Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Kendrion first quarter 2026 results conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be the question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you need to press star one one on your telephone keypad. You will then hear an automatic message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one and one again. Please be advised that this conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Joep van Beurden. Please go ahead.
Thank you very much. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Kendrion's Q1 2026 results conference call. My name is Joep van Beurden, CEO of Kendrion, and with me here today is our CFO, Jeroen Hemmen. Thank you for taking the time to join us and for your continued interest in Kendrion. Today, we will review our performance in the first quarter of 2026. We will discuss the financial results for the group and our key business segments and share our outlook for the remainder of the year and beyond. A recording of this call and the Q&A session will be made available on Kendrion's corporate website shortly after the call. Before we begin, I would like to note that certain statements made during this call may be considered forward-looking statements.
These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions and involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. Let me start with a brief overview. We delivered a strong first quarter with continued growth in both revenue and profitability. Group revenue increased by 5% year-over-year to EUR 65.2 million, entirely driven by our industrial business groups. Profitability improved across all business groups, so IAC, IB, and Mobility, resulting in a normalized EBITDA of EUR 11.0 million and an EBITDA margin of 16.9%. Return on invested capital increased to 25.3%, reflecting both improved earnings and a better asset utilization. Despite ongoing macroeconomic uncertainty, our industrial business performed well, supported by pricing discipline, operational focus, and a healthy order book.
Let me now walk you through the financial performance in more detail. As mentioned, in Q1 2026, the Kendrion Group delivered revenues of EUR 65.2 million compared to EUR 62.0 million in Q1 2025. This represents 5% growth and at constant exchange rates, revenue increased by 6%. Revenue growth was entirely driven by the industrial business groups, supported by improving demand conditions in Europe. Normalized EBITDA increased by 21% year-on-year to EUR 11.0 million, and the EBITDA margin expanded to 16.9%, an improvement of 220 basis points compared to last year. This profitability improvement reflects a combination of volume growth, disciplined pricing, and strict cost control. The added value margin remained stable at 56.2%, demonstrating the resilience of our business mix and continued pricing discipline.
Moving down the P&L, depreciation charges decreased slightly to EUR 3.0 million, resulting in EBITDA of EUR 8.0 million, up 33% year-on-year. Net finance charges declined to EUR 0.8 million, while the effective tax rate on normalized income was 25.4%. Normalized net profit before amortization increased to EUR 5.2 million compared to EUR 3.7 million in Q1 2025, an increase of 53%. Free cash flow in the first quarter was negative EUR 3.0 million, reflecting typical seasonal working capital movements and the timing of tax payments. Capital expenditure was EUR 1.1 million in the quarter and is expected to normalize over the remainder of the year, while remaining well below depreciation for the full year.
Net debt increased to EUR 40.9 million at the end of Q1, primarily due to the share buyback program and seasonal working capital effects. The leverage ratio improved from 2.5x a year ago to 1.0x. Moving on to the business groups. Industrial Brakes delivered revenue growth of 9% in Q1, reaching EUR 26.4 million. Performance was supported by strengthening demand in Europe and continued success in higher value industrial applications, including robotics and automation-related markets. Our focus remains firmly on margin quality and disciplined execution. Revenue in Industrial Actuators and Controls increased by 4% to EUR 28.3 million. We continue to invest in innovative products and applications, including induction heating solutions, advanced locking systems, and next generation motion control technologies. These products are well-aligned with long-term trends toward automation, safety, and intelligent machinery.
Mobility revenue amounted to EUR 10.5 million, broadly in line with Q1 last year. Profitability, however, improved significantly, reflecting the tangible financial benefits of the cooperation with Knorr-Bremse at our Sibiu mobility facility. This cooperation continues to strengthen cash generation and supports a controlled, profitable, and predictable run-off of mobility activities over the coming years. As we enter 2026, Kendrion is positioned at the heart of a major technological transition in industrial markets. While artificial intelligence is enabling smarter and more autonomous machines, motion remains mission-critical, and this is where Kendrion plays a key role. Our strategy is focused on enabling safe, precise, and dependable motion across applications such as robotics, industrial automation, integrated safety systems, medical technology, and energy infrastructure. Our investment decisions continue to follow a strict framework.
Each opportunity must demonstrate, first, strong financial attractiveness with 10% growth potential at a fully costed EBITDA of at least 20%. Second, clear competitive differentiation based on intellectual properties or expertise. Finally, mission-critical relevance in customer applications. If an opportunity does not meet these criteria, we will not invest. Looking ahead, macroeconomic visibility remains limited, including uncertainties related to geopolitical tensions and trade conditions. That said, we remain cautiously optimistic. Short term, we are supported by a healthy order book, and medium to long term by a full project pipeline and accelerating demand driven by AI-enabled industrial investment. In the short term, we remain focused on margin expansion, strict cost control, and continued improvements in operational performance as a 100% industrial company. Over the longer term, Kendrion is well-positioned to benefit from powerful structural growth drivers, particularly in robotics, automation, integrated safety, and medical technology.
We reaffirm our strategic financial targets, an EBITDA margin of 15%-18%, return on investment of 23%-27%. We expect annual revenue growth of 5%-8% and annual dividends of at least 50% of normalized net profit. In summary, we delivered a strong start to 2026 with solid revenue growth, rising profitability, and an improved return on invested capital. Our focused industrial profile, disciplined execution, strong balance sheet provide a robust foundation for sustainable and profitable growth. Thank you for your question. So sorry. Thank you for your attention. We are now happy to take your questions.
Thank you, dear participants. As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone keypad and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw a question, please press star one and one again. Mr. Mbaya will compile the Q&A queue. This will take a few moments. Now we're going to take our first question. The question comes line of Frank Claassen from the, Degroof Petercam. Your line is open. Please ask your question.
Yes. good morning, gentlemen.
Good morning.
Good morning. Question on the added value margin. It's been stable around 56%. What can we expect going forward, certainly given all the cost inflation which is coming up on raw materials and logistics? How are you going to handle that? That's my first question. Secondly, maybe related to that, of the 6% organic growth in Q1, how much was roughly driven by price and how much by volume? Thank you.
Okay. Thank you, Frank. On the added value margin, you know, we've talked now for a couple of quarters that the big difference that we have now as an industrial company is that our products are mission-critical, which gives us a better position to protect our added value margin. Last year you've seen that expand quite a bit, and this was on the back of some a bit of additional work we had to do as we were exiting an inflationary period. That is that has taken place. Today we are focused on obviously trying to expand a little bit more, but at some point, of course, you can't keep raising your prices indefinitely.
Keeping it stable and we feel that we're in a very strong and a good position to deal with inflationary pressures such as increased energy costs, wage inflation or anything else, given the strength of our portfolio. The expectation that we have for the coming periods is to remain at this level that we're currently at. Mid-50s in terms of the added value. On the price, Jeroen?
Yeah.
The 6% organic growth is 1% price and the rest was volume driven. Mainly volume driven revenue growth.
Okay. Is it fair to assume that the price component will increase in the course of the year, given the pass on of inflation or of raw materials or anything to say about that?
It's difficult to say. If we're staying in this, I mean, if we're moving into an inflationary environment, of course, we will try to reflect that immediately in our pricing, and you will see that in the top line. Currently, if you sort of assume the current situation, I think you can expect a similar split between the volume growth and pricing influences.
Okay. That's, that's helpful. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Dear participant, as a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please press star one one. Now we're going to take our next question. The next question comes to line of Martijn den Drijver from ABN AMRO ODDO BHF. Your line is open, please ask your question.
Yes, thank you, operator. I would like to come back to that value add, if I may, because I have a similar question on the components of that organic growth of 6%. The 5% volume is higher than I anticipated. Would it be fair to say that if you do 5% volume and you have these pricing initiatives, which we've talked about quite often, that keeping the value add stable is actually I would have expected that to go up. What explains that these positive elements do not drive that value add to a higher level?
The main topic in Q1 was mix driven, pricing added positively because the sales prices added 1% to the revenue and the purchase prices were flat. In Q1, there was no impact from purchase price inflation. The added value margin was stable basically because of the mix. The mix, the main impact of the mix was the production of inventory. We produced EUR 1.5 million on stock, while last year we had a reduction of EUR 500,000 on stock. That has an impact of around 1% on the added value margin. If you look, let's say like for like underlying, the added value margin would have increased.
That the changes in inventory, it went up in Q1. Of course, it will not go up indefinitely. In the rest of the year, that will, it will even out.
Okay. Just to come back to that, because I'm by no means an accounting expert. This five, six is a big leap forward. What you're saying, essentially, Jeroen, is that the expected value add increase is not yet visible in the P&L because it's been partly reflected in the inventory. You've overproduced, basically, therefore, you had higher factory, you had lower price units. Is that the accounting way to think about it?
You're not an accountant, but this is spot on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay. Got it.
It is not atypical for Q1 that you build up a bit of inventory and reduce in Q4.
Yeah. Got it. Okay. Thank you. My second question is on the order. You've qualified the order book as healthy.
Yeah.
What should we assume if we compare that order book to Q1 2025? Is that up mid-single digit? Is it up high single digit? Is it up low single, low double digit even? Related to that, so part B of the question, if you will, how certain is Kendrion on that order book converts to sales? Because when we talk about Europe, talk about potentially higher inflation. Higher inflation is usually followed by interest rate, higher interest rates. Higher interest rates impact capital goods and the decision to invest or expand production. My question is how comfortable are you with that conversion of that strong order book?
Now, let me first define what we mean with order book. That's effectively what we physically have as production order. You should think about a visibility of typically around three months, maybe a little bit more, but not, definitely not much more. If we talk about the medium to long term, it's more related to the project pipeline. You say-
Look, this is, you know, we're about to start, the production for this specific order book, and it will run up a little bit. Sorry, of this project, that it will run up over the next three to six months. Order book is really visibility as it pertains to the revenue for the coming quarter and maybe a little bit into Q3.
So the certainty of those sales is high. It's really ordered. We have the, we are buying the raw materials, or we already have it in house. There is a delivery date, and typically also because of the mission-critical nature of our products, you don't wanna miss that. It's part of the reliability reputation that we have. So it almost, I mean, I would have to do the analysis, but my assumption is if you say, look, we are talking at around a 5% year-over-year price growth, that order book reflects that roughly. The project pipeline, where we said in Q4, we, you know, we have, we talked a bit more about that. Which is higher than ever. That's still the case.
This is for the, now we're talking about, you know, maybe a little bit in Q4 but certainly in 2027. That's the medium to long-term leading indicator. Now, if we say healthy, just to take you back to Q4 announcement, we did that on the 27th of February. You may recall we struck quite an optimistic tone then.
Absolutely.
28 is when the war in Ukraine started. Obviously, we didn't know that. That's still with us. We were also looking at the book and said, maybe this, you know, because energy's pricing is up, uncertainty is up, maybe this is going to reflect over time a little bit in behavior of our customers. We don't see that. That's why we still call that healthy, which means that current trend that we're seeing and that we're now reporting on over Q1, we expect that to continue in a similar way.
That's very helpful. Thank you. My final question is just a bookkeeping question. Those tax payments in Q1, Jeroen, what should we assume? Is that low single digits, is it just a couple of EUR 100,000? What are we talking about, roughly speaking?
We had significant tax payments, so that was, EUR 3.5 million In total.
Okay.
Which is more than 50% of what you would normally expect in a year. It's more a timing effect. The German tax authorities debited our account in 2026 and not in 2025. You pay both for the Q1 2025 and then Q4 2026. Sorry, Q4 2025 and Q1 2026. It's a timing issue.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay. That's clear. Thank you very much. Those were my questions, gentlemen.
Thank you, Martijn.
Thank you. Dear participants, as a final reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one one. The speakers are answered the questions. I would now like to hand the conference over to a speaker, Joep van Beurden for any closing remarks.
Okay. Well, I would like to thank everybody for your attention and your questions. If you have any follow-up, everybody knows where to find us. Thank you so much.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now all disconnect. Have a nice day.
Thank you.