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Date

Feb. 5, 2026 at 10 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chair and Chief Executive Officer — Jennifer Rumsey
  • Chief Financial Officer — Mark Smith
  • Executive Director, Investor Relations — Nicholas Arens

Takeaways

  • Revenue -- $8.5 billion for the quarter, up 1% as global power generation, higher pickup volumes, and pricing offset North America truck declines.
  • EBITDA -- $1.2 billion or 13.5% margin; excluding $218 million in Accelera charges, adjusted EBITDA was $1.4 billion or 16% margin.
  • Full-year revenue -- $33.7 billion, down 1%, as lower North America truck demand outweighed higher power generation and pricing gains.
  • Full-year EBITDA -- $5.4 billion or 16% of sales; excluding one-time items (net charges, gains, restructuring), underlying EBITDA was a record $5.8 billion or 17.4% margin.
  • Net earnings -- Quarterly net earnings were $53 million or $4.27 per diluted share; adjusted for Accelera charges, EPS was $5.81. Full-year net earnings were $2.8 billion or $20.50 per diluted share; adjusted, $3.3 billion or $23.78.
  • Power systems segment -- Record full-year revenue of $7.5 billion, up 16%, and record EBITDA of 22.7% (up 430 bps), driven by data center demand and improved capacity.
  • Distribution segment -- Record revenue of $12.4 billion, up 9%, and record EBITDA margin of 14.6%, up 250 bps, reflecting power generation strength and pricing.
  • Engine segment -- Revenue fell 7% to $10.9 billion with EBITDA margin of 12.7% due to weak North America truck volumes.
  • Components segment -- Revenue decreased 10% to $10.1 billion while EBITDA margin increased to 13.8%, driven by cost reductions offsetting lower truck production.
  • Accelera segment -- Revenue grew to $460 million with net operating loss reduced to $438 million as cost actions in electrolyzers offset higher coverage costs.
  • Q4 power generation order intake -- CEO Rumsey stated, "we had record order intake in Q4 for power generation. We are taking orders now well into 2028."
  • Capital expenditures -- $1.2 billion in 2025, flat year over year, focused on Helm on-highway platforms and power systems capacity.
  • Tariff impact -- Tariffs diluted full-year EBITDA margins by about 50 basis points, with CFO Smith stating, "if we had no tariffs...our EBITDA percent at the midpoint would be half a point higher."
  • Guidance for 2026 -- Revenue projected up 3%-8%; EBITDA margin expected at 17%-18%, including ongoing tariff dilution; Power Systems revenue up 12%-17% with margin of 23%-24%; Distribution revenue up 5%-10%; Engine and Components segments guided flat to up 5% each.
  • Effective tax rate guidance -- Approximately 24% in 2026, excluding discrete items.
  • Cash flow and capital return -- Operating cash flow in Q4 was $1.5 billion; $1.1 billion returned to shareholders via dividends in 2025, aiming for at least 50% of operating cash flow as returns to shareholders.
  • Accelera cost restructuring actions -- Additional $218 million charge in Q4 for electrolyzer business, with CEO Rumsey confirming, "we have meaningfully reduced our participation in hydrogen...and meaningfully lowered losses for this year."
  • Product launches and investments -- X10 and B 7.2 engines launched; S17 Sentum generator set introduced for urban high-power markets; acquisition of First Mode and joint development with Komatsu for hybrid mining equipment.
  • Regulatory outlook -- Company positioned for 2027 EPA Low NOx Rule and expects "additional content ad in engine business and in the components business after treatment" from regulatory change.
  • Market projections for 2026 -- North America heavy-duty truck production forecast at 220,000–240,000 units (flat to up 10%); medium-duty at 110,000–120,000 (flat to up 10%); China total revenues down 1%; India total revenues down 5%; global power generation up 10%-20%.
  • Backlog visibility -- CEO Rumsey said the company set a new record for power generation backlog in Q4 and is seeing "multi-year strength."

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Risks

  • CEO Rumsey said, "the adoption of zero-emission solutions slows in some regions around the world," indicating reduced growth prospects in these areas.
  • CFO Smith stated, "tariffs diluted the EBITDA percent of every single segment in 2025 and will continue to do so on a percent basis in 2026, even though we did well to mitigate costs and largely recover them."
  • CEO Rumsey said there remains "First, we are, of course, very supportive of the U.S. Administration's focus on strengthening manufacturing and some of the things that they are doing as part of February to make sure that for companies like Cummins that are manufacturing for the U.S, and the U.S. and even manufacturing in the U.S. for export, that there are incentives to do that. And they are still working through the details of the engine offset program. So we are waiting for clarity on how that will work as well as how they define U.S. content. So there is some uncertainty built into that range that we have on our margins in the engine business and components that will depend on how those details work out, and we hope to have more clarity after Q1," highlighting unresolved policy risk affecting profitability guidance for 2026.
  • The company expects 2026 North America truck demand to remain weak in the first half, and management noted risk in supply chain flexibility as "demand does start to strengthen, how quickly can the supply base flex back up because it dropped quite dramatically last year."

Summary

Cummins (CMI 11.65%) reported record profitability in the Power Systems and Distribution segments, driven by strong demand in global power generation, especially for data center applications and urban markets. Management emphasized a significant cost restructuring in the Accelera segment, specifically limiting participation in the electrolyzer business due to dramatically lower green hydrogen demand, resulting in an additional $218 million charge and further declines in segment losses. The company provided guidance for 3%-8% revenue growth and a 17%-18% EBITDA margin in 2026, factoring in the persisted 50-basis-point negative impact from tariffs and ongoing regulatory uncertainties, most notably around the pace and details of Section 232 tariff offsets and the 2027 EPA Low NOx regulation. Cummins highlighted robust multi-year backlog visibility in power generation, with CEO Rumsey stating record order intake and orders extending into 2028, supporting significant capital allocation toward power and urban infrastructure markets. Leadership reaffirmed a capital deployment target of at least 50% of operating cash flow to shareholders, and indicated all planned growth and investment initiatives can be funded within current cash flows and balance sheet strength.

  • CFO Smith clarified that 2026 guidance assumes almost no incremental net pricing benefit outside of tariff recovery, with minimal margin tailwind anticipated in pricing versus cost dynamics for the year.
  • CEO Rumsey confirmed launch of the X10 and B 7.2 engine platforms to address upcoming 2027 regulatory requirements, with the bulk of related content increase split between engine and components businesses as the new rules take effect.
  • Data center-related revenues reached about $3.5 billion in 2025, and are expected to increase in 2026 as power system capacity and order intake grow.
  • Management stated that, while further capacity expansion is possible in power systems, major new investment announcements are deferred until the May Analyst Day, with incremental CapEx already reallocated toward this segment.

Industry glossary

  • Accelera: Cummins' business segment focused on zero-emissions technologies, including hydrogen electrolyzers and battery-electric solutions.
  • Helm engine platforms: Cummins' next-generation modular engine family designed to comply with stringent emissions standards and enable product line flexibility for regulatory requirements.
  • Sentum Series (Genset): Cummins' line of generator sets, including the S17 platform, targeting high-output, compact power generation for critical urban and infrastructure applications.
  • Section 232 tariff: U.S. trade regulation imposing import tariffs on certain goods, with implications for domestic manufacturing incentives and content requirements affecting Cummins' cost structure.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Nicholas Arens: Thank you, Rob. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our teleconference today to discuss Cummins' results for the fourth quarter and full year of 2025. Participating with me today are Jennifer Rumsey, our Chair and Chief Executive Officer, and Mark Smith, our Chief Financial Officer. We will all be available to answer questions at the end of the teleconference. Before we start, please note that some of the information that you will hear today will consist of forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Such statements express our forecasts, expectations, hopes, beliefs, and intentions on strategies regarding the future.

Our actual future results could differ materially from those projected in such forward-looking statements because of a number of risks and uncertainties. More information regarding such risks and uncertainties is available in the forward-looking disclosure statement in the slide deck in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, particularly the risk factors section of our most recently filed annual report on Form 10-K and subsequently filed quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. During the course of this call, we will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures, and we will refer you to our website for the reconciliation of those measures to GAAP financial measures.

Our press release with a copy of the financial statements and a copy of today's webcast presentation are available on our website within the Investor Relations section at cummins.com. With that out of the way, I will turn you over to our Chair and CEO, Jennifer Rumsey, to kick us off.

Jennifer Rumsey: Thank you, Nick. Good morning. I will start with a summary of 2025, discuss our fourth quarter and full year results, and finish with a discussion of our outlook for 2026. Mark will then take you through more details of our fourth quarter and full-year financial performance and our forecast for this year. As I reflect on 2025, I am pleased to share that we delivered strong financial performance despite weak demand in North America truck markets, ongoing trade tariff volatility, and an uncertain regulatory landscape. Our results underscore the disciplined execution of our strategy, the dedication of our employees, and the commitment to deliver strong financial performance.

I am proud of what Cummins accomplished for our stakeholders and remain energized by the opportunities ahead as we continue to advance our strategic priorities and deliver on our financial commitments. Our strategy continues to be the right one, pursuing many paths forward to meet our customers' evolving needs today and in the future. Our strong and diverse position across geographies, markets, and technologies continues to differentiate us and provides the flexibility to adapt in a rapidly changing environment. In 2025, we further strengthened our position by evolving our portfolio to continue investing in innovative solutions that meet our customers' evolving priorities and long-term requirements.

In our engine business, we introduced the much-anticipated X10 as a part of Cummins Helm platforms. This engine replaces both the L9 and X12 engine platforms and will deliver a new level of performance, durability, and efficiency for heavy and medium-duty customers. Alongside the X15 and B Series, the X10 provides customers with the power solution to meet their unique operational requirements while maintaining the performance and reliability for which Cummins is known. In addition, we unveiled the new Cummins B 7.2 diesel engine that brings the latest technology and advancements to one of our most proven platforms.

The new engine will feature a slightly higher displacement and is designed to be a global platform, which creates flexibility for different applications and duty cycles. Both the B 7.2 and X10 engines will be manufactured for North America markets in the Rocky Mount engine plant in North Carolina. In our Power Systems business, we continue to advance hybrid solutions for mining customers through two significant actions this year. We acquired the assets of First Mode, a leader in retrofit hybrid solutions for mining and rail operations. This technology represents the first commercially available retrofit system for mining equipment, significantly reducing total cost of ownership while advancing decarbonization in operations.

Additionally, we announced a collaboration with Komatsu to develop hybrid powertrains for surface hauling mining equipment. This joint development effort will leverage the breadth and scale of Komatsu's global capabilities to enable the acceleration of optimized hybrid solutions for mining. We are excited about the opportunity to bridge current operational needs with future low-carbon goals to support our customers' sustainability efforts. Additionally, within Power Systems, expanding on the success of our acclaimed Sentum Series generator sets, we launched the new 17-liter engine platform generator that produces up to one megawatt of power.

The S17 Sentum genset was developed to produce a large power output within a compact footprint to meet the growing power demands in urban environments, where compact design and high performance are critical. The new genset is designed to support a wide range of critical market segments, such as commercial properties, healthcare facilities, and water treatment plants. Along with completing the Centum Series lineup, we also completed our capacity expansion on the 95-liter ahead of schedule, positioning us to meet rising demand and support a wide range of customer needs.

Lastly, as we navigate this long and dynamic transition with our customers, we remain committed to pacing and refocusing our investments on the most promising paths, as the adoption of zero-emission solutions slows in some regions around the world. As we mentioned last quarter, we initiated a review of our electrolyzer business within the Accelera segment to streamline operations and focus investments amid policy-driven shifts in hydrogen demand. In the fourth quarter, this led to additional recorded charges, which you will see reflected in our results. We remain committed to our multi-solution strategy while pacing and focusing our investments as the zero-emissions landscape evolves. The actions we have taken will lower costs going forward.

Now I will comment on the overall company performance for the fourth quarter of 2025 and cover some of our key markets. Revenues for the quarter totaled $8.5 billion, an increase of 1% compared to 2024, as continued high demand in our global power generation markets, higher pickup truck volumes, and improved pricing more than offset lower North American heavy and medium-duty truck volumes. EBITDA was $1.2 billion or 13.5% compared to $1 billion or 12.1% a year ago. Fourth quarter 2025 results included $218 million of charges related to the strategic review of our electrolyzer business within our Accelera business segment.

This compares to the fourth quarter 2024 result, which included $312 million of charges related to the strategic reorganization of our Accelera business segment. Excluding those items, EBITDA was $1.4 billion or 16%, compared to $1.3 billion or 15.8% a year ago. EBITDA percent improved compared to 2024 as the benefits of higher power generation and pickup truck volume, pricing, lower compensation expenses, and operational efficiency more than exceeded lower North America medium and heavy-duty truck volumes, higher product coverage costs, and the dilutive impact of tariffs. 2025 revenues were $33.7 billion, down 1% from the prior year as lower North America heavy and medium-duty truck demand more than offset higher power generation volumes and improved pricing.

EBITDA was $5.4 billion or 16% of sales, compared to $6.3 billion or 18.6% of sales in 2024. The 2025 results included $458 million of charges related to our electrolyzer business within our Accelera business segment. This compares to 2024 results that included the gain related to the separation of Atmos, net of transaction costs and other expenses of $1.3 billion, charges related to the Accelera reorganization of $312 million, and $29 million of other restructuring actions.

Excluding those items, EBITDA was a record $5.8 billion or 17.4% of sales for 2025, compared to $5.4 billion or 15.7% of sales for 2024, as the benefits of higher power generation volumes, pricing, lower compensation expenses, and improved operational efficiency more than exceeded lower North America heavy and medium-duty truck volumes and the negative impact from tariffs. EBITDA reached record levels in both our Power Systems and Distribution segments. Power Systems delivered a record full-year EBITDA of 22.7% of sales, up from 18.4% in 2024, while distribution achieved a record 14.6% of sales, up from 12.1% in the prior year.

I am proud of these remarkable results with record earnings despite a downside for North America truck markets and the achievement of our 2030 financial commitments ahead of schedule. This reflects the strength of our strategy and our disciplined focus on execution. As you will see from our 2026 financial guidance, we are well-positioned to build on this momentum. As we look to 2026, we continue to operate in a dynamic trade and regulatory environment, but we are getting greater clarity on important areas for our industry. EPA's confirmation of the 2027 Low NOx Rule is an important step in advancing regulatory certainty, and we are well-positioned with our product plans.

Now let me provide our overall outlook for 2026 and then comment on individual regions and end markets. We are forecasting total company revenues for 2026 to be up 3% to 8% compared to 2025, and EBITDA, including the dilutive impact of tariffs, to be 17% to 18% of sales compared to 17.4% the prior year. For our markets, we expect continued weakness in first-half demand in our North America heavy and medium-duty truck market but anticipate other markets, particularly power generation, to remain strong throughout the year.

Industry production for heavy-duty trucks in North America is projected to range from 220,000 to 240,000 units in 2026, flat to up 10% year over year, with the second half of the year higher than the first. In the medium-duty truck market, we expect market size to be between 110,000 to 120,000 units, also flat to up 10% compared to 2025. Our engine shipments for pickup trucks in North America are expected to be 125,000 to 140,000 in 2026, down 5% to up 5% year over year. In China, we project total revenue, including joint ventures, to decrease 1% in 2026, with weakness in heavy and medium-duty truck demand partially offset by growth in data center demand.

For China heavy and medium-duty truck demand, we project a range of down 10% to flat. While we expect export demand to remain high, we anticipate the domestic demand will decline as a result of lower impacts from NS4 scrapping policy stimulus. In India, we project total revenues, including joint ventures, to decrease 5% in 2025. We expect industry demand for trucks to be down 10% to flat for the year with weak replacement demand and limited infrastructure spending. For global construction, we expect a range of down 5% to up 5% year over year, as we anticipate domestic demand in China and North America to be roughly flat, and export demand in China slightly down given geopolitical uncertainties.

We project our major global high horsepower market to remain strong in 2026. Revenues in our global power generation markets are expected to increase 10% to 20%, driven by continued high demand in the data center market and the successful execution of our capacity expansion, which was completed in 2025. Sales of mining engines are expected to be flat to up 10%, driven by replacement demand. For aftermarket, we expect a range of up 2% to 8% for 2026, with increased parts consumption from aging fleets and higher rebuild demand. In summary, 2025 was a strong year with record earnings, excluding one-time items, despite a down cycle in North America truck markets.

In 2026, we expect North America truck demand to be slightly better than 2025, particularly in the second half of the year, along with continued strength in our power generation, industrial, and aftermarket businesses. Cummins remains well-positioned to invest in future growth, deliver strong financial returns, and return cash to investors. As I close, I would like to officially announce that our Analyst Day is now scheduled for May 21, in New York City, and expect invitations to be sent out shortly. I look forward to sharing updates on our financial guidance and further discussing our strategy then. Now let me turn it over to Mark, who will discuss our financial results in more detail.

Mark Smith: Thanks, Jen, and good morning, everyone. We delivered strong operational results in 2025, achieving record EBITDA and earnings per share, excluding one-time items, despite the down cycle in North America truck markets and ongoing tariff volatility. These results reflect the effectiveness of our strategy, our disciplined focus on financial performance, and the hard work of our employees. Now let me go into more detail on Q4 and the full-year performance. Fourth quarter reported revenues were $8.5 billion, an increase of $89 million from a year ago. EBITDA was $1.2 billion or 13.5% of sales compared to $1 billion or 12.1% a year ago.

In the fourth quarter, our strategic review of the electrolyzer business and Accelera resulted in charges of $218 million. This compares to 2024, which included $312 million of costs related to the reorganization of Accelera. Stripping those out, looking at underlying performance, we delivered EBITDA in the fourth quarter of $1.4 billion or 16% compared to $1.3 billion or 15.8% of sales a year ago, even as North America heavy and medium-duty truck engine volume declined by a combined 30%. Fourth quarter revenues increased from 1% a year ago as continued high demand in our global power generation markets, higher pickup truck volumes, and improved pricing more than offset lower North American truck volumes.

Sales in North America were down 2%, while international revenues increased 5%. Foreign currency movements positively impacted sales by less than 1%. Fourth quarter EBITDA improved to 16% compared to 15.8% a year ago. Higher power generation and pickup truck volumes, pricing, lower compensation expenses, operational improvements, and higher joint venture and other income, lots of things higher, all helped more than offset lower North American medium and heavy-duty trucks, higher product coverage costs, primarily in Accelera, and the dilutive impact of tariffs. Now I will summarize some of the impacts by line item in the income statement.

Gross margin was $2 billion or 22.9% of sales, up compared to 24.1% a year ago as lower North American truck volumes, higher product coverage, and the dilutive impact of tariffs more than offset stronger power generation demand, favorable pricing, and operational efficiency. Selling, admin, and research expenses were $1.1 billion or 13.3% of sales, compared to $1.2 billion or 13.7% last year, primarily due to strong cost control as truck markets weakened and lower compensation expenses. Joint venture income of $116 million increased $46 million, primarily driven by higher volumes in our China joint ventures, on and off-highway. Other income was negative $58 million compared to negative $196 million a year ago.

2025 other income included $80 million related to the electrolyzer charges, while 2024 included $171 million related to the Accelera reorganization costs. Excluding these items, other income increased by $50 million, driven by marked-to-market gains on investments related to company-owned life insurance, a modest gain this quarter compared to losses a year ago. Interest expense was $82 million, a decrease of $7 million from the prior year, driven by lower weighted average interest rates. The all-in effective tax rate in the fourth quarter was 21.6%, which included $69 million or $0.50 per diluted share favorable discrete items.

All-in net earnings for the quarter were $53 million or $4.27 per diluted share, which includes $215 million or $1.15 per diluted share of charges related to the strategic review of the electrolyzer business. Excluding these charges, EPS was $5.81 per diluted share. Operating cash flow in the quarter was an inflow of $1.5 billion, up $112 million from a year ago. For the full year 2025, revenues were $33.7 billion, a decrease of 1% from a year ago. EBITDA was $5.4 billion or 16% compared to $6.3 billion or 18.6% of sales in 2024. 2025 included $458 million of charges related to our electrolyzer business within Accelera.

This compares to 2024 results that included the gain related to the separation of Atmos, net transaction costs and other expenses of $1.3 billion, charges related to Accelera of $312 million, and $29 million of restructuring. A lot of moving parts in those comparisons. If you strip those out, the underlying EBITDA percentage improved by 170 basis points year over year, primarily driven by higher power generation volumes, pricing, lower compensation expenses, and operational improvements, all of which more than exceeded lower North American truck volumes and the diluted impact from tariffs. All-in net earnings were $2.8 billion or $20.50 per diluted share, compared to $3.9 billion or $28.37 per diluted share a year ago.

Excluding previously mentioned one-time charges, 2025 net earnings were $3.3 billion or $23.78 per diluted share, compared to 2024 net earnings of $3 billion or $21.37 per diluted share. Capital expenditures in 2025 were $1.2 billion, flat compared to 2024, as we continue to invest in new products and capabilities to drive growth, particularly related to the on-highway Helm platforms within our engine and components business in North America, and also incremental capacity adds within our Power Systems business to serve the growing demand for data centers. Our long-term goal is to deliver at least 50% of operating cash flow to shareholders in the form of share repurchases and dividends.

In 2025, we focused our capital allocation on organic investment, dividend growth, and returning $1.1 billion to shareholders via the dividend and maintaining our A credit rating metrics. I will now summarize the 2025 results for the operating segments that exclude the electrolyzer strategic review costs, and I will provide guidance for 2026. For the Engine segment, 2025 revenues were $10.9 billion, down 7% from a year ago. EBITDA was 12.7% of sales compared to 14.1% of sales a year ago, primarily due to lower North American heavy and medium-duty truck volumes.

In 2026, we project revenues for the engine business will be flat to up 5%, with weakness continuing in North American heavy and medium-duty trucks in the first half of the year, with an anticipated strengthening in the second half of the year. 2026 EBITDA is expected to be in the range of 12% to 13%. Our component segment revenues were $10.1 billion, down 10% from the prior year, and EBITDA was 13.8%, up compared to 13.5% in 2024, as the impact of lower truck volumes was more than offset with cost reduction improvements.

For 2026, we expect total revenue for the components business to be flat to up 5%, primarily driven by the expected improvement in North American heavy and medium-duty truck markets in the second half of this year. The EBITDA margins are expected to be 13% to 14%. In the Distribution segment, revenues increased 9% from a year ago to a record $12.4 billion, and EBITDA was also a record of 14.6%, up 250 basis points from a year ago, driven by higher power generation volumes and pricing. We expect 2026 distribution revenues to grow 5% to 10%, driven by continued strength in power generation markets and higher aftermarket demand.

The EBITDA margins are expected to be in the range of 13.25% to 14.25%. In the Power Systems segment, revenues were also a record $7.5 billion, up 16% from the prior year, driven primarily by demand for power generation equipment, especially in data center applications in North America and China. EBITDA was a record 22.7%, up 430 basis points from 2024, driven by stronger volumes, favorable pricing, and a continued focus on operational performance margin improvement while improving capacity for future growth in demand. In 2026, we expect Power Systems revenues to be 12% to 17%, driven by continued strength in power generation and EBITDA in the range of 23% to 24%. Accelera revenues increased to $460 million in 2025.

We had a net operating loss in this segment of $438 million compared to $452 million the prior year. While we lowered costs in existing operations through our restructure actions, this was partially offset by higher product coverage costs in this segment in the fourth quarter. In 2026, we expect Accelera revenues to be in the range of $300 million to $350 million, and net losses to decline to $325 million to $355 million, reflecting our ongoing efforts to streamline the business and lower costs while ensuring we are set up for long-term success in those product lines where the prospects are more promising. We currently project 2026 company revenues to be up 3% to 8%.

Company EBITDA margins are expected to be approximately 17% to 18%, as the benefits of modest second-half recovery in truck strength and power generation are somewhat offset by the dilutive impact of tariffs. I should have added that in this spirit of saving time, I did not acknowledge that tariffs diluted the EBITDA percent of every single segment in 2025 and will continue to do so on a percent basis in 2026, even though we did well to mitigate costs and largely recover them. Our effective tax rate is expected to be approximately 24% in 2026, excluding discrete items.

Capital investments will be in the range of $1.35 billion to $1.45 billion this year as we continue to make critical investments to support growth. To summarize, we delivered record profitability in 2025, excluding one-time charges, even as demand in North America heavy and medium-duty truck markets declined sharply. This performance was driven by strength in execution in our core business, with power systems and distribution delivering record profitable growth, and the engines and components segments particularly managing costs well through the trough. In Accelera, we took further actions to reduce costs going forward in light of weaker demand while maintaining investments where we believe more promising returns lie ahead.

Cash generation has been and will continue to be a focus, enabling us to continue investing in new products for current and future markets during times of uncertainty and continuing to return cash to shareholders while maintaining a strong balance sheet. We look forward to updating our long-term financial targets at our upcoming Analyst Day in May. Thank you for your interest and your patience as we got through quarters, years, and full guidance outlook. Now let me turn it back to Nick.

Nicholas Arens: Thank you, Mark. Out of consideration to others on the call, I would ask that you limit yourself to one question and a related follow-up. If you have an additional question, please rejoin the queue. Operator, we are ready for our first question.

Operator: Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Jerry Revich with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question.

Jerry Revich: Yes, hi. Good morning, everyone.

Jennifer Rumsey: Hi, Jerry. Good morning.

Jerry Revich: Can you update us on how you are thinking about potentially adding capacity in power systems for the diesel variant and also what are the updated thoughts around potential natural gas product? And can you update us on where lead times stand now as well? Thank you.

Jennifer Rumsey: Yep. Happy to do that, Jerry. So, you know, we continue to see very strong demand in our power generation business. And as noted in the comments, we completed the doubling of our capacity of the 95-liter engine and genset that we supply, which is very popular in the data center market. We have completed the launch of our Sentum product line, and we continue to see benefits of those investments as well as ongoing operational efficiency performance in power systems and DBU, which is leading to the guide for this year. We had record order intake in Q4 for power generation. We are taking orders now well into 2028.

So the demand remains very strong for diesel backup power, and we are well-positioned with the product and channel support that we offer to provide that. We are continuing to look at opportunities to increase capacity. For this year, you can expect the benefit of those things that I already outlined to come through full year and in smaller improvements and efficiency in how we leverage what we have. We will be talking more in May at our Analyst Day about where we think we may have the opportunity to continue to leverage the capacity and products that we offer and if there are any additional investments into new products.

But as you would expect, we are very thoughtful and disciplined in how we think about that.

Mark Smith: And I would just add, even with it, whilst the total of our CapEx outlook in the last three months has not really changed, we have allocated more incrementally to power systems in the last few months, Jerry. You know, and really right now, we are a low-risk weighted play on the AI boom because we are making modest incremental internal investment for which there is high and growing visibility for demand. So we feel confident about our approach.

Jerry Revich: Thank you. And I got my voice back. You are talking about power systems gets me all choked up. I am wondering, Mark, can we just talk about the guidance outlook for 2026? Really good performance this year across engine components of distributions. You are guiding for up sales, but softer margins at the midpoint. Can you expand for us on the comment you made on tariffs? What is the impact of the pass-through and any other puts and takes around guidance in light of the strong performance of '25?

Mark Smith: It is no surprise to anyone that the gross impact of tariffs accumulated through the year, the headlines were one thing, but it took time for those costs to start filtering through the supply chain, managing, negotiating, optimizing, but the fourth quarter was, you know, clearly the biggest gross impact. We have done well to offset that. But as we look forward with the current regime of tariffs, that is full-year dilutive on an absolute basis, Jerry, it is about 50 basis points mostly through sales and recovery, not dollar losses. And so we will see more of that on a percent basis in engines and distribution in particular going into next year.

So that is a modest percentage tailwind into those two areas. Otherwise, there is nothing fundamentally changing. It is obviously a very busy period for engines and components, all the new product development going on ahead of the 2027 emissions regulations. And then in distribution, we do have some modest investments in systems upgrades, particularly in our international regions. So those are the things. But, yes, we look at the numbers the same as you do. We are delighted with performance given all the combination of conditions, variations, complexities of 2025, and fundamentally, underneath what there is a strong business with strong strategic position, high visibility to growth in power systems, hopefully, coming off the bottom of a truck market.

Again, we will continue as the truck cycle moves off this bottom to expect results to improve not just this year, but going forwards too? More meaningful and sustained improvement as truck fundamentals improve.

Operator: Thank you. The next question will be coming from the line of Rob Wertheimer with Melius Research. Please proceed with your questions.

Rob Wertheimer: Just a quick question on the sequential revenue in Power Systems from 3Q to 4Q. I do not know whether that was any capacity issues, timing issues, or anything else. Obviously, you are growing next year. So I was just curious about the relative lack of growth. And then more generally, you mentioned demand into 2028 for data centers, which is great. Is there any change in the shape of what is happening? Is there more behind the meter that might demand more backup? Is there any trend in the design of data centers that either favors or not diesel backup? Thank you.

Jennifer Rumsey: Yes. On your first question, what I would say is we were able to deliver the 95-liter capacity expansion ahead of schedule. So we saw more benefit of that sooner last year. And then as we went into Q4, we had a few down days that are not atypical at the end of the year and things that you do at the end of the year within plants. A little bit of softening in aftermarket. So those things had some impact on top-line performance. And then the other dynamic we had in Power Systems in Q4 was tariffs are still changing.

Let us just acknowledge that while there may be some places where we are getting more clarity, that is still changing in the India tariff. In Q4, it had a negative impact. We are working to recover those costs, but as things change over time, there is typically a lag in how we manage through that with our customers.

In terms of diesel backup, you know, there continues to be a desire for most, you know, really all data center customers to have diesel backup power available to just ensure a level of uptime and reliability that they need, and the conversations are more around how do we use the product line that we have to meet the strong demand that is out there.

Rob Wertheimer: Thank you.

Operator: Our next question is from the line of Jamie Cook with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question.

Jamie Cook: Hi, good morning. I guess, Mark, just two questions, if you could just unpack the margins or implied lack of incremental margins in 2026 for the engine business? I understand we have tariffs, but I thought we were getting pricing through and perhaps some benefit from Section 232. So is there anything else in there? Is there a first half, second half story there? We are exiting the year incremental margins higher. I am just trying to understand how you think about incremental margins through this cycle relative to your 25% target that you guys laid out for engines? And then my last question on just distribution. Again, the implied margins are below 14%.

You talked a little, I think, in the last answer about growth or sorry, investment in that business. So how much is the investment? Where is it going to? And just again, exiting margins exiting 2025, the fourth quarter with a 15.1% margin, and ending implied 2026 below 14% just does not make a lot of sense. Thank you.

Mark Smith: We have had a lot of discussions about the distribution margins. And the performance over a number of years has been really good. So we are really thrilled with the distribution leadership team continuing to grow earnings and margins. The tariffs throw a little bit of a spanner in the works from a percentage basis. You know, we are in tens of basis points of dilution there. It is taken longer to work through distribution. And then the recoveries. And yet, there is a little bit of investment. Nothing underlying has fundamentally changed. So we still think the distribution business is going to be a dollar and a percent grower over time.

There can be some, yeah, modest investments in a over a short period of time, but nothing fundamentally changing there. And then in the engine business, yeah, there is not a lot of pricing this year. There has been a lot of tariff recovery work and tariff mitigation work going on in 2025. But not this year. We are really in preparing for more demand whilst preparing for new product launches. All of those things are going on at the same time. Little bit of dilution from tariffs.

And then there is not nothing is happening significant we do not expect on the JV income line, maybe even be down in on-highway a little bit in China, maybe up a little bit the power systems JV earnings in China. So the net guide is at close to zero for JV earnings for the company, but it may be a little bit of dilution embedded in the engine business guidance and a little bit of enhancement embedded in power systems overall, but nothing dramatic or changing. But yes, overall, I would say pricing is not a big feature of 2026.

Jennifer Rumsey: I will just add, Jamie, on the $232 tariff. First, we are, of course, very supportive of the U.S. Administration's focus on strengthening manufacturing and some of the things that they are doing as part of February to make sure that for companies like Cummins that are manufacturing for the U.S., and the U.S. and even manufacturing in the U.S. for export, that there are incentives to do that. And they are still working through the details of the engine offset program. So we are waiting for clarity on how that will work as well as how they define U.S. content.

So there is some uncertainty built into that range that we have on our margins in the engine business and components that will depend on how those details work out, and we hope to have more clarity after Q1.

Operator: The next question is from the line of Angel Castillo with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your questions.

Angel Castillo: Hi, thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to start out maybe on the supply side of power gen or actually the supply demand. One quick one on the demand side. You mentioned record level of orders in the fourth quarter. Can you size your backlog exactly at this point and maybe provide a little bit more color on what the growth rate was either year over year or sequentially to your in terms of orders or the backlog? Then on the supply side, we have been hearing about capacity investments from perhaps other competitors. How are you kind of thinking about what that means for the competitive environment out there?

And impact your decision to invest in capacity as well?

Jennifer Rumsey: Yes. I mean, we do not quantify the size of our back order. So all I can say is we had a record in Q3, we set another record in Q4 in terms of that demand intake and multiyear strength and continued discussions with our data center customers on how we can meet their multiyear needs and what they are doing. So there is at this point, we see plenty of demand and, you know, some of the investment questions is just defining the plan that we think is efficient use of the capital we have as it relates to natural gas or other things having confidence in the multiyear outlook. On what, the market demand may be.

We do feel pretty confident that we will see strong demand continuing for diesel backup power. And so there really is that developing the detailed plan of what we think we can do and also our suppliers' abilities to invest and keep up with what we are doing in our own facilities.

Angel Castillo: That is helpful. And then maybe just on capital allocation a little bit here. So your net debt to EBITDA seems to be below one and you are taking some charges on Accelera reducing some investments there. I think your R&D expense, if I am not mistaken, should be coming down post EPA engines. So I think that is 2028. Can you also have your truck market bottoming here and hopefully starting to improve. So how should we think about capital allocation as we kind of progress into 2026? I know you are mentioned reviewing some of these investments that you will talk about more at Investor Day.

But assuming you are able to deploy some of maybe Accelera type of investments or others, into that power gen. Should we expect buybacks to come back in the order of magnitude there that we should kind of think about product capital allocation would be helpful.

Mark Smith: Yes. What I would say is we have worked hard over the last couple of years to restore our credit metrics post the drivetrain business or formerly Meritor acquisition. So we are in a strong position. We have financial flexibility. Most well, all of what we are investing in today in the current year can be funded within our current cash flow operations. So we do have that flexibility. We talked about them kind of a minimum goal of 50% back to shareholders. And we do have that flexibility to deploy more capital to shareholders going forward. So if we see the right balance of opportunities.

Operator: Thank you. The next question is from the line of David Raso with Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your question.

David Raso: Hi, thank you. On the tariff impact, can you take us through the cadence? I think you alluded to the fourth quarter was your highest gross impact. The 50 bps that you gave is the drag. I assume that was a net number, that was not just gross. Is that correct?

Mark Smith: 50 bits the 50 bits was the net full-year drag for 2026.

David Raso: So if the net drag is, call it $175 million for the full year, can you take us through the cadence? We are just trying to get a sense of obviously, the margin guide is a bit disappointing, and people are just trying to figure out where at least we think you are exiting 26% on the margins.

Mark Smith: You are doing some kind of net drag there, I think, David, and that is not right. So the drag is really on, let us call it, inflated revenues and inflated recovering and inflated COGS. Incurring costs. It is not just the market one would be a it is a not a dollar block.

Jennifer Rumsey: Yeah. We are our strategy is to work to recover dollars. And that return from the end the revenue number.

David Raso: If sorry. Yeah. The revenue number will move depending on what the tariff dollar is as well our recovery.

Nicholas Arens: So what is it you want to know, Dave?

David Raso: Well, I am curious. What is the revenue the price offset? Like, we are just trying to figure out how much is it price cost, and also more trying to figure out how we exit the year.

Mark Smith: You are talking you are talking about less you are talking about less than 2% year-over-year revenue increase due to the annualized impact of tariff recovery?

David Raso: Helpful. And the pricing comment, I think you made a comment. Not much pricing in '26 or something like that. I apologize. Sure exactly what you are referring to. The tariff impact, was that something that maybe did not raise price quickly enough? I am just kind of curious how you are thinking about ability to capture about pricing ex tariffs.

Mark Smith: Tariffs is not pricing in my mind. So I am just saying other than puts tariffs to one side, we have done a good job mitigating that. The net impact to our P&L through all the actions we took was modest. But overall pricing given that we are mostly selling out existing products, right? This current year that we have done a lot both on pricing in the past few years and the recovery on top. This is we are not anticipating this is going to be a big year for net pricing x tariffs.

But we are moving towards the transition to new products, which is a whole different angle and that is for next year, not for this year.

Operator: Thank you. The next question is from the line of Steven Fisher with UBS. Thanks. Good morning. And sorry, just to clarify again, I know the message previously had been going into Q4, expect to beat price versus cost neutral on the prior existing tariffs, and then it was going to take a little time to get the latest round. So what are we thinking? Is it sort of just a net neutral on price versus cost on the tariffs as you see them today for the year? I guess maybe to start there.

Mark Smith: Yes. Give or take. A few dollars. Not exactly perfect dollar for dollar, but yes. It is not. But a significant dollar hit year over year, but the magnitude of the annualization of the sales and the cost of sales is dilutive to the EBITDA. Since other I will send another way, if we had no tariffs if they suddenly evaporated, our EBITDA percent at the midpoint would be half a point higher, but it would be on lower revenues.

Steven Fisher: Right. Okay. That is helpful. And then I guess just related to this, since you mentioned India, I am curious what you actually have baked into the guidance for India given some of the changes that we have heard about very recently.

Mark Smith: I mean, you are talking about India. Right? Now you are talking I mean, we are talking tens of millions of dollars related to India. And a lot of it was moving global product around because we you know, it is a more international business. Right? And the largely power generation markets where we are shipping products all around the world. So yeah, we are in the tens of millions, but we cannot go through every individual tariff by country or we will be even longer than we would enjoy.

Nicholas Arens: I think, Steve, just to add to that, this is Nick. What I would say is Q4 for power systems was more transitory impact of India tariffs coming through. But to Mark's point, as we move into '26, we feel well-positioned on that particular element to hit our Q4.

Mark Smith: That is where the margins would one of the reasons why the margin down just a little bit in Q4, and you can see from the guide we have got margin expansion built into the guidance there.

Operator: Our next question is from the line of Kyle Menges with Citigroup. Please proceed with your question.

Kyle Menges: Thanks for taking the question, guys. I did want to ask on EPA 27 now that we have gotten more clarity on that and we have heard from various others in the industry that it could lead to a plus or minus $10,000 of increase just to the cost of a truck. So trying to think about how that would actually impact Cummins, I guess, on just engine pricing margin and then also just how to think about the impact to components volume, just given the added content as well as pricing?

Jennifer Rumsey: Yeah. Great. Let me break this down in a couple of things. You know, first, we are committed to always delivering innovative efficient solutions to our customers to meet their needs and with the regulation. And for those of you that have been around the industry for some time, it is quite unusual to have this level of uncertainty, this close to a regulatory implementation date. So the EPA indication late last year, as you noted, that they will move forward with the 27 NOx rule was an important step to give more regulatory certainty.

And I think the EPA has worked hard to balance with regulatory certainty and allowing those that have made big investments in products to launch in '27, not only to comply with the regulation but to bring other values to our customers to move forward while also looking at reducing the cost impact to the end customer. And so they have given some indication of what that looks like. We think we are very well positioned with our Helm engine platforms and the new products that we are going to be launching around those regulations.

There is still a lot of work underway that we are active in with the regulators, with our customers, with our suppliers on the details of those changes that they are going to make and that we complete our validation and certification process in accordance with those. So we are working through that. And just will note, you know, we work with multiple OEMs. The most OEMs on our B series product, which is in a, you know, high variety of different applications. So that is one in particular that we are focused on.

Net of that is we are all moving forward toward that gaining the additional clarity that we need and it will still result in content ad in engine business and in the components business after treatment. In particular, ACT is estimated $10,000 to $15,000 for a heavy-duty truck ad associated with that, and the majority of that will be in the powertrain. So it will split for us in our content ad between the engine business and the components business. And we will see that coming in with those new product launches.

But again, they are also bringing more efficiency, more power, advancing our digital solutions, excited about the value we are going to bring to our customers along with that regulatory change.

Operator: Our next question is from the line of Noah Kaye with Oppenheimer. Please proceed with your question.

Noah Kaye: That is a perfect lead into my question, which is now that we have a little bit more certainty that this is going to happen, even if we are still looking for the fine points of it, what is the guide embed for, any kind of prebuy for '26?

Jennifer Rumsey: Yeah. I mean, it is a big question and part of what I would say is will influence the range and how much the second half comes back. But we are assuming we will see some prebuy in the second half of next year. There is a combination of the natural coming out of the down cycle for the truck market, the more stability and tariffs that will cause customers to start buying trucks again, and then prebuy in the second half of the year. But we are really watching to try to how much will that be. You saw strong orders in December. Improvement in orders last month.

But how that flows over the course of the year, I think we are all cautiously optimistic is what I would say. And then, you know, demand does start to strengthen, how quickly can the supply base flex back up because it dropped quite dramatically last year. So those are the things to watch.

Mark Smith: Yeah. Fundamentals have improved a little bit. It has been a long dry spell. So hopefully that continues in addition to buying some product ahead of the changes.

Jennifer Rumsey: May mean some more even performance as you go from the second half of this year into next year, though.

Noah Kaye: Okay. And then I guess the tie into that just again around the engine margins. You mentioned the preparing for new product launches. But I know a lot of investment has gone into preparing the platform. So is it an incremental headwind to margins, the investment and the preparation costs for launch in 2026? Or are we actually starting to lap that?

Mark Smith: We are starting to lap it to some extent, but said another way, we are essentially in some cases running with parallel operating systems. Some of the engine platforms are going to change quite significantly as we work through the introduction. So as we get through the other side of the launches, yes, we would expect the margins to step up once we convert over.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Tim Thein with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.

Tim Thein: I will just kind of package these together. Question one is just on Mark going back to the comments earlier about the capital allocation flexibility that you have. I am curious as part of that, maybe it does not factor in or not, but your joint venture partner in your AMT venture announced a potential or likely spin-off of that business. I am just curious if that impacts could that give rise to potential option for Cummins if it wanted to increase its stake there. Maybe just thoughts around that. And then I guess part two is the data center revenue in total in '25. Can you help us on that?

And then what is embedded in 2026 across power systems and distribution? Thank you.

Jennifer Rumsey: Yeah. You know, of course, we have an important partnership with Eaton, as you noted, in the Eaton Cummins joint venture. I think it is premature to say how that will happen. We would expect continued partnership with that portion of their business going forward, and that joint venture and really making sure that we have optimized powertrains for our customers.

Nicholas Arens: And then specific to your question on data center revenue, we had alluded, last call and $2.4 billion, $2.6 billion of total company revenue and expectations that would grow 30% to 35%. We did hit the upper bound of that. So for 2025, we are at about $3.5 billion between our power systems business and then also our distribution business.

Operator: Thank you. Our last question comes from the line of Chad Dillard with Bernstein. Please proceed with your question.

Chad Dillard: Hey, good morning, guys. So with the restructuring you took in Accelera, can you talk about how that changes the cost structure? Where do breakeven margins go? And then just maybe a little more color on just what the actions were.

Jennifer Rumsey: Yes. So with this, the actions in the fourth quarter were really focused on our electrolyzer business. And just frankly, with the policy changes in green hydrogen, the demand for green hydrogen has dried up, dramatically lower. And so that has had a relook at our participation. You know, we have commitments to customers that we have made, but we will stop future commercial activity.

And so what that means and even with some of the that are starting to flow through that we took a year ago is we have meaningfully lowered losses for this year, but some of these things take time to fully play through just based on existing business and commitments that we have, but we have meaningfully reduced our participation in hydrogen. And we continue to feel like we have got some good capability in battery electric powertrains and pacing our investments there. Given the slowing in the market, but the anticipation that will continue to grow over time is really where we are focused. And then, of course, we never stopped investing in the engine side of our solutions.

And so, anticipate more strength there for longer.

Mark Smith: Yeah. And I think you will see in our disclosure some of the breakdown of cost was a combination of some people actions, some inventory write-downs, some contract exits. It is a whole combination of things. Whereas the Q3 charge is really just a goodwill impairment. This was related to specific actions that lower the cost going forwards. So as Jen said, what, you know, permanently reducing the rate of participation in electrolyzers going forward, but observing commitments we have already made. So that should have a positive trend to it over time.

Chad Dillard: Got it. That is helpful. And then I wanted to revisit the gross tariff conversation. Can we just go back to talking about the seasonality of that from like first half versus second half?

Mark Smith: Somebody else is responsible for the seasonality of that. But this is what I would say, like think of if you look at over the course of last year, you saw growing, especially in the second half, tariff cost through and recovery increasing as we negotiated commercial agreements with our customers that becomes hopefully more stable and steady this year. Although there are still some new tariff announcements. And as I noted, details around engine offset and 232 that we will need to work through. So we are continuing to spend a lot of time on how this is moving in.

The agreements that we have with our suppliers and customers and fundamentally, maintain our goal of recovering at a dollar level our actual cost.

Mark Smith: But the degree of variation has moderated here between the quarters. We were able to deliver the net, you know, mostly recovered in the fourth quarter that anticipated, which contributed to the solid results overall. So from the seasonal, it is more just the pacing of how long it took to work through the supply chain. And of course, there were a number of changes up and down.

Operator: Thank you. At this time, we have reached the end of our question and answer session. I will turn the floor back to Nicholas Arens for closing remarks.

Nicholas Arens: Thank you. That concludes our teleconference for the day. Thank you all for participating in your continued interest. As always, the Investor Relations team will be available for questions after the call. Thank you.