Good morning. My name is Daniel, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Savaria Corporation's Q4 2025 Investor and Analyst Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone.
You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. This call may contain forward-looking statements which are subject to the disclosure statement contained in Savaria's most recent press release issued on March 4th, 2026, with respect to its Q4 2025 results. Thank you. Mr. Bourassa, you may begin your conference.
Thanks, Daniel, and good morning, everyone. Today I will start with a small recap of our Q4 results. Steve will update us on financial, and JP will update us on Savaria One and Europe, followed by a Q&A session. Once again, I'm very proud of our Q4 results, as for the first time ever, we reached CAD 51.3 million of EBITDA at 21.2%, which is a very important milestone and our best quarter ever.
We finished the year with sales of CAD 913 million and an EBITDA of CAD 186.2 million at 20.4%, which again, is our best result ever. All KPI are improving, and Steve will go more in detail later. Today, there's three things that I would like to highlight. First, thank you.
Yesterday marked the five-year anniversary of Handicare acquisition, and I need to say that I'm quite proud of all the work that has been achieved since the beginning, especially through Savaria One. It's not the same company anymore, and you can see it in the people, in the operation, in the product portfolio, and recently the change under Savaria brand in Europe.
I'm very optimistic about the future and the growth and the profitability. Also, I would like to highlight the performance of Garaventa North America in 2025. It was a record year for the team in Vancouver and North America, congrats to all the team. Second, growth. I'm quite happy with the way we ended the year as we had growth in each area.
It is the pillar that was a bit behind in the Savaria One, as naturally, commercial efforts takes more time usually to pay off. Here are some example of the recent effort to help to generate some future growth. Continue the effort to develop the market on all my elevator in North America. Increase our sales effort in North America. Continue to expand the Matot dumbwaiter and material lift line of products.
Business development activities are always ongoing so that we continue our growth and be a market leader. Expand the one-stop shop in Europe. Talk about it for a long time, but it's coming. The Luma, the VPL, the incline lift, so that will give us a good future. Continue to be the partner of choice on stairlift in Europe.
In the patient care, own the room and continue to develop the long-term care segment as well as the acute care. Just some small details, and we'll try to unveil more detail during our investor day on April 14th, as well as our five years financial target. Third item, acquisition. We have demonstrated in the past that we can do three, four acquisition per year to bring additional sales and EBITDA.
Now with liquidity of CAD 212 million and a debt ratio of 1.03, we can easily invest CAD 200 million over the next three years and maintain our EBITDA debt below 2, which has been always a comfort zone. With the best team ever, we feel quite good that we can apply the learning of the last two years towards integration to make it successful faster.
The recent acquisition of Baxter Residential Elevator is a good example. Small tuck-in, very strategic. In a high potential area, it's one of the most area with the best housing start in North America. We will invest more to develop this area with the sales force and marketing to become a dominating player in Texas. Welcome, R&D and all the team in our family.
To conclude, what allows us to beat each quarter after quarter in the last two years is the new Savaria One culture. It's part of our DNA, it make it normal to always have continuous improvement, what we implement is sustainable. Once again, thanks to all the employees for their efforts over the last two years and looking forward to this new chapter of growth. Steve, financial, please.
Thank you, Sébastien. Good morning to everyone on the call. I'm now gonna provide some further detail and commentary regarding our Q4 2025 financial results. Key highlights for the quarter include, firstly, our adjusted EBITDA for Q4 reached CAD 51.3 million, which is our highest quarter ever and represents growth of almost 20% over prior year. The corresponding margin of 21.2% represents an increase of 200 basis points and brings our 2025 year-to-date margin to 20.4%. This EBITDA performance was driven by revenue growth of 8.3%, made up of almost 8% growth in accessibility and 10% growth in patient care.
Lastly, our Q4 ending leverage ratio is 1.03, which reflects a decrease of CAD 71 million in our net debt versus the same time last year. Now going into more details. Consolidated revenues for the quarter were CAD 241.8 million, an increase of CAD 18.4 million versus last year. This was driven by organic growth of 5.2% as well as a positive foreign exchange impact of 2.5%.
Our Q2 acquisition of Western Elevator also provided revenue growth of 0.6%. Our accessibility segment saw growth of 7.7%, including growth of 7.2% coming from North America, combined with a strong growth of 9% in Europe. Europe recorded positive organic growth this quarter. We feel that we have turned the corner there.
Patient care achieved a revenue growth of 10% in Q4 to bring the full-year revenue growth number for that segment to almost 5%. Our consolidated gross margin for the quarter was 38.9% compared to 37.7% in 2024, and our operating income increased by 36.6%.
This performance is mainly driven by the accessibility segment due to continued improvements under Savaria One as well as operating leverage. As mentioned, adjusted EBITDA was CAD 51.3 million for the quarter, marking our first quarter above the CAD 50 million threshold. Adjusted EBITDA margin finished at 21.2% for the quarter versus 19.2% in Q4 2024. The accessibility segment finished at 23.4%, while patient care finished at 19.4%.
Our full-year adjusted EBITDA margin was 20.4%, which is above our goal of 20% that we set over three years ago. We also incurred CAD 4.7 million in strategic initiative expenses for the quarter. This quarter marks the last quarter of consulting fees related to Savaria One. We also incurred CAD 1.8 million of other expenses in this quarter, that's related to optimization and one-off costs.
Finance costs for the quarter were CAD 4.8 million compared to CAD 2.4 million last year. Interest on long-term debt decreased by CAD 1.3 million due to an overall lower debt balance and a reduction in variable interest rates. We also incurred an unrealized foreign currency loss of CAD 1.7 million compared to a gain at the same time last year.
Net earnings was CAD 20.5 million for the quarter compared to CAD 14.3 million last year, which is an increase of 43%. Earnings per share was CAD 0.28 for the quarter compared to CAD 0.20 in Q4 2024. Looking at cash flow in our balance sheet.
Cash flow from operating activities in Q4 was CAD 35 million, driven by the strong net earnings and also a reduction of working capital of CAD 2.8 million for the quarter. CapEx was CAD 6.8 million for the quarter and finished at CAD 22 million for the year, which represents 2.4% of sales and is in line with our guidance. CapEx mainly includes for us a mixture of maintenance, new equipment, and R&D costs.
Our cash flow contributed to a repayment of debt of CAD 45.2 million in Q4 and CAD 75.2 million for all of 2025, improving our leverage ratio to 1.03 at year-end as previously mentioned. We finished 2025 with our guidance largely achieved. As noted already, we surpassed our adjusted EBITDA goal of 20%, which we owe in large part to Savaria One and the transformation that has taken place across the company.
This new profitability level is 100% structural and was achieved without any favorable one-offs in our underlying numbers. Savaria One is a continuous improvement way of working that is now ingrained in our culture, and the next phase of our strategic plan will focus on accelerating growth by expanding our market opportunities, deepening customer relationships, and further strengthening our competitive position.
We look forward to sharing more details at our upcoming Investor Day in April. With that completes my prepared remarks, and I'll turn the call over to JP to provide further details on Savaria One. JP?
Yes. Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. Let me first talk about Savaria One to explain what happened in 2025, highlight some of the successes in Q4, and also give a heads up for what to expect in 2026, and then I'll say a few words about Europe. 2025 was a year of transition for us on Savaria One because we really internalized the effort.
What happened is we kept the rigorous cadence of implementation that we had for the past years. We started to generate more initiatives by ourselves. A lot of the initiatives we implemented in last year have been developed in-house without any support. When I look back at the numbers, we implemented more than a dozen initiatives each month for with over 160 initiatives through the year.
It's really a lot of small efforts across the company that are paying off. We also continue to generate more gains each quarter than the quarter before, which means that we have an accelerating momentum. Nothing is slowing down on our side. Also important to note is that we refreshed our strategic plan last summer and early fall, and that's something we'll present in the next Investor Day in April.
Therefore, we have a growth roadmap for the next three years, but also cost reduction initiatives that we continue to implement. I think we had a very successful year in 2025 on Savaria One, and now we enter 2026 with at least 100 new initiatives generated for this year. Still a lot of work ahead of us.
If I look at Q4 in particular, there were about 35 new initiatives implemented in the quarter, generating multiple millions of recurring savings. Some examples of what happened include the renegotiation of our main IT support and license contracts. We also improved our what we call the RMA process, which is the returns and warranty parts process to reuse more parts. We completed a number of procurement, RFPs, which delivered savings across different categories.
We also partnered with a distributor for small hardware across many of our facilities to reduce small hardware costs. Also we had some additional successes with automation of our business processes, and something that we've been working on for some time is getting our field engineers to be more efficiently dispatched, and that continues to improve. Finally, we reduced our warehousing costs and also innovated in our factories.
Still many improvements happening even in Q4 last year. We're also already actioning some elements of our growth plan. We did a lot of work last summer to look at how we can grow the business. As you saw in the results in Q4, we're already accelerating our growth, including in Europe. That's very positive. One thing I wanted to highlight is our direct businesses are doing particularly well, and that's because we had a lot of innovation and improvements in those through Savaria One. What to expect for 2026 for Savaria One. Like I mentioned, we entered the year with two things.
First is about 100 new initiatives that we're gonna implement this year. We also have some tailwinds or momentum, as you call it this way, from all the initiatives we implemented in 2025. If you remember, we had initiatives implemented through the year, and some of them did not pay off fully in the year and continue to accrue benefits in the next year.
I think we have good momentum starting this year and, of course, we'll have more details to unveil during the investor day. Rest assured, everything, all the good habits we developed in Savaria One continue. In fact, we decided to keep the name Savaria One internally because we really believe this is the right way to talk about how we improve the business and work together to be one great efficient company.
Maybe some news about Europe now. I started a new role earlier this year officially, but I've been spending a lot of time in Europe in Q4 of last year. The way I would think about it is that the last two years in Europe before I started were a lot about reorganizing the business and improving profitability. Somehow my arrival coincides with a changing in momentum and priorities for Europe, where we now have a good business that is very healthy and profitable, and our focus is about growing the top line. As you saw in the Q4 results, we already have some good momentum there.
One thing that we did to make that happen and enable that going forward is we already reorganized the team in Europe to have a better allocation of responsibility between different leaders, so we can have a better support for each of our growth vectors.
We also spend a lot of time with our different dealers, which actually have great feedback about our company, about our support to the, those dealers, and about our products. That is already starting to show in the numbers, and we're quite optimistic about the potential there. We already have some good wins since I started of dealers switching their product portfolio to us. Again, it shows in the numbers that we have in Q4.
Looking forward, 2026 is gonna be a year of new product introductions and of innovations, especially in Europe, where we have new stair lifts that are coming, but also a new incline platform lift. We have a number of field trials going on right now. Hopefully, if everything goes well this year, we'll have a number of those product introductions to come to mass market.
Finally, we did something important for us, which is that we rebranded our operations in Europe to be under the name Savaria, which is a bit of a symbolic thing, but to say we are now Savaria in Europe. We're not just the different brands that we used to convey, but we're actually Savaria, which means we have the full product portfolio.
We are the one-stop shop, and we're positioning ourselves to be the best partner for accessibility with our dealers. This summarizes my updates. Maybe I'll turn it back to you, Seb, for closing remarks.
Thank you very much, JP. Good detail. Before we turn to Q&A, I just want to say thank you very much to all the analysts. You do a very good job on your coverage. You know well the story of Savaria. Hopefully, today you will learn a few new things, and you can continue your good work. Daniel, I think we are ready for questions.
As a reminder, to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Michael Glen with Raymond James. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning. Maybe just to start, JP, you were talking about Europe. Can you just remind us? I think it's been for the past two years that Europe on the top line has seen some pressure. Can you just remind us, what were the main items that were overhanging top line in Europe and just the duration of those in total?
When you say overhanging, you mean that limited the growth of the top line? Just to be sure.
Yeah, exactly. I think there were some programs, some government programs that came off, and then there was some, you guys had exited some business. Just those elements, the timing of those and the duration.
If you want exact timing and duration, maybe, Steve, you can complement. Okay. I can, I can talk about the main ones, just to give you a flavor. If you think about top line, what happened is, first of all, we did some divestments in the car business, but that was a while back. Maybe Steve can add to this. We had some restructuring, if I can call it this way, to our business in Europe.
\In some of our direct businesses, we decided to have a, maybe a more rigorous approach on pricing. We did the same in some of our dealer businesses. In some markets, we had some contracts with, let's say, business partners and dealers that were unfavorable to us.
We just held a stronger line on the partnership terms and sometimes on pricing, and that made some of them go to a competition. We also had very aggressive competition, some markets, to be honest. At the same time. That's why we had limited or sometimes a flat growth in Europe. I think that happened in through 2024 and maybe the first half of 2025, largely speaking.
There were also some, let's say, challenges with government programs. In many of our markets in Europe, there is some form of government support for purchasing of our accessibility products. Sometimes, for example, in France and in Italy last year, there were some moments of stop and go.
The government would announce a program, for example, in France, but would not be ready to process the order, so that slows down the business. In Italy, they announced that the program would stop, and then it started again. There's a bit of stop and go like this happening, but I think that's just creating fluctuations quarter-to-quarter.
I think the fundamental thing we did in the last two years is more to be more rigorous about which business we wanna have, to be more disciplined about which partnerships and the pricing we wanna have and that resulted in limited growth since 2024. Steve, do you wanna add anything on this?
I mean, I think you covered it well, JP. Just adding that, you know, the biggest impact was really our focus on higher margin sales. You know, these efforts really kicked off with Savaria One. I'd say, Michael, it's really been two years that sort of the end of 2023 and now, lapping that at the end of 2025. It's really been the last two years that we've seen sort of that decline, now come to an end.
Okay. No, that's. Thanks for framing it that way. That's good information. Then can you also just provide an update on the capacity expansion in the U.S. and the expected timing for the go-to-market on the Made in the U.S.A. elevator product?
Well, a very good question. Thanks for the interest. Yeah, definitely Greenville, if we go back in time in Q2 2025, we started to do some elevator, home elevator in Greenville. I think right now, again, we are doing approximately 35%-40% of our home elevator of Savaria brand in Greenville, depending on where the end user is located.
For sure right now, we're still complying with USMCA, so that means we do not pay tariff, so that's why we pick and choose. I will say our Greenville expansion, but we are actually all our permits, the digger are in place, they are digging, and the new extension should be ready in October this year. I think that will be a positive news to be able to continue to add some capacity for the future.
When would you expect to? How much of the elevator at that point in time will be made in Greenville once that capacity expansion is done?
We'll need to come back later with more details. Right now, again, we are compliant. We do not pay tariffs. I think this is why we started with one line. As the expansion gets ready, we'll be able to expand with more for the future.
Steve, can you just remind us of how CapEx trends next year and what we should expect quarter to quarter?
The Greenville obviously is a one-off project for us. It's an owned building that's started already. It's, you know, we have shovels in the ground already in 2026, the work's actually started. We're gonna see this probably come live in Q4, we're gonna see the spend or the CapEx investment over the next few quarters. We do have an increase in our CapEx budget this year, but we have tightened up some other areas. You know, we're gonna be slightly over our 2.5% of sales, but this is sort of a one-off project investment that we're treating that way.
Would it be CAD 20 million-CAD 25 million in CapEx? I'm just trying to get a number.
For 2026, our number's probably gonna be more in the 2.5%-3% of sales.
Okay. Okay, thank you.
Thank you, Michael.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Derek Lessard with TD Cowen. Your line is open.
Yeah, good morning, everybody. Congratulations on a great year, Sébastien, to you and your team.
Thank you.
Maybe just talking about the business as a whole. Curious how you're thinking about it and without stealing any of your thunder coming this April, but is it more... You did allude to accelerated top-line growth, but can we expect some margin expansion in 2026 as well?
A very good question, Derek. For sure we need to wait a bit more to get further detail. Definitely, as JP say, things are sustainable. We continue to generate new idea. When this new idea, it's not always about money, but often there's some, a bit impact. Definitely I would be disappointed if we don't continue to improve the margins this year.
Let's call it this way. For sure, we always have to be careful if we do, example, midsize acquisition that could bring down the margins for a certain time. On the legacy business, on a full Savaria, I'm very positive as the environment change that we should be able to improve the margins.
Okay. Maybe that's a good segue. My next question was on M&A. Curious about the pipeline and maybe some of the opportunities that you're seeing in the market, whether it's, you know, new categories that you guys wanna get into, or is it maybe related to incremental manufacturing capacity that you might need?
Good question. For sure, again, we have always done M&A in the past. We like to do M&A because for us to acquire one of our existing dealer is very natural. Again, we prove it last year with Western, this year with Baxter. This is good because we're vertical integrated, that give us a chance to invest a bit more in the local market to accelerate the sales. Also, when we bring in new products, example, you made that when we bought that last year. That's always good because that bring new products to our dealers so that we can continue to be the number one choice in the industry. Definitely there's the two type of acquisition we like to do, products or a dealer that can help us to be better on the local market.
Now we are lucky, we have the right liquidity. For sure we will always remain disciplined, okay? We don't want just do acquisition to do acquisition. We have to do the one that will be the most beneficial for the group. We have a very good future.
Absolutely. Okay. Maybe I'll throw one last one in here for JP. Can you maybe talk about your full circle transition from consultant to a leadership role in Europe and how that came about?
What's your question specifically? I'm happy to answer, but what are you thinking?
I just, I was just curious on and, you know, why that, one, the transition and, is it because you saw or what opportunities you saw in the role in Europe in particular?
Well, just I'll try to answer your question. Thanks for asking. For me, the role in Europe is a natural professional progression for me because like joining Savaria as a chief transformation officer, I got to know the whole business and I learned skills that I did not have as a consultant. I was building on my skill set but expanding it.
Leading the business here in Europe is a personal professional challenge for me, I'm learning a new role. I feel like I'm also very well equipped for it 'cause through Savaria One I did spend a lot of time in Europe. I know the business quite well. I speak multiple languages. I studied and worked in Europe a lot in my pre-previous life. I think I'm very happy here.
I'm having a great time. I think it's benefiting the business also that I bring some of the Savaria North American culture to Europe so I can really bridge the gap there. I think, yeah, that's how I think about it. It's great for me. It's great for the business, I believe. Hopefully we have a lot of success with me playing this role.
Okay. That was helpful. That's exactly what I was asking the question for. Thanks.
Thank you.
Thank you, Derek.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Frederic Tremblay with Desjardins Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Thanks. Good morning, everyone. Morning. Just maybe coming back on the CapEx and beyond 2026. Not looking for specific numbers, but just wondering if the growth plan that you're, you know, about to introduce, will that require incremental CapEx, or do you feel like the growth opportunity can be supported with, largely with the existing infrastructure?
I mean, we're definitely gonna talk more about this at the Investor Day, generally speaking, we have enough capacity, especially with what we're building at Greenville to facilitate the growth that we have planned for the next few years.
You never know what could come through M&A too as far as, you know, footprint is concerned, we have enough, especially with the Greenville expansion, we're gonna have enough footprint and capacity to achieve our growth plan. You know, we are gonna have a little bit of additional expenditure this year, we're gonna be back down, this year being 2026, we're gonna be back down in line with our, you know, 2% to 2.5% of sales for 2027. That's our plan.
A, a big part of our CapEx spend, as a reminder, is our R&D. You know, that continues to be an area of focus for us where we do invest. It's roughly half of that CapEx spend on a, on a normal annual year. It won't be not exactly the same in 2026, but for 2025 and 2027, typically R&D and intangibles is sort of half of where we spend the money. That's important to us to make sure we have a robust R&D pipeline of new products hitting the market. You know, while it's can be a sizable investment, it's critical, a critical area of expertise for us and a critical competitive advantage I'm trying to say.
Okay. If I may, Steve, okay. I think again for us, Frederic, we have pushed a lot our factories in the last two years to improve, to have the best machine, to be the most productive. Right now we have unlocked so much capacity in the last few years.
To continue to be the best, okay, is very, very important for us. R&D, we have 62 people. I think, we have done a lot of reorganization, new process in the company. You will see that in the future we'll be able to improve existing product, launch some new one, and R&D has to be part of the growth plan, okay? I think we are pretty in good shape in across all our different segments, right?
That's great. I was hoping to get a bit of an update on market conditions in North America, where, you know, obviously, you know, seeing home construction activity still pretty slow, but you guys keep growing at a nice pace in North America in accessibility segment. I wonder if you could comment just generally on the market and sort of what Savaria has been doing to win market share and keep growing nicely in that region.
Definitely, we have some interesting slide, okay, to show at our Investor Day about the size of the market, the opportunity. Again, with the aging of the population, after that, the dense cities in the city, the townhouse are going up, okay, that's really helping elevators. Right now, not enough people put home elevator into their housing, okay.
If we continue the good work with architect, contractor, designer to develop this market, I think that's enough, okay, opportunity for that to offset some maybe the slowdown you might have right and left. Example, Texas, we talk about that's an opportunity for us. I think, on our side, we continue to be busy. When we look at other product like stair lift, it is a necessity. When your bedroom is on the second floor, you cannot go up and down.
No, you put a stair lift. It is very affordable. Some place in Europe, yes, you can have some subsidies. That's, again, we have the right demographic, to help us.
Great. Maybe last one for me. Just on dealer acquisitions, can you remind us of, like, the drivers of accelerating the growth of those businesses after you acquire them? I think typically you'd expect the organic growth of those businesses to accelerate after you've acquired them. Maybe, you know, briefly run through some of the key aspects that you guys focus on after acquisitions.
For sure. It's a good question. No, right now we own 30 direct stores, and I think there's a lot of good place that we do very good business. At the end, okay, we're able to learn from each other and to bring it to the dealer after the acquisition to enable to invest in the business, to generate more leads, to again, push a bit the sales team to meet more architect, contractor. We believe in showrooms, so very often, okay, we'll make sure we have a good representation, a nice showroom that we can bring a professional and a customer into our showroom to see what is the best we can do.
I think, that's really all the knowledge that we had in the past that when a dealer wants to sell or wants to retire, we're a very natural buyer. Right now, approximately 33% of our sales of accessibility are direct. The rest is dealer, but we are good at it.
Thank you, congrats on the strong results.
Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Zachary Evershed with National Bank Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Good morning, everyone. Congrats on the quarter.
Thank you.
Most of my questions have been answered. Maybe just one. You mentioned a five-year target to be revealed on April 14. Will we be getting shorter term guidance as well for 2026?
I think it's the job of the analyst to do short-term guidance, Zach. No, we try to. I think we have demonstrated in the last two years, okay, what we are capable to do, and what we do is sustainable. I think we'll be able to give enough color the Investor Day on the five years target that people will be able to put a number by themselves for the yearly guidance. We want to go on a, on a broader period because we're in the business for the mid long term, not for the short term.
Makes sense. Thanks. Actually just one other one. You previously mentioned that some parts of Europe are already exceeding the 20% margin target, while some are dragging. Can you tell us broadly what those units are doing differently versus the ones still under the target? Or is it primarily a function of the subsidies that are available in those geographies?
I think just one. I'm not sure where you got this comment. I think if we look at the detail, MD&A, I think, we see that the accessibility is at 22%. Again, it's a mix of North America and Europe. I think we're probably closer to 20% than we were in the past, okay? I don't think we detail exactly per location or per country what's happening. Maybe some of the good thing that we're doing, JP, you want to highlight a few item what we're doing good, for Europe to improve our profitability?
The main things in the last few years have been the efficiency of our factories and our field operations. In our factories, there were a number of initiatives to reduce the, let's say, the number of people we have for the same output by automating some industrial processes we have. That's been very effective. We also deployed a lot of lean, let's say, lean improvements to our factories. I think that's where we have a lot of people in the factories, and there we became much more efficient. The other place where we have a lot of people is in the field operations for installation and servicing.
For that, we did not only improve the quality, let's say, of our work because we had a lot of training and we elevated the performance of our team by capability building, but also we deployed better systems where the dispatching, for example, is more efficient. That's something we keep working on, but it's already much better than it was. Through this, we improved the profitability quite a bit. Last thing is, as I mentioned before, is we became a bit more, let's say, rigorous and strategic in how we price and manage the pricing. As a result of all these things, we improved our profitability overall.
Great color. Thanks. I'll turn it over.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Justin Keywood with Stifel. Your line is open.
Good morning. Thanks for taking my call. Still on the Baxter residential elevator acquisition announced early in February. Realize it's a tuck-in deal. Are you able to provide any metrics around the profitability of that asset and the opportunity to expand margins and some of the integration activities that have been successful with some of Savaria's other acquisitions?
Okay. Thank you, Justin. We did which is probably in the low teen, okay, the profitability. I think the success of Savaria is always the vertical integration from the dealer to the factory to the subcomponents, example, in Mexico. I think all this make us successful. Again, we see with Baxter a good opportunity. Again, it's a small business unit, I think we will add some volume and develop some area that will continue to help for the success. Takes us in an area that we believe we can be much better and that's why we did the acquisition.
Great. That's helpful. How did the acquisition come about? Was this a cultivated opportunity? Just if you have any background on that. Thank you.
I think at this stage, most of the dealers know that we are natural buyers. I think it goes to different conversation with their president right and left, okay, that, and then Nicolas, our corporate development. Definitely we know which dealer might be selling in the next few years, and typically they're on the list. When they are ready, they call us. That's a bit how it works.
Great. Good to hear. I had a question on foreign exchange. It was quite impactful in the quarter. I don't recall it being impactful historically. Just wondering if there's a strategy around managing FX risk with hedges or if there were any unique factors for this quarter impacting the results?
We do have some hedges in place, Justin. We, so we do hedge some of our debt. What happened this quarter was unrealized loss on the US dollar. Some of our mainly related to US cash and to US receivables that when they were converted back to Canadian, just a change in the FX rate quarter-over-quarter created that loss versus the same time last year, you remember the US dollar was going the other way, so quite a bit.
I mean, we do, we do have some hedging in place, but, you know, we're going to see these types of impacts on a quarterly basis. I think this one is just more pronounced based on the change in the US dollar over the last short term.
Thank you very much.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Razi Hasan with Paradigm Capital. Your line is open.
Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. You spoke about operating leverage in the quarter. Could you maybe talk about future ability to capture operating leverage and where that comes from?
I mean, you know, we've talked a lot about continued improvements, and that have come under Savaria One, and it's a new way of working and a new culture here. You know, something that is just gonna happen naturally without any effort is gonna be some of that operating leverage. You know, I mentioned the capacity that we have at our sites.
You know, a significant amount of our cost base is fixed, so being able to put through more revenue with the same cost base, we're gonna see that leverage come through in all of our regions and segments. We're gonna see that in patient care and accessibility. We are making this one-off investment in Greenville, but we feel or we know that we have enough capacity to service our long-term growth plans.
Razi, we're gonna see this come through. We saw some this quarter. We're gonna see this continue over the next few years.
Okay. Great. Thanks for that. Then maybe one for JP. Just if we take a step back a bit, could you maybe provide some details on growth rates for the elevator market in Europe? Just overall, you know, how do you see the market growing? How has it been growing, and how do you see it growing going forward?
Just to clarify, we're currently not playing in the elevator market in Europe except for Vuelift, right? You know this.
Mm-hmm.
That's the context. The growth rate, we will present that in the Investor Day, what we think, like, are the growth rates per market. I think it's in the range of 4%-5%, if I re-remember. I'm going from memory. It's in that range. Most of our markets are in that or slightly higher range of growth rate. That's what's. Yes. What maybe hold that question until the Investor Day, and you'll get the more granular view of all the markets we operate in.
Fair enough. That's helpful. Then maybe just lastly, I'm not sure if it was answered earlier or asked, but just thoughts on priorities for capital deployment for 2026.
Yeah. I can take this one, Razi. We have been delevering over the last couple years. We're gonna continue to do that. We are building the balance sheet for mainly for acquisition growth, and for acquisition opportunities to make sure we have the funds available to execute transactions as they arise. We are at 1x leverage.
Our sweet spot is around that 2x mark or below that 2x mark. Sébastien mentioned in his comments that there's CAD 200 million available for acquisitions over the next few years. This is gonna continue to expand, and the idea is that we're gonna be self-funding acquisitions. Our dividend policy is relatively stable.
You know, we're not looking at buybacks in the short term, we've talked a little bit about CapEx already. The main goal right now is to continue to repay debt and use our revolver to execute on acquisitions when they arise.
Great. Thanks. That's helpful. I'll leave it there.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Jonathan Goldman with Scotiabank. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning, team. Thanks for taking my questions. Really nice organic growth. Maybe we can just focus on accessibility, both North America and Europe. Can you provide some color on how booking trends and backlog have trended so far in Q1? I guess if you wanna talk about it directionally, has the momentum from Q4 spilled over into 2026?
Okay. I don't, I don't think we have retailer backlog in Q4. You know, I think We had a good start of the year and typically Q1, okay, there's a bit of deadline in North America for some price increase, that usually give us a healthy backlog. I think in terms of Sterling, we are busy. No, I'm quite comfortable with the way we have exited the year, that we have some backlog remaining to hopefully have a good Q1.
Okay, thanks for that. Maybe switching to Europe, the idea of you know, kind of being a one-stop shop, could you remind us of what the current product mix is in Europe right now? I guess related to that, could you give us an update on the dealer uptake and reception of the Luma?
Maybe I will start, then JP will complete. For sure in Europe, we are first, okay, the stair lift organization. That has been the bread and butter of Handicare for many, many years. Then don't forget we have the Garaventa brand in Europe, where we have the incline platform. We have been a strong parent incline platform as well.
We brought the Luma last year. For sure Luma, again, it takes time, but it's one of those who put the seeds for the mid, long term because people before they buy, example, 10, they do one and they put one in their showroom. Then they do one with their customers. It takes some time. Definitely there's a lot of traction. People like the products, so I think we'll get a good future.
Again, we have the Vuelift in Europe. We have some short VPL called the Multilift. Definitely, we are starting to have a better picture of the one-stop shop and the dealer appreciate that. I think that will be good. Maybe JP want to complete something on that.
I think you said it well, Sébastien, but I think it's recent that we bring almost all the products. The one big piece that's missing is home elevators, 'cause we have the Vuelift, but we don't have the other category killers like the Eclipse, for example, but for everything else we are there. For us, to be transparent, for example, selling incline platform lifts, vertical platform lifts has always been something that we existed through Garaventa, but we still have room to grow there because we're, for example, educating even still today some of our historical Handicare dealers to sell those products.
Yes, we made progress in that regard in the last few years, but there is still work for us to do and room for us to cross-sell our different products to our different historical dealers in Europe.
Okay, that's good color. Maybe just one more on the patient care. The organic growth was really strong in the quarter and you were lapping also like a really strong comp as well. Was there any one-time projects in there or anything that would make that growth look unusual?
On my patient care we have to be careful. It's always a bit lumpy from one quarter to the other, okay, because of big project, as you said, and sometimes there's some deadline with some funding with the government. On our side, we try to get more at one year, okay, versus one quarter for the patient care. I think last year we finished in the low 5% of growth. I think it is below what we want, but I think this is how we should look at it.
Oh, that's a fair comment. I'll get back in queue. Thanks for taking my questions.
Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question is a follow-up from Michael Glen with Raymond James. Your line is open.
Oh, hi. I apologize if I missed this. Did you indicate what the organic, like, the excluding Forex organic growth rate was in Europe for the quarter?
Steve?
Yeah. We don't typically disclose that number, but we had low single digit organic growth in Europe. They had a very large positive FX impact. it's roughly around, you know, the 9% split roughly around 2% organic and 7% FX. the pound/euro strengthened versus the CAD.
Okay. Is it safe to assume that that would have been negative through the first nine months of the year?
No, it wasn't negative. It's been positive for most of the year.
Okay. Just, the tax rate next year or this year, 2026?
Maybe your question is coming from our lower tax rate that we experienced in Q4. For next year, we're expecting to be back in the range of 26%-26.5%. There were some positive impacts in Q4 that you'll see. I think our rate for the quarter was about 17.5%, and we had some positive adjustments on earnings in some countries that previously were experiencing losses.
We have carry forward losses in some of those countries that when we're now making income, that we can apply those losses against the current income so that the effective tax rate is lower. You know, there was a bit of a one-off adjustment, but going forward, I think if you're modeling, keep 26.5%.
Thank you.
Thank you. If we have any additional questions, please press star one one on your telephone. Again, that is star one one to ask a question. I'm showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn it back to Sébastien Bourassa for closing remarks.
Well, thank you very much, Daniel. Thanks for all the good questions. Seems a lot of good interest this morning. Again, I'm very happy of the results. Very proud of that. I think it shows that we are in a good industry. We're going to do the right thing, the several one learning we did in the last two years, quite comfortable and excited to present to you the next chapter of growth in April.
By remember, if you have interest to be at the Investor Day in April in Brampton, Toronto, please register so that we have enough chair and enough sandwich for lunch. Thank you very much, Daniel. See you next quarter.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.