there that needs a refresh. But not sure if you guys have any color you could provide on that opportunity or whether you're already talking to customers about potentially having some boots on the ground there or what you can do to kind of make sure you can benefit from a rebuild?

Michael Baughman: So I appreciate the question, Scott. Certainly, a subject that we've we've renewed here in the walls of our company with our teams. We have a long established history in Venezuela. And relationship with Pineda Vista that goes back for decades. We estimate to have approximately $1 billion of installed base in the country. And largely, many of our channel partners, believe it or not, are still intact in the country, although we are not we've not been transacting in Venezuela since the sanctions. Have been transacting over the last two years directly with Chevron but sub million dollars a year. So we have a plan.

We've mobilized and thought through what investments we need to put back into the country. We'll watch to and see what happens with the with the national oil laws that need to be amended to enable foreign investment. Into Venezuela. But we believe that a market and you're absolutely right, there has been that it's been underinvested, lacks talent, is right for growth. So we'll see how things develop and we'll be ready to go in there and provide technology into those installations.

Ram Krishnan: Just to add to that, interestingly, as we looked at it, the first area that will probably go will be power. And so they'll they'll have to work on the power situation there, and there's an opportunity there for us as well.

Scott Reed Davis: And that's what I was gonna ask as a follow-up really is I'm thinking about traditional upstream

Michael Baughman: and perhaps

Scott Reed Davis: maybe not thinking as much about some of the other stuff including downstream or even other industries. I don't know Venezuela well enough to know if there's any infrastructure out there otherwise. But is there a wider TAM out there than perhaps just what we're talking about in oil and gas?

Michael Baughman: Yes. I think Mike's point on power generation is a valid one. But the biggest challenge the country is gonna have, Scott, is that there's been an incredible brains rain that's impacted Venezuela over the last twenty years. Lack of engineers, technical knowledge, And a lot of that has to be reestablished. Security situation needs to be improved. And investment capability needs to be enabled by their Congress. So we're ways away, but we'll watch it very carefully. And we're at least and to be honest, much like we did in Iraq after the Gulf War, becoming prepared so that we can hit the ground running.

Scott Reed Davis: Okay. Sounds good. Thanks guys and best of luck the rest of the year.

Michael Baughman: Thanks Scott.

Operator: Thank you. Our next last question will be from the line of Deane Dray with RBC Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.

Deane Dray: Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for fitting me in. Just a couple of quick ones. Any update on tariffs mitigation activity any color there?

Ram Krishnan: Yeah. I mean, obviously, a tariff perspective, the positive news on China, Aipa tariffs there, fentanyl tariffs going from twenty to ten. Now we did get some tariffs from where, you know, countries that don't have a trade agreement with Mexico and importing into have tariffs. So that's a little bit of headwind. But net, I and obviously, the development today, it early. But with India, has a meaningful impact. So I would say more favorability. We still haven't quantified versus we built in.

I mean, we built in don't know if we've shared the number, Doug, on the amount of tariffs we built in about a $130 million of tariffs into the plan We are seeing relief to that number, but it's early to quantify how much. But it will be a net positive for the year versus what we've baked into the plan. Got it. That's helpful. And then China's come up a couple different times I know it's not a new region of softness, but, Lyle, you mentioned it could be some green shoots. So, you know, what's the latest there? What's the opportunity? What are those green shoots you were referencing?

Michael Baughman: Yes. We've seen really good activity in the test and measurement space in a broad portfolio business. You know, we don't participate in the aerospace defense segment there. The semiconductor, where we allow to with the various sanctions and certainly in portfolio, And that business is up in the high double digits. So we feel very good about that. There are great opportunities and continue to be great opportunities in power generation. Again, there is a dynamic in China that very much aligns in The U. S. Around data center build out, AI infrastructure, and power generation needs. We're seeing new capacity come online as opposed to that wave hitting The U. S.

There were 25 ethylene coal fired power plants last year. There's a bunch of nuclear work to be done. As well as behind the meter work. So that's where we see the activity. But overall, still, I continue just overall concern that we'll be in a low single digit negative growth. By the time we're set and done this year.

Deane Dray: Understood. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen, we have we reached the end of the question and answer session. And this also concludes today's conference, and you may disconnect your line at this time. We thank you for your participation. Have a great day.