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DATE

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — William Burns
  • Chief Financial Officer — Nathan Winters
  • Vice President, Investor Relations — Michael Steele

TAKEAWAYS

  • Revenue -- Sales reached nearly $1.5 billion, representing a 14% increase overall and 4% organic growth.
  • Adjusted EBITDA Margin -- Margin rose 90 basis points to 23.2%, aided by multiyear high gross margin and operating expense leverage.
  • Non-GAAP Diluted EPS -- Delivered $4.75, up 18%, exceeding the high end of internal guidance.
  • Segment Performance -- Connected Frontline grew 20.6% (3.8% organic), led by mobile computing; Asset Visibility & Automation rose 4.8%, with strength in printing and machine vision.
  • Regional Results -- North America up 4%, EMEA up 2% (tempered by softness in the Middle East), Asia Pacific up 11% (driven by India and Southeast Asia), Latin America up 10%.
  • Gross Margin -- Adjusted gross margin increased by 80 basis points to 50.4%; key drivers were productivity initiatives, favorable FX, and business mix.
  • Free Cash Flow -- Generated $163 million; full-year guidance is at least $900 million, indicating a ~100% cash conversion rate.
  • Share Repurchase -- Repurchased $300 million in Q1 and an additional $200 million early in Q2, totaling $500 million year-to-date.
  • Debt and Liquidity -- Debt leverage ratio at 2.1 with $1.1 billion credit capacity.
  • Outlook Update -- Raised full-year sales growth expectation to 10%-14%, reflecting a 1-point increase at the midpoint, with 7 points from acquisitions and FX; adjusted EBITDA margin guide is ~22%, and diluted EPS guided to between $18.30 and $18.70.
  • Memory Cost Management -- Management stated, "we currently have line of sight to the supply we need to support our outlook," with proactive sourcing actions and direct supplier relationships mitigating expected 200 basis point margin headwind.
  • Elo Touch Acquisition -- Contributed to Connected Frontline segment growth; new geographic penetration (notably India) and synergy realization progressing as planned.
  • Strategic Priorities -- CEO Burns cited three: driving profitable growth, advancing innovation (including AI and machine vision), and maintaining a capital-light, flexible financial model for cash generation and capital return.
  • AI and Machine Vision -- Recent launches included a new line of enterprise mobile computers and wearables with embedded RFID and AI capabilities; management highlighted double-digit growth in machine vision and momentum from these innovations.
  • Price Increases -- Announced price increases during late March to offset memory cost inflation; pricing expected to contribute a 1-point benefit to full-year growth, offset by lower back-half volume assumptions.
  • RFID Business -- Temporary decline in Q1 due to tough prior-year comparison; growth expected to resume in Q2 and continue through the year, including diversification beyond retail apparel into categories such as fresh foods and parcel tracking.

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RISKS

  • Winters disclosed, "We have experienced 20% to 30% price increases across the various lanes that we use for our products," but noted transportation costs are below 2% of revenue and cited ability to manage with other levers.
  • Management acknowledged continued "memory inflation" and noted that adjusted gross margin improvements included only a "modest impact from memory inflation in the quarter," with sequential margin pressure expected from a step-up in memory costs into the next quarter.
  • Future changes in U.S. tariff regimes remain an area of uncertainty; Winters stated, "there's just not enough details to speculate on what the impact will be until we get further clarity."

SUMMARY

Zebra Technologies Corporation (ZBRA +11.45%) emphasized execution and demand durability, reporting double-digit revenue and earnings growth alongside increased full-year guidance for revenue, margin, and cash flow. Management articulated confidence in managing memory supply and cost headwinds through tactical sourcing and price actions, while reaffirming long-term market expansion imperatives, including expanded offerings in machine vision, RFID, and AI-enabled devices. Strategic M&A and capital allocation were highlighted by share repurchases exceeding $500 million and active pursuit of synergy in recent acquisitions, particularly Elo Touch, which enabled entry into new markets.

  • CEO Burns identified "mobility, intelligent automation, asset visibility, cloud connectivity and physical AI" as core, durable demand drivers underpinning the enlarged TAM of $35 billion and Zebra's competitive position.
  • Segment color revealed outperformance in manufacturing and machine vision within Asset Visibility, while Connected Frontline growth benefited from acquisitions and pipeline expansion into previously untapped geographies.
  • Elo Touch’s integration delivered both revenue and cost synergies, with initial wins, especially in India, supporting portfolio breadth and new digital touchpoint adoption by customers.
  • No material customer "pull forward" of demand was observed in response to Q1/late March price increases or component constraints; the company’s outlook reflects a balanced approach to pricing benefit and volume sensitivity in light of memory headwinds.
  • Machine vision was described as reaching an "inflection point" with recent double-digit growth and additional momentum projected for 2026, fueled by innovations from acquisitions such as Photoneo.
  • Tactical capital deployment remains a focus, with full-year buyback assumptions increased and the flexibility to deploy all free cash flow to repurchases if share price remains attractive.
  • Tariff regime changes, including Section 122 and potential Section 232 adjustments, are being closely monitored, but management expects only limited P&L impact barring significant new developments.
  • Company is deploying AI broadly across its internal operations (software development, sales, supply chain) and stated the belief this will contribute to future margin improvement while accelerating customer-facing innovation.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • RFID: Radio-frequency identification; a technology using radio waves to capture and read digital data encoded in tags attached to objects, widely applied in automated tracking solutions.
  • Machine Vision: Systems combining imaging hardware and AI-driven software to automate visual inspection, identification, and process control, especially in manufacturing and logistics.
  • Asset Visibility: The ability to track location, status, and movement of physical assets across enterprise operations, improving operational efficiency and inventory control.
  • Connected Frontline: Segment encompassing mobile computing devices, wearables, and software applications that provide digital interfaces and workflow automation for edge workers.
  • TAM: Total Addressable Market; the aggregate revenue opportunity available for a product or service within a defined market.

Full Conference Call Transcript

William Burns: Thank you, Mike. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. The year is off to a great start. Today, I want to take a step back to put our results into a broader context to what our performance says about Zebra's position in the market, the momentum in our business and the opportunity ahead. There are 3 takeaways I want to leave you with this morning. First, we achieved strong Q1 results, and we are seeing continued momentum that supports our increased outlook for the full year. Second, our performance reflects Zebra's industry leadership and our unique value proposition backed by our integrated portfolio of solutions that combines hardware, software and services to solve our customers' complex challenges.

We are deeply embedded in our customers' operations and increasingly central to their efforts to drive productivity through automating workflows and proving how work gets done across the front line of business and beginning to integrate AI into their operations. Third, we are executing a clear strategy to create long-term shareholder value by driving profitable growth, building on our leadership and track record of innovation and enhancing our financial strength and flexibility. With that, let's start with our first quarter results. Turning to Slide 4. We delivered results near the high end of our outlook, driven by our team's strong execution and positive demand trends across our portfolio.

For the quarter, we generated sales of nearly $1.5 billion, a 14% increase or 4% on an organic basis from the prior year, and adjusted EBITDA margin of 23.2% and non-GAAP diluted earnings per share of $4.75 an 18% increase over the prior year. We achieved growth across both our segments and all regions with outperformance in our manufacturing end market. Elo Touch also contributed solid profitable growth, and we are encouraged by our customers' interest in our combined portfolio of solutions and our progress in driving synergies. We expanded adjusted EBITDA margin by 90 basis points, driven by a multiyear high gross margin and operating expense leverage, reflecting the benefits of our productivity initiative.

These results demonstrated the durability of demand for our solutions and our ability to convert that demand into profitable growth. Supported by our strong financial position, we have executed $500 million of share repurchases year-to-date through early May, following more than $300 million in the fourth quarter. Our business momentum and progress in navigating the current memory supply environment gives us confidence in raising our outlook for the full year with our recently elevated stock repurchase activity, underscoring our conviction. In a few minutes, Nathan will discuss our outlook and our progress in managing memory supply. Turning to Slide 5.

We have significant runway for growth with our clear and differentiated value proposition, supported by trends in automation, digitization and AI across a $35 billion served market. Our broad portfolio of integrated hardware and software solutions enables us to deliver value across the entire workflow, not just a single use case, creating a meaningful competitive advantage. And our industry leadership puts us in a unique position to be the supplier of choice of AI for the frontline. We have a resilient financial model with strong margins and cash generation, supported by disciplined capital allocation that drives long-term shareholder value. Moving to Slide 6. Zebra provides the foundation for intelligent operations.

We help our customers understand what's happening across their operations in real time and then act on that information to drive better outcomes. We operate across 2 segments: the connected front line, providing the digital touch points necessary to improve productivity, collaboration and the customer experience. Our solutions include enterprise mobile computing, interactive displays, frontline software and AI agents. Asset visibility and automation enables real-time insights from assets, inventory and operations to automate environments through our portfolio of solutions, including advanced data capture, printing and supplies RFID and machine vision. Together, these segments give us a broad and complementary portfolio that allows us to meet customers where they are in their automation journey and advanced their capabilities.

Zebra is well positioned to benefit from the mega trend shown on Slide 7. Across industries, our customers are operating in increased complex environments, shaped by labor constraints, cost pressures higher consumer expectations and the growing need for real-time visibility and execution. As a result, priorities like mobility, intelligent automation, asset visibility, cloud connectivity and physical AI are becoming increasingly central to how enterprises run their operations. We see these as durable long-term demand drivers that support Zebra's growth opportunity. Slide 8 illustrates how Zebra's end-to-end presence across the supply chain is a key differentiator. Our embedded role in daily operations generates the insights that power smarter solutions and AI at scale.

Our broad portfolio enables us to address mission-critical workflows that span from factory floor to the warehouse to the end customer and all touch points along the way. Zebra's products and solutions can be utilized more than 30x as an item travels through the supply chain and this number continues to increase with the need for real-time visibility. Slide 9 highlights the breadth of our customer base and the significant opportunities in front of us. Zebra supports more than 80% of the Fortune 500 across large and growing end markets, each with distinct needs shaped by the unique business models. That said, there's a common need across all of them, greater operational visibility and productivity.

We play a critical role in helping our customers better understand what's happening across their operations, allowing them to take action in real time. We are deeply embedded in their workflows as a trusted partner, enabling us to co-innovate as they adopt new technologies to digitize their operations and look to leverage AI. On Slide 10, we highlight the 3 strategic priorities guiding our business. Our first priority is driving profitable growth. We see meaningful room to grow across both of our segments, supported by a large and diverse market and a long runway of adoption in many of the environments we serve.

We believe both connected frontline and asset visibility and automation have a 5% to 7% organic sales growth profile over a cycle and are confident in our ability to deliver. Penetration is still relatively low across the markets we serve highlighting the opportunity in front of us. For example, based on third-party research, there are 3/4 of warehouses globally are in the early stages of their automation journey. Our growth prospects are supported by investments in RFID, machine vision and AI that enhance our differentiation and expand our relevance with customers.

We are also driving efficiency initiatives in our business to enhance profitability, which include operating margin leverage through cost discipline, including our previously announced restructuring actions, accelerating software development velocity by deploying new AI tools and enhancing our go-to-market model to improve market coverage and efficiency. Our second strategic priority is to continue building on our market-leading position by advancing innovation. Recent progress includes launching an entirely new line of enterprise mobile computers and wearables with embedded RFID and optimized AI processing capabilities and a global logistics customer has selected our new frontline AI picture proof of delivery capability. This on-device AI solution is driving faster delivery times while improving the consumer experience.

These are just a couple of examples of innovation that are tightly aligned with customer needs and designed to drive both growth and differentiation. Our third strategic priority is enhancing our financial strength and flexibility by driving consistency of earnings and cash flow generation through our capital-light business model. We will also continue to execute on our balanced capital allocation strategy, prioritizing investments in our business that elevate our portfolio of solutions, while consistently returning capital to shareholders. I will now turn the call over to Nathan to review our Q1 financial results and improved 2026 outlook.

Nathan Winters: Thank you, Bill. Let's start with the P&L on Slide 12. In Q1, total company sales increased 14.3% or 4.3% on an organic basis with momentum across our business. Our Connected Frontline segment grew 20.6%, including the recent Elo Touch acquisition, or 3.8% on an organic basis led by mobile computing. Our asset visibility and Automation segment grew 4.8%, led by printing and machine vision. We realized solid performance across all our regions. North America sales increased 4%, led by strength in manufacturing. EMEA sales grew 2%, with broad-based growth across Europe, partially offset by softness in the Middle East. Asia Pacific sales increased 11%, led by India and Southeast Asia and Latin America sales grew 10%.

Adjusted gross margin improved 80 basis points to 50.4% primarily due to productivity initiatives, favorable FX and business mix with a modest impact from memory inflation in the quarter. Adjusted operating expense leverage improved by 20 basis points. This resulted in first quarter adjusted EBITDA margin of 23.2%. Non-GAAP diluted earnings per share were $4.75, an 18% year-over-year increase, exceeding the high end of our outlook. Turning now to the balance sheet and cash flow on Slide 13. In the quarter, we generated free cash flow of $163 million. As of Q1, we had a modest debt leverage ratio of 2.1 and $1.1 billion of credit capacity. We have been deploying capital consistent with our allocation priorities.

For the quarter, we repurchased $300 million of stock and have repurchased an additional $200 million in the second quarter to date. Turning to Slide 14. We have a proven track record of navigating dynamic environments, and we are applying that same disciplined playbook as we manage the current memory cost and supply landscape. While this remains an area we are monitoring closely, we are increasingly confident in our ability to successfully mitigate impacts based on the actions already underway and the visibility we have today. We are working proactively across multiple fronts, including direct supplier co-planning, alternative sourcing options and transitions to higher density memory components, where capacity is expected to increase into 2027.

Based on the progress we have made, we currently have line of sight to the supply we need to support our outlook. And in addition, the component pricing trajectory for the year is tracking in line with our prior guidance. Our cost position remains favorable relative to spot market rates, given our direct supplier relationships, and we have line of sight to fully mitigate the margin impact for the year. This is not a new muscle for Zebra. Our teams have managed through prior component disruptions by acting early, maintaining close supplier partnerships and using our scale to create flexibility in the supply chain. We are taking that same approach here. Let's now turn to our outlook.

We've entered the quarter with a strong backlog and pipeline that supports our sales growth guidance range of 14% to 17%, including approximately 10.5 points of contribution from business acquisitions and favorable FX. Our second quarter adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be slightly higher than 21%, and non-GAAP diluted earnings per share are expected to be in the range of $4.20 and $4.50. For the full year, we expect sales growth between 10% and 14%, reflecting a 1 point increase at the midpoint from our prior outlook.

Our guide factors in year-to-date performance, a strong pipeline of opportunities momentum in manufacturing and machine vision, the previously announced price increases, constrained memory availability and a 7-point favorable impact from acquisitions and FX. Our full year adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be approximately 22% and non-GAAP diluted earnings per share is now expected to be between $18.30 and $18.70. Our full year guide continues to reflect full mitigation of the memory 2-point headwind, which we are increasingly confident in achieving. We are driving this through targeted price increases and other direct memory initiatives, net of savings from our restructuring actions, volume leverage and FX favorability.

Free cash flow for the year is expected to be at least $900 million, which reflects a conversion rate of approximately 100%. We are continuing to optimize our working capital levels, balance with our supply chain resilience objectives. Please reference additional modeling assumptions on Slide 15. With that, I will turn the call back to Bill.

William Burns: Thank you, Nathan. Before we turn to your questions, let me conclude with the points I highlighted at the start of the call. We delivered a strong quarter and are moving forward with confidence in our increased outlook for the full year. Our integrated portfolio of solutions continues to differentiate Zebra, enabling customers to automate workflows and improve their operations. and we remain focused on executing our strategy to drive profitable growth and deliver long-term value for our shareholders. I will now turn the call back to Mike.

Michael Steele: Thanks, Bill. We'll now open the call to Q&A. We ask that you limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up to give everyone a chance to participate.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question will come from Andrew Buscaglia of BNP Paribas.

Andrew Buscaglia: Yes, just I wanted to check on some of the comments you made on memory, clearly, a concern amongst investors. But you guys say you have a line of sight to mitigate these costs through the end of the year. Are you implying -- do you -- have you secured capacity at this point because shortages are a concern? And what are your memory price assumption baked into the rest of the year in terms of the memory price spiking.

William Burns: Andrew, maybe I'll start and then hand to Nate for specifics. I'd say that memory continues to be a dynamic environment overall. Our teams have done a great job, quite honestly, working closely with our suppliers and the relationships, the long-term relationships we have with them, but also with our customers and partners to make sure that we get early visibility into their needs on the demand side. we're confident in our ability to mitigate the memory challenges and to achieve both our second quarter and full year guide. A lot goes into that, a lot of thinking and planning and the teams have been working this memory issue since the second half of 2025.

And we feel we're in a good position to enter Q2 and where we're after the full year, but I'll let Nate add some more color.

Nathan Winters: Yes. So if you look at 2 pieces. One, from a supply perspective, as we mentioned, pursuing numerous mitigation strategies, great relationship with our direct suppliers as well as looking at new alternatives as well as a lot of work in terms of transitioning to the different memory types where we expect capacity to increase as we get into 2027. And I think we feel really confident in what we had for the first half. So Q1, we got the supply we needed to deliver on the outlook, great visibility to what we need here in Q2. And our second half guide assumes a similar memory supplies received in the first half.

We've received no indication that our second half allocation would be any less than the first half. And if anything, the teams are working options for increased supply to meet the unconstrained demand we have, which is near the high end of our guidance range. So again, a lot of actions right now in terms of how do we increase the supply to give some upside to the guide that we provided this morning. And then on the costing, as we mentioned, the market pricing trajectory is in line with our prior guidance. There's variability, obviously, across the different memory types.

But as a reminder, we purchased the vast majority of our memory direct, which has been favorable to the spot market rates that a lot of folks have visibility to. So we have built-in escalations through the balance of the year. And so far, those are playing out, which has enabled us to maintain our margin guidance for the year relative to memory.

Operator: The next question comes from Tommy Moll of Stephens.

Thomas Moll: I wanted to start on margins. You were well ahead of your guidance for the first quarter on an EBITDA margin percentage basis. And then if we look at the second quarter that percentage steps down sequentially. So it's a 2-part question. What were some of the favorable items you would call out that drove that outperformance in 1Q that may fall away into 2Q? And then are there any headwinds sequentially as we move from 1Q to 2Q?

Nathan Winters: Tommy. So if you look at Q1, the operational -- I think it starts with the operational gross margin, which was at record levels at 50.4% increase of 80 basis points, driven by a combination of factors. One, the productivity initiatives, the teams have been actively working on. We had favorable deal mix. We had real strength across our manufacturing vertical, which is favorable from a run rate perspective, but also our print scanning machine vision portfolio. So the deal mix was a benefit in the quarter, and that drove a portion of the upside to our guide and FX was a tailwind as we entered the quarter.

So again, I think Q1 just had a combination of favorable deal mix along with the productivity of the team's been actively working on. And memory was, I'd say, a modest headwind in the quarter. So really, if you look then from Q1 to Q2, on the EBITDA line -- EBITDA margin guidance, the decline is really driven by the step-up in memory costs in the second quarter. So if you look kind of 2 points lower sequential about 1.5 points of that is the higher memory costs in the quarter as well as just normalized deal mix as we go into Q2.

And I think what it really showed is that Q1 is part of our mitigation strategy on memory. If you recall, half was the price increase we announced. The other half was underlying operational benefits from restructuring actions as well as all the other actions the team have taken. And I think that beared out in Q1, and now it's being utilized to offset some of the headwind here as we go into Q2 and the back half of the year.

Operator: The next question comes from Amit Malhotra of UBS.

Unknown Analyst: This is Paratabh on for Amit Malhotra. I just wanted to catch up on the Elo. Like, it has been a couple of quarters for the Elo acquisition now. Can you provide any early feedback on your progress with the business what is the growth rate and like what kind of revenue or margin synergies you are seeing there?

William Burns: Yes, we continue to be excited about the Elo acquisition as really elevates our strategic position across our connected frontline segment. And as to the breadth and depth of our portfolio and delivers a set of complementary solutions to what we've got already across mobile computing and our software assets inside the connective frontline pillar. Elo in the quarter grew in line with our expectations. Certainly, a solid pipeline of opportunities. We'd expect 2026 growth to be in the mid-single digits, and that's playing out as expected. We're seeing progress in the synergies and both revenue and cost. So a lot of work on the integration, and that's taking place today.

But a lot of focus across the teams around the globe on building a commercial pipeline of opportunities working together with our global teams as 1 team and then positioning with our customers. We've entered some new geographies with the Elo portfolio where they haven't had a presence before, and we've got our first wins in India, which was one of those new geographies overall. So we feel good about what's happening so far across the portfolio. We're still super excited about it. It gives us another opportunity to have a digital touch point and things like modernizing point of sale within our retail customers, streamlining self-service payment, touchscreen displays across areas like manufacturing and health care.

So overall, it expands the breadth and depth of our portfolio. And so far, things are going well.

Operator: The next question comes from Ken Newman of KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Kenneth Newman: Maybe for my -- maybe if you could just give us a little bit of color on how sales trended through the quarter, Bill. And just maybe help us quantify if there -- if you saw any indications of a pull forward, I think you mentioned that the price actions really for the memory cost really took place in late March. Maybe help us kind of quantify what that's supposed to add to the full year sales growth that was kind of in line with expectations. And again, just if you saw any indications of people trying to get ahead of that price action?

William Burns: I'd say that Q1 overall excellent execution by the teams really strong start to the year that we're pretty happy about double-digit sales growth and EPS growth in the quarter. I'd say that the results demonstrate the durability of demand for our solutions across all the verticals we serve. So broad-based growth across both vertical markets, regions, products as well. And really, our ability to convert that demand into profitable growth for Zebra. The momentum has continued into Q2 across the business.

We're obviously, as Nate talked about, progressing the navigating of the memory challenges, and we've made a lot of progress there and have more confidence certainly in the full year guide and what we've seen in Q1 and then we have visibility to moving throughout the year, both on the demand perspective. And then constraints to that demand. The unconstrained demand pushes us to the higher end of our outlook range, and I think we're seeing that. So we feel good about where we're at in the momentum across the business. we saw no real pull forward of demand across our customers related to memory or price increases overall.

So I think that we're seeing our customers continue to execute on their plans to deploy technology across their environments to make their businesses more effective and more efficient and moving ahead with that. We haven't seen any real change in demand based on it. The only thing we've really seen is we work closely with our suppliers and our customers and our partners on the demand side to make sure we have early visibility to what they need to make sure we have the right products. So we're procuring memory and then building the right products for them.

So we've been working closely with our customers to make sure we really understand but no pull forward that we've seen across the business.

Nathan Winters: Yes. The only thing I'd add is if you really at the Q1, the upside to our guidance to the high end was driven by asset visibility and the strength in manufacturing, which did not have the price increase. So the real strength in the quarter, which drove some of the gross margin favorability was around asset visibility, which is, again, where we didn't have the price increase to just add to what Bill mentioned. And then the other one, we did incorporate the full year pricing benefit of 1 point into our guide, but we offset that by lower volume assumptions in the back half due to the memory constraints.

So if you look at it kind of net neutral from the benefit on the pricing side, but then lowering the overall demand or volume given the constraints. So that balances out for the second half of the year.

Operator: The next question comes from Brad Hewitt of Wolfe Research.

Bradley Hewitt: So kind of tagging on that last question. So you raised the full year organic growth guidance by about 1 point to 5%. You mentioned the Q1 outperformance in manufacturing in Latin America and Asia but curious if you could elaborate a bit more on what drove the implicit organic growth guidance range for the rest of the year, whether that's by vertical or by geography?

William Burns: I'd say that demand trends overall remain strong. And as I said a minute ago, customers continue to invest across each of the vertical markets. So it was really broad-based growth, quite honestly, across regions, across vertical markets and across both of the segments. I would say certainly, manufacturing is helping, right? Manufacturing has been a lower growth profile than the other vertical markets we serve. But now clearly, there's been a strength, including in French scanning and we saw double-digit growth in machine vision in the quarter. So we feel good about machine vision. I'd say demand for Elo continues to be strong. So our customer conversations that we've had.

We've had our 3 largest trade shows of the year most recently, so start the year with our retail with the national retail show and then logistics and warehousing show and then health care as well. And all of those trade shows, we were able to demonstrate our innovation, the depth and breadth of our portfolio, our new solutions that we're bringing to market across mobile computing and machine vision, RFID, our AI solutions, all of those have been positive conversations with our customers. They continue to invest as their businesses continue to grow. So I'd say broad-based demand across regions, segments, verticals, which we feel really good about.

And that's really given us confidence in the full year outlook, we'd be at the top end of our outlook range. Only we see constraints from memory, which we've factored in. And we feel good about the momentum we're seeing in the marketplace.

Operator: The next question comes from Meta Marshall of Morgan Stanley.

Meta Marshall: A couple of questions. Just one, in terms of kind of the demand that you're seeing within manufacturing, are there any verticals kind of within manufacturing, where you're seeing strength? Or do you think that some of this is starting to be some of the refresh of some of the devices bought during COVID. And then as just a second question, just any commentary around increased freight and whether that has any impact to kind of your assumptions for the rest of the year?

William Burns: From a manufacturing perspective, I would say that strong across each of the subverticals within manufacturing, semiconductor, auto, we've seen some additional strength in across our machine vision portfolio, maybe I'd call out. I would say that the investments are really across visibility across the supply chain. So more drive to continue to have more visibility, both in warehousing, but across the entire supply chain. Clearly, automating quality control that's driving machine vision inside manufacturing overall. Outside of manufacturing, we're also seeing strength. So retail e-commerce was a great vertical in the quarter. So solid demand across that and continues to be a long-term growth driver for us. Health care continues to have solid growth in the quarter.

When you were talking about more of the refresh opportunities that's really focused from a retail perspective, they're continuing to refresh. Every customer is a different refresh cycle. Transportation logistics is really the larger refreshes that we're working with our customers on today building a pipeline of opportunities. Really, we see that coming in and beginning in 2027. So that opportunity continues to grow. Transportation & Logistics cycle a large order compare from prior year, but we see a healthy pipeline of opportunities in that. Those conversations about the refreshes in '26. We really have forecast about the same level of refresh activities across the different vertical markets as we did in '25 and our guide.

But really, '27, we would see clearly an opportunity to these bigger refresh cycles with T&L begin to play a role in our numbers.

Nathan Winters: Meta, the second question, which I believe was on the freight rates and what we're seeing from a logistics standpoint. We have experienced 20% to 30% price increases across the various lanes that we use for our products. That's stabilized here recently. We've incorporated that increase into our guidance. But transportation or freight costs are less than 2% of revenue. So right now, it's in a range that we can manage and use other levers to offset. So we've incorporated that higher pricing into the guidance for the full year and the teams are actively working on different lanes and different options given the environment.

Operator: Next question comes from Keith Housum of Northcoast Research.

Keith Housum: I do want to say congratulations on the gross margin improvement. Good to see. In terms of the machine vision, I think, Bill, you quoted, that was up double digits here. Obviously, machine vision has a little bit of a challenging time over the past year or 2. Do we see an inflection point here? Or what's the Viking in terms of where the machine vision improvement is coming from and what the expectations are for the rest of the year?

William Burns: Machine vision, for us, we see as an integral part of really the future of our asset visibility and automation segment, right, is that as you know, Keith, drives both the logistics markets, the transportation logistics and then clearly manufacturing. We saw machine vision grow double digits, strong double-digit growth year-on-year in first quarter. So we've been looking for this inflection point in the market. So I think you'll see that really aligned with the industry as a whole. So I'd say recent logistics wins across the U.S. and Europe continue to be encouraging signs for us and delivering our new solutions.

We're seeing growing opportunities in manufacturing and e-commerce that's driving what we would expect to be double-digit growth for the full year. So continuing the momentum in growth throughout 2026. I'd say, overall, our value proposition is resonating with customers. So ease of use the idea that we're using a single software platform that's unified across the portfolio of products that allows our customers to easily set up and use our products. So we think of how do we make it simple for our customers to leverage machine vision portfolio?

How do they get speed of deployment inside their environments and then how efficient are the reason and how good is our product overall from a machine vision and fixed industrial scanning portfolio. So I think that we're continuing to invest in go-to-market. We've expanded the portfolio with the Photoneo acquisition. We continue to invest in software assets around AI and deep learning, which allows that simplification of deployment in our customers' environment. So I think we're feeling good about where we're at in machine vision. We do think it's an inflection point. We've been working really hard to drive growth across this business.

And I think the market opportunity allows us to do that, and then we're seeing it both in T&L and manufacturing where it's really broad-based working with our customers around the world.

Operator: The next question comes from Jim Ricchiuti of Needham & Company.

James Ricchiuti: Thanks for the color on your machine vision business. I'm wondering if you can talk to what kind of growth you're seeing across your RFID portfolio, maybe in the same light.

William Burns: Yes. RFID continues to build a strong pipeline of opportunities across the supply chain. So we're seeing not just in retail, but transportation logistics, manufacturing, government. So all of that creates opportunities for us in machine vision. We saw strong compares from a year ago in RFID. So we would expect a decline in first quarter but not a concern to us. We had large cycling of compares in the first quarter. expecting growth certainly in second quarter and then for the full year. So momentum in RFID continues, I would say, overall.

We're seeing the move in retail beyond retail apparel, really into things like fresh foods which is a new opportunity for RFID inside grocery, broader merchandising as well within retail beyond apparel. Transportation, logistics, parcel tracking through logistics providers is creating a market as well or a new market for us, which is another place we're working closely with our customers. But quick-serve restaurants, health care, anything you need to track and trace across the supply chain is seeing momentum in RFID. From a Zebra perspective, we've got the broadest set of solutions. So we're the market leader in fixed and handheld RFID readers. We've got a portfolio of our printing printers and labels to go along with that.

We've recently released our new line of mobile computers that have embedded RFID capabilities into those and our wearable products as well across that portfolio. So we continue to expand RFID functionality across our portfolio. So we see this as a long-term growth opportunity as people are continuing to drive visibility across the entire supply chain within their environments.

James Ricchiuti: A question, just with respect to the large project business, any change in the outlook looking out to the second half, either macro-related or the result of potential changes in the competitive landscape as it relates to the pending transaction with Brady and Aiva?

Nathan Winters: Jim, we haven't seen any changes related to the second half. As Bill mentioned earlier, the project funnel remains strong, a great pipeline of opportunities as we look out through the balance of the year and into '27 as particularly some of the large T&L refreshes start to come online, but no change overall in terms of the overall pipeline relative to the recently announced transaction. So I think it's playing out as we expected, the large deals, I'd say, are in line with the total growth as they were as we announced in our last earnings. So no change that kind of the mix of large deal and run rate both equally contributing to the full year guidance.

Maybe to the second part of your question, I'd say our focus is really on our business and continuing to expand our lead in the marketplace. I'd say that Look, we've got deeply embedded relationships with our enterprise customers, and we're focused on continuing to innovate and drive our solutions portfolio to continue to take share in the marketplace.

Operator: The next question comes from Rob Mason of Baird.

Robert Mason: My question is just around capital allocation, if there's been any change in the thought process for 2026. I think originally, you would earmarked about half the free cash flow for the year towards share repurchase. It sounds like year-to-date, we're already at that point or thereabouts. Any change in the thought process around half the free cash flow going to share repurchases?

Nathan Winters: Rob, as you mentioned, we've already repurchased $500 million through April. So above -- already above the 50% outlook that we provided in the last update, obviously, taking advantage of what we believe is an attractive stock valuation, and we're going to continue to be active in the market. If you look at now our full year EPS guide assumes we do an additional $100 million of share repurchase. However, we have the flexibility to allocate all of our free cash flow for the year. If we see it's again, at an attractive price and an opportunity for us to continue to repurchase.

Operator: Next question comes from Joe Giordano of TD Cowen.

Joseph Giordano: One of like the more structural pushbacks people give on Zebra story is like a terminal value question about in the future, as we have more and more automation and more and more robotics and less people in the buildings that you currently serve, there's just a structural smaller need for your products and services. How would you answer and address that question on like a much longer-term view?

William Burns: Joe, I'd say that the automation trends, right, and the trend towards physical is clearly a benefit or I'd even say, tailwind for Zebra as a whole is really our business is all about driving automation and productivity within our customers' environment. And I'd say that we've got a long runway of growth ahead of us that we've got relationships with our largest customers and even the most advanced customers today with that are the most advanced from an automation perspective, continue to grow their installed base of Zebra solutions. And that includes mobile computers to drive labor productivity.

And I think that -- when we look at the one place you talk about automation because it doesn't really apply in things like front of store retail or nurses and hospital settings or -- so really you're talking about warehousing, today, nearly 75% of warehouses around the world are really in the early stages of an automation journey. And that we're seeing that if you look at the numbers the number of frontline workers are continue to project it to increase warehouse footprint continues to grow and really driven by things like e-commerce, now manufacturing growth along with that.

So we see our customers wanting to have flexible solutions for automating and that's really what we do across the environments. And I think that we're seeing that continue to provide that from a quick ROI modularity and our solutions overall, when you think of what Zebra does, we collect the data, ultimately reading a barcode printing a label, all the things we do in our asset visibility portfolio to feed either automation trends because you need data or physical AI trends for analytics and then leverage workers within the environment to get work done, and those workers are augmented by technology and automation to make their jobs easier overall.

So I'd say automation augments workers doesn't replace workers and we've seen automation in place for a long time, and we continue to see the demand for Zebra solution continue to grow. So I think that we feel good about where we're at as a business, and we see the terminal value being strong and things like physical AI being a net positive for us versus a detractor.

Joseph Giordano: When you think about AI deployment, how do you -- where do you see the sweet spot for you, whether it's developing your own AI tools or having a software partner deploy those tools on a Zebra device where you get just like the device sale. And so when you think about like monetizing, how -- what's the right balance for you there?

William Burns: Yes. Joe, it's really all of the above. If you start at the highest level, AI adoption trends, as I said, just like automation are net positive for us and that we really understand our customers' workflows and that we've got a large installed base of solutions today that really are fundamental to driving automation or AI for the front line because AI is really the analytics that drives automation. And I would say that we're really uniquely positioned to be the supplier of choice for AI for the front line.

And what I mean by that is that at the highest levels, the asset visibility and automation portfolio we have, printing scanning, machine vision, optical character recognition, parcel dimensioning, all that information is required on the front line to create data around the physical world to feed AI model. So we give assets a digital voice within our customers' environments that feed AI models that ultimately tell our customers how to be more effective and more efficient. And the way today you get that work done is through automation in the environment or people doing the work. And those workers are using mobile devices today and are software.

So think of task management software, think of communication collaboration software, think of our new AI for the frontline agents. All of those are used to be able to drive the productivity within our customers' business and the answers from the AI engine. So I'd say that the entire portfolio benefits from AI. From a frontline AI suite, we've got on our mobile devices now specifically, we have enablers, blueprints and companions, all of which allow our customers to easily deploy AI on the front line of business, and we're at the very early stages of that. So we won a new opportunity in parcel proof of delivery with P&L provider.

We're in multiple pilots with our customers around retail, transportation, logistics, other areas around the world. So that's still very early days. But overall, the portfolio we have of asset visibility and connected frontline, AI, physical AI deployment is a net positive for Zebra across the entire portfolio, then specifically, their software opportunities with things like our frontline AI suite that allows our customers for us to meet them wherever they're at in the journey of automation or deploying AI.

Operator: The next question comes from Guy Hardwick of Barclays.

Guy Drummond Hardwick: Congratulations on the quarter. Excellent performance. Nathan, I appreciate that you expect to fully offset the 200 basis points of margin memory impact. But do you expect any impact from a lag of recovery in any 1 quarter? And the reason I ask is that 1 of your competitors called out memory's being a headwind specifically for Q3 to their gross margins. And then a major mobile device manufacturer mentioned gross margin headwind in the June quarter. So I just wonder if you could comment on that.

Nathan Winters: No, I think the only thing, obviously, you see the step-up in the cost profile from Q1 to Q2, just as we work through our inventory position coming into the year as well as the prices have escalated in line with what we had expected, escalated here over the past quarter. So obviously, there's a step-up in Q1 to Q2 and we'd expect that to continue to increase modestly, stepping up from Q3 to Q4, but offset as we get higher price realization on our own products and the flow-through of that. So I think Q2 is kind of the inflection point in terms of step change sequentially just as we roll through with that.

And then a modest increase as we go to Q3 and Q4, but that's mitigated as we get more price realization on our side. to help mitigate the inflow. So there's -- I wouldn't say there's any other particular macro or market-driven reason for it. I'd say it's more just timing of inventory and the flow through that through the P&L.

Guy Drummond Hardwick: And just as a quick follow-up. Just wondering whether the changes in the tariff regime could have had any impact on the business, either positive or negatively in Q1 and how it maybe impacts your Q2 guidance?

Nathan Winters: Yes. So if you look at the elimination of the IEEPA rates, but most of that -- a big chunk of that was offset by the Section 122 tariffs. I think you really didn't have a meaningful impact on the P&L in Q1, again, most of that just given the timing of the announcement and the carryover from inventory. It will have a small benefit in Q2, but we don't expect really any impact for our full year guidance.

Our expectation is that as we go into the back half of the year, second half of the year, whatever the new form, whether that's Section 301 or others will replace what was the effect of IEEPA rates coming into the year. So I'd say at the full year, we're not expecting any material changes due to the new tariff regime, just as there's going to be a new form factor of that presumably in the second half of the year. And if that changes, we'll obviously update as we go through the year. So -- and in the short term, I'd say, pretty modest, just given inventory impact and then the differentiation between the rates between IEEPA and 122.

Operator: The next question comes from Brian Drab of William Blair.

Brian Drab: Yes. I think my question was just taken there. But I wonder if you can just elaborate more on the -- one of the questions I've been getting all quarter is around is Section 232 going to impact you and you've moved a lot of manufacturing in Mexico. How does this specifically for 232, does that have any impact? And I can see the tariffs weren't mentioned in the transcript here until that last question, the Q&A. So I guess, it's not a big deal, but I wonder if you could just give some detail around that.

Nathan Winters: Yes. Look, I think it would all depend on what exactly comes out in terms of the scope, and I think that's not clear today. We've been obviously monitoring and tracking with our trade compliance team. And we leveraged the largest semiconductor companies in the world and continue to assess country of origin across all of our different products in terms of the flow of semiconductors through the supply chain. So again, actively working both our supply base and our government relations team. But I think there's nothing really to specifically come on relative to 232 as it's been out there for quite some time.

But I'd say just like anything, whether that was the tariff round 1, tariff round 2 and all the other changes. As those change, we'll take the necessary actions to mitigate the impact of the P&L. And communicate that implications with our customers. So that's no different on whatever the next version of whether it's 301 or 232 that comes later this year?

Brian Drab: So this dynamic of product being taxed based on its metal content at 50% transitioning to a product being taxed on its entire value at 25% like that type of dynamic is not a big deal for bringing a barcode printer or any other device into the country, say, from Mexico or elsewhere?

Nathan Winters: Yes. Again, I would say it all depends on what's actually ultimately written in terms of country of origin and how they scope it in terms of what content and what rate. And I'd say right now, there's just not enough details to speculate on what the impact will be until we get further clarity.

Operator: The next question comes from Rob Jameson of Vertical Research.

Robert Jamieson: Congrats on results. Just a couple for me. Bill, you've all have been very active on the ecosystem side, including the strategic investments like the Apera AI or CoreVision for factory automation as well as like the broad ISV network that you're building out for AI and mobile compute. Just curious like how central are these partnerships and investments to your AI strategy? And then on the near-term ROI side, like where are you seeing the most tangible benefits from AI-enhanced solutions today? And which verticals do you think or would you expect to see the most incremental AI revenue contribution from as we look ahead?

William Burns: I'd say first, that our venture investments, again, we view as another lever ultimately to be able to stay close to new innovation. These are relatively small investments. From our perspective, it allows us to invest across the portfolio in interesting companies, technologies that we ultimately see as interesting to us longer term in this case, really around machine vision and physical AI in the most recent one. So I think that's always of interest to us, but these are small investments overall. But I think it's important for us to continue to keep our pulse on what's happening in across venture.

I'd say, our independent software vendor relationships and just our relationships as a whole is we're seeing that it's important that whether it's our relationship with Qualcomm or Google or the memory suppliers in this case most recently, but also the software vendors, large and small, everyone from the biggest players to the smallest are part of our ecosystem of partners that we leverage to work with our customers. And then our channel partner community ultimately serves a lot of our customers around the world as well. So all those are incredibly important to us as we bring our solutions to market. Across AI, we see it a combination of really meeting our customers wherever they're at in the journey.

And I think that their ROI is driven by our frontline AI suite is as kind of 3 components to it. One is enablers that allows our customers to leverage our next-generation mobile devices that we've recently released and the idea of capabilities to support the processing and memory required for AI, but allow those enablers to be used by our customers that want to deploy their own AI agents in their own AI software at the front line of business. Our Blueprint allows our customers to leverage those enablers where we package them together into a specific use case, like parcel proof of delivery is a good example of that.

We talked about the recent transportation logistics win in that area. That's combining our enablers, along with agents from Zebra and then packaging this together that will fit underneath our customers' application. And then the third is where we do the full application ourselves. So that's companions. So we meet our customers wherever they're at in their journey. They want to use our enablers on the device and leverage those to build their own AI agents. That's okay. If they want us to create that software for them, we've got an offering and generate revenue associated with that. And if they want us to build a full application for them, we'll do that as well.

So we meet our customers wherever that in our journey, and that's what we do, leveraging our independent software vendors and our AI partners is to them, along with our customers, along with our offerings, complete the full suite of offerings to our customers. So we can meet them wherever they're at on their AI journey or wherever they're at in their automation journey. And that's what our customers really want to see from us that we're not driving them in one direction or another. If they want to do a lot of the development themselves and some of our largest customers want to go do that, but a majority of our customers do not.

And they want help from us or our software vendor partners to be able to deliver an entire solution.

Operator: Our last question comes from Piyush Avasthy of Citi.

Piyush Avasthy: Bill, I think you mentioned AI helping your customers improve efficiency. Are you deploying AI internally as well, like you mentioned productivity initiatives helping you this quarter. So if you could elaborate on what you're doing there? And like how should we think about like margins in the longer term? Like does AI kind of improve that 50 bps of year-on-year margin that's baked into -- the expansion that's baked into your long-term outlook?

William Burns: Yes, we do see AI driving internal productivity within our business. The areas you really would expect software development, right, and a lot of work being done using AI tools across our development process within research and development. Our sales and marketing teams leveraging AI across what they're doing around the globe, working with customers and then Marketing Cloud and others. Supply chain forecasting, we're seeing that our customer service teams as well we're using AI tools broadly across the entire organization. So we've encouraged clearly our employees to leverage the AI tools we have available to them, and we're seeing broad-based adoption across AI.

And we do believe that ultimately, it drives efficiency and allows us to continue to increase our margins moving forward. So absolutely, we believe that AI will be a productivity tool inside Zebra, but we actually believe that the overall, the biggest opportunity is what we provide to our customers, but it's also important from a profitability perspective. So really both.

Operator: This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the call back over to Bill Burns for any closing remarks.

William Burns: I'd just like to wrap up by thanking our employees and partners for delivering solid Q1 results and certainly excellent progress we've seen so far on our 2026 priorities, and we're excited about the opportunities ahead. Thank you, everyone, for joining.

Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation, and you may now disconnect.