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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

Apr 29, 2026

Operator

Hello, welcome to the Q1 2026 IDEX Corporation earnings 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. If you would like to ask a question during this time, just press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, just press star one again. Thank you. Now I would like to turn the call over to Jim Giannakouros, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, Jim.

Jim Giannakouros
VP of Investor Relations, IDEX Corp

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to IDEX's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. We released our first quarter financial results earlier this morning, and you can find both our press release and earnings call slide presentation in the Investor Section of our website, idexcorp.com. On the call with me today are Eric Ashleman, President and Chief Executive Officer of IDEX, and Sean Gillen, our Chief Financial Officer. Today's call will begin with Eric providing highlights of our first quarter results and an update on our business outlook and strategies. Sean will discuss additional financial details and our updated outlook for 2026. Following our prepared remarks, we will open the line for questions. Before we begin, please refer to slide two of our presentation, where we note that comments today will include forward-looking statements based on current expectations.

Actual results could differ materially from these statements due to a number of risks and uncertainties, which are discussed in our press release and SEC filings. As IDEX provides non-GAAP financial information, we provided reconciliations between GAAP and non-GAAP measures in our press release and in the appendix of our presentation materials, which are available on our website. With that, I will turn the call over to Eric.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Thanks, Jim. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Please turn to slide three. IDEX delivered a strong first quarter and continue to see our growth strategies gain traction as we expand and integrate capabilities in targeted advantage markets powered by 80/20. I'd like to thank our teams around the world for their disciplined execution, agility, and focus as they help drive long-term value creation. In the first quarter, IDEX delivered organic sales growth of 5% and adjusted EBITDA margin of 26%, which reflects a margin expansion of 50 basis points year-over-year. These results were above our expectations and reflect strong performance across each of our segments. Additionally, orders were better than expected, growing 10% organically year-over-year.

Strength was most pronounced in our Health & Science Technologies or HST segment, where secular drivers continue to fuel growth across high-value applications in data center, semiconductor, and space and defense markets. The strong backlog build in HST improves our visibility to deliver continued solid growth for the balance of the year and into 2027. Finally, orders in our Fluid & Metering Technologies or FMT segment grew 9% organic year-over-year. This was driven by strong order activity in our water platform and our pumps businesses. In our general industrial business units, we are off to a good start to the year, and it's encouraging to see signs of improvement in these end markets. Taking our Q1 performance and backlog build into account, we are raising our full year 2026 financial outlook. Sean will get into greater detail later in the call.

Before turning it over to Sean, I'd like to walk through a live example of IDEX's capabilities to drive long-term value as 80/20 drives growth, margins, and earnings. Please turn to slide four. At the highest level, this starts with a very high-quality portfolio of market-leading applied technologies used in environments where performance is critical and failure is not an option. Space and defense is a prime example of faster-growing, durable end markets where we are increasingly deploying resources in the HST segment to expand our opportunity set. In simple terms, we provide critical components that move, manage, filter, focus, and protect data, energy, and fluids in space and defense systems. These markets benefit from growing demand for space-based connectivity and breakthrough defense technologies with long program lives and rising system complexity creating a multiyear growth runway.

Importantly, our participation spans multiple touch points across the portfolio from optics enabling secure data transmission to Mott filtration solutions, supporting propulsion and thermal management alongside other engineered components for mission-critical systems. These solutions are co-engineered early with customers, allowing us to move quickly, adapt as requirements evolve, and reinforce our role as a trusted partner. Please turn to slide five. For more than a decade, 80/20 has helped us improve focus, margins, and execution. Within our growth platforms, we are increasingly using it as a growth tool, segmenting markets more deliberately, clarifying where we win, and actively reallocating capital and talent toward the highest value opportunities. What's different today is the quality and scale of growth emerging from our platform 80's customers and markets. As demand concentrates in more complex, higher-value applications, our pivot toward durable growth areas is reinforcing a stronger overall outlook for IDEX.

This momentum also creates a flywheel effect. Strength in our advantage platforms allows us to further simplify, rationalize, and refine the portfolio, driving higher growth, stronger margins, and enhance shareholder value over time. It might seem counterintuitive to some, but we grow fastest by focusing and doubling down on fewer customers over time as we help winning customers quickly grow share within advantage spaces. Our component orientation allows us full flexibility to move right or left into other application arenas to apply 80/20 again, smoothing out the peaks and valleys of dynamic growth as we compound value. We complement this work with balanced and disciplined capital deployment, maintaining a strong balance sheet for flexibility, investing organically, actively pursuing tuck-in acquisitions, and returning capital to shareholders. We repurchased $76 million of IDEX shares in the first quarter and expect to maintain that pace throughout 2026.

With that, I'll turn it over to Sean to walk through the quarter in more detail, including segment performance and our updated outlook.

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

Thanks, Eric. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Please turn to slide six. As Eric mentioned, in the first quarter of 2026, IDEX delivered better than expected financial performance. Organic revenue growth of 5% was better than we forecasted with notable strength in HST. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 50 basis points year-over-year on productivity improvements, positive volume leverage, and positive price cost, partially offset by mix. Adjusted EPS came in significantly higher than our guided range in the first quarter. Overall, our orders grew approximately 10% organically in the quarter, again led by HST's organic order growth of 17% year-over-year. FMT orders grew 9% organically in the first quarter, and FSDP orders declined 4% organically. As a reminder, we typically enter any given quarter approximately 50% booked overall.

The strong order activity in HST is driving a backlog build that offers greater confidence in our ability to deliver better financial performance than we outlined entering 2026. In FMT and FSDP, the rapid fulfillment nature of those businesses limit our visibility to approximately midway into any given quarter. Touching on some of the more meaningful business demand trends in the quarter, we saw a continuation of strong order activity in areas influenced by AI, which for us is most meaningfully in power generation for data centers, semiconductor manufacturing, and optical switching. We also continued to see strength in municipal water, mining, pharma, and space and defense. Organic sales in the first quarter grew 5%, with HST growing at 11% and FMT growing at 2%, while FSDP was down slightly. On a consolidated basis, organic sales growth was balanced between volume and price contribution.

IDEX adjusted gross margin declined 40 basis points year-over-year to 44.9%, reflecting productivity gains and volume leverage being more than offset by mix. Adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 50 basis points versus last year, reflecting productivity gains, volume leverage, and cost discipline more than offsetting negative mix. The first quarter is our seasonally lowest cash flow period. Free cash flow of $86 million declined $5 million versus last year, driven mostly by higher working capital investment due to higher growth. We continue to expect free cash flow conversion of at least 100% on an annual basis. Finally, we ended the quarter with strong liquidity of approximately $1.1 billion. Finally, we spent $76 million to repurchase IDEX shares in the quarter, and we remain committed to that quarterly pace for 2026. Now quickly, some color on our results by segment.

I'm on slide seven. In HST, organic orders increased 17% and revenue grew 11% organically. Volumes increased in advantage markets, including semiconductor OE and consumables, data center applications, and space and defense. Notably, these exposures are, as Eric mentioned, in the areas we have pivoted the portfolio towards in the last few years and where our integrated growth strategies and platform building reside. Pharma was also an area of strength in the quarter. HST adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 100 basis points year-over-year as positive volume leverage, positive price cost, and productivity benefits more than offset unfavorable mix and acquisitions. Turning to slide eight. In FMT, organic orders increased 9% and organic sales increased 2%. Orders growth was supported by our intelligent water platform and our mining exposures, partially offset by global softness in chemical end markets.

Looking at our leading indicator industrial order rates, they showed growth in the quarter as orders and revenue in these businesses were slightly better than we had expected. Our water platform continued to perform well, contributing to both the order and sales growth in the quarter. FMT's adjusted EBITDA margin declined slightly by 10 basis points year-over-year as productivity benefits were more than offset by mix and volume deleverage. Please turn to slide nine. FSDP organic orders declined 4% year-over-year, and organic sales decreased 1%. Our Fire & Safety franchise grew high single digit in the quarter as we continued to see strong demand for our fire and rescue tools in North America and stable demand in Europe. This growth was offset by an expected decline in dispensing.

This decline in dispensing was due to tough comps in project volumes in North America and Asia. We expect to see stability in our dispensing business on a sequential basis. FSDP adjusted EBITDA margin increased 30 basis points year over year as strong productivity improvements more than offset mix and volume deleverage influences in the first quarter. Please turn to slide 10, where I'll touch on capital deployment. Like I mentioned earlier, I drove $86 million of free cash flow in the first quarter, which is our seasonally lowest cash-generating period in a given calendar year. Our gross leverage position as of the end of the first quarter is at roughly two times. As outlined last quarter, we continue to maintain a balanced approach to capital deployment.

In the near term, we will focus on organic investments to drive growth, bolt-on M&A, and capital return to shareholders. In the quarter, we paid $53 million in dividends and repurchased $76 million in shares. We plan on maintaining the share repurchase level per quarter through the rest of 2026. I'd like to discuss our updated guidance for 2026. Please turn to slide 11. For the full year 2026, we now expect organic growth in the 3%-4% range, an increase over our original 1%-2% organic growth guidance coming into the year. Our overall IDEX organic growth guidance balances approximate high single-digit growth for HST and flattish outlooks for FMT and FSDP. These outlooks reflect HST's strong order book and relative stability in our FMT and FSDP segments.

Adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to be in the 26.5%-27% range in 2026, unchanged from our previous guidance. We continue to expect productivity benefits throughout IDEX businesses and solid leverage and margin expansion at HST this year. However, volume decrementals in FMT and FSDP and mix influences keep our near-term margin expansion expectations unchanged. We are increasing our adjusted EPS guidance for 2026 by $0.20 to $8.35-$8.55, representing mid to high single-digit growth year-over-year. For the second quarter of 2026, we expect 3%-4% organic growth, adjusted EBITDA margin in the 26.5%-27% range, and adjusted EPS of $2.07-$2.12. Also, I wanted to provide an update on tariffs.

We continue to monitor the changes closely and adapt our businesses accordingly. While the IEEPA tariffs have been repealed, the administration has implemented new tariffs in reaction to this. For our businesses, these new tariffs are largely consistent with the ones repealed, such that we currently do not anticipate much of a net impact to our financial results. As it relates to the expected IEEPA refunds, we have taken the requisite actions to apply for these and will keep you updated, if applicable, as it is expected to play out over the coming months. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Eric.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Thanks, Sean. I'm on slide 12. As we step back, we feel very good about the start to the year and the momentum building across IDEX. Our performance reflects strong execution, increasing traction in our advantage markets, and continued progress as we execute our growth strategies.

The demand signals we're seeing within our growing backlog reinforce our confidence in the direction of the portfolio. Many of the demand trends in our advantage markets are expected to remain robust well beyond 2026. At the core of this progress is 80/20. It continues to sharpen our focus, guide where we invest capital and talent, and help us scale growth across platforms and applications that matter most. Just as importantly, it is enabled by our teams and our culture, one that emphasizes trust, collaboration, and accountability across the organization. We recognize there's still work ahead as we continue to execute our strategy and further enhance the quality of growth across the portfolio. We are encouraged by what we are seeing, confident in the path forward, and excited about the value creation opportunity in front of us.

With that, we appreciate your continued interest in IDEX, and I'll turn the call back to the operator for your questions.

Operator

We will now begin the question and answer session. We will pause for a brief moment to compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Joe Giordano with TD Cowen . Joe, please go ahead.

Joe Giordano
Managing Director, TD Cowen

Hey, guys. Good morning.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Morning.

Joe Giordano
Managing Director, TD Cowen

Just curious on how to think about the guide here. One Q comes in 5%, two Q guided 3%-4%. Given the orders here, why should the second half organic decelerate from the pace that we're on now? Is this just, "Look, there's a lot going on in the world, and we're just playing it safe"?

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

I think HST should continue at a pretty similar clip as we've mentioned. High single-digit to double-digit growth at HST, and that's really driven by the order backlog, as you referenced, where we've seen that momentum. I think in FMT in particular is where we saw good performance in the quarter. The end of the quarter was stronger than the beginning, seeing some sequential improvement. As we outlook for the year, still seeing or forecasting a growth outlook that's a bit flat. That's probably a little bit of the macro world.

You know, one quarter into the year, some uncertainty in the macro world, and what we're seeing, the visibility, keeping that around flat. That's a little bit of color as, you know, first half of the year as we move into the second half.

Joe Giordano
Managing Director, TD Cowen

What needs to happen at HST to get margins back to like that, you know, 30-ish percent range that you were at a couple years ago? Is that incumbent on life sciences picking back up? What's kind of needed there to get back to historical highs?

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

Yeah, good question. I think there's two pieces to that. One is the recently acquired businesses, which are performing quite well and are driving a lot of the growth, as more of the growth in that business has come from the acquired businesses. Their still margins are strong, but they're not quite at the segment average yet. What we'll take to get there is, as we've talked in the last couple of quarters, some continued focus on 80/20, to drive margins higher in the acquired businesses. As they get their margins up and the growth continues to come from them, that will have a mixed benefit. Then the other piece is, as you mentioned, life sciences, you know, kind of flattish to slightly down in the quarter.

That's a nicely profitable business for us, so a little mix there. Would expect growth to return to that, as we go forward as well.

Joe Giordano
Managing Director, TD Cowen

Awesome. Thanks, guys. I'll jump back in the queue.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Matt Summerville with D.A. Davidson. Matt, please go ahead.

Matt Summerville
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Thanks. A couple questions. Just on one of the last points Sean made, can you give a bit more context as to why you expect to see what sounded like maybe some sustained inflection from here in the life sciences portion of HST? Then I have a follow-up.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

I think the life science business is about exactly where we thought it would be. The core Fluidics and Optical Filters franchises that drive the bulk of the profits there are still growing low single digits. Honestly, the drivers on both sides remain the same. Pharma, really strong. The pressure points coming largely from both the China market for our end customers and then the funding, NIH funding, academic pressures that we've seen for a while now. I think for us in the first quarter, you remember about a year ago, you know, this was just starting to play out. Now we're pretty deep into it. I think most people are expecting that it'll remain at this pressure.

We had a call here that coming into the year, we thought, you know, these customers, some of our customers that depend on us were going to be a little guarded in some of the inventory positions of IDEX product. We saw that play out as we thought. You know, the dynamics here remain exactly as we've been talking about over the last few quarters. Kind of low single-digit growth, some positives, some negatives and, you know, but a ton of innovation and things that are going on here that I think longer term is going to give us a lot of confidence in where this market's going to go.

Matt Summerville
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Can you also maybe highlight just how you saw incoming orders cadence through the first three months of the year, what you're seeing in April thus far across the businesses? Specifically, I'd be curious as to how the general industrial book-to-bill has been trending in both FMT and HST. Thank you.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yep. Yep. I mean, it's a little different, depending on the segments. You know, the HST side with the momentum that we're seeing there has, you know, less of a non-linearity profile. It's just been generally pretty strong for a while kind of saw it that way play out that way in the quarter. On the FMT and FSDP segments, which are certainly more, you know, fragmented, broadly indexed to industrial markets. You know, that was interesting. It was pretty soft in the beginning of the year in January. It came back a bit in February, it was a much stronger March. We've kind of stayed at that level here in April.

The one thing that's interesting, we've talked a lot about the businesses that we use as diagnostics for kind of near term health, while those were overall positive, you know, they didn't move positive in a uniform way. You know, we don't have sort of every member seeing the exact same thing. It's a little mixed. Even the project business that we saw in there, we don't get a lot of it, but we. You know, that tells us something too. Almost all of those you can trace back the successful ones back to, you know, some of the same mega trends that we're referencing in HST. Data center work, energy grid, things like that. I think it's improving.

It's better than, you know, we had obviously modeled originally for the quarter, but I would still put it in sort of a mixed place, and I think largely that's because of the overhang of the geopolitical situation.

Matt Summerville
Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst, D.A. Davidson

Looks good. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Nathan Jones with Stifel. Nathan, please go ahead.

Nathan Jones
Managing Director, Stifel

Morning, everyone.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Morning.

Nathan Jones
Managing Director, Stifel

I guess I'll follow up on the short cycle industrial question. Maybe you can talk a little bit more about the pieces of that that you where you're not seeing some improvement and maybe what you think is required to get those businesses going in the right direction again.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Well, in the, in the few places where that played out, I'd say those businesses are a little bit more indexed to, you know, chemical markets and some of the ones that we mentioned, or kind of core energy. Their exposure there probably explains some of it. They're also probably the most fragmented businesses. You know, a lot of the orders there are one or two here, and they have really quick lead times. If somebody is uncertain, they're the kind of businesses that you really don't have to make much of a commitment because we're gonna be able to quick turn all of the product. I would say that's, you know, those would be the two characteristics.

This wasn't a lot of businesses, but there is some mix, there is a mixed nature of how these ran out over the last four months.

Nathan Jones
Managing Director, Stifel

Fair enough. I'm gonna ask the HST margin question a little bit differently. You've seen good positive growth for the last three quarters, and the incremental margins have been in the low 30s%. I think I would have expected, and I think you would expect long-term those incrementals to be higher. Can you maybe just run through the pieces that are keeping those depressed? I know you talked a little bit about acquisitions. There's probably some drag on that. maybe just some color on what's depressing those a little bit, what it takes to get back to kind of, you know, maybe into the 40s% on incremental margins. When you think you'll be able to get those incrementals to move back to a more historically normal level. Thanks.

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

Yeah. You know, for the last quarter or two and in this quarter, you know, the flow-through in HST was about 33%, so in that low- to mid-30%, as you referenced. As you think about kind of the guide for the year, we see that improving slightly, getting to kind of those mid-30%. All that's really in line with where we expected it to be for the year so far. Then in kind of what needs to happen to have it tick up, I think it's a couple points, you know, which I referenced. It's the acquired businesses which are below the segment EBITDA margins of kind of 26%-27%, as we take some 80/20 actions.

What I mean by that is as we start to prune some pieces of the portfolio within those businesses that are dragged on the margin within the acquired businesses and continue to grow the higher value add, higher margin parts of the acquired businesses. I'm thinking Muon, Micro-LAM, and Mott being some of the ones that have some room for improvement in overall margin. That's kind of point one. You know, those acquired businesses, a lot of the growth you're seeing are coming from those businesses. As they continue to provide more of the earnings power, getting their margin up will help increase the flow-through towards that 40%. Then part two is life sciences, which is a nicely profitable business for us.

As that grows, it has strong leverage and EBITDA flow-through. Haven't seen that in the first quarter or two, but for all the reasons that Eric mentioned, you would expect that to improve as we move through this fiscal year. In terms of getting to 40%, as I mentioned for the year, you know, the guide contemplates kind of mid-30% flow-throughs. I think as we get into next year and some of those 80/20 actions take hold and some improvement in some end markets, I think we'll get towards that 40%.

Nathan Jones
Managing Director, Stifel

Thanks for taking the questions.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Deane Dray with RBC. Deane, please go ahead.

Deane Dray
Managing Director, RBC

Thank you. Good morning, everyone.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Morning, Deane.

Deane Dray
Managing Director, RBC

Hey, you called out some strength in the water business in FMT. Just kind of give us a sense of where that demand is. You know, how much of that is kind of the flow business versus projects, and what are your assumptions for the balance of the year?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

No, it remains a really strong part of the story. You know, the municipal facing side of that's, you know, kind of our core inspection and analytical software piece has been really good. We had some nice equipment sales in particular, this particular quarter to back that up. The hardware side was nice. Again, to remind people, it's a really great business that's very focused around storm water, storm water flow. Flow conditions and remediating those are a big part of what they do. That remains really relevant as we see, given the nature of infrastructure and catastrophic weather events. It's just really well-positioned.

The part that's, giving it an added boost this year is, we do have a component of that platform that is focused on, high purity water, largely for semicon applications. That has actually been headwind for that, for that group in the last, year or so. It's flipped over. It's now positive and growing as well. We've got kind of both of those firing. That accounts for the high single digit, growth that we posted, and we continue that to sustain.

Deane Dray
Managing Director, RBC

Great. Just as a follow-up, I wanted to ask about M&A activity in your sector, but that was done away. Just, you know, what the implications are and, you know, what the thoughts might be. We've seen some deals in the storm water space, combined sewer overflow. I mean, I think that's just a validation of how much a focus this is. Where do you see growth rates for you all in terms of is it M&A? Is it organic? That's a question. The second one, there was a really interesting transaction in fire and security recently, which I think is a validation of your commitment to this business. You know, two different sectors, interesting M&A away, you know, what are the implications for IDEX?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah. Well, certainly, I mean, you're pinging on two spots where we play and, you know, we do very, very good work with, you know, in both cases, very critical technologies applied to get jobs done that are highly valued. I think, you know, both from small deals to large deals in the spaces that you referenced here, you're seeing appreciation, you know, for work of that nature and quality. I think it's a testament, a continued testament to kind of where we are, where we're positioned, and the way that we see those businesses as well. You know, as things play out and businesses change hands, I mean, we always kind of look at that and just see if that has a competitive impact on the market.

We're very close to those worlds and customers and, you know, we'd respond accordingly in any way we had to. I think, you know, bottom line here is it's, I take it as a testament to the quality of the work that we do.

Deane Dray
Managing Director, RBC

Real helpful. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Bryan Blair with Oppenheimer. Bryan, please go ahead.

Bryan Blair
Managing Director and Senior Analyst, Oppenheimer

Thank you. Morning, guys. Nice start to the year.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Thank you.

Bryan Blair
Managing Director and Senior Analyst, Oppenheimer

I was hoping you could offer a little more color on HST visibility, starting with backlog expansion. I think last quarter you had cited around $100 million in year-on-year build. Given the investment trends and project orientation of some of HST's advantage markets, you know, how are you thinking about underlying demand support through the back half and into 2027? Eric, you had, you know, alluded to, you know, solid runway in your prepared remarks.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah.

Bryan Blair
Managing Director and Senior Analyst, Oppenheimer

Just curious if you can offer any additional detail?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah. Well, as you saw, we, you know, drove a nice backlog number again increase for HST this quarter. It's interesting here. You know, we're getting more visibility than we've typically had, you know, for classic IDEX. You can see that growing in HST, and it's really growing in these faster-growing order wins and application spaces. The nature of it is, you know, these are moving fast. Many cases, these are novel solutions, you know, where we're just kind of bringing them to market. You've got customers here that are trying to ramp pretty aggressively. They're giving us, and as well as other suppliers, some good visibility to the road ahead, you know, to make sure that we've, you know, are properly capitalized.

We've got labor lined up. We've got materials available. We get more than we typically would, let's say, in certainly in FMT and other places, even much of the rest of HST. That accounts for some of it. That being said, you know, it's anything that we've are recognizing here, of course, is within a 12-month period, and it's actually pretty linear as it runs. Also in the discussions that we have with customers as we're booking it and we're working with them, you know, that same, that same spirit runs into discussions about out years.

You know, what comes next in terms of technology is something we talk about, what kind of volume requirements might be needed there so that, again, we get the jump on any capital we and others might need to lay in. That's why we're able to point towards, you know, continued growth beyond a 12-month horizon here because of those conversations that kind of look forward that, again, is a little different from what we've typically experienced in IDEX, but it's something that we had planned to be part of, you know, our growth story here, and it's playing out that way. Hence the, you know, the references to confidence both for this year and the out years.

Bryan Blair
Managing Director and Senior Analyst, Oppenheimer

That's very helpful. Thank you.

Operator

Sorry for that. Let me go next to Mike Halloran with Baird. Mike, please go ahead.

Mike Halloran
Associate Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst, Baird

Hey, everybody. How you doing?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Hi, Mike.

Mike Halloran
Associate Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst, Baird

I'm gonna tell you that I had some user error. I might have hung up on you right when Deane was asking his first question, and I came back on. I apologize ahead of time if I ask anything that's redundant here. Could you help me a little bit with the sequential dynamics you're assuming for the remainder of the year? Obviously, the orders are really good. As we sit here today, the short cycle piece seems like it's going the right direction. All LC tools with a couple of end market headwinds. You know, Eric, maybe simply, do you feel like we're at an inflection point or close enough to an inflection point to be comfortable with the trajectory on those short cycle pieces yet? Obviously, you just talked about the higher growth areas, the investment areas, you feel good there.

Maybe more just on the short cycle dynamic trajectories you worked through the year and how you think about sequentials.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah, we did talk about this a little earlier. I think it's worth restating. You know, we definitely saw, you know, a cadence of improvement across really the four months of the year. You know, kind of weak in January, a little better in February, pretty strong March, then it sort of held at that level in April. I mean, I actually think that's a testament to the resilience of these markets in the face of, you know, some pretty concerning or uncertain headlines geopolitically. I did reference, though, as you know, we have these diagnostic businesses that give us some insight into, you know, strength of inflection. That usually comes about when they're all moving in the exact same way.

That's the one piece that I pointed to and said, "You know, we've got a few that are not moving in the same direction." You know, they're okay, they're stable, they're not jumping yet. That matches the conversations we're having. You still see an awful lot of references to what might play out in terms of energy pricing, material availability, all the, you know, usual suspects when something like this is going on in the world around us. I think we're better. I believe it is an indicator of, you know, how strong maybe that industrial world wants to run here. I would also say pretty reasonably guarded because of some of the things that are out there.

The way that we have it modeled, you know, we kinda have it probably appropriately conservatively modeled as flattish running out, kind of not too far from our original assumption. I think that's the right call based on what we're seeing and what we're hearing.

Mike Halloran
Associate Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst, Baird

Is it fair to say then that the delta in the guidance here, obviously the uptick is partially the first quarter strength, but it's more tied to the internal growth initiatives, the investments you've made internal and with some of the M&A than it is any real change in the cyclical dynamics?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

That's absolutely true.

Mike Halloran
Associate Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst, Baird

Okay. Thank you for that. Just quickly, just thoughts on buybacks versus the M&A side of things, how you're thinking about the pipeline on acquisitions as it sits here today.

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

The, you know, pipeline on M&A continues to be active and continues to be kind of focused in that bolt-on type size of deal. You know, we have sufficient capacity to take that on while continuing to maintain the current buyback levels. You know, we did $76 million in the quarter, mentioned that we'd expect that cadence to continue for each of the quarters through this year. At those levels, we still have, you know, more than enough capacity to execute on bolt-on M&A as it comes into focus. I'd say kind of no change from a capital allocation specifically as it relates to repurchase, and then still focused on M&A with a pipeline that's active and focused on that bolt-on world.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

I would just add that, you know, the cultivation for those tuck-ins, I mean, it continues to improve. The more traction we get on our initiatives, largely almost all of which involve some integration of units, you know, people see that, they recognize that, and increasingly wanna be a part of it.

Mike Halloran
Associate Director of Research and Senior Research Analyst, Baird

Thanks, guys.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Bryan Blair with Oppenheimer to continue his follow-up questions. Bryan, please go ahead.

Bryan Blair
Managing Director and Senior Analyst, Oppenheimer

Thanks, guys. I actually cut out a bit. I appreciate you letting me ask a follow-up. I'm not sure if this was just addressed, so apologies if it was the case. I wanted to circle back to FMT trends and just the disconnect between order rates being kind of high single-digit range over the last four quarters, relative to, you know, sales being 1%, give or take, on average. Sounds like trends are generally positive, and there is that disconnect between, you know, order and revenue recognition. Just trying to get a sense of how much conservatism you're baking in versus something else that would, you know, drive a, you know, continued delta on that front.

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

Good question. I think that's where, you know, looking at a quarter or two in FMT can be a little bit misleading because a lot of that order activity is consumed within the quarter. If you look over a longer, call it, you know, kind of four-quarter period, you normalize for some of those movements, that'll help. You know, in the order activity that we saw in the quarter, which was strong at 9% organic, you know, water really led the way on that performance, and we would expect that performance to continue as we have them pegged in kind of that high single-digit growth. We saw some notable bright spots in our mining end markets in the quarter, as well as in just the overall pumps market.

Some of that was a little bit of, you know, demand coming in Q1 that we might have expected in Q2, that probably led to the order growth being at 9% in excess of the sales growth and in excess of what we expect for the balance of the year. I do think, as you mentioned, there's a touch of conservatism as you think about the guide on flattish growth in FMT. You know, Eric's touched on it. I mentioned it earlier in the call. There's a piece of that as well, given that we're just one quarter in, the world's kind of uncertain. While the trend seems to be pointing in the right direction, you know, not extrapolating that for the balance of the year.

Bryan Blair
Managing Director and Senior Analyst, Oppenheimer

Okay. All makes sense. Appreciate the color.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Buscaglia with BNP Paribas. Andrew, please go ahead.

Andrew Buscaglia
Senior Analyst of US Industrial Technology, BNP Paribas

Hey, good morning, everyone.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Morning.

Andrew Buscaglia
Senior Analyst of US Industrial Technology, BNP Paribas

There was some sort of a trend we're picking up this earnings season, just some companies talking about these higher energy prices. You know, the near term, maybe some volatility, long term, maybe positive impact for their businesses. I know direct energy exposure is not huge for IDEX, I'm wondering how you're thinking about your business in that context.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Well, yeah, we do have a segment involved in energy. A lot of it's downstream, custody transfer. We're kind of the cash register for a lot of the industry. It never directly correlates. It's not a well head kind of business. I would say higher energy prices and activity tend to have kind of a derivative impact positively over time. We saw some of that in the first quarter. You'll, you know, you'll note, you know, we didn't list energy as a significant pressure point, whereas we have in some of the preceding quarters. We've seen, you know, certainly more activity there, more money being put to work, U.S. exports, all of that stuff. As that happens, it generally kind of back feeds into the markets that we're a part of.

We've kind of got that in a slightly better place. We'll watch it as it, obviously, this whole story runs out. There's a lot of volatility there, but, you know, the energy exposure at IDEX at least now has moved more to the green.

Andrew Buscaglia
Senior Analyst of US Industrial Technology, BNP Paribas

Yeah. Okay. That's interesting. Yeah, Eric, you know, the last couple quarters, you know, the execution's been strong. You're talking about, you know, 80/20 and the growth investments you're making, is there any other subtle changes to the 80/20 process that's been going on under the hood? Are you know, doing anything differently in terms of that process that's driving these better margins?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah. Well, I think the two extensions of the playbook, which we've had in place a long time here, really it's in the areas where we're growing and acquiring businesses. You know, we're integrating some of the units together into these growth platforms in the way that are a little different from kind of classic IDEX. When you do that, it does add another dimension. It's kind of making it taking a two-axis story and makes it three axis. You have to be cognizant of how you define 80s and 20s, how you allocate resources, sometimes crossing business units. We're doing a lot of work this year to kind of write that code, codify it, and train it in those areas.

As I referenced in my opening comments, I mean, what's exciting about it is the scale of opportunity here also grows. You're seeing some of that come onto the board here. You know, I had a graph in the slide deck that showed sort of this, you know, difference between a customer set that's declining as we focus on the winners and then sales and margins, you know, ramping on the backside of that. That's that code book at work, that extension. Very, very exciting piece of it, very much pivoted towards growth. Of course, you get almost one-for-one margin support as we grow the company. That's a great question, and that's sort of the new chapters that are being written right now.

Andrew Buscaglia
Senior Analyst of US Industrial Technology, BNP Paribas

Yeah. Interesting. Thanks, Eric.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Dan DiCicco with BMO Capital Markets. Dan, please go ahead.

Dan DiCicco
VP of Equity Research, BMO Capital Markets

Great. Thank you for taking my question. just slide four, space and defense, were a lot of these products already in place, or have you kind of tweaked and tailored some of these solutions and platforms to better align to these markets? Is there any more opportunity here down the road?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Well, I mean, this whole industry, particularly on the space side, is developing really fast. There's almost always something new there. We're actually leveraging, you know, kind of an early incumbency position. You know, we long ago studied this market, kind of helped. Frankly, I'd argue we helped it develop. As we've done that, you know, that's given us presence in the rooms with, you know, the people that matter to help solve problems along the way. You have an incumbent position that was very thoughtfully deployed, and then that access point allowed us to see where things needed to go from there, and then our innovation stream is actually enabling it. I'd argue you have some of all of that. Then just, you know, as a space, there's a reason we highlight it here.

I think it's tremendous in terms of growth potential, you know, both in terms of depth of applications as well as the number of people that are starting to play here. Just couldn't be more excited about it. Absolutely.

Dan DiCicco
VP of Equity Research, BMO Capital Markets

Great. Thanks. Then just maybe if you could just touch quickly on your overall exposure in just power generation and then more specifically around fuel cell power support. Thanks.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah. Well, we mentioned in our data center applications, in the pneumatic space, we've long talked about, you know, that's some of the work that we do there. It's behind the meter power gen, you know, to power data centers essentially with standby power. We do a very, very critical job there of thermal management within those applications. Yeah, that is an area that we've capitalized on, we've, you know, helped support and are excited about for the future.

Dan DiCicco
VP of Equity Research, BMO Capital Markets

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Vlad Bystricky with Citigroup . Vlad, please go ahead.

Vlad Bystricky
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Citigroup

Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for thanks for taking my question.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Morning, Vlad.

Vlad Bystricky
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Citigroup

Nice quarter obviously and like the positive outlook for 2026. I did wanna ask you mentioned some price cost pressures impacting gross margin in one Q. Can you just talk about what price cost was in the quarter, how you see it evolving going forward through the year, and whether you're expecting to take or need to take incremental price related to, you know, tariffs or any other inflationary pressures?

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

Yeah. Good question. You know, for the quarter, to the EBITDA line, price cost was a net positive. You know, not to the same magnitude that we saw in a couple quarters in the last year, given, you know, tariff pricing actions. Positive to the quarter, would expect that to continue, kind of be net even, a little bit positive. We're not contemplating any second-round price actions in the guide as it stands today based on what's happening in the world. If it continues, and we need to do those things, those are of course actions that we'll continue to do. I think the tariff example is a good one in that it shows that the, you know, the businesses within IDEX have the ability to move price in accordance with what they're seeing in cost.

If we do start to see some sustained, price pressures, or we expect that on the cost side, we will revisit our price assumptions and actions with our customers. For the quarter, positive kind of for the guide, expect that to continue and can be revisited, depending on what happens in the businesses.

Vlad Bystricky
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Citigroup

Got it. That's helpful. Appreciate that, Sean. I think you talked a little bit about life sciences, you know, where you're seeing sort of some pressures in China and at NIH. I guess could you just talk more about, you know, how you're thinking about the potential for a more positive inflection within life sciences in HST over the coming quarters or into 2027?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah. Well, you know, we're gonna focus where we can focus. That's in core innovation with the customers that we've long, you know, had relationships with. There's some great things there. We're seeing that now playing out positively in largely in the pharma space. You know, there's just a number of things going on in that area. Even some of the questions around geography, you know, how that's gonna all play out given that the, you know, the world turns in different ways there. I'd say we actually are helping customers think through that too because, you know, we've got great global scale. So if people wanna reposition assets or target different markets around the globe, we can support that.

We're talking through, you know, those situations with customers too. For us, we're just gonna focus on what we do best, which is, you know, kind of double down on the global span that we have, the scale that we have within the business. Remember, those have long been integrated units where people are used to working together and driving that scale of solutions, and then bring innovation to bear in the markets that are inflecting the most positively.

Vlad Bystricky
VP and Equity Research Analyst, Citigroup

Got it. Thanks for that, Eric.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Rob Wertheimer with Melius Research. Rob, please go ahead. Rob, your line is now open.

Rob Wertheimer
Founding Partner and Machinery Analyst, Melius Research

I apologize. Thank you. You've had a lot of success in some of the growth investments you've made, and I'm curious how much kind of remains in the pipeline, products you haven't launched, products you're developing. You know, maybe you could characterize how far along that curve you are. My second question, I'm not sure you'll want to answer, but you know, of the total order growth, maybe in dollars, how much was attributable to kind of your, you know, I don't know, new markets or advantage markets or growth investments you've done versus the general cyclical rebound? Thanks.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Sure. Look, I think these spaces have a lot of potential, not just this year, but in later years. You know, it's one of the reasons we've indexed so positively that the years past 2026 we see as being very good for us because we're involved in the discussions. We're working on the technology. We're talking about problems that need to be solved. We know kind of when those would go to market and how they would run out. Obviously, you know, the investment cycle here has got multiple chapters, and we're exposed to it. To your second question, it's related actually to the first.

I mean, I wouldn't give a specific number here, but I mean, you know, much of what we're talking about is you can point back to recently acquired units, very specific investments, the choices that we made to link to units of this quality. A fair amount of it is coming from there. What I particularly like about it is it's, you know, we're kind of pinging these different worlds from multiple points. We think of those as entrances. You know, entrances into really great application spaces, each one of which has their own, you know, subsequent chapters to write through our innovation efforts. We talked about data centers. You know, we talked about kind of behind the meter power gen over there.

We're also involved in really interesting things related to optical switching and how that's gonna play out. We've got valves there that are positioned around liquid cooling and other aspects of thermal management. Broad semi exposure, which has been very positive for us. You know, involved in everything from consumables to metrology to lithography. We've got these nice little entry points, each one of which again just has this sort of extended discussion about here's what we need today, here's what we're gonna need tomorrow, and here's what we're thinking about in terms of the future. You know, water in the FMT space has some of those same characteristics. You know, We're providing data and data sets to people that are now starting to think about how that could be commingled with their own AI applications.

Really like how the investments that we have made link to advantage spaces and then have this nice runway potential.

Rob Wertheimer
Founding Partner and Machinery Analyst, Melius Research

Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Robert Jamieson with Vertical Research Partners. Robert, please go ahead.

Robert Jamieson
VP of Industrial Technology, Vertical Research Partners

Morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Just a quick one on CapEx and just the step up that we're seeing this year. I know no change in guidance, but is this more related to capacity or automation investment? Is that more specific like the HST segment? Just trying to think about, like, where that bulk of the incremental investment's being directed towards.

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

Good question. As you mentioned, you know, we have guided and no change to the guide on that front. An increase in CapEx for the year, it's really supporting all the growth that you're seeing. It is overweight towards HST. There's the nature of the business, there's no one or two really big ticket items in terms of CapEx that we need to drive the growth. It's really across a variety of the businesses, but we are allowing for more growth CapEx to be spent in this year to help support the growth and the demand that we're seeing. That's in the form of equipment and other things, you know, like that to help support the growth. Not a huge step up, but a meaningful one.

It's still relatively low in terms of kind of the overall size of the business. You have budgeted for some growth in CapEx for the year.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

This is actually an area where 80/20 helps us a lot as well, in line with our component orientation. 'Cause if we make choices, you know, to, let's say, move on from a small part of a business, very often it's the same capital or the same technology that we would run faster-growing applications across. It actually kind of gives us an internal funding source or an offset so that, you know, it keeps CapEx increases at a nice level too. That's another lever that we have that comes out of 80/20 work.

Robert Jamieson
VP of Industrial Technology, Vertical Research Partners

That's great. Super helpful. Just taking a step back, just given the strategy and, you know, the pivot over the last couple of years on advantage markets with secular tailwinds, I mean, what are maybe some of the top two or three secular themes, you know, outside of AI, where you think that IDEX is most under indexed today and potentially willing to invest more aggressively in?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Well, you know, I mean, when you step back, what's nice about the changes that we made is I actually start with the things that are constant. You know, we essentially always have kind of moved either fluids, gas, or light. That's basically what we're doing, even in these advantage spaces. We've got great technologies, great access here. I'm particularly excited in terms from an end market perspective. You know, we highlighted space and defense for a reason. I think that's, you know, just getting off on the ground. We were there from the beginning. Our positioning there is really good. Our optics technologies in specifically tie very nicely to that world.

Here's where the acquisition work comes in very handy because we're actually kind of moving technologies and joining them across a couple of the businesses here to create solutions that are pretty novel and really could only kind of come from us. That's part of the thesis too. I think, you know, how we position MSS, the Material Science Solutions platform, that's where optics sits. I mean, that whole thesis really gives us a nice jump off point into virtually every market that we've talked about here that is advantage. You know, continuing to expand it through bolt-on tuck-in work, that's why we're excited about that as well. There are some other things we'd like to bring in as our presence increases.

Some more to come here, but I think off to a great start and kind of playing out the way that we had hoped and expected.

Robert Jamieson
VP of Industrial Technology, Vertical Research Partners

Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Brett Linzey with Mizuho. Brett, please go ahead.

Brett Linzey
Senior Analyst of Industries, Mizuho

Hey, good morning all. Question regarding your CapEx intensive businesses. I guess as you parse through the composition of your growth and activity, how are those performing versus the more OpEx-oriented businesses? I guess as IDEX has grown in areas like material science and defense and space, what does that mix look like today and how has that evolved?

Sean Gillen
CFO, IDEX Corp

I'd start by saying, I mean, none of the businesses we're in are that capital intensive. So, you know, you're seeing an increase in CapEx, but it's really in line with growth, and angled towards the HST segment as well as some other platforms where we're seeing that growth. I don't think that there's a material shift in the CapEx intensity of the business. We're just allowing for some capital to support the growth that we're seeing. No, no material move in terms of what you should expect in terms of CapEx for our businesses going forward.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah, that continues to be part of the filter set when we think about a space, a technology set or acquisitions. I mean, we're looking for kind of max innovation at relatively low capitalization requirements. You know, there's not just from the economics of it, but that gives us the, you know, the agility, the optionality of moving the technology fast. It's all kind of part of the filter for us. It's simply rising here because frankly, the growth rates are rising.

Brett Linzey
Senior Analyst of Industries, Mizuho

Just shifting over to fire and safety, encouraging to see the strong demand in North America. You noted the relative stability in Europe and Asia. The stable Europe comment, I think, is maybe a change in trend. Perhaps just some color there. Are the local spending priorities maybe firming up and shifting a little bit to the upside here?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

I mean, I think on the fire and safety European front, you know, I remember call it was late in the summer, last year, we had that turn down kind of unexpectedly. We saw some very specific positioning over to alternate spends. That actually came back to something more normal, at the end of the year, and it's basically remained there. You know, it's not widely growing, but it's kind of back in its normal corridor, and I think that was actually kind of a temporal shift. And then we've seen again, the further from home markets have been stable for a while. As you said, most of the growth strength on the North American side.

Brett Linzey
Senior Analyst of Industries, Mizuho

Thanks for the color.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah.

Operator

Our final question comes from the line of Joe Giordano with TD Cowen. Joe, please go ahead.

Joe Giordano
Managing Director, TD Cowen

Hey, guys, appreciate letting me have the follow-up here. Just like one last kind of bigger picture question on M&A. You know, Eric, as you moved into some of these newer areas, like when you bought Mott, you bought Muon. I think from an investor angle, it seemed a little bit more. Are these more complicated? Is this away from core a little bit more? Obviously those businesses started a little slow and now are doing quite well and are directly aligned with what your strategy is. I'm just curious, as you look back on the last couple of years with these businesses, what's like the takeaway in your head? Does this like reinforce that IDEX knows how to do M&A as a core competency?

Does it inform you on timing of when is appropriate to do this and how much work we need to do through the businesses that are in these kind of markets? Just curious, like, I know we're in a good place to talk about it now, but just curious, like, what you guys kinda, like, took away from getting from where you were when you started to where you are today.

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Yeah, no. Thanks for that. Well, look, a big part of the thesis here was supporting stronger growth for the company. I mean, that's why we went down this direction. I think one of the insights that comes out of this, given all that you cited, is actually I put it in the end, I put it into a strength category. I mean, these are mission-critical markets where, you know, the uptick on growth takes a little longer than maybe we would, you know, like out of the gate. That actually becomes the moat for us once we get through it. You know, that defensibility of, you know, people that are super risk-averse, gotta make sure everything's gonna work right, make sure that we're a trusted partner.

All those things have always been true at IDEX. They're probably even more true in these kind of critical markets. You know, that delayed some things out of the gate in terms of take-up and adoption. It was, let's remember, a pretty crazy world at the same time. What we're seeing now is the backside of that. Those same characteristics, I actually think are massively in our favor because that's the deep moat that now surrounds us. We're in the room, we're having the discussion. We're at the table to say, "Hey, what comes next? What can we do? What can we do?" Now we have more pieces and parts to play with. We're not a single business in there. We're actually a couple of units to three. We've got more people in the room.

We've got more depth and, you know, we've gained that trusted partner status. I think that's the insight, and I think it's a net positive as we sit here today.

Joe Giordano
Managing Director, TD Cowen

Great color. Thank you.

Operator

That concludes our question and answer session. I will now turn the call back over to Eric Ashleman for any closing remarks. Eric?

Eric Ashleman
President and CEO, IDEX Corp

Well, thanks everyone for your interest in support of IDEX. I'd say to sum up here, we're very pleased with the strong start to the year. You know, HST in particular continues to build strong sequential momentum within its target advantage growth markets. As we said during the call, perhaps most encouraging for us is the fact that many of their wins have long multi-year tails that point to really nice growth over time. You know, with FMT and FSDP, we saw some encouraging positive signs of early inflection, but we still most likely need to clear the uncertainty of geopolitical stuff to move materially to the next level of support. Our businesses there are really well positioned to capitalize on that strength as it plays out from here.

I think bottom line, our growth strategy is supported by our growth platforms, expanded through thoughtful M&A and operational integration, are powering IDEX towards a really bright and successful future, and we look forward to updating you as we go along the way. Thanks so much.

Operator

That concludes today's call. You may now disconnect.

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