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DATE

Feb. 3, 2026 at 10 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Robert Reebroek
  • Chief Financial Officer — Charles Lischer

TAKEAWAYS

  • Net Sales -- $2.1 billion for the quarter, flat year over year as volume and pricing declined slightly by less than 1% each, offset by a $40 million foreign exchange benefit.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $311 million for the quarter, with a $40 million combined impact from competitive pricing and lower packaging volumes versus the year-ago period; foreign exchange added an $8 million tailwind.
  • Full-Year Net Sales -- $8.6 billion, down approximately 2%, with the Augusta divestiture accounting for a $150 million to $190 million decrease; pricing a 1% headwind and volumes flat, while foreign exchange was a $57 million tailwind.
  • Full-Year Adjusted EBITDA -- $1.4 billion, with a $174 million price and volume headwind not offset by $59 million in net performance, as commodity and operating cost inflation totaled $150 million.
  • Adjusted EPS -- $1.80 for the full year.
  • Net Leverage -- 3.8 times at year-end, influenced by EBITDA headwinds, Waco facility investments, and repurchasing over 2% of shares outstanding in 2025.
  • 2026 Net Sales Guidance -- $8.4 billion to $8.6 billion, based on volumes expected in the -1% to +1% range and innovation-driven growth expected to contribute approximately 2% of sales; guidance assumes $150 million total market and pricing headwind.
  • 2026 Adjusted EBITDA Guidance -- $1.05 billion to $1.25 billion reported; $1.2 billion to $1.4 billion pro forma, excluding temporary production curtailments tied to a $260 million inventory reduction.
  • 2026 Adjusted Free Cash Flow Guidance -- $700 million to $800 million, supported by a reduction in capital expenditures to $450 million, ongoing inventory drawdown, and tax legislation benefits.
  • Capital Expenditures -- $935 million in 2025, dropping to an expected $450 million in 2026, with spending moving to ≤5% of sales following completion of the Waco facility.
  • Waco Greenfield Project Spend -- $1.67 billion total including $80 million in capitalized interest, with $1.58 billion spent by year-end 2025.
  • Inventory Target -- Company aims to lower inventory to 15%-16% of sales from 20% at year-end by reducing both raw materials and finished goods.
  • Debt Reduction -- Management expects to pay down approximately $500 million of debt in 2026, with deleveraging highlighted as the highest near-term capital allocation priority.
  • Adjusted EPS 2026 Guidance -- 75¢ to $1.15 per share.
  • Incentive Compensation Restoration -- Approximately $100 million to be reinstated across 2,000+ employees in 2026 after being effectively zero in 2025, impacting cost structure and future cash flows.
  • Seasonality and Production Curtailment Timing -- First-quarter adjusted EBITDA expected to be $200 million to $240 million, with the heaviest production curtailments in the first half ($45 million in Q1, $40 million in Q2) and first-half EBITDA comprising 40%-45% of the annual total.
  • Cash Interest Expense 2026 -- Projected to be $255 million to $275 million.
  • Waco Facility Startup Costs -- $40 million in 2025, below the original expectation, with no further startup costs anticipated in 2026; these were excluded from adjusted EBITDA.
  • Transformation Office Established -- New function led by a chief transformation officer to drive operational improvements, cost savings, and productivity through AI deployment and process optimization.
  • Portfolio Review and Core Business Focus -- Comprehensive review initiated targeting enhanced returns by concentrating resources behind highly integrated, competitively advantaged segments, particularly North America and Europe food and beverage, with non-core businesses under evaluation.

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RISKS

  • EBITDA Margin Deterioration -- Charles Lischer reported that, "the pressure on adjusted EBITDA reflects a combination of unusual competitive pricing, and softer packaging volumes," while company-wide EBITDA margins declined from 19.9% in 2023 with further deterioration projected into 2026.
  • Bleached Paperboard Overcapacity -- CEO Robert Reebroek stated, "our smallest business is bleached paperboard, which is oversupplied with substantial new capacity," pressuring margins and resulting in pricing that is "still a little bit below the cost of capital."
  • Inventory Reduction Impact -- Management acknowledged that actions to remove approximately $260 million of inventory in 2026 will represent a one-time cash flow benefit that does not reflect normalized ongoing earnings power.
  • Elevated Leverage -- Company expects leverage to remain elevated in the near term "with the impact that our inventory reduction actions will have on adjusted EBITDA," even after planned debt paydown.

SUMMARY

Graphic Packaging Holding Company (GPK 17.66%) reported flat quarterly revenue, a full-year sales decline, and significant headwinds in both EBITDA performance and margin, citing continued pricing pressure and demand challenges. Management outlined a multi-year operational transformation focused on cost reduction, portfolio optimization, and disciplined capital allocation, including plans for a drastic reduction in capital spending and inventory. The company established a transformation office to drive restructuring, expects considerable capital freed up for debt reduction and potential shareholder returns, and has begun a comprehensive review of both its assets and organizational structure to align with evolving end-market dynamics and customer needs.

  • Management introduced guidance for 2026 that reflects ongoing margin compression and anticipates adjusted free cash flow to materially increase through non-recurring inventory and capital measures, temporarily supporting leverage metrics despite normalized earnings remaining under pressure.
  • Key end markets are characterized by weak demand and ongoing customer cost rationalization, while overcapacity in bleached paperboard continues to undermine pricing power and profitability in that segment.
  • The company’s leadership confirmed a commitment to restoring higher EBITDA margins but highlighted that improved profitability depends on cost actions, productivity measures, and a sustained recovery in demand and mix.
  • Graphic Packaging will prioritize reinvestment, deleveraging, and disciplined expansion into segments with durable competitive advantage, with the expectation that continued balance sheet improvement will enable increased share repurchases and future dividend growth once leverage targets are met.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Coated Unbleached Kraft (CUK): A type of strong, fiber-based paperboard used in packaging requiring high durability.
  • Coated Recycled Board (CRB): Paperboard manufactured from recycled fiber, coated to improve strength and print quality.
  • Solid Bleached Sulfate (SBS): Premium white paperboard produced from bleached virgin fiber, often used for high-end packaging and food containers.
  • EBITDA Margin: Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization expressed as a percentage of sales, providing insight into operating profitability.
  • Pro Forma: A financial figure that includes adjustments for nonrecurring items or events (such as inventory reductions or plant curtailments) to better reflect normalized earnings potential.
  • Integration (in packaging): Degree to which a company produces its own primary materials (such as paperboard) used in manufacturing finished goods, impacting control over cost and supply chain efficiency.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Robert Reebroek: Thank you, Mark. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Before we review our results, I would like to take a few minutes to introduce myself and share my perspective on the opportunities I see for Graphic Packaging. And to discuss my initial observations and key focus areas as we adjust our strategy to drive value for shareholders. I've spent more than twenty-five years leading global consumer brands and businesses, including leading a Fortune 500 division and serving as a public company CEO. I've lived and worked across North America, Europe, South America, and Australia.

Over that time, I've held leadership roles at Procter and Gamble, PepsiCo, Kimberly Clark, and Primo Brands where I gained experience operating complex businesses with global manufacturing, and supply chains and building consumer brands at scale. In several of these roles, I've been a customer of Graphic Packaging. And my teams worked closely with the Graphic Packaging team to design winning packaging solutions. Throughout my career, packaging design and procurement have been a major part of my work. In creating winning packaging, I worked directly with brand teams and retail including design and technical specifications, sustainability, and manufacturing requirements and performance needs. Notably, I worked on three innovative packaging solutions that went on to receive patent protection.

Packaging is a critical part of the consumer experience and I am aware of how packaging influences consumer purchasing decisions at the shelf, and how consumers interact with packaging at home. I understand how important packaging is to our customers across the consumer packaged goods, quick service restaurant, and retail industries. And I'm acutely aware of the challenges and opportunities our customers face in a world of GLP-one BAHA and the evolution of private label. I've also seen firsthand the exceptional quality of our packaging solutions. And the impact they have on customers, brands, and consumers.

I have a deep appreciation for the role we play not just in protecting products or reducing costs, but in shaping and enhancing brand perception. Enabling sustainability goals, and delivering exceptional quality and reliability. That perspective is what attracted me to Graphic Packaging. And it will shape how I approach the business and manage towards the substantial opportunities we have ahead. Today, I will spend some time on how I am assessing the business. What excites me about the foundation we have and where I see opportunities to significantly improve performance and create value for shareholders. Chuck will then walk you through our fourth quarter and full year results in our outlook.

Graphic Packaging is a world-class company with leading positions across attractive end markets. Strong relationships with many of the world's most respected consumer brands, and retailers and an industry-leading asset base that was built to provide a high level of integration and durable long-term competitive advantage. Our people, scale, and capabilities are significant strengths. We have an exceptional team and an industry-leading production footprint. Including a network of about 100 packaging facilities and the two highest quality and most efficient recycled paperboard manufacturing facilities in North America. In Waco and Kalamazoo, our superior innovation and technical capabilities are helping us build stronger, deeper customer relationships with leading CPGs, QSRs, and retailers.

While our manufacturing footprint and customer relationships are strong, we recognize that there is significant work to do. The actions we are taking now and will take place in the next several months are focused on unlocking Graphic Packaging's full potential to drive stronger performance and value for all our stakeholders. Our investors, communities, employees, customers, suppliers. When I stepped into the CEO role at the beginning of the year, we initiated a comprehensive operational, and business review. Including of the company's footprint, systems, and organization, selective portfolio assets, and financial performance. This review is underway now. I've already visited multiple facilities. Including Waco, Macon, and Perry.

Spent meaningful time with our leadership team and the board held a global town hall joined by several thousand of our employees, joined the leadership of select industry organizations, met with key customers, and spoken with several of our shareholders. These interactions with our most important stakeholders are informing our early actions. Recognizing the depth of talent in this organization and the need for continuity, we've taken steps to retain and attract top talents. We have also implemented select initial organizational and reporting changes to enhance transparency and accountability.

We established a transformation office led by our new chief transformation officer, who will work hand in hand with me to drive operational improvements, enhance productivity, and cost savings throughout the organization without disrupting customer service. We engaged external expertise to supplement our own resources as we evaluate opportunities to enhance profitability and drive growth and innovation. And we have initiated a comprehensive review of our organization structure and operations footprint. And a selective portfolio review to ensure that our resources are focused where we can create the greatest value for our shareholders.

Now that I have been in the role a little more than thirty days, I would like to share a few of my initial observations on the most meaningful opportunities within our control. One, the external environment remains challenged near term. Overcapacity commodity bleached paperboard markets are putting pressure on finished packaging. And demand trends for consumer staples remain uneven as a result of affordability and macroeconomic uncertainty. While we expect these trends to improve, we also acknowledge that consumer purchasing patterns and the dynamics between brands and private labels are evolving. We are not simply waiting for markets to recover. We are focused on what we can control where our resources have the best opportunities to create lasting value.

Two, the combination of softer than expected market demand and the need to build inventory out of the Waco startup led to paperboard and finished goods inventory levels higher than what we currently require. In addition, we need to right-size our cost structure for the realities of the current macroeconomic environment. We are taking immediate steps to address these issues that we believe will enhance our profitability over time. And drive free cash generation in 2026 and beyond. Three, we have the best and most efficient recycled paperboard manufacturing facilities in North America. However, our costs to complete these projects were higher than anticipated. Driving the need to quickly capture the value these assets can generate.

Four, we need to significantly reduce inventory and ensure that every spending decision brings an appropriate return. These steps should allow us to reduce our debt, which in turn would allow us to prioritize returning capital to our investors. Five, through the investments we have made, Graphic Packaging has strong and durable competitive advantages. However, I believe that there are select opportunities within the portfolio to better optimize our position over time and drive value creation for shareholders. And finally, we are a global leader in innovation, but we need to move more quickly from idea to commercialization. We are already working to more carefully align our innovation teams, with our best market opportunities with both new and existing customers.

This is a key source of differentiation for Graphic Packaging, and I believe that our innovation team is the best in the business. In sum, I see tremendous opportunity to create real value for shareholders by one, enhancing profitability through cost actions and operational efficiencies two. Reducing inventory and capital spending to drive significant free cash flow generation three, driving disciplined organic growth with innovation and exceptional customer service Four, prioritizing our free cash flow to reduce our leverage and return capital to shareholders and five) conducting a comprehensive business review. In 2026, we expect to generate adjusted free cash flow between $700 million and $800 million.

There are, of course, one-time items in our 2026 and also in our 2027 adjusted free cash flow projections. Particularly with respect to inventory reduction and cash taxes. As we look beyond that timeframe, we are targeting adjusted free cash flow of $700 million plus incremental EBITDA growth. Recognizing that our current adjusted EBITDA is substantially lower than it was projected to be when the company first established its Vision 2030 financial targets. When volume growth was expected to be positive. Restoring top-line growth and delivering stronger margins is central to our value creation plan. And key to delivering on the free cash flow generation potential of this exceptional company.

Achieving an investment-grade credit rating by 2030 remains a central element of our Vision 2030 commitments. Now let's take a minute to dive a little deeper into each of those objectives. Our EBITDA margins have come under pressure in recent years. Driven by both the external pricing and demand environments and our own cost structure. I believe that there is a meaningful opportunity to optimize our cost and better align with the current operating environment. While protecting the operational capabilities and market positions that make Graphic Packaging an industry leader. This effort spans SG and A manufacturing footprint and efficiency support functions and core processes. And includes extensive deployment of AI tools.

As previously mentioned, I have established a transformation office to lead the effort to strengthen accountability and drive operational excellence and enhance productivity and cost savings across our entire company without disrupting customer service. My goal is to simplify the organization, improve execution, and eliminate inefficiencies ensuring we can return profitable growth with a cost structure that supports both our near-term needs and our long-term objectives. Where it makes sense, we will also be adding additional talent and capabilities to drive stronger organic growth. I want to briefly address Waco and Kalamazoo. The Waco project is substantially complete, and already producing top-quality recycled paperboard to service our packaging system needs. Waco and Kalamazoo are world-class assets.

The highest quality and most efficient recycled paperboard manufacturing facilities in North America. While the Waco facility is large, its net impact on market capacity is quite small, after we closed two of our older higher-cost facilities and other producers closed capacity. Its impact on our cost of production, however, is substantial. And creates durable long-term competitive advantage. While the market has been weak a return to more normal consumer demand should put us in a strong position. To restore volume growth and help ensure that we can leverage our production cost advantage to drive the best possible returns from our world-class Waco and Kalamazoo assets. Total 2025 capital spend was $935 million higher than the company's target.

Total project spend for the Waco Greenfield facility which is substantially complete, is currently estimated at $1.67 billion when we include capitalized interest of approximately $80 million. Spending through 2025 totaled $1.58 billion. A review of the root causes of the higher than originally planned capital expenditures on the Waco project is underway. And appropriate corrective actions will be taken to prevent similar events from occurring in the future. Capital spending is expected to drop by approximately $485 million in 2026. Including the remaining spend to complete Waco and will remain at or below 5% of sales in the next several years even as we invest selectively in productivity and new capabilities.

As we exit the period of heavy capital investments, our opportunity to drive free cash flow improves significantly. We expect to reduce capital spending to approximately $450 million in 2026. And are raising the bar for new capital spending project approvals. At the same time, we are working to reduce our inventory balance towards our 15% to 16% of sales goal from an elevated 20% level at year-end.

Together with our ongoing cost actions, disciplined organic growth, and the continued ramp-up at Waco, we expect to generate $700 million to $800 million of free cash flow in 2026 as we benefit from ongoing inventory reductions, and a tax legislation passed last year and are targeting adjusted free cash flow of $700 million plus incremental EBITDA growth in the years ahead. This will give us the flexibility to significantly reduce leverage, return capital, and reinvest in the business over time. Our growth strategy is customer-centric and markets-backed. We are focused on disciplined organic growth. Putting our resources into markets with the best long-term opportunities. While reducing our exposure to markets where we see less opportunity.

We are partnering with key consumer packaged goods companies, quick service restaurants, and retailers to improve baseline volume growth, bring innovation to market faster, and in some cases selectively move into new end markets. In recent calls with customers, a recurring theme is the need to drive volume growth to protect or regain market share. We are ready to help our customers meet these goals. Our best-in-class packaging innovation unmatched scale, and exceptional customer service. We aim to be more than a supplier. Our goal is to be a trusted strategic partner to our customers. As part of this renewed commercial and customer focus, we recently promoted Jean Francois Oche to Chief Commercial Officer.

I see the value in his global role, and I am working with Jean Francois to ensure that we have the talent we need to drive sustainable growth. Innovation is one of Graphic Packaging's greatest competitive advantages. A strength that was built over decades in North America and enhanced by the acquisition of AR Packaging in Europe in 2021. Our global innovation team is helping us bring paperboard packaging into new markets often through plastic or foam replacements. Innovation has been a part of why we have been able to retain volume in the markets we serve. Innovations like Pacesetter Rangier, ProducePack, and VaporSeal are driving adoption in growing categories such as produce, fresh food, protein, household products, and wellness.

Delivering the more circular, more functional, and more convenient packaging solutions. That Graphic Packaging is known for. My priority here is to accelerate the speed of commercialization and ensure that our resources are focused on the most promising opportunities. With a broad portfolio that spans every grocery aisle both with brands and private labels, as well as food service, prioritizing where we put our resources is essential to driving real value creation. We aim to be the first choice for our customers. And believe that with our innovation, product quality, and exceptional customer service, we have the right to win in a more normalized macro environment. Finally, the key pillars of our capital allocation strategy are one.

Reducing our leverage two. Returning capital to shareholders and three. Identifying opportunities to optimize our footprint and portfolio over time. Today, our net leverage stands at 3.8 times. We are taking concrete steps to reduce debt. And move towards our target of an investment-grade rating by 2030. Deleveraging is our highest near-term capital allocation priority. We expect to pay down approximately $500 million of debt in 2026 but with the impact that our inventory reduction actions will have on adjusted EBITDA our leverage ratio is likely to remain elevated. A key priority. Returning capital to shareholders remains. We remain committed to returning capital through dividends, and opportunistic share repurchase. And expect to increase share repurchase activity as leverage declines.

Lastly, we will look for opportunities to optimize our footprint and our portfolio. Ensuring that capital, and management attention are focused on the areas where we have durable competitive advantage and attractive growth opportunity. The common thread across all of this is discipline. By improving execution, and cash generation, we will create a much stronger balance sheet that will provide the flexibility to allocate capital in a way that creates long-term value for shareholders. With that context, I'll turn it over to Chuck to walk through our fourth quarter and full year results.

Charles Lischer: Thank you, Robert. Turning to slide 13, I will begin with a summary of our fourth quarter and full year financial results. The fourth quarter, net sales were $2.1 billion basically flat year over year, by volumes and pricing, which were both down slightly less than 1%. More than offset by a $40 million foreign exchange benefit. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $311 million. As discussed in earlier quarters, the pressure on adjusted EBITDA reflects a combination of unusual competitive pricing, and softer packaging volumes which together reduced adjusted EBITDA by approximately $40 million versus the year-ago quarter.

Commodity and other operating cost inflation were in a similar range along with the negative performance as a result of the production curtailment decisions we made during the quarter to manage inventory. Foreign exchange was an $8 million tailwind. For the full year, net sales were $8.6 billion down approximately 2%. Augusta divestiture accounted for $150 million up $190 million decrease. Price was an approximately 1% headwind, and volumes were basically flat. While FX was a $57 million tail. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA was approximately $1.4 billion. Price and volume were a combined $174 million headwind, and net performance of $59 million was not enough to offset commodity input and operating cost inflation of approximately $150 million.

That performance was lower than normal as a result of production curtailments decisions we made primarily in the fourth quarter. The Augusta divestiture reduced adjusted EBITDA by $30 million and foreign exchange was a $13 million tailwind. Adjusted EPS for the full year was $1.80 and we ended the year with a net leverage of 3.8 times reflecting the headwinds to EBITDA investments at Waco, and our decision to repurchase more than 2% of shares outstanding. During 2025. Slide 14 lays out our current expectations for 2026.

We expect net sales in the range of $8.4 billion to $8.6 billion which assumes volumes in the range of down 1% to up 1% including the benefit of innovation sales growth which is expected to be approximately 2% of sales. That implies market volumes down approximately 2% at the midpoint reflecting our expectation of continued inflationary pressure and ongoing affordability challenges in the consumer staples market. While we do not comment on future pricing expectations, our guidance assumes a similar level of competitive pressure and packaging pricing as we saw in the fourth quarter and includes the expected impact of recent third-party announcements.

Taken together, these represent a $150 million headwind across 2026, at the midpoint of our guidance range. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $1.05 billion to $1.25 billion on a reported basis and $1.2 billion to $1.4 billion on a pro forma basis. Excluding the temporary impact of production curtailments related to our actions to remove approximately $260 million of paperboard and finished goods inventory in 2026. Our adjusted EBITDA guidance range also assumes a restoration of incentive compensation programs. Roughly $100 million figure represents approximately five of Graphic Packaging's total compensation cost and impacts over 2,000 employees. Given performance that was below expectations in both 2024 and 2025.

Incentive compensation awards were well below plan 2024 and effectively zero in 2025. A return to more normal incentive compensation assuming that we reach our performance targets, is important to employee retention, and attracting top talent. Adjusted cash flow is expected to inflect sharply upward in 2026 to $700 million to $800 million. This improvement is driven primarily by three factors. First, a step down in capital spending to $450 million. We will be reviewing all significant planned spending to ensure that it delivers appropriate returns. Second, the net benefit of our inventory reduction actions as we optimize inventory to our current production footprint and adapt to market demand realities.

And third, improved profitability through our renewed focus on disciplined organic growth operational excellence, SG and A, and other cost reductions. I look forward to partnering with the new transformation office that Robert established to improve our processes and better leverage technology and AI to drive fixed cost removal operating cost reductions, and productivity initiatives. Adjusted EPS is expected in the range of 75¢ to $1.15. While we do not generally provide quarterly guidance, we do want to highlight a few factors that are expected to affect the progression of sales and EBITDA in 2026. Normal sales seasonality is more pronounced in submarkets than others, but relatively modest overall.

In general, we tend to book something in the range of 23% of full-year net sales in the first quarter and 26% in the third quarter second quarter modestly higher than the fourth quarter. Adjusted EBITDA tends to follow that same pattern before discrete items. Scheduled maintenance at our paperboard manufacturing facilities will be heavier in the first half by approximately $15 million mostly in the second quarter and by about $10 million in the fourth quarter. There is no significant maintenance scheduled for the third quarter.

The production curtailments to reduce inventory that Robert mentioned are expected to be heaviest in the first half in the range of $45 million at the midpoint for the first quarter and roughly $40 million in the second quarter. Third-quarter curtailment activity is expected to be the lowest, since it is generally our busiest quarter. The actions that we are taking to reduce SG and A and other costs and to make operational improvements are expected to be moderately more back-end weighted. And finally, recent severe weather across Central And Eastern United States impacted operations at several facilities.

While we don't have a final tally, our best estimate of the impact on first-quarter adjusted EBITDA, is in the range of $20 million to $30 million. Taken together, normal seasonality and these discrete items imply that first-quarter adjusted EBITDA be in the range of $200 million to $240 million. We expect first-half adjusted EBITDA to be roughly 40% to 45% full-year adjusted EBITDA. And while we expect our effective tax rate to be in the range of 25% the full year, our first-quarter tax rate will likely be slightly higher than in subsequent.

Slide 15 walks through key drivers of the year-over-year adjusted EBITDA change and a bridge to our 2026 adjusted cash flow target of $700 million to $800 million starting from $1.4 billion adjusted EBITDA in 2025, there are several moving pieces worth highlighting. First, the incentive compensation that I mentioned earlier was not earned in 2025. Second, as noted earlier, price and volume outcomes are assumed to be negative overall. Reflecting the consumer affordability challenge and unusual competitive pressure and packaging pricing along with the impact of announced third-party price changes and bleach paperboard.

Third, the items over which have the most control and performance including the benefits from Waco and SG and A reductions, partially offset by January weather and production impacts, at between $100 million and $170 million. These gains will be partially offset by the one-time production curtailment impact as we reduce inventory levels. The actions we are taking to reduce inventory will generate cash flow in 2026, that do not reflect our normalized earnings power. Taken together, these factors are expected to result in 2026 adjusted EBITDA of between $1.05 billion and $1.25 billion or approximately $1.2 billion to $1.4 billion on a normalized basis.

On the right side of the page, we provide a bridge from expected 2026 adjusted EBITDA to expected 2026 adjusted free cash flow. The largest contributor to the incremental free cash flow in 2026 is capital expenditures, which are expected to decline to approximately $450 million. Additional contributors to 2026 adjusted cash flow expectations included in net working capital release from inventory reduction and lower cash taxes as a result of the 2025 tax law change. Incentive compensation is noncash in 2026. As it would be paid in 2027.

Cash interest is expected to be in the range of $255 million to $275 million and other working capital and cash items were expected to be a source of cash approximately $5 million at the midpoint. As Robert mentioned, our highest near-term capital allocation priority is to reduce debt given our current leverage position. We expect to pay down approximately $500 million of debt in 2026, which would put us on the path to an investment-grade credit rating by 2030. We remain committed to returning capital through dividends and opportunistic share repurchase activity and expect to increase share repurchase activity as leverage declines. In summary, 2025 reflected a challenging operating environment, it also represents the final year of heavy investment.

We're taking actions to optimize the company, drive operational efficiencies, and reduce inventories. We are entering a period where we expect will be defined by strong free cash flow generation significant balance sheet improvement and disciplined growth. With that, I'll turn it back to Robert.

Robert Reebroek: Thank you, Chuck. Graphic Packaging is a strong company with a world-class asset base. Deep customer relationships and leading positions across attractive end markets. Our mid to long-term shareholder value creation plan is clear. We will enhance profitability by optimizing our cost structure and driving greater operational efficiency. We will generate significant free cash flow through our actions to reduce inventory and reduce capital spending. We will focus on disciplined organic growth and deliver exceptional customer service. We will reduce debt on our path to investment grade, and return capital to shareholders through our dividend and opportunistic stock repurchase.

And after a thorough review, we will work to optimize our resources to ensure they are focused where we can create the greatest value for our shareholders. With that, operator, let's open it up for questions.

Operator: Certainly. Everyone at this time will be conducting a question and answer session. If you have any questions or comments, please press 1 on your phone at this time. We do ask that while posing your question, please pick up your handset if you're listening on speakerphone to provide optimum sound quality. We do ask that participants please ask one question and one follow-up, then reenter the queue. And once again, if you have any questions or comments, please press 1 on your phone. Your first question's coming from Matthew Burke Roberts from Raymond James. Your line is live.

Matthew Burke Roberts: Hey, Robert, Chuck. Good morning. Robert, welcome, and congratulations on the role. So when you joined, Robert, the board noted your strong CPG background and the timing, of course, coincided with Vision 2030. Those numbers are revised today. So ultimately, as you embark on that ninety-day review or look to your longer-term targets alike, what makes your approach different than what has come before at Graphic Packaging? Would you say it's more operationally focused to reach free cash flow commercial efforts more of a priority to ensure you're able to reach flat volumes in 2026?

Robert Reebroek: Thanks, Matt. Thank you for welcoming me. Yeah. I do wanna just recap a bit of my background. I did spend about thirty years in consumer brands. As a customer of Graphic. Not only in North America, but also in Europe, South America, Australia. So I bring a bit of a global perspective on the business, and I work at Procter and Gamble, Kimberly Clark, PepsiCo, and Primo. I have a background with complex businesses with global manufacturing and supply chains. And I have a lot of experience with packaging, design, procurements, and some prior experience, as you know, on tissue and towel manufacturing. And Brandy Millison tissue towel mill in Australia when I was running Kimberly Clark, Australian.

With regards to the approach, you know, I plan to focus on cost reduction. Productivity. Operational excellence, We wanna ensure we deliver a really good experience to our customers. I've had a number of calls with key customers over the last couple of weeks. Including yesterday, I spoke to two customers. These are customers across food service, beverages, and food, grocery, And, you know, they really need us to help them restore growth and therefore we need to stay very close to that. I'll bring a more disciplined approach to CapEx. Going forward. And focus on free cash flow generation to create value for our shareholders.

So with regards to customer centricity, I do believe in a market-backed approach and really partnering with our customers. We'll do a bit of a review of our manufacturing footprint to understand where we can consolidate and drive productivity. We do have to define where we have the right to win. Where we have competitive advantages, and focus the resources behind the core. We have to define what that core is. We have a lot of businesses that are around the world in different geographies that we have to understand better. And we'll do it selective very selective review of the portfolio. Of course, you know, the mills are where the money is made.

We will make sure that the mills and manufacturing facilities stay state of the art and are fully utilized.

Matthew Burke Roberts: It's all very helpful. Thank you, Robert. I look forward to working with you and seeing the progress there. For my follow-up, could ask about the inventory reduction, it goes from 15% of sales to or from 20 to 15%. Think that number implies about 200,000 tons. How are you able to balance that much coming out while Waco continues to ramp? And then given that inventory curtailment is a one-time benefit in '26, cash from the incentive comp also hits in '27. What other elements are needed to bridge to that $700 million figure again in 2027? Thank you all again for taking the questions.

Robert Reebroek: Yeah. Just let me clarify the inventory reduction program. It'll primarily focus on recycled bleached, and, cub stock. We're also reducing some finished goods inventory where demand fell short of expectations. And in the bleached paperboard system, production and demand are in good balance. It's just really the inventory that's too high. And I wanna emphasize that our customer service is a priority and will not be disrupted by inventory reduction action. Let me pass to Chuck for some of the financial details.

Charles Lischer: Yeah. Hey, Matt. This is Chuck. So on the bridge to the 700. As you pointed out, a lot going on in cash flow and EBITDA was what we provided the detailed bridges that we did. But before I talk all the way about post-2027, I wanna just reiterate the confidence in 2026. We outlined the levers there. We see those levers. Have the confidence that we'll be able to pull those levers to hit the $700 million to $800 million range in 2026. 2027 will continue to benefit from the tax benefits. And there'll be additional inventory reduction. And then post-2027, there are some negatives and positives that happen.

Some of the items that happened in 2026 are, of course, nonrecurring. But, for example, as the tax benefits end, then we have interest rates that are reducing. And as Robert pointed out earlier, we're gonna be continuing to push on CapEx and other items in addition to normal EBITDA growth. So we can take you through the details more of that offline.

Matthew Burke Roberts: Excellent. Robert, Chuck, thank you all again.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question is coming from Ghansham Panjabi from Baird. Your line is live.

Ghansham Panjabi: Good morning, everybody, and best wishes to the two of you in your respective roles. You know, Robert, maybe just to start off with you, just given your background at the CPG level and, you know, your unique lens, if you will, how do you think this pricing dynamic situation in paperboard in The US will play out for the industry over the next couple of years? What can you do internally to sort of navigate through this period? Because it presumably, customers will be pretty opportunistic as it relates to substitution, etcetera, just given the, you know, change in the pricing dynamics.

Robert Reebroek: Yes. Thanks, Scott. The two grades that matter most to us are recycled and unbleached. And both of those markets are in good balance. You know that we are very highly integrated as a company. And our smallest business is bleached paperboard, which is oversupplied with substantial new capacity that's come into the market. The demand outlook is trending down. So the current prices we don't believe that bleached paperboard producers are earning a good return on capital. As I said, you know, we have very high integration in our bleach business, so our margins tend to be higher but are still a little bit below the cost of capital.

You know, I think the bleach and the bleach markets are less integrated, so the economics are a little tougher, and the overcapacity is impacting the markets. And so that's where I am on that. Chuck, any thoughts from you?

Charles Lischer: Yeah. I think you saw that in the AFMPA data that came out end of last week that I think you can see recycled and unbleached is generally aligned to demand and police. I think the weakness that you see there is consistent with what Robert talked about. So I think it's all as Robert laid out.

Ghansham Panjabi: Okay. Thank you. And then, you know, Robert, do you kind of step back a bit, obviously, a lot going on this year and next, and so on. But, you know, if you look at the company's EBITDA margin profile, you know, 2023, 19.9% as your slide deck lays out, obviously, a huge deterioration that you're projecting over that time period through 2026. Is there anything structurally having changed in the industry that you cannot get back to the sort of high teens EBITDA margin threshold, or was 2023 just a unique situation?

Robert Reebroek: We think that over the long run, we will be restoring our EBITDA margin to the higher teens level. As a result of restored demand, cost management productivity, so we're pretty confident that we will be managing that back towards that original Vision 2030 level. But it's too early to tell exactly where that's gonna wishes for the future. Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question is coming from Arun Viswanathan from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is live.

Arun Viswanathan: Great. Thanks for taking my question. And I guess I'll add my congratulations on the new roles as well. Yeah. I guess just kinda going along a similar line of questioning. Maybe we could get your perspective and insight on what you're hearing from your customers. Specifically, are they talking about SKU rationalization, changing packaging strategy, how are what are you hearing on how they're dealing with Maha and maybe other changes to consumer behavior? You know, obviously, we've seen some relatively lower volumes on the food side, and food service. And are you hearing any kind of customer response to address that? Thanks.

Robert Reebroek: Yes. Thanks, Arun. We do have very extensive conversations with our customers across food, beverage, grocery, various other industries, and food service. With regards to consumer packaged goods, customers are really highly focused on cost right now and driving rationalization. In the number of packaging executions to reduce downtime. And changeovers in the manufacturing process. So there is a need for simplification to drive better basically, COGS for their cost of goods and our packaging complexity is part of the. So the more we can simplify our assortment whether that's a specific execution in the beverage industry, or in the food industry, the better. They also continue to focus on shared shelf, and shared SKU.

They wanna gain volume share at retail. And a lot of the CPG companies, and some of them that I've spoken to, are reviewing their back price architecture to get the right price points with smaller portions and lower consumer price points. The other trend we see is that there's a lot of private label embracing innovation quickly, and they continue to gain momentum even in some categories that were historically insulated from private label growth. And customers they really want packaging solutions now. That reduce material usage. That improve palletization simplify the number of formats and complexity, but they also want very high-quality graphics that improve shelf appeal.

So they're not willing to compromise on the, you know, winning at the shelf, winning at the first moment of truth. There is another big trend which is, you know, it starts in Europe, but it's coming to The US, is the single-use plastic production. That continues to be front and center of discussions with the large global players. The reduction of plastic in The US, specifically reduction of foam to improve the sustainability profile of our customers. Regards to food service, you know, affordability has really created a challenge for the quick service restaurants. And they need to innovate and stay competitive both in food and beverage and meal solutions.

So they wanna hit hot price and they wanna make sure that they're competitive across the board. Marketing and thematic promotions continue to be important. That's where we come in with our thematic packaging and our ability to react quickly to their orders. So we're starting to see some improvements with recent large-scale promotions and I think the food service opportunity is substantial. And plastic and foam replacement will continue. So on Europe specifically, innovation is now a key driver there. Because of the regulatory changes against plastic. In North America, we're seeing that more and more consumers prefer paper cups over plastic and foam.

Arun Viswanathan: Thanks for that comprehensive answer. I guess, just as a quick follow-up, back onto the SBS, question. So you know, I understand that it's a very small grade for you, but I guess our perception or my perception is that, you know, the oversupply is kind of also pressuring unbleached, and maybe customers are getting the option to switch into SBS because there's, you know, not much premium there. So how do you do you see that as well, and do you see that kind of oversupply in SBS? Continuing to weigh on other grades as well, or is it not really impactful? Thanks.

Robert Reebroek: It's a well-known fact in the industry. There's overcapacity of bleach and, you know, it is the most fragmented of the paperboard grades, as you know. And periods like this tend to result themselves usually through capacity rationalization, downtime, consolidation. But remember, we primarily sell finished packaging and have a high degree of integration. And we do see some price pressure in recycled packaging from bleach producers. They're looking for volume, but we haven't lost volume. And we have to be competitive with package price, and that can cause a little bit of margin pressure. And we also know that bleach packaging selling at the price of recycled long term is not sustainable.

It's more expensive to produce, and it doesn't earn the cost of capital returns. Now we're focused on driving volume. Where we have the right to win, and we control what we control. So we are focused on cost spending exceptional customer service. So that's where we are at that. Thanks.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question is coming from Lewis Merrick from BNP Paribas. Your line is live.

Lewis Merrick: Morning, Robert, Chuck, Mark. Thank you for taking my questions and congratulations on the appointment, Robert. Let me just go into portfolio review comments that you had in the deck and in your earnings statement. You just give us a sense or expand on the factors what you would consider. Yeah. As elements which would determine a core or noncore asset in your business. Today. But it could be quite a long.

Robert Reebroek: Very good question, Lewis. Thank you for the question. Thanks for welcoming. Okay. Great. Look. I'm a big believer in the focus on the core. As part of any company strategy. When you have a strong growing core, you win. And I think where we may have to provide a bit more perspectives on all of the businesses we own around the globe, that may or may not be core to the operation. We're looking at an initial review of the business portfolio of the operations and our global footprint. And we wanna really focus on future growth and value creation and understand where we have the right to win.

Let me give you an example of very obvious places which are part of our core. Our North America and Europe food and beverage business is obviously the biggest part of our company. No question that we have to play there. But there may be some smaller businesses that we have an opportunity to review. We want durable competitive advantage. And we want synergies. We want higher integration rates in our between our paperboard manufacturing and our conversion factories where we make the finished packaging. With regards to, you know, looking at everything we do also gonna look at zero-based budgeting, and particularly at CapEx. It's time to take a fresh look at all we do.

We'll take a comprehensive look. In the context of what is really a changing market. Consumer dynamics are changing. Certain packages are starting to accelerate. Others are starting to decline. Consumption patterns are evolving as well, and so we need to bring those consumer insights back into our company so that we can align our assets to future growth opportunities. Now it's very early days, No decisions have been made, and we'll keep you updated as appropriate.

Lewis Merrick: Have you and the board had any thoughts as to whether you may look to revisit your dividend policy of $20.20 cents? Thank you.

Charles Lischer: Dividend. So I think we are professionals. Oh, and I'll hop on dividend. So sorry. I didn't catch it for the fourth the first time. So on dividends, as we said in the prepared remarks, our clearest or most highest near-term priority is debt pay down. And so we be focused on debt pay down in the short term. But we have not committed to a dividend change this year yet. But over time, would expect to have growing dividends as talked about in the prepared remarks. And increasing the return to shareholders. But clearly, near-term priority is to pay down debt given our current leverage ratio.

Lewis Merrick: Thank you. I'll send it over. Hope that's 20% actually with it. Thank you.

Operator: Your next question is coming from Mark Weintraub from Seaport Research Partners. Your line is live.

Mark Weintraub: Thank you. Welcome both. Question, since you did mention that overcapacity in bleach board has been putting downward pressure on finished packaging pricing across your grades. I guess one of the questions I have is that if the trade journals show, for instance, CRB prices were to go down or something like that, if to some extent it's already been reflected that the pressures in the business because of overcapacity in SPS? Do you get hit a second time, or can you help us understand how the prices we might see in trade publications can affect what you end up realizing on a go-forward basis?

Charles Lischer: Yeah. Hey, Mark. This is Chuck. I'll take that. So as you know, we've been seeking to convert many of our contracts over to a cost model. And so many of our many of our have made progress on that. So many of our contracts are no longer tied to published pricing. We do still have some contracts that are tied to published pricing. And our guide does not reflect any unpublished or unannounced changes in pricing.

Mark Weintraub: Okay. And so just a follow-up. So if there are changes, is it modest because of the direct impact, modest because of the adjustments you've made in your contracts, or any help you can give? And I recognize if you're not comfortable, understood. But figured I'd ask.

Charles Lischer: Yeah. There's several factors. There's timing as to when the price impact would be recognized based on our contracts, and then there's also, of course, offset by the ones that are already on the cost model. And so it's there are a lot of moving parts and pieces there to give you specifics around it.

Mark Weintraub: Okay. And just one other follow-up then. On, Waco, I know originally you had outlined some relatively significant start-up costs I think $60 million or something like that. Could you just update us how what has happened and how you're reporting that and it seems like you're just putting that in net productivity now. How should I be understanding that? Thank you.

Charles Lischer: Yeah. So good news on that, given the strong startup of Waco, that our startup costs came in below and we do not expect any longer startup costs to continue into 2026. So our startup costs came in at around $40 million in 2025. So lower than our original expectation. Given the strong startup. Importantly, though, we do put those costs below the line. And so that doesn't roll up into performance. It does roll up into the items that are below adjusted EBITDA. And so that information that was provided to you in the previous text was just information only, but that is something that of course, impacts cash and came in stronger.

And as I said, zero in 2026.

Mark Weintraub: Okay. And just one clarification. So the Waco startup costs were excluded from the adjusted EBITDA number you gave us or included?

Charles Lischer: They were excluded from adjusted EBITDA.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question is coming from Gabe Hajde from Wells Fargo.

Gabe Hajde: Hey. Good morning. Welcome. I had a question about seasonal working capital changes and then, obviously, the very concerted efforts to reduce inventory. Seems like a decent amount of that production will hit and the reduced production will hit in the first half. But normally, you consume cash and working capital in the first quarter. And if I look at kind of what you gave us, you know, the 40% to 45% of EBITDA earned in the first half, it looks like leverage can, in fact, tick above closer to the mid-fours or higher. Can you talk about that a little bit? And then I have a follow-up. Thank you.

Charles Lischer: Yeah. I think you've identified all the right trends. Historically, our cash flow is strongest in the fourth quarter, and that's how it played out in 2025. And we would expect it to play out that way in 2026 as well. I will say the impact in 2026 should be significantly moderated versus where it was in 2025. If you remember 2025, the heavy spend on Waco was through the first three quarters and so you would have seen a much more negative impact or a heavier negative impact on free cash flow in 2025 than what we'll see in 2026.

So it'll more follow the EBITDA, but it is still our cash flow has historically and always been back-end weighted as we build for the season through the summer. And then harvest that cash in the back.

Gabe Hajde: Okay. Thank you. And then the 200,000 tons roughly of inventory this year, and obviously, you gave us $1 equivalent. I guess, Chuck, for 27, can you give us a reference point? I think you talked about some moving parts. To bridge to the $700 million of free cash flow. But will you still be sort of underproducing next year? And again, I appreciate it. It depends on demand. But and unlocking some inventory. And if so, do you have an order of magnitude as it sits right now?

Charles Lischer: You know, we're not giving 2027 guidance down, so we'll give you the number. But as you hit on the key factors, I mean, we are committed to bringing inventory down to the target ranges that Robert gave, the 15% to 16% target. We would, of course, much prefer that to come out via demand, as you mentioned, than come out via downtime. But we are indeed committed to bringing it out.

Operator: Thank you. We have reached our allotted time for Q&A. I'll now hand the conference back to Robert Reebroek for closing remarks. Please go ahead.

Robert Reebroek: Thank you, operator. I appreciate you joining us on our earnings call today. I'm excited to be here leading this outstanding team that has what is truly a pivotal time for our company. Graphic Packaging serves markets with attractive subsegments. Solid secular trends. With the best-in-class assets and a highly talented team. We're a global leader in sustainable consumer packaging. And through the actions we're taking, we plan to grow our market share and further strengthen our industry-leading position. While I've had the opportunity to engage with several of you already, I look forward to connecting with others and to provide ongoing updates on the business and our progress against these priorities. Thank you for your interest in Graphic Packaging.

Operator: Thank you. Everyone, this concludes today's event. You may disconnect at this time, and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.