Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Date

Friday, May 1, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • President and Chief Executive Officer — Simon Meester
  • Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — Jennifer Kong-Picarello

Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email [email protected]

Takeaways

  • Revenue -- $1.7 billion, up 41% reported and 10.8% pro forma, driven by the REV merger and growth across all legacy segments.
  • Specialty vehicles segment sales -- $436 million for February and March, with 20% growth from higher price realization and unit deliveries.
  • Pro forma backlog -- $7.1 billion at quarter end, reflecting strong bookings and forward visibility.
  • EBITDA margin (fiscal Q1 ended March 31, 2026) -- 9.9%, down 50 basis points, primarily due to tariffs not present in the prior year, partially offset by operational improvements in Materials Processing and Specialty Vehicles.
  • EPS -- $0.98, up 18%, with $0.10 per share from one-time tax benefits and $0.05 operational improvement.
  • Free cash outflow -- $57 million, consistent with seasonal patterns and prior year.
  • Net working capital -- 16.7% of sales, improved from 26% year over year.
  • Net leverage ratio -- Reduced to 2.4x, reflecting disciplined capital structure management.
  • Pro forma bookings -- $2.1 billion, resulting in a 109% book-to-bill ratio and sequentially higher backlog.
  • Materials Processing segment bookings -- $623 million, up 38% pro forma, with backlog up $205 million to $594 million.
  • Environmental Solutions segment sales -- Grew 3.3%, led by utility demand; Q1 EBITDA margin was 18%, lower due to volume mix but supported by synergy benefits.
  • 2026 sales outlook -- Anticipated 5% pro forma growth to $7.5 billion–$8.1 billion.
  • 2026 pro forma EBITDA outlook -- $930 million–$1 billion, with a midpoint margin of 12.4%.
  • Synergy realization -- On track for $28 million in 2026, targeting $75 million run-rate within 24 months post-REV merger.
  • EPS guidance (2026) -- $4.50–$5.00, with approximately 25% of EPS expected in Q2 due to profitability phasing.
  • Segment growth expectations -- Environmental Solutions to grow mid-single digits, Materials Processing high single digits, and Specialty Vehicles high single digits pro forma, all with margin improvements anticipated.
  • Geographic revenue mix -- 80% of revenue generated in North America, with roughly 85% of that manufactured in the United States, reducing global macro sensitivity.
  • Supply chain investments -- 35% capacity increase at Ocala, Florida plant and expanded production for S-180 pumpers in South Dakota, aimed at reducing lead times.
  • Integration execution -- REV integration progressing on schedule, with all work streams at or ahead of plan and cultural alignment between legacy Terex (TEX 0.53%) and REV teams.
  • Aerials segment margin outlook -- Margins expected to improve sequentially in Q2 and Q3, remaining price/cost neutral for the year despite increased tariffs.

Summary

Management confirmed strong execution in the fiscal first quarter ended March 31, 2026, with significant backlog growth and healthy bookings across key segments. The integration of the REV acquisition is on track, with synergy realization already materializing and all integration work streams progressing as planned. Segment-level margin expansion is targeted through productivity improvements, price actions, and higher volumes, particularly in Materials Processing and Specialty Vehicles. Despite operational outperformance, management reiterated its full-year financial guidance due to macroeconomic and tariff uncertainties, reflecting a disciplined near-term outlook. Product introductions and portfolio diversification are expected to drive longer-term margin and revenue opportunities, with increased U.S. exposure enhancing resilience.

  • Simon Meester stated, "we are reiterating our full year outlook and with the recent additions to our portfolio, remain laser-focused on execution and integration."
  • Simon Meester said, "For the synergies with REV, we are on track to realize approximately $28 million in 2026 by eliminating duplicate overhead and have line of sight to achieving a $75 million run rate within our 24-month target."
  • Simon Meester described Specialty Vehicles backlog as providing "very good visibility for the balance of the year," with throughput expected to increase as investments come online in Q4.
  • Management indicated current operating EPS improvement was achieved "despite the tariff headwinds," and does not expect a material impact from recent tariff changes for Environmental Solutions or Specialty Vehicles.
  • The company continues strategic review processes for the Aerials business, engaging with multiple interested parties and emphasizing value maximization for shareholders.
  • Simon Meester highlighted investments in digital solutions, stating that 3rd Eye technology has been expanded to utility vehicles, cement mixers, and fire and emergency vehicles.
  • Terex noted that over 80% revenue weighting in North America and a more durable supply chain reduces risk from external macroeconomic volatility.
  • Jennifer Kong-Picarello confirmed, "We expect 2026 free cash conversion of between 80% and 90% of our net income."

Industry glossary

  • Book-to-bill ratio: A measure of incoming orders (bookings) divided by fulfilled orders (billings or sales), indicating demand strength and future revenue visibility in capital equipment industries.
  • Synergy realization: Cost reductions or operational efficiencies achieved following business combinations such as mergers or acquisitions, often quantified in annual run rates.
  • 3rd Eye digital solution: Proprietary AI-based situational awareness platform for specialty vehicles, supporting operational efficiency and safety in fleet management across Terex segments.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Simon Meester: Thanks, Derek, and good morning. I would like to welcome everyone to our earnings call and appreciate your interest in Terex. We're off to a good start for the year, including our new Specialty Vehicle segment, which was in the portfolio for 2 months of the period and already making a meaningful contribution to the group. We grew sales by 11% on a pro forma basis, including growth in all 4 segments, led by Specialty Vehicles, which grew 20% compared to the same period last year. Terex Utilities was our fastest-growing business this quarter. The Utilities team is doing an excellent job ramping up production in a very bullish market.

And EPS increased 18% year-over-year to $0.98 or 6% improvement with a normalized tax rate. Quarter ending backlog increased to $7.1 billion, which includes strong bookings trends, particularly in Materials Processing, Aerials and Terex Utilities, providing good forward visibility and consistent with our expectations for the year. As a result, we are reiterating our full year outlook and with the recent additions to our portfolio, remain laser-focused on execution and integration, which brings me to Slide 4. The REV integration is progressing as planned. We are executing the same playbook we used for the ESG integration, which we completed ahead of schedule and within budget with synergies above target.

For the synergies with REV, we are on track to realize approximately $28 million in 2026 by eliminating duplicate overhead and have line of sight to achieving a $75 million run rate within our 24-month target. With regards to the integration effort, all work streams are at or ahead of schedule. In addition, I'm particularly encouraged by the way the legacy Terex and legacy REV teams are working together, and the 2 cultures are meshing really well. Last week, the Specialty Vehicles team showcased our 3rd Eye digital solution at the Fire & Emergency Trade show in Indianapolis, and we're very pleased with the level of interest it created.

3rd Eye is an AI-based solution that our Environmental Solutions segment developed for their customers to provide situational awareness around the vehicle and add tangible commercial and operational benefits. It's an integral part of what is now referred to as smart truck technology in the waste collection sector. Our digital team has already developed applications that leverage this technology for utility vehicles, cement mixers and have now added fire and emergency vehicles to their scope. So good progress on the REV integration and the synergies front. We're also pleased with the progress we are making with the strategic review of our Aerials business.

We continue to engage with multiple interested parties and are working towards an outcome that maximizes value for our shareholders. We do not have any specific details to share at this time, but we will continue to update you as the process unfolds. Moving to Page 5. Over the past 2 years, we deliberately shifted our portfolio's end market exposure to more U.S.-based, resilient and predictable sectors with attractive growth profiles. As a result, Terex is far less exposed to global macro dynamics and trade policy than in the past. Based on pro forma 2025 results, about 80% of our revenue was generated in North America, of which roughly 85% was manufactured in the United States.

Our end markets are more stable and our supply chain is more durable. Touching briefly on our primary verticals. Demand for fire and emergency vehicles continues to be strong. We are making strategic investments to improve production efficiency and increase capacity in key areas such as ladder trucks, where we are increasing capacity by 35% at our Ocala, Florida plant. And in South Dakota, we're increasing capacity for the pre-engineered S-180 pumpers. Both investments will help to reduce lead times and with the S-180 pumper, provide our customers with a lower cost alternative that we can deliver in about 9 months.

In waste and recycling, our customers are indicating that 2026 demand will be more skewed towards the second half, including anticipated prebuys ahead of the 2027 EPA changes. HAL is well positioned to outperform the market again this year due to its product portfolio, production quality and its lead times. We continue to anticipate growth in aftermarket, retrofits and digital sales this year. And of course, the long-term fundamental growth drivers for the segment remain intact. Utilities is poised for strong growth for 2026 and beyond as demand on the U.S. grid continues to increase, particularly from data center expansion and AI use cases.

Industry forecasts call for 8% to 15% annual CapEx growth through 2030, and we're making good progress with our phased investment to bring 30% more capacity online by the end of next year. And finally, in construction, we see robust infrastructure activity supported by government funding. The pipeline of mega projects provides a tailwind through 2030. MP continues to grow its business in India, and we are starting to see improvements in Europe and Australia, although oil prices can potentially hamper some of that growth given the more vulnerable state both of those markets are currently in.

In summary, in the past 2 years, we have built a highly resilient portfolio of businesses that enable us to navigate short-term macro and market-specific dynamics and deliver on our financial objectives predictably and consistently going forward. And with that, I'll turn it over to Jen.

Jennifer Kong-Picarello: Thank you, Simon, and good morning, everyone. Let's look at our Q1 results on Slide 6. Our operational performance was in line with our expectations. We grew sales to $1.7 billion, an increase of $505 million or 41% compared with the prior year on a reported basis. The growth was due to the merger with REV that closed on February 2 and growth in each of our legacy segments. On a pro forma basis, we grew 10.8%, led by strong growth in Specialty Vehicles, Material Processing and Terex Utilities. Excluding the impact of the merger and the sale of our Crane and [indiscernible] businesses, organic revenue increased 8.1% with increased sales across all legacy segments.

Q1 EBITA margin was 9.9%, down 50 basis points versus the prior year, primarily driven by tariffs, which were not in effect in the prior year period, partially offset by improved performance in MP and SV. Interest and other expenses of $44 million was $1 million lower than Q1 last year. And the first quarter effective tax rate was 11%, driven by favorable onetime tax attributes. EPS for the quarter was $0.98, which included approximately $0.10 of onetime tax benefit when the Q1 tax rate is compared to our 2026 full year expected tax rate of 21%. Our operational EPS improvement was $0.05 compared to last year despite the tariff headwinds.

Notably, our current Q1 EPS is based on 96.1 million shares outstanding, up from $66.9 million in the first quarter of 2025. Free cash outflow in the quarter was $57 million, consistent with Q1 last year. Terex's historical cash generation is seasonally weighted towards the back half of the year with first quarter cash outflows reversing as volume increases and working capital unwinds through the remaining of the year. Importantly, our newer businesses, particularly Specialty Vehicles, have a more favorable working capital profile with significantly less seasonality. As a result, our Q1 net working capital as a percentage of sales improved to 16.7% compared to 26% in the same period last year.

We also reduced our net leverage ratio to 2.4x and remain disciplined with our capital structure, focused on maximizing value for our shareholders. Please turn to Slide 7 to review our segment results, starting with Environmental Solutions. As expected, sales growth of 3.3% in ES was driven by Terex Utilities as they begin to ramp up to meet strong demand for bucket trucks, digger derricks and products and services. Q1 EBITDA margin of 18% was lower than the prior year due to a higher mix of utilities volume, where margins continue to improve, coupled with lower ESG volume, partially offset by higher synergy realization. Turning to Slide 8.

MP had a very good first quarter, growing bookings and sales and expanding operating margin. Sales of $419 million were 18.3% higher than prior year on a pro forma basis or 12% higher, excluding the impact of foreign exchange rates. Growth in aggregates was the primary driver as sales grew in every region. The handling and environmental verticals also grew in the quarter. MP EBITDA margin continued to improve, reaching 15% in the quarter as higher volume, efficiency improvements and pricing actions drove the 310 basis point increase over the prior year. The margin actions and increasing bookings and backlog sets MP up well for the balance of 2026. Moving to Slide 9.

Our new Specialty Vehicle segment got off to a great start, generating $436 million of revenue in February and March, representing growth of 20% compared with the same period last year. The growth was a combination of price realization and higher unit deliveries across all product lines, partially due to weather-related delivery timing. EBITDA margin increased by 160 basis points to 14.2%, driven by higher throughput, price realization and improved operational efficiency. Turning to Page 10. ARRIS had another strong bookings quarter with 132% book-to-bill, generating a $1 billion backlog, giving us forward visibility as we head into the annual selling season. Sales in the quarter were $469 million, up 4.2% year-over-year, largely due to positive foreign exchange rates.

As expected, Aerials EBITDA was breakeven because Q1 is typically a seasonally low volume quarter and due to tariffs, which the business did not incur this time last year. In addition, the business faced some temporary unfavorable mix but expects favorable price/cost dynamics for the remaining of the year. Turning to bookings on Slide 11. Before going into each segment, for Terex overall, Q1 pro forma bookings of $2.1 billion represented 109% book-to-bill ratio and led to modestly higher backlog on a sequential and year-over-year basis. In Environmental Solutions, Q1 bookings were $347 million, slightly lower than prior quarters due to the timing of several large utilities bookings that were recorded in Q4.

We expect bookings level in utilities to remain strong, and our focus remains on ramping up throughput to meet demand. On the ESG side, we expect orders to be more heavily weighted to the second half of the year, including additional orders for delivery in advance of the new 2027 EPA regulations. MP bookings of $623 million reflects 38% year-over-year growth on a pro forma basis. While aggregates was the main driver, bookings also increased in concrete, material handling and environmental. MP ended the quarter with $594 million in backlog, up $205 million or 53% versus the prior year, setting it up for strong performance through 2026. SP bookings came in at $501 million.

As you can see on the chart, orders can be lumpy in the segment, but overall, the backlog remains elevated, and the team is focusing on bringing lead times down with calculated investments. Finally, Aerials bookings of $620 million in Q1, combined with $971 million in Q4 is 21% higher than the same 6 months period a year ago. While growth was strongest in North America, we also saw modest growth in EMEA, providing good visibility for the balance of 2026. Now turn to Slide 12 for our 2026 outlook. We are operating in a complex environment with many macroeconomic variables and geopolitical uncertainties, and results could change negatively or positively.

The outlook we are providing today reflects our current portfolio and does not account for any cost to achieve the synergies, purchase accounting adjustments nor other nonrecurring items. Our first quarter performance, booking trends and backlog of $7.1 billion supports reconfirming the full year 2026 outlook that we provided in February. Overall, we continue to expect 2026 sales to grow approximately 5% on a pro forma basis to $7.5 billion to $8.1 billion. We further expect pro forma EBITDA to grow by approximately $100 million or 12% year-over-year to between $930 million and $1 billion or 12.4% EBITDA margin at the midpoint.

Included in our EBITDA outlook is approximately $28 million of synergies that we are well on our way to realizing. This is in line with our goal to achieve $75 million of run rate synergies within 2 years of closing the merger. We continue to anticipate interest and other expenses to be approximately $190 million, consistent with pro forma 2025 based on average debt outstanding of about $2.7 billion. The effective tax rate for the full year is still expected to be 21%. We expect 2026 EPS between $4.50 and $5. Please note, the share count for quarters 2 through 4 will be approximately 115 million.

For modeling purposes, approximately 25% of our full year EPS is anticipated in the second quarter as we expect profitability in Aerials and Environmental Solutions to improve in the second half. We expect 2026 free cash conversion of between 80% and 90% of our net income. Our net leverage is expected to improve over the course of the year. Looking at our segments, we expect Environmental Solutions to grow mid-single digits in 2026, led by utilities, where we continue to ramp up production to meet strong demand. We expect margin to improve in the second half due to higher volume, including digital and aftermarket, productivity improvements and improved customer mix.

We do not foresee a material impact from the recent tariff changes on ES performance. Turning to MP. The strong start to the year and growth in bookings and backlog gives us confidence in our high single-digit pro forma growth outlook for the segment, largely driven by aggregates. We also expect margins to improve through 2026 due to higher volume, productivity and favorable price cost. It's important to understand that mobile crushing and screening equipment, the primary products in the aggregate vertical that we import from the U.K. are not subject to 232 tariffs.

Our new Specialty Vehicles segment got off to a great start and with roughly 2 years of backlog provides very good visibility for the balance of the year. We continue to expect sales growth of high single digits from an 11th-month pro forma prior year total of $2.2 billion. We also continue to expect meaningful margin improvement compared to the prior year EBITDA margin of approximately 12.5% due to higher throughput, price realization and ongoing operational improvements. From a modeling perspective, we expect run rate revenue and margins in Q2 and Q3 to be similar to Q1 with a modest seasonal step down in Q4 due to fewer working days.

We do not foresee a material impact from recent tariff changes on ASV performance. Finally, in Aerials, we continue to anticipate 2026 sales and margin to be similar to 2025. We have good visibility with over $1 billion in backlog following back-to-back quarters with strong bookings. Margins are expected to improve sequentially in the second and third quarters with higher volume, price realization, favorable customer mix and disciplined cost management. Even with a higher impact of tariffs versus last year, we expect Aerials to be largely price/cost neutral for the full year. With Q1 behind us, healthy backlog and fleet utilization, we expect the business to have bottomed and start its path to cyclical recovery.

In summary, given that we are only 1 quarter into the year and there are macro variables that we do not control, we believe it is prudent to hold our 2026 outlook at this point in time. We will obviously refine our outlook as the year unfolds. Please turn to Slide 14, and I'll turn it back to Simon.

Simon Meester: Thanks, Jen. We delivered a solid start to 2026 with strength in Materials Processing and Utilities and a strong initial contribution from our new Specialty Vehicles segment. Integration execution is progressing as planned, and we are on track to deliver our synergy commitments. Our portfolio is more resilient and predictable with greater North America exposure and less sensitive to macro volatility and tariff changes than in prior years. Our teams are focused on disciplined execution against our strategy and our annual plan as we build on the progress that we've made to date. And with that, I would like to open it up for questions. Operator?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Angel Castillo with Morgan Stanley.

Angel Castillo Malpica: Just wanted to start, I guess, you delivered a very solid Q1 here in EPS. You had very strong bookings and improving margins in all the segments. And yet, I guess, you chose to hold the full year guidance constant. So Jennifer, I know that you kind of qualified it as prudent, but curious, I guess, is this primarily a function of macro tariff uncertainty or just more about conservatism? And then curious if you could add to the extent that there is conservatism in the guide, I guess, where are you seeing most areas of kind of uncertainty within the business?

Or where do you see the most kind of room for upside risk in terms of the segments or the products?

Simon Meester: Angel, thanks for the question. Yes, the short answer is, as Jen said in her prepared remarks, that it's much more about discipline and timing than any change in how we feel about the fundamentals of the business. We're very pleased with how the year started. Q1 execution is strong, bookings and backlog improved, and we are seeing good momentum across the board. That said, we're only 1 quarter into the year. We're operating in an environment that still has a fair amount of uncertainty around macro conditions and tariffs.

And so we believe that at this point, it's most prudent to confirm the outlook that we set in February, which already contemplated solid growth and margin expansion and synergy realization. And we feel like it reflects our confidence in delivering those commitments while also basically allowing us to see a bit more conversion and volume flow through the system. Importantly, I think, is nothing that we've seen year-to-date has changed our confidence in the underlying trajectory of the business. And as the year progresses, we'll gain additional visibility, and we'll continue to evaluate the outlook based on how we execute and how things evolve at the macro level.

But for now, we think reaffirming is the right and responsible approach.

Angel Castillo Malpica: That's totally fair. And I guess as a follow-up to that, Simon, I was hoping you could unpack the backlog and bookings trends a little bit more. I guess, first, just curious how orders have progressed through your segments in March and April. I think you just noted that there's maybe -- we haven't seen anything change so far, but just a little bit more color on that. And also if you could expand on the MP bookings and backlog, I think that's the strongest we've seen in a couple of years here.

So just can you talk about what you're seeing in terms of demand there and whether that was maybe more of a onetime step-up or if it's just kind of a continuation that you anticipate in terms of demand?

Simon Meester: No. I mean we're very encouraged by the bookings in MP. We think there's strong momentum. MPs, as you know, is mostly a dealer model. We see fleets at a healthy level. We see utilization at a healthy level. We see RPOs coming back in, which were being a little delayed in the last couple of quarters, but we are seeing the RPOs picking back up. So we're very pleased with the momentum that we see building in MP, and we expect that to carry forward in the remainder of the year. Pleased with the bookings in aerials. We've got now 6 of the 9 months covered.

And with some of that price cost coming our way for the remainder of the quarters, we feel good about where that's going. And then on ES, very strong Environmental Solutions, very strong bookings, continued bookings in utilities, although when the slide that we shows a little bit of a dip in Q1, that's mostly because we had bookings that we thought would drop in Q1 dropped in Q4 with Terex Utilities, so they were a bit lumpy. And secondly, we see the center of gravity for ESG bookings more in the second half tied to new product introductions, fleet replacements and potential prebuys. So that explains a little bit the booking pattern in ES.

And then last, SV continues to be moving strong on bookings, although as lead times gradually and slowly start to improve, we expect bookings to start to come down at some point because as you can see from our appendix in the earnings deck, our backlog basically in that business has been going up consistently for the last 3 years. And as an industry, we've been very focused on bringing that down, hence, the investments that I spoke about in my prepared remarks. So we should be seeing bookings come down at some point in SV and see us working that backlog down.

So I think bookings, strong story this quarter and particularly encouraged with some of our -- like MP and aerials that we see some early cycle signs here. We see some independents picking up in Aerials, which is typically a sign for us that there might be some early cycle momentum building here that we're encouraged by for the year.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Kyle Menges with Citigroup.

Kyle Menges: Great. I was hoping if you could just talk about any changes to how you're thinking about margins across the segments for the year and tariff impacts. I think you said in the press release fairly negligible, but are tariffs at least somewhat of an incremental headwinds weighing on the guide?

Jennifer Kong-Picarello: Right. This is Jen. So maybe I'll start with AP first. Given the great performance in Q1, we expect a further step-up in our margin profile in Q2 and Q3, driven by the higher volume support of our backlog and the higher bookings and also favorable mix and price cost favorability in that segment. So we expect that to go up further. Now on ES, we expect that Q2 to be very similar than Q1. Our Q2 margin profile, our volumes continue to be driven by utilities.

And then we expect a meaningful step-up in our margin profile in the second half of the year for ES versus first half of the year, driven by ESG book-to-bill that Simon actually referenced in his prepared remarks. We expect higher-margin digital and aftermarket to drop through into second half of the year. And then finally, utilities continue to drive throughput at both of our Waukesha and Birmingham installed facilities continues to ramp up.

So ending with maybe SV, on our SV margin, we expect, like I mentioned in the prepared remarks, the Q2 and Q3 run rate to be very similar to our Q1 and then a marginal step down in Q4 due to lower -- less working days and due to customer inspection. Now in terms of the -- as segment, we do expect that Q2, we expect a natural step-up driven by our seasonal demand at 25% incremental. We then expect Q3 a further step-up driven by favorable customer mix. favorable capitalized variances and cost actions. And then Q4, which is a natural step down driven by seasonal lower demand, partially offset by realization of additional cost actions.

So again, for Aerials, Q1 was price/cost unfavorable. For the rest of the year is price/cost favorable, which leads to a full year price cost neutral.

Kyle Menges: Got it. And I'm just curious your confidence level in Aerials being price/cost favorable for the rest of the year with maybe some incremental tariff impacts. Curious if there's any ability to get additional price or getting some help perhaps from a higher mix of independents? Would just love to hear that.

Jennifer Kong-Picarello: And Carl, I forgot to address your question on the tariff piece. From a sequential standpoint, I don't see additional headwind on our tariff. The reason why I mentioned that in the press release, it's negligible in the tariff is because the change in the 232 calculation is largely offset by the IEEPA going away. So for us, for the Aerials business, we do have 6 months of backlog already in our backlog and we can see what is the margin profile of those backlog. We can see a favorable mix in our customer mix and also in that is in our backlog and also the pipeline as well.

So we are very comfortable with the price cost favorability for the rest of the year.

Simon Meester: Yes. So good forward visibility on price cost and mix, that's basically is what's giving us the confidence of the step-up in margin scenarios.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Mig Dobre with Baird.

Mircea Dobre: I guess great to hear that tariffs are not having much of an impact. But I'm curious as to how you're managing inflation more broadly, right? I mean we're seeing it in material costs. We're seeing it in energy, freight components. So where are you today versus maybe where you were back when you initially issued this guidance from an overall cost standpoint? And what are you doing to be able to maintain positive price cost like you talked about earlier? Is this a function of additional pricing adjustments on your end? Or is there something else in there how you're operating this year that we should be aware of?

Jennifer Kong-Picarello: This is Jen. So in terms of our cost inflation, any of our CPI index changes, it usually has a 3 to 6 months lag due to the hedging program that we do have, the vendor contracts that we are locked in for 3 to 12 months ahead of time. The commodity inflation is really baked into our current outlook. What we see in terms of the only risk from a cost inflation standpoint, it's higher inbound freight costs that we might have to incur for some of our international routes.

From a mitigation standpoint, as you know, our SV segment already baked in 6% to 8% of value-added price in our backlog, which covers the CPI inflation based on delivery lead times. The SV segment also has commercial chassis that's on a pass-through pricing mechanism so that it doesn't really impact us at all. And MP and ESG is more of a book-to-bill business right now given the normalization, which means that if we cannot mitigate the cost ourselves, we have the ability to flow down them as a surcharge. Our 2026 guidance already conservatively accounts for the known energy and commodity headwinds.

And with North America now representing more than 80% of our revenue, where energy inflation is more moderate and end market fundamentals remain robust, I feel that we're well positioned to manage the energy price validity in 2026 without any material downside risk to our current outlook.

Mircea Dobre: All right. Understood. My follow-up in Materials Processing, very good order performance there. I'm wondering if this is a function of dealers finally starting to restock. If that's the case, I'm wondering relative to history, where do you think this process is? How many more innings do we have in terms of dealer restock? And how do you separate that from actual end-user demand at this point and how that's developed?

Simon Meester: Yes. Great question. It's a little bit of both. It's definitely end user demand is picking up as well, particularly in the United States. We've had the tailwind of mega projects for quite some time. But now data centers, we actually see more spend actually landing in terms of infrastructure and road and bridge building, if you will. And all those are mobile crusher applications. Now obviously, that drives some of the sentiment and that also drives some of the willingness of our dealers to replenish. But we also see RPO conversions picking up, as I think I mentioned earlier on this call. So it's a little bit of both. Fleets are where they need to be.

They're not high, they're not low. But basically, most of the bookings in crushing and screening is triggered by RPO conversion. So if a customer converts a rental into a procured unit, it turns it into a booking from our dealer onto us. So it's a little bit of mix of both of more end-user demand, a little bit better sentiment and then fleets being in the right place.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Tim Thein with Raymond James.

Timothy Thein: Excellent. Yes. Just first question on the Specialty Vehicle segment with just some -- a bit more time accrued under your belt owning REV. I'm just wondering if there have been any notable takeaways or findings that inform you about just the outlook for the business and kind of the prospect for synergies as you look out. So maybe just kind of an update on REV to start.

Simon Meester: Yes. No, I appreciate the question. Obviously, very excited. A lot of good things happening. They had a good start of the year. It's only 2 months. We actually had a slightly better start to the year than we had originally anticipated because of some of the weather in January, we weren't able to fly customers in -- for the final inspection of their trucks. S o some of that kind of revenue that we were anticipating in January actually dropped into February. That's why they were up a bit more in February, March than I think they will be for the remainder of the year.

That's why we're holding their guide to a high single digit, even though they were well into the double digits for the first 2 months. But yes, I mean, it's obviously a lot of backlog to work through. So the focus needs to stay on production output, quality production output, and that's what the team has been focusing on for the last 6, 7 quarters, and we want to make sure that we help them maintain that momentum. And that's really where the focus is.

But at the same time, we are very inspired and encouraged by the synergies that we're seeing, not just from an overhead standpoint, but also operational synergies, looking at each other's supply chains, and there is a lot there. So we're very encouraged by the synergy pipeline as that is ramping up and that's building out. And then as I said in my prepared remarks, we have 8 or 9 work streams to basically integrate the business, and we're doing really well on all of those work streams. So far, it's been a great first couple of months, and we're very excited with what that business can bring to our group overall.

Timothy Thein: Got it. Okay. Probably a bit of a stretch to call this a related follow-up, but so be it. And maybe just to -- I wanted to spend a minute for an update on your stake in Apptronik. There's obviously lots of buzz these days around humanoid robotics, and there's been some speculation of additional funding rounds likely on the horizon, potentially at like a $15 billion or $20 billion implied valuation for that company. So I was hoping you can just remind us of your ownership stake? And I guess, secondarily, how, if at all, you're leveraging that technology within your operations?

Simon Meester: Yes. Thanks for the question. Maybe for context, Apptronik is a humanoid manufacturer, and we made an investment in Apptronik several years ago because we believed that humanoids would have application in our business, and we're thinking about warehousing, manufacturing, maybe even job sites. And our stake has certainly nicely appreciated over the last couple of years. But yes, we have an active technology pipeline with Apptronik.

And we actually launched our first prototype of a zero gravity arm that was developed by -- codeveloped by Apptronik and Genie at the CONEXPO show a little over a month ago and proudly voted as one of the 5 best innovations shown at the show by -- I believe it was Construction Weekly. And it's a great -- that's an industry game changer, we think, because it significantly increased safety, and it allows basically one person in the platform to install ceiling panels or dry wall because the zero gravity arm holds it all in place. effortlessly and you can manipulate and operate that arm really with just one finger.

So that's a great example of what Apptronik is bringing to our industry. And the feedback that we received from customers at that show was really encouraging. So those are the kind of things that we're working on with Apptronik, and we're very pleased with that partnership.

Jennifer Kong-Picarello: And Tim, this is Jen. If I could just add on, we account for that at the cost perspective. So the valuation that we talk about is not recorded.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of David Raso with Evercore ISI.

David Raso: Specialty Vehicles, I appreciate the January month when you did not own it, there was less shipments and you sort of got the benefit that they shipped later in the quarter when you did own it. But let's just talk about the first quarter pro forma. It seems like specialty vehicle revenues pro forma, if you'd own it the whole quarter, were about $615 million, $620 million, something like that. When you say revenue run rate to be similar to the first quarter, is that sort of the revenue number you're referencing? I just want to follow up on that, just so I get clarification first.

Simon Meester: Yes. It's probably -- you're not far off on that number. It's probably going to step up a little bit in Q2, Q3, but then it's going to come down in Q4 because we have less working days in Q4. But you're not far off, David.

David Raso: I guess the spirit of the question is your ability to bring better throughput to REV Group's factories was a key aspect of maybe the opportunity to really leverage the backlog this year. And just curious why we would not see a step-up. And you can -- I understand if it's first quarter, we don't want to look out too far and change the guidance. But I'm just curious why we would think there's no throughput increase from that first quarter run rate because it would imply the rest of the year has very little growth right from a year ago.

Simon Meester: Yes. We are guiding high single digits for the segment. And typically, about 2/3 of that is probably price and 1/3 of that is unit growth. Now we do have -- I mentioned investments coming online, but those mostly will come online in the fourth quarter of the year. So they don't yet have a meaningful impact for 2026. But that -- yes, going from mid-single to high single-digit kind of unit growth, that's really the focus that we have for that business for 2027. Now obviously, there's 2 years backlog. We think that, that eventually will settle at a 1-year kind of backlog level. That's where -- that's what we think is the sustainable level.

So that's the trajectory that we're working on, David.

David Raso: Again, though, sequentially, I was just thinking the backlog seemed to get repriced well, there would be a little more sequential from that first quarter run rate. I'm just trying to level set everybody just that seems like an area where, especially trying to get that backlog down. I mean, as you said, it's a huge backlog. It's 2 years of backlog. I appreciate that will be coming down. But just trying to understand the factory opportunity, the backlog repriced opportunity just to make sure we understand the revenue. I guess it is what it is. You're saying you think the revenue will be flat sequentially from a pro forma basis. kind of 1Q to 2Q, 3Q?

I'm just making sure I understand fully.

Simon Meester: Yes. No, I said step up from Q2 to Q1. So -- sorry, Q1 to Q2 will be a step up and then Q3 and then Q4 will be a step down because of working days. So the units built per day is going to continue to step up over the course of the year.

Jennifer Kong-Picarello: Yes. So David, this is Jen. If I could just add on...

David Raso: From the earlier comments, Jen, that's why. Okay. The earlier comment was revenue and margins 2Q and 3Q similar to 1Q. And I just wanted to get clarification on that.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jamie Cook with Truist Securities.

Jamie Cook: Congrats on a good start. Sorry, another question on Specialty. Again, I just want to make sure I understand the margins. You're going to do better than the 12.5% adjusted EBITDA margins for Specialty, Jen. And I think last quarter, you talked about sort of a 30% incremental. I guess, is that still the right way to think about it? And how are you thinking about specialty in terms of like where those margins can go longer term? It seems like we should be able to do better than what REV Group talked about in terms of their margin expansion. So where can that actual EBITDA margin number go? And then my second question is on Aerials.

I guess, Simon, with aerial markets potentially getting better, I'm just trying to understand how that's impacting like the bidding process in the sense that things are getting better. Does that mean more people are interested in it? Or like to what degree would you want to hold off on the sale because markets are getting better, perhaps maybe next year, you can do better than the flat margin you're going to do this year. Just trying to understand how the market is inflecting are impacting the decision on the sale.

Jennifer Kong-Picarello: Yes. Jamie, so in terms of margin profile for EV, maybe if I could just mention, R, they did an Investor Day probably 2 years ago on committing to a 2027 Investor Day margin profile. In fact, they're right now in 2026, they will be achieving that 1 year in advance. So I'm very pleased with the performance. With regards to the margin step-up over -- in Q2 and Q3, as you could see in our pro forma for just 3 months, January to March, the EBITDA margin is 13.1%, 100 basis point improvement versus last year. I expect this margin profile to continue to have a step up sequentially more than 100 basis points year-over-year.

So every single time that you look at year-over-year, it will be more than this 100% basis point margin improvement throughout the year, even with the step down in the delivery in Q4. Very comfortable with the price in the backlog very comfortable with the throughput that we're seeing. And most importantly, what makes this business margin sustainable and keep on improving is on the sourcing that they do have a clawback mechanism with the vendor. There's a lot of centralized sourcing initiatives that have actually already started. And we do expect that, that will improve through until the end of the year as well.

At this point in time, the -- what I shared in the margin profile does not include any other synergies outside of corporate. So I'm very comfortable with the margin expansion year-over-year throughout the year, more than Q1 pro forma basis.

Simon Meester: Yes. And I'll take your follow-up, Jamie, on the process, yes, it doesn't really change the process. We've always been very clear that this is a through-cycle discussion, and that's exactly how the discussions with multiple parties have been. It's a long term -- it has a long-term nature. And the fact that I think it's well documented that Aerials is a cyclical business that historically, 5, 7 years up, 2 years down, we're now at the end of the second year. The fact that it cycles up a little faster than maybe some anticipate. For us, the first quarter came in as we expected. The bookings came in as we expected.

So it doesn't really change our view on the process and our view on the outlook. But it's obviously a good problem to have to see the early signs of a cycle.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Tami Zakaria with JPMorgan Chase.

Tami Zakaria: So I heard you say you're expecting some prebuys in high ESG in the back half. I was wondering how does that impact your view about orders and revenue growth potential for that segment in 2027 after you're done with the prebuy-related pickup?

Simon Meester: Yes. We don't -- so this business doesn't really cycle, Tami, very strongly. So we're talking -- it's all within the margin, if you will. We don't see a major uptick in terms of prebuys either. In the second half, we think there's some. We actually think that 2027 looks pretty good from a just from a fleet expansion standpoint. And there's -- what I did not mention, I believe, in my prepared remarks is that there's a lot of new technology coming out as well in the second half that we think will drive a lot of momentum for us going into 2027.

We're obviously not guiding today for 2027, but we're not concerned that whatever happens in the second half will have a material impact on 2027. There's a lot of momentum there.

Tami Zakaria: Understood. That's very helpful. And so related to that, given you're expecting a lot of technology to be introduced in the back half, should we expect stronger price realization as you price for these enhancements?

Simon Meester: Well, I mean, our mantra has always been to be price cost neutral and whatever value or cost we find or add is for the benefit of the shareholder. That's our mantra. And not -- I don't think we should forget that this business is already operating in the high teens, performing really strongly. And part of the reason is because it's -- we're running a very efficient factory in Fort Payne, Alabama, and we're running a very accretive product portfolio that is well accepted by its customer base. because of the benefits that it creates for our customers. So we'll take that same approach.

We want to be market-based in terms of our pricing, and we want to continue to create value for our customers. That's what's going to drive that.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jerry Revich with Wells Fargo Securities.

Jerry Revich: Simon, I'm wondering if we could just get your latest thoughts on capital deployment. If you do complete the Ariel divestiture, what are you seeing in terms of the M&A landscape? How likely is it that we'll be looking at stock buyback versus additional opportunities to expand the portfolio? Can you just give us your updated views?

Simon Meester: Yes. I appreciate the question, Jerry. I really don't want to get ahead of myself here on this. Our most -- our immediate focus is on integration and execution, deliver on what we've committed to for the year. Really, if you think about it, we've gone through quite some change in the last 2 years. So making sure that all the work streams get done in terms of the integration and building up our synergy is our primary focus. And whatever the balance sheet will look like as we move forward, as always, we will look at what is best for our shareholders. And we have -- we like the optionality. The optionality is only growing.

It's only getting better for Terex and which means that our opportunity to add value for our shareholders is only going to increase going forward. So we'll deal with it when it comes, but it will be -- the tiebreaker will be whatever is best for our shareholder.

Jerry Revich: Super. And then separately on Specialty, really good operating performance in the quarter, as you shared in the pro forma financials. I wanted to ask from a booking standpoint, can you just talk about what kind of book-to-bill we should be expecting for in 2Q and 3Q? What's the cadence based on the awards pipeline that the team is working towards in that line of business?

Simon Meester: And you said Specialty, didn't you, Jerry?

Jerry Revich: Yes, Simon.

Simon Meester: Yes. So the bookings are typically lumpy in Specialty Vehicles. So it's kind of touch and go. But if you look -- I can probably give you maybe more of a trend answer. We expect that at some point, the bookings will start to soften just because to David's question earlier, as we continue to ramp up throughput and lead times will start to slowly improve, naturally, bookings become a function of lead time and availability and will have to come down because trucks being put to use is a very -- is a consistent number that just grows at a mid-single-digit CAGR every single year. So the bookings will evolve as a function of how lead times improve.

So we expect bookings to slowly come down. And eventually, where supply/demand will meet is we're planning for is around that 1-year lead time. So that's how I see -- I don't know if it will quite pick up this year yet, but certainly next year.

Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back to Simon Meester for closing remarks.

Simon Meester: Thank you, operator, and thank you all for the questions. Yes, Terex is off to a good start of the year and the integration of the legacy REV business is progressing as planned. In less than 2 years, we have effectively merged 3 businesses into a single much stronger company. And given that we're still early in the year and in light of ongoing geopolitical uncertainty, we believe it's prudent to maintain our full year guidance at this time, and we remain firmly focused on delivering against it. And I'm particularly proud of the 17,000 Terex team members who make it all possible day in, day out.

Thank you for joining us today, and we look forward to speaking with you again next quarter. And with that, operator, please disconnect the call.

Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.