Zurn Elkay (ZWS) Q1 2026 Earnings Transcript

Source The Motley Fool
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Date

Wednesday, Apr. 22, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chairman and Chief Executive Officer — Todd A. Adams
  • Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — David C. Pauli
  • Vice President, Investor Relations — Bobby Belmar

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Takeaways

  • Organic sales growth -- 11% growth, attributed mainly to nonresidential end markets, with residential remaining soft.
  • Total sales -- $433 million, reflecting both core and reported 11% year-over-year growth.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $116 million, representing an 18% increase; margin expanded 160 basis points to 26.8%.
  • Free cash flow -- $43 million generated in the quarter.
  • Share repurchases -- $50 million repurchased at approximately $47 per share.
  • Leverage -- Net debt leverage ended at 0.5 times, inclusive of share repurchases.
  • Revolving credit facility -- Upsized and extended from $200 million to $550 million, maturing in five years.
  • Second quarter guidance -- Anticipates 8%-9% core sales growth and adjusted EBITDA margin of 27%-27.5%, a 50-100 basis point expansion.
  • Product mix shift -- Retrofit/replace business now at a 50/50 split with new construction; target for retrofit/replace may rise to 55% in the coming years.
  • Pricing contribution -- Price contributed 5% of the 11% total core sales growth.
  • Drinking water and filtration performance -- Drinking water and filtration businesses each grew at double-digit rates; Pro Filtration product adoption remains high, with a strong attachment rate.
  • Tariffs -- Impact of recent tariff changes, including assumptions for 232, 122, and 301 tariffs, are expected to be "price/cost positive" in 2026 without reliance on refunds or future price increases.
  • Low-margin product exit -- The company has largely exited low-margin noncore residential sinks, improving overall portfolio profitability.
  • Continuous improvement (#CI) -- Associate-led continuous improvement initiatives contributed materially to margin and productivity enhancement, aggregating significant organizational gains, though no individual initiative is material alone.
  • M&A outlook -- Management stated a well-developed M&A funnel exists in early, mid, and late stage, prioritizing strategic fit and return objectives, with ongoing share repurchase and dividend payments to continue.

Summary

Zurn Elkay (NYSE:ZWS) reported a 630 basis point improvement in adjusted EBITDA margins from Q1 2023 to Q1 2026, with a 730 basis point increase over 13 quarters attributed to systematic margin initiatives and portfolio optimization. Management emphasized deliberate conservatism in full-year guidance, stating, "we're simply going to update the second half after Q2," rather than reactively adjusting short-term assumptions amid evolving tariff details and macro uncertainties. The company's largest sourcing origin is now the U.S., materially reducing prior tariff exposure. Institutional and Waterworks end markets are performing at low single-digit growth rates, commercial has shown slightly better than flat results, and residential demand remains challenged. The flexible capital structure following the revolver upsizing supports ongoing M&A interest, but no completed deals were cited during the call.

  • David Pauli attributed margin expansion since the Elkay merger to the Zurn Elkay Business System, stating, "The margin improvement over the past 3 years is a combination of a number of drivers," including synergy capture and footprint optimization.
  • Management reiterated that "Our full year outlook does not take into account any potential tariff refund benefits and assumes that the current tariff structure in place as of today remains in place throughout 2026."
  • Drinking water installed base of filtered bottle fillers and the filtration segment itself are both expanding at double-digit rates, reinforced by customer-driven adoption of the Pro Filtration product line.
  • First quarter performance was aided by approximately 1 percentage point of incremental growth from weather-related break-fix activity, with no material variance expected between Q1 and Q2 from this effect.
  • Management described the balance sheet, leverage, liquidity, and cash flow generation as "in a great spot as we continue to evaluate our funnel of M&A opportunities."
  • Management maintained that operational execution and product mix—particularly investments in water safety and control, flow systems, and filtration—are the core contributors to volume and margin outperformance, rather than outsized pricing actions.

Industry glossary

  • Retrofit/replace: Sales derived from upgrading or replacing installed products in existing structures, rather than supplying new construction builds.
  • #CI: Internal program for continuous improvement, where employees submit ideas to streamline operations, eliminate waste, and enhance productivity.
  • Pro Filtration: Zurn Elkay's proprietary filtration product line designed to address end-user demands for advanced drinking water solutions.
  • 232, 122, 301 tariffs: U.S. trade measures impacting imports; Section 232 (national security), 122 (tariff updates/adjustments), Section 301 (unfair trade practices).

Full Conference Call Transcript

Todd Adams: Thanks, Bobby, and good morning, everyone. I'll start on Page 3. 2026 is off to a decent start as first quarter sales grew 11% organically. EBITDA grew 18% to $116 million, and our margins expanded 160 basis points to [ 26.8% ]. In the quarter, we generated $43 million of free cash flow and repurchased $50 million of Zurn Elkay at roughly $47 a share. We're very comfortable with our full year outlook for free cash flow of approximately $335 million and anticipate revisiting that along with the rest of our outlook after Q2. Just a couple of thoughts from me before I turn it over to Dave.

From a market perspective, we generally see the same market conditions we outlined when we provided our outlook in February. The same is very much true for the pricing environment. Next, there's been a lot of announcements in moving parts related to tariffs over the course of the quarter. The Supreme Court ruling on the [indiscernible] tariffs and subsequent refunds, the implementation of 122 tariffs changes to the 232 tariff scheme and the opening of new studies on future Section 301 tariffs. We've also continued to advance our own supply chain footprint initiatives.

And what I will say here is that we are very much on track to meet or beat the objectives we set out to achieve at the beginning of the year. As it relates to all these tariff changes and potential changes in our outlook, our view is that assuming some of the known changes to 232 tariffs, and projecting some likely net adverse changes stemming from the potential 122 and 301 changes, we are highly confident that without receiving any refunds or implementing any future price increases, the discrete impact of tariffs within 2026, which we said was to be price/cost positive remains unchanged. This leads me to my final point on our full year outlook.

I think the way to describe the way we think about our outlook is to be both deliberate and conservative. As you can see with our first quarter results and second quarter outlook, we're running ahead of what was likely assumed for the first half of 2026. As I just discussed, we have high confidence that we will continue to manage through the tariff dynamics extraordinarily well. Second, as of now, there isn't anything I can point to that would make the second half worse than what we had anticipated. So I think it's safe to say our first half outperformance flows through to the year. That's where the deliberate methodology enters into our approach.

The reality is that there's 8 months left in the year. And depending on today, there's simply a lot going on in the world. So rather than try to change a bunch of digital assumptions day by day that frankly will become more clear as the year goes on, we're simply going to update the second half after Q2. So with that, I'll turn it over to Dave.

David Pauli: Thanks, Todd. Please turn to Slide #4. Our first quarter sales totaled $433 million, which represents 11% core and reported growth year-over-year. In the first quarter, we generally saw our end markets perform in line with the guidance we provided 90 days ago. Growth in our nonresidential end markets was partially offset by softness in residential. We've had solid execution on our growth initiatives and those initiatives helped drive our sales performance to the higher end of the outlook we provided 90 days ago. . In addition, during the first quarter, portions of the U.S. experienced some unusually cold weather.

This resulted in some incremental break fix activity that we think plays out to about 1 point of growth over the first half. Turning to profitability. Our first quarter adjusted EBITDA was $116 million, and our adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 160 basis points year-over-year to 26.8% in the quarter. This continues a trend of year-over-year margin expansion that we have delivered since the Elkay merger. The strong margin and year-over-year expansion was driven by the benefits of our productivity initiatives, leveraging our Zurn Elkay Business System and continuous improvement activities across the organization as well as mix as our higher profit margin products are growing the fastest.

Please turn to Slide 5, and I'll touch on some balance sheet and leverage highlights. With respect to our net debt leverage, we ended the quarter with leverage at 0.5x. Our 0.5x leverage is inclusive of the $50 million we deployed to repurchase shares in the quarter. During the quarter, we also upsized and extended our revolver. We transitioned from a $200 million revolver to a $550 million revolver that extends 5 years. This gives us even more liquidity as we move forward. Balance sheet, leverage, liquidity and cash flow generation are in a great spot as we continue to evaluate our funnel of M&A opportunities. I'll turn the call back to Todd.

Todd Adams: Thanks, Dave. And I guess I'll move to Page 6. I think the takeaway here could be [indiscernible] your work and work your plant, which when you boil it all the way down is the essence of the Zurn Elkay Business System. When you look at some of these attributes of our business, most of these have been cultivated through focus and intentional actions to build a business with a wide competitive moat that is flexible, repeatable and scalable and even when the external environment or circumstances aren't optimal.

Stemming from our strategic planning process, all the way through to our strategy deployment process, being disciplined and intentional on playing the game, we can win consistently at a high level as our ultimate priority, whether it's our geographic focus, the product categories we're in, the end markets we prioritize are the actions we take on product or market exits or even more importantly, the new product development and adjacencies we're entering. It's all connected. If you followed us, one slight change that you may notice here is the slight change in our mix towards retrofit replace which 5 years ago was 45%.

But as we deployed our strategic plan with an emphasis on growing drinking water and filtration, coupled with growth in our water and safety control products, and portions of our genetic and environmental business were now evenly split, which over time, only makes the business more resilient and in aggregate is margin mix positive for us. We're really excited about the trajectory and future of Zurn Elkay, and it stems from the culture we've established and the people we have.

Throughout this year, we're going to expose everyone to more of our team on these calls, so investors gain a further appreciation of the management depth and passion that exists here and the appreciation for the people who really make all this happen each and every day. Now I'll turn it back to Dave.

David Pauli: Thanks, Todd. I'm on Slide 7. Todd just talked about the focused and intentional decisions that led to the business we have today in Zurn Elkay. Slide 7 helps to illustrate the results in the form of profit. These decisions have produced over the last several years. On a trailing 12-month basis, our adjusted EBITDA margins have improved 630 basis points from Q1 of 2023 to Q1 of 2026 and on a point-to-point basis, our adjusted EBITDA margins are up 730 basis points over the last 13 quarters. That starts with 19.5% margins in Q1 of 2023 compared to this quarter's adjusted EBITDA margins of 26.8%.

The foundation of our EBITDA margin improvements all center on our Zurn Elkay Business System, the belief in continuous improvement and the focus on getting just a little bit better each and every day. The margin improvement over the past 3 years is a combination of a number of drivers that I'll walk through. First, part of the Zurn Elkay Business System is sharing ideas and wins across the organization so that we can replicate successes. We've highlighted our #CI for continuous improvement process in the past. But as a reminder, these are associate-led and submitted ideas that save time, eliminate waste and improve day-to-day processes across the organization.

While no single #CI on its own is material, they do become material when we have thousand submitted across the organization each year. The second item I'd point out is our unit volume growth in the most profitable areas of our business. Water Safety and Control, Flow Systems and Drinking Water have all seen growth over the last several years, while we've exited via 80/20, the lowest margin products within the portfolio. Third, after delivering on over $50 million of synergies associated with the Zurn Elkay, we continue to make positive structural changes beyond those identified in the synergy case.

Consolidating our footprint to reduce overhead, introducing and sustaining the Zurn Business System lean tools into the Elkay manufacturing facilities and continuing to challenge our strategy around internal manufacturing versus sourcing. And lastly, our supply chain has been a clear competitive advantage that has allowed us to improve profitability while successfully navigating the tariff environment. Now to the guidance on Slide 8. For the second quarter of 2026, we are projecting core sales growth to increase 8% to 9% over the prior year, and we anticipate our adjusted EBITDA margin to be in the range of [ 27% to 27.5% ]. which is 50 to 100 basis point expansion year-over-year.

Within Slide 8, we've included our second quarter outlook assumptions for interest expense, noncash stock comp expense, depreciation and amortization, adjusted tax rate and diluted shares outstanding. As Todd mentioned earlier, our first quarter actual results and second quarter guidance puts us ahead of our expected first half performance, and our plan is to revisit the second half of 2026 outlook when we announce our Q2 results. One other comment on guidance. Our full year outlook does not take into account any potential tariff refund benefits and assumes that the current tariff structure in place as of today remains in place throughout 2026. We will now open the call up for questions.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Bryan Blair with Oppenheimer.

Bryan Blair: Great start so far to the year. I was hoping you could offer a little more color on drinking water trends. Pro filtration has obviously been in the market for another quarter. Any updates on adoption and the impact on overall platform growth or detachment rate would be very helpful. And with consolidated progress at 11%, I assume drinking water growth was quite robust in the quarter. Are you willing to share top line performance in Q1? Or how your team is thinking about .

David Pauli: Sure, Brian. It's Dave. So Drinking Water in the quarter performed very well, in line with where we thought it would be going into the quarter. The installed base continues -- the installed base of filtered bottle fillers continues to grow at double digit. The filtration piece of the business continues to grow above double digit. You mentioned Pro Filtration. We've seen really nice adoption of Pro Filtration. That product was developed around feedback that we received from customers, end users, facility managers. And so seen really great adoption of that and the attachment rate associated with that is very high, just given some of the technology changes.

So overall, drinking water had a really nice first quarter and we see that Pro Filtration continuing to accelerate as we go. As you know, we have a dominant share of specs, and our team is currently working just to update those specs. So legacy product to Pro Filtration. So in a good spot with Drinking Water.

Bryan Blair: All good to hear. And I guess a level setting question as a follow-up. You just walked through the drivers of rather impressive EBITDA margin expansion over the last 3 years. And if we set aside Elkay synergies as kind of onetime structural lift. The rest of it is #CI in one form or another. Given the level of profitability that you now have and assuming that mix does not meaningfully shift or continues to positively transition. You've spoken to low 30s, maybe a step up to 35% as normalized incremental margins for the business. Are we at a point now where it would be reasonable to speak to a higher figure going forward?

Todd Adams: Yes. Brian, look, I think Dave mentioned it in his comments, we while we had a nice quarter in drinking water, I think it's also important to recognize water safety and control in our Drains business is growing just as fast. And so when you think about those 3 categories, the margin profile in each of those is really good. And I think the combination of CI, obviously, the Elkay synergies, all the work we're doing on supply chain helps. But I think there's another thing to think through, which is a lot of the new products that we're introducing come at margins replacing the old products or the new products are even better.

So it's a really nice dynamic where we've got an operational sort of lever that we're continuing to work at to all those things. But then as we introduce and launch new products, those are coming to market at attractive margins. And so I think in time, we may modify that. But for the time being, I think it's a good framework to think through as we invest in some of these new products to bring them to market. But I get your point, and we'll revisit it when we feel like we're ready to.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Krill with Deutsche Bank.

Andrew Krill: I wanted to dig in, I guess, more on the change of OE versus retrofit up to 50-50 split. Just -- is there any way you can quantify like a target over time where you think this can go? Many other industrials, they can be 2/3, 75% more aftermarket. Like is there any reason you can't get to that over time?

Todd Adams: Yes. I think, Andrew, a good portion of our business is still new construction, an important part that actually ultimately feeds the retrofit replace. So I think I think it's unlikely that we'll get to a 75 retrofit replace sort of percentage. But I do see in the coming years that has the opportunity to drift higher. 55% I think is a reasonable next way point to think about for us. And as we point out, as Filtration grows, [indiscernible] our installed base for all of our products grows we see that opportunity to grow a little bit higher. .

Andrew Krill: Great. And then on the weather comments of the Northeast, I believe Dave said it till about 1 point of a good guy from the first half. Can you just break down what this was in the first quarter, is there any chance it was flattish or down? Like any help on how that impacts 1Q for 2Q would be great?

David Pauli: Yes. Even between the 2 quarters, Andrew, nothing oversized in Q1.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Nathan Jones with Stifel. Good morning, everyone.

Nathan Jones: I guess I'll ask some of the dumb tower questions. There's obviously been newly implemented tariffs and you guys are talking about contemplating some additional tariffs after that. Could you -- is there any color you can give us on what you think the incremental growth impact to the business in terms of increased cost is? I think everybody understands that you're very, very good at passing that through to customers. But just any color you can give us on what you think the gross impact is?

Todd Adams: Yes, Nathan, there's obviously a lot of to be determined moving parts as 122 likely expires and then the studies from 301 come back and potentially get implemented. What I can say is we're not counting on passing any future price increases through a combination of all the work we've done on products substitution materials, obviously, some of our footprint things, we think hold that steady with some, I will say, conservative assumptions. And I also think it's important to point out that over the last 2 or 3 years as they function of the work we've done, our largest sourcing comes from the U.S.

So out of all the countries that we source from, the U.S. is the largest by a decent margin at this point. So in many ways, we've insulated ourselves from it. But I think our working view is that Net-net, it's about the same as we started the year. The assumptions around 122 rolling off, 301 coming in. That's sort of where we see it today. That's what's embedded in our view.

Nathan Jones: Okay. Fair enough. I'm going to ask a lot about capital allocation. It's been quite some time since Zurn acquired Elkay. The balance sheet is in great shape. Certainly has plenty of available capacity for M&A. Maybe talk about the maturity of the pipeline, the appetite for more M&A and priorities for capital deployment?

Todd Adams: Yes, as we, I think, pointed out routinely on these calls, we run a proper funnel. So we're not -- we don't participate in auctions in a meaningful way. We continue to do some of that cultivation work, I think. Obviously, some of the work we're doing around new products is informing new targets as well. So I would say we're in late stage to mid-stage to early stage on a number of cultivations. We do have an appetite to do those only to the degree that they make sense strategically and then obviously meet the return hurdles that we set out for ourselves. In terms of capital allocation, we've obviously bought back shares routinely.

We're going to continue to do that more when we feel like the intrinsic value relative to what we see is understated or less than what we think is fair value. And obviously, we pay a nice dividend. And so those are going to continue to be the priority. So no change. But certainly, optimistic that over the coming quarters, we're going to get some of these things over the finish line.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Michael Halloran with Baird.

Michael Halloran: So first question, just to clarify your comments familiar. So it doesn't sound like you're expecting incremental pricing. Just confirm that 1 way or another. And then the follow-up is when you talk to your customer base, what's the sense of fatigue on the pricing side of things? What concerns would you have if you had to go back to the market with price? Or do you still feel pretty good all else equal. Obviously, you have a value proposition you're pitching and people are pretty aware of the inflation that's out there. So just kind of curious on the puts and takes from the customer base at this point?

Todd Adams: Well, Mike, I think when you take a giant step back, in aggregate this year, we're talking about 3 points of price, incremental. So it's not like we've gone out with egregious price increases above and beyond what our competitive set has done. We've got different competitors across all of our different product lines. So some people have been more aggressive than us. Some people have been less aggressive than us in certain spots. So taken as a whole, I think, stability would be a great thing.

And I think that's sort of what we see in our outlook, which is the things that we're doing put us in a great spot to not sort of have to put these big digital price increases through that we're going through last year. But that being said, we've got to stay diligent because inflation of commodities and freight. And obviously, this conflict in the Middle East are all sort of bubbling. And so I think we're going to be smart about it. I don't see any meaningful fatigue. But I think it's something that we're just watching very carefully category by category, region by region.

And I think we've done a really nice job of staying close to it and expect to continue to operate the same way.

Michael Halloran: That makes sense. And then maybe the follow-up question is just any thoughts on the growth adjacencies you've been talking about and some of the growth initiatives that you're highlighting have an impact late this year and into next year. Just kind of any thoughts on some deeper color on what those might be or target areas or anything you might be going to share?

Todd Adams: Yes. I mean nothing that we're going to share at this point. Obviously, these are going to be new entrants in the categories that competitors have or maybe even some new competitors. So I think we're making great progress there. I think it's really exciting. I suspect that by the time we get to Q3, we'll be in a spot to share some of those and obviously, as more roll out over Q4 and into the first part of next year, when we're ready, we'll talk about it, but I think very much on track with what we thought as we started the year. but great work by our teams.

And I think it's going to be exciting for us moving forward, not just in '26 and not just in '27, but really starting to stack these year in, year out, which will be helpful to our long-term growth rate. .

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of James Cole with Jefferies.

Unknown Analyst: I guess I wanted to touch on this growth adjacencies a little bit more here. I just wanted to understand the rationale behind it. Like should we think about these initiatives as additive to your like current long-term mid-single-digit growth outlook or more as a way to kind of sustain that level if like other end markets slow or -- yes.

Todd Adams: I think it could be both. Clearly, we're not going to predict what the market conditions are in '27 or point. So if they're weaker, this could clearly boost some of that maybe lower market growth. If the market is what it is, I think it would ultimately end up being additive. So I think it could serve both, James. And it really is something that we've done historically. I think given where we are from a balance sheet perspective, a strategic focus perspective, we see a dual-pronged approach here, right? We're going to enter new categories, develop new products, open up additional available market.

And as a function of that, I think it's going to aid in some of our cultivation. So I think long term, it can be both. It can support what we have in the event of a weaker-than-expected market. And to the degree the market is okay, it should enhance is sort of the way to think about it.

Unknown Analyst: Great color. And I guess as a follow-up, I just wanted to touch on 1Q outperformance like. Can you talk about the primary kind of drivers of the outperformance since growth came in stronger than expected even accounting for a favorable impact from weather. So can you kind of break that by core sales growth into like volume and pricing and potentially mix?

David Pauli: Sure. So if you look at the 11%, 5% price in the rest volume, you mentioned the weather thing. That was about 1 point in the quarter. And then just in terms of the outgrowth we've talked about it a little bit just in terms of our Water Safety and Control business, our Drains business, our Drinking Water business, growing very nicely in the quarter. I think if you look at some of the initiatives that we set out and have talked about last year into this year, looking at areas of the U.S. where there is maybe a little bit more construction activity over resourcing those.

So we've seen some nice wins from a regional growth perspective in terms of areas that we've intentionally deployed resources to and focused on. So I think that's helping to deliver some of the over performance we saw in Q1. .

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc Capital Markets. .

Jeffrey Hammond: Just had a couple kind of end market question. So in the Q, it looks like commercial bucket kind of accelerated. I didn't know if there's anything to parse out there if that captures more of the brake fix. And then I know it's small, like 8% Waterworks, but there's been some peer companies with some short-cycle noise. I didn't know if you could just comment on what you're seeing in that business and if you're seeing anything to that extent.

Todd Adams: Yes. Again, I think when you look at commercial, it's a lot of different things. I'm staring at a pipeline chart here from our manufacturer's rep and just in New York, right? I mean, you've got the Core Weave data center. You've got the West Point football stadium. JFK Airport, the U.S. open stadium and parking garages on the come. You've got things like Major League Soccer Stadium in New York, the Brooklyn Borough jail. So I think there's a lot of activity out there, and I think it's representative of being hyper local and finding pockets of growth even in a geography where you may not assume that there's a lot of growth.

In terms of Waterworks, nothing abnormal for us in Waterworks at all. So hopefully, that's the color you were looking for. .

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Brett Linzey with Mizuho.

Unknown Analyst: Congrats on the quarter. This is Peter Kasson, for Brett. And maybe just 1 more about end markets. Can you kind of talk through your outlook by end markets? You're talking to flat to slightly positive market in total with institutional low singles, commercial flat and resi a little bit tougher. Do you have any updates to that given the 1Q outperformance?

David Pauli: No. I'd say if you go back to the guidance framework we gave 90 days ago from a pure end market, we call institutional low single digits, Waterworks, low single-digit growth, the commercial market, we said would be flat and resi down low single digits. And I think we've generally seeing those end markets play out. In Q1, the commercial market might have a little bit better than flat. But I'd say from a long term, how we see 2026 play out, no change to that guidance framework we gave initially. .

Unknown Analyst: Awesome. And then maybe just could you give us a sense of the margin differential between some of these lower-margin products you're walking away from and then some of the higher unit volume growth areas that you called out, like the safety and control the flow systems in the drinking water?

David Pauli: So in terms of the stuff that we walked away from, intentionally, that would have been substantially lower margin. So think back to the Elkay merger when we exited some low-margin noncore residential sinks that were primarily sold through big box. We're largely out of those types of products at this point. The things that are growing faster that have some incremental margin would be think about filtration within drinking water. Think about some of our water safety and control and drains products that carry a really nice margin that would be ahead of the fleet average. .

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from the line of Jeffrey with RBC.

Jeffrey Reive: I appreciate all the color thus far. So if we think about the puts and takes around pausing the full year outlook, what are the key variables you're waiting to see it resolved by the time you report 2Q. Is it just tariffs? Is it something else?

Todd Adams: Jeff, I honestly don't think it's that deep. I think we had a really nice Q1. We're projecting a nice Q2. I think that certainly, there's going to be more clarity on some of these tariff issues as we get through the summer. But quite honestly, we just are electing like we have in the past to sort of wait and see. I can't point to anything that would say at this point, the market is worse. We're concerned about the tariff issue. So it's really just, I think, being very deliberate about modifying the full year outlook. It's probably not going to foot across in your model.

But I think we're sort of really trying to dial in a better view for the full year once we get through the second quarter.

Michael Halloran: Got it. I only ask because I think when you see a company kind of paused guidance, it's usually a cause for concern, but obviously, you're doing it from a position of strong 1Q and a better 2Q outlook. Maybe just on visibility into the second half. Can you maybe talk to that the line of sight do you have your backlog? Just any comments there?

Todd Adams: Yes. When you look at contractor backlogs as they sit today, as we talk to our third-party reps on activity that is likely to come to fruition in the second half. It's very much consistent with the kind of market growth that Dave talked about. And obviously, some of the outgrowth in terms of regional focus, new product launches, I don't see anything that would derail that at this point. So you're using the word pause. I think we're going to use the word deliberate. But needless to say, I think we're going to end up in a good spot for the year.

And we're really just focused on the next 90 days and doing the work to make the second half as good as it can be.

Operator: I will now turn the call back over to Bobby Belmar for closing remarks.

Unknown Executive: Thanks, everyone, for joining us on the call today. We appreciate your interest in Zurn Elkay Water Solutions, and we look forward to providing our next update when we announce our second quarter results in late July. Have a good day. .

Operator: This concludes today's conference call.

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JPMorgan Chase has raised its year-end target for the S&P 500, noting that the core driver is not a simple recovery in sentiment, but rather upward earnings revisions for AI-related techn
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Australian Dollar receives support after Trump extends ceasefire with IranAUD/USD pares its recent losses from the previous day, trading around 0.7160 during the Asian hours on Wednesday.
Author  FXStreet
15 hours ago
AUD/USD pares its recent losses from the previous day, trading around 0.7160 during the Asian hours on Wednesday.
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Tesla Q1 2026 Earnings Preview: 50,000-Unit Inventory Overhang, Energy Storage Halved, 5 Core Metrics Long-Term Investors Should Really WatchIntroductionTesla (TSLA) is scheduled to release its first-quarter 2026 earnings report after the U.S. market close on April 22. The Non-GAAP EPS consensus from Tesla's official compilation (comprisin
Author  TradingKey
Yesterday 10: 19
IntroductionTesla (TSLA) is scheduled to release its first-quarter 2026 earnings report after the U.S. market close on April 22. The Non-GAAP EPS consensus from Tesla's official compilation (comprisin
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Gold holds steady above $4,800 amid US-Iran ceasefire uncertainty Gold price (XAU/USD) trades on a flat note near $4,825 during the early Asian session on Tuesday. The precious metal steadies amid renewed geopolitical instability in the Middle East.  
Author  FXStreet
Yesterday 01: 24
Gold price (XAU/USD) trades on a flat note near $4,825 during the early Asian session on Tuesday. The precious metal steadies amid renewed geopolitical instability in the Middle East.  
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How Will the U.S.-Iran Situation Evolve? What Is Behind the Nasdaq’s Record High?The conflict in the Middle East escalated further over the weekend. Optimistic signals released by Trump were refuted by the Iranian side. According to Reuters, the U.S. military seized a
Author  TradingKey
Apr 20, Mon
The conflict in the Middle East escalated further over the weekend. Optimistic signals released by Trump were refuted by the Iranian side. According to Reuters, the U.S. military seized a
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