Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to today's conference call of Wienerberger's Full Year 2025 Results. I am Judith, your operator for today, and I would like to remind you that all participants will be in listen-only mode, and the conference is being recorded. The presentation will be followed by a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, you may click on the Raise Your Hand button, and if you are connected via phone, please press star key nine to enter the queue on your telephone keypad. With star key six, you can unmute yourself. We are looking forward to the presentation, and with this, I hand over to Therese Jandl.
Good morning, everyone, and a warm welcome to the Wienerberger Full Year 2025 Results Presentation. My name is Therese Jandl, and I'm pleased to host this call today from London. I'm joined by our CEO, Heinrich Scheuch, and our CFO, Dagmar Steinert. We will begin with a presentation of our key developments of 2025 and the financials of the year, an update of today's news as well, and an outlook for 2026. Afterwards, we will open up for your questions. With that, I hand over to Mr. Heinrich Scheuch.
Thank you very much. A lovely good morning from our side, from Wienerberger's team. Glad to have you on the call. Let's walk quickly through the results of 2025. You have received them actually a week ago, so I just focus on the most essential points. If we look at 2025, I think it was again, a year that has to be characterized by a lot of volatility, politically speaking, financially speaking, and also business-wise. The guidance that we actually delivered to you mid-year with the EBITDA number has been fully reached. We have, considering the circumstances that we operate in, I think, shown a high degree of profitability with an EBITDA margin, which is more or less flat compared to last year, 16.5%.
Keep in mind that all of this comes at the market level when we talk a combined market level, new build, new residential housing, infrastructure and renovation, that even dropped compared to the year before. We had a drop in the relevant markets from about 70%. You remember that we'd give indication that 2021 is our reference year was 100%, so we dropped to 70% in 2024 and to 65% when we talk about 2025. Again, here, Wienerberger has shown basically through the very strong cost discipline and the efficiency improvement, this strong margin in the year 2005.
Keep also in mind, and Dagmar will elaborate on that a little bit more, that we had quite a substantial cost inflation also last year, which we could counter with these measures in order to keep the level of profitability. Profit after tax, very good and strong performance. We more or less doubled it to EUR 168 million. The free cash flow, this is, I think, a very important step forward to reach nearly EUR 500 million last year. Again, we showed here the discipline in managing cash, managing the capital allocation throughout the business especially, and therefore being able also to reduce debt further. Let's move on a little bit when we look at the debt structure as such. We came in in net debt about EUR 1.6 billion, so that's 2.2x .
Considering what we have achieved with the acquisition of Terreal the year before and digesting it, it shows actually again, the strength of Wienerberger to self-finance such transactions, to digest them, to integrate them, and especially also financially, also to be able to handle those. Again, one of the important step next to the cost discipline, next to the efficiency improvements throughout the business, which contributed largely to these strong numbers, was the reduction of working capital to 20%. Also, again, a very important step in this volatile times to focus clearly on working capital. This, all of this, I consider that it has been a very strong approach, very firm approach of Wienerberger on the discipline side when it comes to the financials.
I already explained a little bit the market decline. Here we have obviously the market decline when we talk about new residential housing. Here again, you see that we have seen further declines in 2005 that have occurred especially in the second half of the year. We come obviously already when we look at the current status with a lower level into 2026 compared to the year before, 2024- 2025. Again, at this stage, I just want to draw your attention because I probably are the first ones in the sector, but I don't shy away to make frank comments because it's no use to sort of wait and see.
We had very harsh winter this year. It's an extremely strong winter, not only in North America, but also all around Europe, with not only cold weather, freezing, snow, ice, but also flooding. All of this has to be digested in the first quarter and will certainly have its effect in the second quarter as well.
All in all, I think when we talk then a little later during the call about the outlook, which is again, a strong outlook that Wienerberger will provide, but it comes in at the basis of a, I call it a, weaker start in the year due to the weather conditions, the harsh one that we have to face this year. Let's move on a little bit to the different regions, where we have seen in West, I think I call it a stabilization throughout the different businesses. You see also that again, Wienerberger, from a housing perspective and the new build segment, outperformed the market with 2% volume increase. Very disciplined approach on renovation, on new build when it comes to this part of the ceramic business, and also the pricing was very much in line with our expectations.
Also on the piping front, we were able to improve our performance, grabbing some market shares left and right. Again, you see here that Western Europe has performed, considering the market as such, very well. You see also the share of the business, which is, I think, very important to show that Wienerberger has emerged as a player, not only in new resi, but also one in a stronger and even increasing share in infrastructure and in renovation. If we move now a little bit to the east, a little different picture. Obviously, depressed markets when we come to the new resi markets, with about 2% down. Again, here we have sort of increased our activity and being a little bit more active in the market when it comes to volume, so a plus 1% here.
Also from a pricing and okay situation throughout the year 2025. I would say on the piping front, the -3 in volume effect, yes, that's due to, you know, some of the projects get delayed when the European funds don't finance in certain countries where there's political turmoil. These projects, the bigger ones, tend to get delayed, so this has an impact on the volume, and therefore the -3 when it comes to the volume in piping. Here you see also that we have already, from a revenue split, improved our revenues in renovation and infrastructure, but not to the extent that we've done it in other areas. This is some work in progress, I would say, as far as the share of different activities is concerned in Eastern Europe.
Now let's move across the Atlantic to North America. I would say a very From our perspective, was a very tough environment that we faced throughout the year 2025 in North America, both in the U.S. and especially in Canada. In Canada, we had a drop of new resi of more than 30% digest in the market, that was rather dramatic, I would say. Also in the U.S., around nine, 10%, depending on the states that we operated in. This affected, obviously, our new residential housing business, essentially facing bricks. You see it also on the revenue split, that we are very much exposed to this sector, yet are still in North America. The piping operations are doing well.
We consider in this context that we only have one pipe factor in North America, but performing very well on the volume side. We extended our presence there due to investments in the production, so we grabbed a little bit of market share again in the piping segment. Above all, I think we performed even in this market where the margins are coming down from this very high level during the last couple two years now to a normal one, in a very satisfactory terrain, still in the piping business in North America. All in all, I think driven by weak markets, North America suffered the most in our portfolio, and this is obviously then to be seen also in the profitability.
Still, they have done a good job, North American management, in managing efficiencies and cost structure. I think when you look to summarize the introduction before I hand over to Dagmar, you see the strong development, how we have improved, again, our share in the different segments. Wienerberger is now emerging as a strong player when it comes to the piping business in infrastructure, especially in the water management and energy management, and in the renovation, due to our strong growth in the roofing business. This is, I think, from my side, this introduction, and hand over to you, Dagmar.
Thank you, Heimo. Yeah, a warm welcome from my side as well. I will give you a deeper insight into our financials. It's now 12 months I'm with the company. It's my first conference call for a full year. I've seen how resilient and strong our business model is. We delivered a solid set of results, and that even in these really tough markets. Having a look at our revenues and operating EBITDA, we are delivering. We are delivering our guidance. We've seen a stable profitability with still a remarkable margin of 16.5%, despite quite a high cost inflation. On the revenue side, Heimo already elaborated a bit about the market situation, about the volume. Overall, for the whole group, on average, volumes are flat, as well as prices.
Of course, we managed to again increase our revenues with innovative products, which are now standing at 34%, and that, of course, is as well paying in for our profitability. If we now go on further to the bridges, revenue bridge and operating EBITDA bridge, that, well, is dominated in 2025 by our growing exposure to our roofing business, especially in Western Europe, which pays in, into our strategy and shows that we are growing in renovation. On the revenue side, yes, it's a flat development with overall +1% and a negative organic growth. We already explained the volume softness in different markets, especially in North America. We've had some, yeah, modest headwind from the currency side and the scope, the EUR 120 million scope that reflect our increasing exposure in roofing.
On the operating EBITDA, we delivered. We delivered despite these rough markets, again, markets coming down, remarkable earnings, we managed to absorb the overall cost inflation we faced, that is a very strong result. How did we do that? Of course, overall cost inflation was +4% in the year 2025, that accounts for more than EUR 100 million, that's quite a big chunk we had to manage. This cost inflation was mainly driven by higher labor and energy costs, as we elaborated during all our conference calls already. We managed to have EUR 30 million overhead savings from ongoing strict cost discipline. That is something which we are doing since years, focusing on a strict cost discipline.
If you have a look at the markets, which are, yeah, softening year by year, it's quite a challenge to really deliver out of that some gains. What did we do? We delivered from structural simplifications, and we had a high focus on tighter spendings. With that, as already said, we managed somehow to deliver EUR 30 million savings. Additionally, we are focusing on operational excellence. What does that mean? We have a look at production measures and capacity optimization, especially in the ceramic business in Europe. We improved our operational performance through improved shift patterns, improved throughput, and of course, one or the other, energy savings. That helped quite a lot. On the other hand, we started our program, Fit for Growth, in the third quarter 2025.
Fit for Growth is about streamlining processes from holding to operations so that we are improving our, yeah, our culture, how we work together, that we become much more agile, that we are faster, and that everything is towards the customer in a better optimized structure and way. With that, of course, we will see annual savings in the range of EUR 15 million-EUR 20 million once it is in a full swing. We haven't seen EUR 15 million-EUR 20 million in 2025. It was a bit less, overall, that is sustainable, and it will continue. Coming now to our operating segment, starting with Western Europe. Western Europe had a really good performance in 2025 due to roofing and the renovation portion of that business.
Renovation accounts for nearly 50% of the business in Western Europe. It's dominated by our roofing business. On the operating EBITDA, on the profitability, of course, we had besides our strict cost control, we took capacity out. We managed to have a higher utilization. We showed a strong operational excellence. With our well-balanced portfolio in Western Europe, as already mentioned, the roofing business is a main contributor. In Eastern Europe, the picture is a little bit different. Markets are dominated by our new build business, our wall business. That's a difference to compare with Western Europe. Our exposure towards renovation and infrastructure is less.
Anyhow, we managed to keep our revenues on previous years' level, regarding the profitability, we had quite to digest a big chunk from inflation, but we managed to have a recent operating EBITDA margin with 18.1%. We focused a lot on cost efficiency and on capacity reductions, where we had one or the other winter still stand as well. Coming now to North America, that is our segment where we have the highest exposure towards new build, and Heime already mentioned that the market is, yeah, in 2025 in North America and Canada especially, well, a disaster. Markets have been down significantly, on the piping business, which counts for roughly 20% of our business, we've seen volume increases.
On the pricing side, we faced, due to deflation in raw materials, price decreases, therefore, our revenues are significantly down by 12%. Of course, that has a high impact on operating EBITDA, on the profitability, and we came in with EUR 132 million operating EBITDA, and a remarkable strong margin of 19.0%. With that, I would like to go further to our free cash flow. Our free cash flow is the second highest free cash flow in the company history, and it's the second year in a row with a remarkable free cash flow. I would like to put your attention on the change in working capital. We managed again to have a significant cash inflow from the reduction of our working capital.
That, of course, a high free cash flow is the basis to reduce net debt and to be ready for further growth. With that, I would like to elaborate a little bit about our net debt development. We managed to reduce our net debt by roughly EUR 120 million, and therefore our leverage by the year end is 2.2. Beside our really good free cash flow, we had a strong focus on growth CapEx, because we focused on high return projects, and that underpins again our future growth, which will be self-funded. We've seen some smaller build-on acquisitions, where we paid in total EUR 24 million in 2025. Of course, we, as always, have a significant amount which we pay on dividends and share buybacks to our shareholder.
With all of that, I must say we have a disciplined CapEx and cash management, and that is ongoing. If you have a look at our balance sheet, don't look at all these numbers. It's just to give you an impression that our fundamentals are in a really good shape. We have a robust balance sheet, a solid balance sheet, and we even managed to improve our equity ratio by 1%, from 45%- 46%, despite different headwinds we faced. One headwind, of course, the really weak markets, and the other headwind regarding our equity ratio, the swing in negative currency impact.
On the other hand, positive, we reduced our gross debt by 10%, we reduced our net debt by 7%, and that of course, goes hand in hand with a reduction of working capital, where we improved the ratio towards revenues to 20%, coming from 24%. As you can see, our fundamentals are in a really good shape. We have an attractive shareholder return, paying dividends, which are solid, steady and reliable. Our dividend proposal for the year 2025 is EUR 0.95 per share, as we had in the last year. As you can see, if you look at the development of our dividend payout and share buyback, our dividend is stable and... Is stable or is even growing and never comes down.
Our payout ratio is 28% of the free cash flow, and that is in line with our 20%-40% range. Now, I would like to come to our outlook. What are the key assumptions? If we have the macroeconomic view, we expect, again, flat residential markets, no structural recovery. We see flat infrastructure and renovation markets, so there will be no real movement. And as well, we don't see any decline in long-term interest rates. Markets stay difficult, volatile, and are not growing. Inflation is expected to be around 2.5%, and we will cover that by price increases up to 2%. What are we doing to manage all these key assumptions? We focus again on optimization and efficiency measures. First, I would like to mention our Fit for Growth program. That is a cultural transformation.
Our people are empowered to take on more responsibility and accountability, to be more responsive and agile, with a view to delivering future growth and profitability. We will see further consolidation of our plant network, and of course, we will see a payback of expanding our industrial footprint with new products. Just to remind you, we are growing year by year our share of revenues from our innovative products. We will have some special topics in 2026, and one I would really like to point out, put your focus on, is our energy inflation, because that energy inflation is Wienerberger specific. It will be a burden of EUR 30 million in 2026. We face highest energy costs of the past 10 years, and we will be not able to compensate these higher energy costs through price increases.
It's not homemade, it's externally driven. I will explain on the next chart why. Here you can see the development of the market price, natural gas, which is most important energy we use, and the price we pay in our portfolio. As you can see, the market price came down from 2025, from EUR 37 in 2026 to EUR 33 on an average. What we pay or paid for our portfolio in 2025 was an average price of EUR 24. That goes up to EUR 32, maybe EUR 33. It goes up to the market price. Out of that, we face this EUR 30 million extra one-off energy inflation, which we are not able to compensate. If you look at the CapEx, we expect overall EUR 280 million.
EUR 100 million will be gross CapEx for high profitable projects. We will spend roughly EUR 180 million, which is with EUR 160 million maintenance CapEx, and additionally, EUR 20 million for improving our secure zone action plan, which is to support the safety of all our plant workers. A little view again on the market. Our assumptions are we don't see a recovery of the market. 2026 will be flat, not only in new build as well, but as well in renovation and infrastructure. I would like to draw your attention on the development during the year 2026. We start at a very low level in the first quarter. The first quarter, due to these really bad weather conditions, will be a quite weak quarter.
Therefore, we expect the first half 2026 to be below the second half 2026. Of course, the first half 2026 will be below the first half of the previous year. That's all in line with a development of a flat market. Coming now to the numbers of our outlook for the ongoing business. You can see here a bridge starting at our delivered guidance, 2025, a EUR 754 million operating EBITDA. We will see out of organization and profitability measures, EUR 36 million. That includes everything, like our Fit for Growth, our operational excellence, what we do on regarding operations, where we are improving our profitability in our processes towards better, better shifts, better mix, and better utilization.
We would have an operating EBITDA of EUR 790 million, but unfortunately, we have these one-off in 2026 regarding our own energy inflation, and therefore, our guidance for our ongoing business for the year 2026 is with the assumption of flat markets, EUR 760 million operating EBITDA. Of course, that's not all, because the future is going on, and we have our next chapter, and that's a growth chapter. With that, I would like to hand over again to Heimo.
Thank you, Dagmar. Ladies and gentlemen, I think what you have seen in the presentation of Dagmar is very clear. We have performed very well in the light of declining markets, in the light of sluggish, I call it a recession, development over the last couple of years. Wienerberger has been very good, and on a personal note, I, with sadness, I sit here in this call because I remember four years ago, this dreadful invasion of Ukraine by the Russians, and a lot of things have changed in business. Not only energy costs, and not only the way how we do business, but we had to adjust in a lot of aspects of the business, and we adjusted very well as Wienerberger.
If you look at the performance of North America, that Dagmar has shown in detail, I mean, when I compare the housing starts that we had last year in Canada and the U.S., and the performance of EBITDA-wise to the ones that we had five, six years ago, how strong we have been able to improve our EBITDA performance, our margins in North America, it's impressive how we work on this every day, and our people put a lot of effort in making our business even more performant in the future. Secondly, and that's also, I think, something to really, before we go into the new chapter, to stress, is the innovation rate. It's a very strong rate, above 30%, actually, around 34.4% that we have in the group. We push through our systems more successfully.
Otherwise, actually, if you sell only bricks, pipes, roof tiles, we wouldn't be able to make these margins in such depressed markets. That's the system approach that helps us to increase margins, and we continuously do so. Thirdly, and most importantly, you see also the strict discipline when we come to M&A. We have delivered over the last 10 years, a lot of deals coming in, very disciplined when it comes to the pricing of the deals and also the payback. Every cent has been paid back, and that's why we have the strong performance. If we look now at the new growth chapter that comes our way, we have had the ideal fit for our business to grow and to improve, when we talk about the Italcer acquisition. Why? Let me just summarize this in a nutshell.
This is Italcer is the leading business when it comes to high-end solutions for tiles, for floors, for walls, for facades, for the inside, for the outside, and especially in the renovation segment, which is very highly performant. Modern production hubs in Italy and Spain, they are growing not only in the local markets, but especially with respect to exports. It's not a new business for Wienerberger. I call it an adjacent business. Why? Because actually we use the same raw material. It's clay. We have more or less the same technology. Obviously, these colleagues in the wall and floor tile industry are more specific, highly technology when it comes to the surface treatments, the colors, the structures.
This is a, a great addition to our facing business that is obviously very strong in North America or Western Europe, and also increasingly strong in the renovation. Here we have an ideal sort of growth base for the future in order to improve our footprint there. Clients are more or less the same in a lot of countries, we can sort of improve our footprint in the, the Southern European hemisphere and also in the Western Hemisphere. Obviously, Italcer is a leading company when it comes to technology, as I said before in manufacturing, also in capturing CO2 and improving the footprint there. They have the first kiln when it comes to electrified kilns in Spain, high performant.
Again, you see it's an ideal fit for Wienerberger on the growth path in the future, and gives us a more and even stronger performance and a footprint in the renovation part of the business. As I said, these are the reasons from our perspective to enter Italcer. We have here the leading company, solid growth, outperforming its markets over the last couple of years. Very strong and committed management team that will stay in place and fits culturally and also from a performance very well with ours. It's an easy integration, if I may say so. We will put the guys also on our platforms and integrate them as we did in the past with others on our back offices and business support centers, and then therefore ensure, obviously, the growth in the future.
We look further to this business, the transaction structure that we have put here. Dagmar has stressed this item very carefully and duly when we talk about financing. Again, we focus here on self-financing and support. This is again an acquisition that we realize in this way in order to ensure this financing, buying 50% plus one share now. Then we will have the necessary approvals that are for such transaction. They are not the EU application necessary. It's only in German and Austria, no in other countries. This will run through rather smoothly, we all expect it, and then start the consolidation from Q2 onwards. Again, it's a fully cash transaction, funded from our existing liquidity. We have all the facilities in place in order to finance this transaction.
When we look at the from our perspective, the integration as such, it's, as I said, it's going to be a rather quick one on the back office side or the front office side, because in these markets, Italcer is very strong. We can obviously help them in order to improve the business throughout Europe and also in North America, where they have a strong business, also exporting to the US. Our strong footprint with our outlets and sales offices throughout the country will help us to improve here the performance.
On a financial front here, we see about EUR 10 million of synergies rather quickly to be grabbed here on the commercial side and a little bit on the cost side, but more will come in the future, but this is, I think, a good starting point. When we summarize, again, in a nutshell, it's a ideal in sort of addition to our portfolio. It's easy to manage, easy to integrate. We understand the business. We can handle it in our product assortment, can use it to improve our footprint in the facade business throughout the world, actually. It will strengthen our footprint also in the renovation segment, which is very strong. It helps us with architects, with planners, with designers, in order to have here even a better footprint for Wienerberger when it comes to new build, but especially renovation.
We will get quite a substantial amount of synergies in, as I said, very quickly. It's an highly attractive financial profile because from a perspective of EBITDA, about multiples, we have here about EUR 82 million EBITDA that Italcer will provide us full year in 2026. We will come to this in a minute, but a strong sort of performance here, which gives us a multiple, a little higher than 6, but not nothing sort of that we look at comparable transaction in the past, so very attractive for us. We'll bring it down when we look at the EUR 100 million that we think we were able to achieve rather quickly to a multiple in the 5-ish. For such an acquisition, I think a very strong track record again.
Let's move on to the next slide. Here you see from what has been presented by Dagmar on the outlook of the ongoing Wienerberger business, now the integration of Italcer. Obviously, when you look at the outstanding performance in 2025, all these measures that Dagmar has explained will make us performing in this scenario rather well. Let me say one thing on this. Dagmar and myself used the word flattish, stable markets. Yes, that's an assumption. If the markets get better, and if something happens this year, we are ready. Don't worry about that. We have capacity in place, we have structure in place to satisfy.
Only if you see all this volatility, and I think it's wise at this stage of the year to say clearly, "Let's see what comes our way." We, as Wienerberger, we don't wait for the cycle. We create our own growth by doing the right things and improving our portfolio, focusing on the cost side, focusing on the organic growth side, and therefore reaching then the EUR 790 million, when you talk about performance. The EUR 30 million of one-off effects on the, on the energies front, I think you have understood that it's a result of our buying forward strategy. Basically, it helps us at a long time, and then it comes a little bit against us, but I think it's a one-off. We digest it.
The EUR 760 is a strong guidance for this year, operating-wise, and we will add the EUR 50 million coming from Italcer on top. That's, as I said earlier, provided that we get the necessary approvals in Q2, and then we will consolidate the EUR 50 million from this date onwards, and end then at the operating EBITDA guidance of EUR 810 for the whole year of 2026. If we look at a very important point, because some of you will obviously ask these questions anyway, on the financing, Dagmar has clearly explained how we have brought down our debt in 2025 to EUR 2.2 billion. The Italcer acquisition will bring in a additional debt of about EUR 400 million, so we'll end up a little bit above EUR 2 billion of debt.
That's about 2.5. If I then calculate the 810 as a reference already, and then we bring it down as a two with very specific measures, as you have seen in 2025, we have now already in place our reduction in working capital. We have also the CapEx adjustments that we will bring in, and there's some real estate transactions where we have non-operating real estate that we will sell off. All of this brings in about EUR 220 million. We will reduce towards the year end 2026, again, our debt level to about EUR 1.8. You see a very disciplined approach and how we can finance such a transaction and expansion of our portfolio rather quickly, fast, and very efficiently throughout this year.
Again, when we look at the 810 outlook, it's in the light of a persistent geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainty that we face. Guys, all of you that are listening in, every day, there are other news on tariffs, on other things. We need to live with this, and this is something I think we've learned to do so, and therefore we remain very optimistic, very positive, and just do our work well and cut costs where we can, focus on margins. As I said, we assume right now that there's no real big recovery in the new residential housing market. There's somehow flattish infrastructure and renovation markets. It might be better than towards the mid of the year. We will see. As I said, we are prepared.
We have a lot of potential to grow fast and react very quickly. At this moment, the financing environment, the banking, how they react with real estate, I think is remains very restrictive. There's not the green light that I see here or the tailwind that some of you talk about that is here in the market in order to boost the business. Again, we will outperform by this guidance, our markets. We'll focus on the debt risk reduction that we told you. Strong cash generation obviously goes by itself, and integration of Italcer, and therefore expanding our earning space. A strong focus on the business again this year. I think from, from my side, this is summarizes the year 2026.
We will obviously have our Capital Markets Day a little later this morning, where we'll elaborate about the strategy in much more detail in the future, but this is, I think, from a perspective of year 2025, 2026, what we had to tell you today. I hand over to all of you in for further questions.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the Q&A session. If you would like to ask a question, you may click on the Raise Your Hand button. If you are connected via phone, please press star key nine to enter the queue on your telephone keypad, and with star key six, you can unmute yourself. The first question comes from the line of Cedar Ekblom from Morgan Stanley. One second. Please go ahead. Can you unmute yourself?
Can you hear me now?
Yes, we can.
Perfect. Thank you. That took a while on, on my side. I've got a couple of questions, please. Can we just go back to Italcer? I'd like to get some final details around the purchase consideration on a 100% basis and the implied multiples pre- and post-synergy. I appreciate in the slides you've got the cash impact of EUR 400 million in 2026, but my understanding is that is only for the initial 50% plus one share, it would be helpful to get a sort of a fully acquired impact to the gearing, and the multiple, and the cash impact. Do we multiply EUR 400 million by two to get to the sort of 100% EV implications for the business? That, that's question one. Question two, also around Italcer.
To be honest, I'm not 100% sure on the sort of channel overlap here on the products. Maybe you can talk a little bit more about it. My understanding is that Italcer's products are sort of luxury, high-end ceramic products for internal, you know, design applications, fancy bathrooms, fancy tiles, et cetera. I don't get that, how that overlaps with your external brick roofing product categories. I get that there's a regional overlap, but I don't see the end market overlap there, so a bit more color around how you see the fit would be helpful. Those are the two questions on Italcer, and then there's two questions just on sort of the outlook or financials.
Can you confirm if you had any benefit from carbon credit sales in the 2025 results? Any positive impact there? Just on the energy side of things, you have guided to this EUR 30 million impact, which I understand is around the way you purchase energy. Is there any way that you could soften that impact by doing, you know, some contracts, some hedging, et cetera, that you wouldn't normally do, in order to try and soften some of that headwind? Quite a lot to unpack there, though. Those are my four questions. Thank you.
Thank you, Cedar, for the questions. I will hand over and then come in if it's needed.
Yeah
... on the Italcer financials, because Dagmar will take over right now, and then I will answer the rest.
Yeah. Well, regarding on the Italcer financials, and the additional EUR 400 million debt we will put on our balance sheet, of course, we buy 50% plus one share, and with that, we are going to fully consolidate the whole group, and with that we are taking debt over. Therefore, in 2027, when we make the second step to acquire the, yeah, minorities, it will be far, far less than EUR 400 million. We see overall equity value of EUR 560 million. With that, I'm very confident that we will not only manage to bring our leverage by the year end 2026 again down to 2.2, but we will see further improvement the years to come, 2027 and ongoing.
I think-
Sorry, Dagmar, just before you go on. Apologies. I just want to be 100% clear here. You're saying EUR 560 million equity value?
No, enterprise value.
Enterprise.
Enterprise. Okay.
No.
Five.
Yeah.
Okay, that's helpful. Thank you. Apologies, Carol.
As I said, Cedar, it's a EUR 82 million full year EBITDA contribution from Italcer in 2026. Yeah? We will only consolidate 50 because we have the processes to go through on the approval side from antitrust authorities in Germany and Austria. Understood?
Understood. Thank you.
Thank you. Let's now go into the one. You had two questions, actually. The first one was the channel question, distribution, and the other one was obviously the positioning of Italcer. First of all, let me start with the positioning. Yes, they started with the sort of, I wouldn't call it only luxury, but high-end sort of applications, tiles for floors, for walls, and in the inside and renovation. Yes, you are right. This is a business which is strongly in renovation. There are some special dealers around Europe that sell those products, but there are also big distributors. I will refer to, for example, to a French one that is very well known to you. It's Point P, the Saint-Gobain distribution structure in France that sells all of their products.
Here, Wienerberger products and Italcer products goes through the same channels. In Italy, for example, we have this the same. In, in the U.S. There's a, a lot of, common, when we talk about distribution as such. Obviously, we will have a specific sales force, as we have for facing bricks or for clay blocks, or for, also the roof tiles. We will have the special and continue to have the special sales force for the tiles in Italcer. On top of it, and this is a, I think, a very important aspect, I said, that strategically you will see emerging very strongly in the next couple of years. This company is leading when it comes to treatments of services, digital printing, colors, et cetera. Where do we need it?
We see that the facing brick business moves towards a thinner product business. That means the bricks get thinner and thinner. We call them thin bricks or slips or whatever throughout the different markets. Here we have a very ideal addition to our business, where we can produce these products and replicate old bricks very easily through the Italcer channel. There's a lot of manufacturing synergies there, and where we can improve the business because there's a lot of renovation work going to be on the outside in Europe of the old housing stock. Replicate those bricks that we do today, burn in our kilns, traditionally, cut them, have some waste, and then put it to the market. We can produce it much quicker, much faster through the manufacturing base of Italcer.
This is something, a growing business already for them. They have here a business, a good business already, and due to the addition to ours, in Western Europe especially, and above all, also in North America, this will play out as a very strong, growing business for Wienerberger in the future. I hope I have addressed, this part of Italcer for you strategically.
You had some questions about our energy pricing and ask if we are able to fix energy at lower prices with like future contracts. Of course, we do that. We did that in the past, but always like ongoing for the next years to come. In the face of decreasing energy prices, of course, our level, what we fix, is below what we did in the past. We feel quite comfortable how we manage our risks and what actions we are taking. 2026 will stay as it is. We will pay energy prices on market level and the years to come, of course, it highly depends how our energy prices are developing, what is going on with the war, and so on. That's a volatile environment.
To add something what, Dagmar, what, Cedar has asked, there is no softening possibility...
No
... to EUR 30 million.
No, there's not.
This is, I think, what you wanted to understand.
Yeah.
Here we have done the utmost in order to bring it down to 30.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Could we get some color just on the carbon credit sales? I'm not sure if you disclosed these numbers, but it would be helpful to know if you have been selling excess credits in the market in the last couple of years, and put some numbers around what those benefits might have been.
Well, we are always selling some carbon credits, which we don't need for our ongoing business, and we have some gains out of that. That's normal business, nothing unusual.
What is the quantum there? Are we talking EUR 50 million?
No, no, no, no.
Or less?
By no means such high numbers. No. It's as Dagmar said, it's a normal sort of ongoing business thing. It's not a few million EUR. It's a double-digit amount, if I may say so, but nothing in the range of what you were referring to.
Okay. Helpful. Thank you so much for being-
Thank you.
... so detailed in your answers.
Yeah, thank you.
Thank you very much for your questions. We now have a question from the line of Markus Remis from ODDO BHF Securities. Please go ahead. I can see that you are unmuted, Markus.
Can you hear me now?
Yes.
Yes.
Okay, excellent. Thank you. I'd also like to start with a question on the 2025 financial statements, and I'm trying to better understand the cash conversions, because when I look at the receivables, the ratio compared to sales was the lowest since 2010. Can you maybe disclose the level of factoring by year-end to get an understanding as to which extent this was operationally driven, or how much financial engineering stands behind the receivables reduction?
Well, we have two effects on our receivables. First of all, regarding our working capital management, we focused on our, yeah, trade payables and receivables, and we faced lower, much lower sales volumes in the months November and December. That, of course, was one expect of a reduction of receivables. On the other hand, we increased our factoring by roughly EUR 30 million towards year-end, that's normal operating business, as we had our Terreal acquisition integrated in our group, and therefore, a bigger portion of that refers to the integration of Terreal into our factoring business.
Okay.
The focus, just to add the focus for the year 2026 for the reduction of working capital is strongly on inventories.
Okay. Thank you. Factoring at year-end 2025 was then close to EUR 200 million?
Yeah.
Okay. Thank you. That's very helpful. Then, if I may follow up on the cost inflation part, you've flagged 2.5% of cost inflation, excluding this energy burden, this EUR 30 million.
Right.
Can you shed some light on the remaining drivers, how that 2.5% is composed? Some indications here would be helpful. Then, on the other hand of the price-cost equation, for which parts of the business are you most upbeat to raise prices to get to this 2% on the group level? Thank you.
Well, I can answer that. For example, we are certainly on the roofing segment, which is a stronger segment in resident than the new residential housing right now. There are obviously, I think we will have no problems bringing up the prices.
The 2.5% on an average inflation, it's just a normal inflation, you face more or less in every country. In some, it's below, in some, it's even higher. Therefore, it's an average number, 2.5%. You see it on personal expenses, you see it on, on, yeah, on everything, more or less.
Mm.
Nothing specific.
Labor is the most important.
Yeah
Yeah.
Okay. All right. The last question, again, to get it straight on Terreal, the EBITDA multiple that you mentioned. It's like just over 6x , I think that was just mentioned. How is that derived? If I take the equity value and then assume something-.
Enterprise.
Enterprise value.
Enterprise.
Sorry, enterprise value. Yeah. Sorry. The EUR 70 million of current EBITDA, I get to quite a different-.
No, no, you, you take EUR 82 million EBITDA. EUR 82.
Eight... Okay.
Yeah
kind of annualized contribution in the current year?
Correct. Correct.
Okay. Okay, thank you. That's helpful.
Thank you.
Thank you very much, and next in the line is Yassine Touahri from On Field Investment Research. You may begin to speak now.
Hi, can you hear me?
Yes.
Perfectly well.
Oh, yeah. Yeah, thank you for taking my questions. Two questions regarding maybe 2026 and 2030. The first one would be, is the, you know, current inability to pass on cost inflation behind us after the EUR 30 million hit in 2026? Maybe my second question would be: what is the pace of recovery in European residential construction you're expecting, since we're seeing kind of some green shoots in Germany and France, and maybe give a bit more color regarding that, please?
Thank you for the two questions. Yes, I agree with you that, this one-off, as Dagmar has explained it, the EUR 30 million energy is then this one-off that we have to deal with this year. The rest is then a more, call it, stable development when it comes to inflation that we can digest with price increases on a yearly basis in the years to come. Now, from the future, if I may, we will do it, and I will speak about this in the Capital Markets Day presentation in more detail.
I've given you a base case that you will see in the presentation, where basically, I say it's a stable case in the future, where we, Wienerberger, can generate growth and don't wait for green shoots, as you have explained or you have referred to in France and Germany, et cetera. We say Wienerberger has the capacity to digest and to grow very quickly when it comes to better markets or stronger markets in new residential infrastructure and renovation, because we have the capacity there. We have also, if the Ukraine war ends and there's more demand, also the possibility to substantially grow our business quickly, and that will have a huge financial impact. At this very moment, obviously, these are things that might occur.
We don't know when and how, and there's a lot of volatility, so we don't want to put our business model only on this. As I tried to explain on our own strengths and what we can influence and drive therefore, the growth independently for this, and you will see the numbers that I present to you in a minute.
Right. Thanks for the color.
Thank you, Isaac.
Thank you very much, Isaac. I am moving on to Julian Radlinger from UBS Limited. You should be able to speak now.
Yeah, thanks very much, guys. A couple for me. First of all, could you help us with some of the moving parts in the 2026 guidance, please? What should we assume for D&A and net interest costs? I'd love to better understand the implied EPS guidance, either excluding Italser or preferably, including it. Secondly, so you're alluding to H1 2026 being particularly tough for a lot of reasons that make sense. Could you elaborate on that a little bit, please? Historically, your Adjusted EBITDA seasonality, H1 versus H2, is something like 48%, 52% of full year EBITDA. Are we thinking something like 45%, 46%? Is that the right kind of ballpark, or should we think about it differently? Thank you.
Well, first of all, I would like to start with our interest costs. Our interest costs in the year 2025 amount to EUR 100 million, we usually build up during the year working capital. We take more debt during the year on our balance sheet to bring it down by the year-end. These EUR 100 million, of course, are first of all, like the basis, then we will see additional EUR 400 million in the second quarter. Our interest costs on average are between like 3.5% and 4%. The impact will be digestible, but of course, we have to refinance the net debt of Italcer. Italcer pays a much higher interest rate. We will see overall for 2026, of course, higher interest rate.
Okay, that's helpful. The D&A?
The D&A, of course, is increasing as well, but if, if you look at the P&L of Italcer and the strong margin they are delivering, that will be less. Yeah, I would say a little bit less impact than we have on average on our business.
That you're saying they have lower D&A as a percentage?
Right
of sales than you do?
Slightly. Of course, we have to see, regarding the purchase price allocation, what we identify in, yeah, assets which we have to amortize. What is like the split between goodwill and like customer lists and know-how and so on? That work isn't done so far. Therefore, it's still a little bit, of course, of a slightly black box for us.
Understood. Thank you. Regarding the H-126, please.
H-126?
Yeah, you mean your EBITDA split.
Oh.
I think, you know, historically, you're right. You can deduct this from all the, the, the information that you have available, but I wouldn't sort of count on this for this year. It's a very different year. We have never seen such a winter for the last 20 years or so, so I think we'll, we'll have to cope with it in the sense of how the business will start in March, when it starts, how quickly it takes off and how it develops. We will see. I think I don't want to make too many predictions. As we said, we, we give you a clear guidance for the year, which is already, I think, a very strong message from ourselves in this volatile market.
Got it. Thanks very much, guys.
Thank you.
Thank you very much. There are no more questions at this time. I would now like to turn the conference back over to Therese Jander for any closing remarks.
Thank you very much, thank you for joining and your interest in Wienerberger. We hope you, we hope to welcome you back again in for the first quarter call in May the 30. And I hope you'll also find a lot of useful information around our Capital Markets Day that you will now receive on our website. Thank you everyone, and goodbye.
Ladies and gentlemen, the conference is now over. You may now disconnect your lines. Goodbye.