Resideo (REZI) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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DATE

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Jay Geldmacher
  • Chief Financial Officer — Michael Carlet
  • President, Products & Solutions — Thomas Surran
  • President, ADI Global Distribution — Robert Aarnes

TAKEAWAYS

  • Total Net Revenue -- Resideo (NYSE:REZI) reported $1.9 billion, up 8% year over year, including a 2% favorable impact from currency, exceeding the high end of management's outlook range.
  • Adjusted EBITDA -- $215 million, representing 28% year-over-year growth, with the increase partly attributed to a $35 million benefit from the terminated indemnification agreement.
  • Adjusted Earnings Per Share -- $0.65, up 3% year over year, with $0.15 in business separation costs and $0.12 from a one-time litigation settlement excluded in adjusted results.
  • Products & Solutions Net Revenue Growth -- 9% year over year, with an approximate 200 basis point positive impact from currency and a 300 basis point increase from having four extra days in the quarter.
  • Products & Solutions Gross Margin -- 41.8%, up 40 basis points year over year, marking the twelfth consecutive quarter of gross margin expansion.
  • Products & Solutions Adjusted EBITDA -- Increased 12% year over year, attributed to gross margin efficiency and resulting operating leverage.
  • ADI Global Distribution Net Revenue Growth -- 8% year over year, including a 1% favorable impact from currency and an average daily sales growth of 1% after accounting for the four extra sales days.
  • ADI Global Distribution Gross Margin -- 21.2%, down 40 basis points year over year, primarily due to higher fuel costs for freight.
  • E-commerce Revenue at ADI -- Grew 12% year over year, driven by greater customer adoption, with average daily sales up 5% and a positive contribution to gross margin.
  • Exclusive Brands Revenue at ADI -- Increased 7% year over year, generating 13% more gross margin dollars versus the same period last year.
  • GAAP Net Income Per Share -- $0.17, compared with a net loss of $0.02 in the prior period.
  • Cash Used by Operating Activities -- $145 million, compared to $65 million in the same period of the prior year, with the increase attributed to business separation costs, higher cash interest, and working capital.
  • Second Quarter Guidance -- Total company net revenue expected in the range of $1.916 billion-$1.940 billion; adjusted EBITDA forecasted at $216 million-$230 million; fully diluted earnings per share guided to $0.71-$0.75, with one less day in the quarter versus the prior year.
  • Business Separation Update -- Public filing of ADI's Form 10 completed, with spinoff anticipated between the middle of the third and fourth quarters; Investor Day events planned for mid-July in New York.
  • Pricing Actions -- Planned for later in the second quarter to mitigate rising costs, especially higher freight expenses, with customer acceptance expected.

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RISKS

  • Gross margin at the total company level declined 10 basis points year over year to 28.8%, with management citing "higher fuel costs on freight at both business segments" as the primary driver.
  • Cash used by operating activities increased to $145 million from $65 million in the prior year, with the change attributed to "business separation activities, higher cash interest paid and working capital dynamics."
  • Management stated, "price actions will lag inflationary costs, there could be a slight headwind to the gross margin for each business segment in the second quarter."
  • ADI's high-end residential audiovisual segment remained weak, with "continued soft U.S. residential market" noted and product category declines reported.

SUMMARY

Management reaffirmed the 2026 annual outlook and confirmed that both the Products & Solutions and ADI segments are expected to achieve similar year over year net revenue growth rates. ADI's business transformation initiatives—including real estate rationalization, organizational restructuring, and operational expense optimization—were described as "quite significant" and expected to yield EBITDA margin expansion later in the year. The spinoff of ADI remains on track, with key milestones achieved and further details to be finalized in the third or fourth quarter. Price increases are scheduled for implementation in the second quarter to address higher fuel and freight costs, with acknowledgment of a lag effect that will impact near-term gross margin. Supply chain constraints for memory components are expected to remain manageable in 2026, based on secured allocations and product portfolio characteristics.

  • Management cited that ADI's high-end audiovisual business comprises approximately "20%-ish" of its total business, providing context for segment exposure.
  • Executive comments confirmed that both future standalone entities will target approximately 3x gross leverage, with deleveraging identified as a near-term priority post-separation.
  • Resideo's leadership indicated that fiscal order timing is shifting more revenue and margin opportunity to the second half of the year, especially for ADI.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Form 10: SEC filing required to register a planned spin-off, containing detailed information about the new company's business, management, risk factors, and pro forma financials.
  • Snap One: Acquired company focused on smart living and audiovisual integration, whose operations are integrated within ADI.
  • BRK: Product brand under Resideo for nonconnected safety devices (e.g., smoke detectors), referenced for channel sales.
  • SKUs: Stock Keeping Units—unique product identifiers for each item in a company's catalog.
  • DDR3/DDR4/DDR5 DRAM: Successive generations of dynamic random-access memory, with increasing speed and capacity, used in electronics and devices.
  • Section 232 Tariffs: U.S. import duties imposed for national security reasons, relevant for cost impact on electronics and hardware supply chains.
  • First Alert: Safety products brand owned by Resideo, highlighted for growth and market share in smoke and carbon monoxide detection.
  • Luma/Triad/Araknis/Control4/Lutron: Product lines referenced for new ADI product launches and audiovisual integration opportunities.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Christopher Lee: Thank you, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us for Resideo's First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. On today's call is Jay Geldmacher, Resideo's Chief Executive Officer; Mike Carlet, Chief Financial Officer; Rob Aarnes, President of Resideo's ADI Global Distribution business; and Tom Surran, President of Resideo's Products & Solutions business. We would like to remind you that this afternoon's call contains forward-looking statements. Statements other than historical facts made during this call may constitute forward-looking statements and are not guarantees of future performance or results and involve a number of risks and uncertainties.

Actual results may differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements as a result of a number of factors, including those described from time to time in Resideo's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company assumes no obligation to update any such forward-looking statements. We have the principal risks and uncertainties that affect our performance in our annual report on Form 10-K and other SEC filings. In addition, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures on today's call. These non-GAAP financial measures, which can sometimes be identified by the use of adjusted and the description of the measure should not -- should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for or in isolation from our GAAP results.

A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures is included in the financial data workbook, which is accessible on the Investor Relations page of our website at investor.resideo.com. Unless stated otherwise, all numbers and results discussed on today's call other than revenue are on a non-GAAP basis. With that, I will now turn the call over to Jay.

Jay Geldmacher: Thank you, Chris, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. I'm very pleased with the continued execution demonstrated by the entire team. Resideo exceeded the high end of the first quarter outlook ranges for all metrics. Total net revenue grew 8% year-over-year to over $1.9 billion. Total adjusted EBITDA grew 28% year-over-year to $215 million. Total adjusted earnings per share grew 3% year-over-year to $0.65. Our first quarter results reflect the solid health of our operating fundamentals. Our Products & Solutions segment reported net revenue growth year-over-year, driven primarily by increases in both price and volume across most sales channels.

Our ADI segment report 8% net revenue growth year-over-year, primarily from strength in our security business, partially offset by declines in our residential AV business. The strength of our combined operations, coupled with the elimination of the indemnification agreement resulted in strong bottom line results. Resideo's execution continues to be steady in an uncertain global macroeconomic environment and with end markets still soft. I'd like to make 2 important points on recent macro events that are relevant to Resideo. First, on inflationary cost dynamics, we have largely absorbed cost inflation, primarily related to higher costs for freight in our reported first quarter results. We intend to raise prices later in the second quarter to combat increasing costs.

There is broad understanding from our customers for the need to share the inflationary pressures and we expect to work collaboratively with our customers as we have historically. Second, on the impact of cost inflation on customer behavior, Macroeconomic conditions have generally had an impact on consumer confidence and affordability. While the high-end residential audiovisual market has been softening, Resideo remains well positioned with the existing products, its upcoming new product introductions and its exceptional distribution footprint to take advantage of the markets we serve. Not withstanding these macroeconomic conditions, as a result of our outperformance in the first quarter and other actions we are taking, Resideo is reaffirming its 2026 outlook.

We believe our solid execution and proactive mitigation tactics will enable Resideo to manage through the uncertain environment for the rest of the year. Mike will speak more about this in his comments. Before I hand over the call to Tom to discuss the performance of the Products & Solutions business segment, let me give you an update on our separation activities. We have achieved key milestones in our business separation process, including yesterday's public filing of ADI's Form 10. I'm very pleased with the high-caliber management team and Board of Directors that ADI will have as a stand-alone company, which is a testament to Rob and the entire ADI team for the business they have built.

And for Resideo, Tom has built a world-class team within products and solutions that will carry the business forward. We have accomplished a tremendous amount of work to get us to this point, and we have done so while continuing our strong business execution including providing high-level products and services to our customers. Additional details will be shared at a later date but we plan to hold Investor Day events for Resideo and ADI in New York during mid-July, where we introduce the full leadership teams and discuss each company's go-forward business strategy and value creation model.

As we noted in our announcement yesterday, we expect the spinoff to be complete between the middle of the third quarter and the middle of the fourth quarter. I'm very pleased with the focus, discipline, dedication and leadership demonstrated in the first quarter by the entire team. Now let me hand the call over to Tom.

Thomas Surran: Thanks, Jay. The Products & Solutions team continued its strong operational execution, resulting in another quarter of year-over-year organic net revenue growth and the 12th consecutive quarter of year-over-year gross margin expansion. Products & Solutions reported net revenue growth of 9% year-over-year, including an approximate 200 basis point favorable impact from currency. The impact of having an extra 4 days in the first quarter on net revenue growth was approximately 300 basis points. Net revenue grew across substantially all our sales channels and product families due to both price and volume driven by customer demand. Let me walk through our activities in each of our primary sales channels as our products can be sold through multiple channels.

In the retail channel, strong year-over-year net revenue growth was primarily driven by volume. There was an uptick in demand for our safety and thermostat products available in the retail channel driven by both weather and regulatory changes. Point of sales volumes at our key accounts continue to be strong and supported by healthy levels of channel inventory. Sales of First Alert products, including the First Alert SC05 connected smoke and carbon monoxide detectors showed increasing adoption, which we believe contributed to market share gain in safety products. The OEM channel posted its sixth consecutive quarter of healthy year-over-year net revenue growth, driven almost equally by price and volume.

Weather was a tailwind with notably stronger-than-expected demand in EMEA for our higher-priced and more profitable units. The electrical distribution channel had another quarter of year-over-year net revenue growth driven by volume. We saw continued demand for our BRK branded nonconnected safety products, primarily in the MRO and the manufactured housing market. Net revenue from the security channel grew year-over-year driven primarily by price increases on our existing products. Security sales to a large customer were in line with our expectations. We are receiving positive market signals for our new integrated security platform scheduled for general market release in the second half of 2026.

Concluding our channel walk on a high note, net revenue from the HVAC channel was down only 1% year-over-year. Volume declines were partially offset by higher prices related to new products. During the quarter, we saw conditions in the residential HVAC market stabilize as we indicated several quarters ago. We saw a material reduction in the channel inventory held by our large HVAC distribution partners over the past 3 quarters, which we do not expect to continue going forward.

While we saw improved market conditions at the end of Q1, during the quarter, there was a modest volume decline that was partially offset by weather-driven demand and increased adoption of our new products. including continued strong demand for the Honeywell Home Elite Pro premium smart thermostat. Gross margin was 41.8%, up 40 basis points year-over-year. driven primarily by continued improvement in factory utilization, partially offset by product sales mix. We achieved the 12th consecutive quarter of year-over-year gross margin expansion despite absorbing higher fuel costs. We increased investments in R&D to support new product launches and speed to market. Adjusted EBITDA grew 12% year-over-year due to continued gross margin efficiency, which led to operating leverage.

We intend to continue driving operational efficiencies during 2026 and beyond. Looking forward, we're excited to capitalize on the profitable growth momentum from our continued new product introduction cadence. And with that, let's turn the call over to Rob.

Robert Aarnes: Thanks, Tom. ADI reported net revenue growth of 8% year-over-year. After accounting for 4 extra sales days in the quarter, average daily sales growth was 1% year-over-year. Both growth metrics include a favorable impact from currency of approximately 1%. Net revenue growth was driven by demand in the security, professional audio visual and data communications categories. partially offset by the residential audio visual category due to a continued soft U.S. residential market. We saw sequential growth in security product categories, including an expected rebound in video surveillance. We saw stronger contributions from large accounts this quarter relative to the last 2 quarters, demonstrating conviction in our operational stability.

Performance in our international business was also a call out yielding a positive return from operational changes we made last year. In our areas of strategic focus, e-commerce continues to grow as part of ADI's net revenue while also being accretive to gross margin. E-commerce revenue grew 12% year-over-year and average daily sales grew 5% year-over-year, both driven by greater customer adoption. Customer rating metrics continue to trend upward, and ADI achieved top-tier recognition for service, training and technical support from CE Pro, which is voted upon by the distribution industry.

In another area of strategic focus, exclusive brands revenue increased by 7% year-over-year, while also generating 13% more gross margin dollars in the quarter versus the same period last year. From a new product introduction standpoint, we added approximately 60 SKUs in the first quarter, including new Luma security cameras, Triad premium residential sound products and Araknis residential and SMB networking products. Also, the availability of the new Control4 operating system continues to broaden, resulting in an increased number of projects and attach opportunities for our Lutron lighting product. Moving on to profitability. ADI reported 21.2% gross margin in the first quarter, down 40 basis points year-over-year. Gross margin was primarily impacted by higher fuel costs for freight.

Operating expenses in the quarter were up year-over-year due primarily to incrementally higher variable costs during the 4 extra sales days as well as duplicate costs as we continue to optimize stores and distribution centers. ADI's income from operations was flat year-over-year, and adjusted EBITDA declined by $6 million due primarily to the previously mentioned decline in gross margin. I said in the past that one of our key operating principles is our customer-first ethos: we pride ourselves in delivering an optimized customer experience that breeds loyal and profitable customer behavior. Another of our key operating principles is continuous improvement.

We are pleased that we delivered against the Snap One synergy target. -- as well as implemented new operational systems integral to our future growth. We can now fully focus on business transformation actions, including optimizing our real estate footprint and streamlining our operating expenses globally that we believe will result in EBITDA margin expansion later this year. Now let's turn the call over to Mike to discuss our first quarter's financial results and 2026 outlook.

Michael Carlet: Thank you, Rob. Good afternoon, everyone. Let's get straight into the quarterly results, starting with revenue. Total net revenue was $1.9 billion, up 8% year-over-year, including an approximate 2% favorable impact from currency, exceeding the high end of the outlook range. Gross margin in the quarter was 28.8%, down 10 basis points year-over-year. The slight decrease in gross margin rate was primarily driven by higher fuel costs on freight at both business segments. Adjusted EBITDA was $215 million in the quarter, up 28% year-over-year and above the high end of the outlook range.

The primary reason for the increase year-over-year was higher net income, driven in part by net revenue outperformance and the benefit of $35 million associated with the terminated indemnification agreement. GAAP net income per share was $0.17 versus a net loss of $0.02 in the prior period. Adjustments to arrive at adjusted earnings per share include $0.15 of business separation costs and $0.12 related to a onetime litigation settlement impacting products and solutions. First quarter's adjusted earnings per share was $0.65, exceeding the high end of our outlook range and increasing from $0.63 in the prior year period.

Total reported cash used by operating activities in the first quarter was $145 million versus the use of $65 million in the same period last year. The year-over-year fluctuation was driven by business separation activities, higher cash interest paid and working capital dynamics. Our outlook for the full year 2026 cash provided by operations we provided last quarter, excluding separation-related payments, remains unchanged. Now before I provide our financial outlook, let me walk you through some of our market perspectives and assumptions that are incremental to those shared with you last quarter when we set our 2026 outlook.

As Jay stated, we believe uncertainty in the macro has resulted in increased operating costs and softer market demand in certain end markets. From a cost standpoint, we anticipate higher costs during 2026 in areas such as fuel on freight. We do not anticipate material cost increases related to new Section 232 tariffs after conducting our assessment. Additionally, we do not anticipate material cost impacts for memory chips. As noted earlier, we intend to take pricing actions starting in the second quarter that are intended to fully mitigate these increasing costs. Given that our price actions will lag inflationary costs, there could be a slight headwind to the gross margin for each business segment in the second quarter.

From a market demand standpoint, we expect the ongoing uncertain macro to impact ADI more than Products & Solutions as questions around consumer confidence and affordability are anticipated to impact ADI's high-end residential end markets. Now on our annual outlook. We are reaffirming our 2026 outlook. The shape of the company's outlook for the remainder of the year is now more weighted to the second half due primarily to a shift in fiscal orders for ADI. On net revenue growth, we continue to anticipate both business segments achieving year-over-year net revenue growth in 2026 and now forecast the growth rate of ADI and Products & Solutions to be approximately the same.

On gross margin, we now forecast total company gross margin percentage expansion to be flat year-over-year. We continue to anticipate that products and solutions will have greater gross margin percentage expansion than ADI. As Rob noted, ADI is executing against business transformation plans that we believe will be a benefit to EBITDA in the second half. Our outlook for the second quarter of 2026 is as follows: Total company net revenue to be in the range of $1.916 billion to $1.940 billion. Total company adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $216 million to $230 million. And total, company fully diluted earnings per share to be in the range of $0.71 to $0.75.

Note that there is 1 less day in the second quarter of 2026 versus the same period of last year. We encourage you to visit our Investor Relations website to access our earnings presentation, which includes our outlook ranges along with key modeling assumptions for 2026. Let me turn the call back to Jay before we open the call up for Q&A.

Jay Geldmacher: Thanks, Mike. Our outperformance this quarter is another proof point of Resideo's execution and product innovation pipeline resulting in profitable growth. Following the separation, there will be 2 pure-play companies. We expect the strategic focus for each company to be sharper and supported by greater financial flexibility that can be directed towards achieving their respective initiatives to create shareholder value. We believe there is more opportunity for the investment community to recognize the positive progress we have made. We see our upcoming business separation providing another catalyst for a multiple rerating as investors can learn more about how each company is well positioned to deliver long-term growth and value creation for shareholders. Let's now open the call up for questions.

Operator?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Dan Stratemeier with Jefferies.

Dan Stratemeier: I guess maybe this question is for Mike. On a high-level basis, I think this reminds some folks of the third quarter, a really good quarter and a little bit more of a muted outlook in the very near term. Why are you confident your -- I guess, the price actions will be enough to overcome the macro and given your confidence in still hitting these numbers, just a little more comfort on that, but it's clearly a little bit of a deja vu for folks?

Michael Carlet: Sure. Dan, thanks for the question. So obviously, as we look out the rest of the year, there remains macro uncertainty. Every day, the news changes with what the outcomes are going to be between the war, other issues that are out there. we feel confident that we've got the right pricing actions. We've talked to our customers. Tom and Rob can certainly comment on that as needed. But our communication with our customers that we feel good we can pass through the appropriate pricing to pass along the cost increases that we expect. There's a little bit of timing as these things come through when we roll through contracts when we can actually implement that pricing.

But we're very highly confident that what we're doing will offset the cost that we see. Obviously, there's uncertainty out there, costs could continue to rise, they can moderate and we'll continue to adjust as needed, but we feel really good about the position we're in from a commercial standpoint as it relates to our pricing and our competitors and our ability to raise prices to offset.

Dan Stratemeier: All right. And Rob, I'll turn it over to you. You mentioned business transformation actions. Could you just dive into that a little bit further? How significant could they be? How quickly do you think you're going to be able to do those?

Robert Aarnes: Yes. Thanks, Dan. Great question. I would tell you that they are quite significant. And in fact, to the point where we are doubling down on trying to bring as much of that into '26 as possible. And there in the area, some I mentioned on the call or in my prepared remarks, and some I didn't but the big buckets are, first of all, are rationalizing our real estate footprint. We're, I would say, first, second inning there in terms of looking at our stores and our DC footprint since we've actually acquired Snap One. So there's a lot of opportunity to rationalize the footprint there.

And then second, you may have seen the press release Monday yesterday on my leadership team, we reorganized the team. We put all the sales and operations reporting into Ali Copeland and then on Marco Cardazzi's merchandising team, e-com marketing and all of category management. And so that -- those 2, they have a lot of opportunity to look at redundant costs and optimize OpEx going forward. So between our real estate footprint and just optimizing our current head count across the businesses, we see a quite a bit of opportunity there.

Dan Stratemeier: Okay. And how about on the sales and growth side, understanding the high-end Snap One side. How about the sort of the core ADI, any initiatives to reinvigorate growth there?

Robert Aarnes: 100%. In fact, I'll use the term I was just using -- I was talking about this with somebody earlier today. I mean, we've got a number of powerful, very focused initiatives on driving and returning our commercial categories, really the strength of what we do back to year-over-year growth. And when you look at Q1 as a whole, obviously, up 8%, but 1% on average daily sales. I would challenge you to look past that. And I was very encouraged to see a number of our commercial categories actually return to growth. We've got a couple that are continuing to lag a bit behind, but that is where we are focused going forward.

And I'm very encouraged by what I'm seeing from the team and the categories that we did return to growth and what we're going to do with those remaining categories going forward. So I would just lastly tell you, look, this is the same team, right, that has delivered some really nice growth over the last decade year-over-year. And now they're equipped with better tools. And so there's nothing that makes me believe that we won't be back and pretty soon.

Dan Stratemeier: I don't want Tom to feel left out, Tom. The growth at P&S here has been a number of quarters in a row here, Tom, that's just above market, really aggressive. Give us the bullet points as to why P&S is just flat out outperforming the end markets and the overall industry, I mean, you're obviously as levered to resi as anyone in the entire company. So how about that number one? And then as everybody knows, these memory stocks are through the roof, memory costs are through the roof. There's a lot of concern that you're not going to be able to mitigate that.

I heard the comments from Mike earlier, like how are you able to mitigate the memory cost increases?

Thomas Surran: Yes. So let's take that one second, let's go back to your first question, the outperformance. In the press release, we made a comment that we've assembled and have an extremely strong management team. And as I think through and I can give you specific examples, the person that's going to be heading up our sales and marketing and how that team has gone out there in just a tremendous job introducing the new products as well as some of the existing products and working with our customers and communicating the message of what we're trying to do, fantastic. Our supply chain. I'm going to come back to that one a little bit.

So let's just put a pin, but they've executed extremely well. Our product management and our engineering team shortening development cycles, creating new differentiated products that create and deliver value to our customers, exceptional execution. So in general, I think it's been the execution of that team that's enabled that. All right. So one of the questions, so I'm going to come back to supply chain to answer the memory question. Mike did do a great job, by the way, of explaining that we have the fuel costs. We've got metals, we've got 232 costs. All of these, what I believe, are transitory inflationary pressures.

And we have, as Jay mentioned, worked with transparency and sharing this information and working with our customers to -- that we've had to pass this on. And that how we're passing that on is over this next quarter, we've already communicated these price increases. They're going into effect, there will be a bit of a lag, but they're all set up to execute and we've had no pushback on that. But the bigger question, how do we know we're in the correct position related to memory? That supply chain team, I was mentioning, they've been working on this since last year as we saw the first indicators that there was going to be a memory squeeze.

And they worked with all of our suppliers to make sure that we had allocation commitments for all of 2026, but that's the allocation. On the pricing, there was also some pull forward in pricing and the engineering, product and supply chain have worked on other means of addressing this. Our products only a minority have memory in them. And when we use memory, it's typically smaller capacity, so less amount of memory, and it's not the cutting-edge technology that's in such high demand at the data centers. So there's a little bit less pressure on that.

But we've also tried to do whatever we can to try to maximize that value to customers by trying to see if there's ways we can reduce some of the memory or change how we execute but there is some cost to our customers that we are passing it was described as nonmaterial, and we feel comfortable that we have received the allocations we need to be able to execute in 2026.

Operator: Your next question comes from Ian Zaffino with Oppenheimer.

Ian Zaffino: My question would be on the guide. As we think about the second half of the year, what's giving you confidence in that second half of the year? And I know we talked about price increases going through. But at the same time, you have some softness in some of the other end markets that may or may not recover? And what are you seeing maybe there that you think is going to improve? And then any other kind of factors that are driving kind of the guide to the second half of the year or the implied guidance for the second half of the year from a puts and takes basis?

Jay Geldmacher: Thanks, Ian. I'll kick it off, Rob, Tom, feel free to jump in with any color or commentary. But I think, first of all, when we think about our guide for the year, the first thing we look at is the current trends of the business and ask ourselves what's going to change for the good or the bad, what are those macro factors, what are our internal initiatives, and we try to bake all that into how we think about the rest of the year.

As we think about the second half of this year, Rob has mentioned the cost activities that he has in place some of which we've been planned, some of which we looking to pull forward. We've added some of that to our guide the year because we know that what we've identified we can get done. We know our current trends of our daily sales average. We know going into the second half at ADI specifically, we had a weak second half last year with some things that were going on operationally in the business that we're going to be lapping some easier comps.

Same thing at the P&S side of the business, we're lapping that HVAC disruption in the market last year. So all those things, as we think about the current trends of the business compared to how we were performing in the second half last year, gives us a lot of confidence on the top line. We've talked about the pricing actions we're taking to protect our margins. And again, the OpEx activities, specifically at ADI that we're implementing to pull some costs out of the business. We're highly confident will be achieved as well. So all that together makes us feel like our guide for the year is very prudent and appropriate for what we think is going to happen.

Again, we all would acknowledge the uncertainty that's out there, so things can get better, they can get worse and we'll react accordingly. But based upon what we can see today, we feel really good about how we're thinking about the full year.

Ian Zaffino: Okay. And then as a follow-up, when we're talking about fuel and freight, what type of inflation have you seen there maybe in the dollars and cents basis? And then also in ADI, remind us how much of that is high-end AV and maybe how much of that -- how much was that segment down?

Jay Geldmacher: I'll do the first one -- second one first, it's easier. If you just look back when ADI bought Snap One. Snap One was about $1 billion business. we're about a $5 billion business, plus or minus today. So it's around 20%-ish. There's some pluses and minuses, but if you use that as a directional sort of proxy that will get you in the ballpark of what those numbers are. As far as the fuel and freight costs, it's millions of dollars that we are incurring in each quarter right now. It's obviously changing as we speak.

The cost of bunkers and fuel changes every single day but it is not an insignificant number that we're incurring at both sides of the business, both ADI and P&S, and offsetting that again with price. So for the year, it's going to be in the tens of millions of dollars of cost. The timing of how that goes through, obviously, varies as you go through inventory as you think about receipts and as you can think about the uncertainty that's out there in the market.

Operator: Your next question comes from Erik Woodring with Morgan Stanley.

Unknown Analyst: This is [ Ralph Herro ] on behalf of Erik. Just with regard to the Form 10 you put out earlier this week, you outlined some leverage targets for Resideo or RemainCo. I'm just curious, how are you thinking about that time line to achieve your net leverage goal? And just any other checkpoints that you are considering to other checkpoints that you need to hit to consider M&A, share repurchases, dividends, et cetera? And then I just have one quick follow-up.

Michael Carlet: Sorry, excuse me. Thanks for the question. I think first of all, look, we have a lot further conversations about the separate companies as we go forward. As we sit here today, we're very focused on running the business today. We're certainly preparing for the separation. We posted decks for both ADI and P&S, RemainCo, separately that can be viewed on our website, so I'd encourage you to look through them. I think at a high level, both companies on a separate company basis, are very focused on deleveraging. We've got 3x leverage as gross leverage as the target for both companies. We think we get there pretty rapidly. These are both strong cash flow-generating businesses.

We think we'll get there pretty quickly. But we're going to hold off talking about specifics on that until we get further down the path, we get closer to Investor Day.

Unknown Analyst: Got it. Makes sense, totally understand. And I just wanted to double-click a little bit on the memory supply chain dynamics that the other gentleman alluded to. So I know you talked about having relative comfort with the allocations you received in 2026. But we're hearing in the industry that in a lot of cases, there are constraints extending well into 2027. I guess, to the extent you're able to provide any color beyond 2026 in terms of what you're seeing in the supply chain, that would be helpful.

Thomas Surran: Sure. This is Tom, Ralph. I wanted to just explain clearly for 2026. It's not that we stop working on this problem at the end we're working on allocations for 2027, dealing with our vendors to do it. You're right. I would expect this to continue in 2027. But again, I'd go back to the comment that the products that are in the most demand are things such as DDR5 DRAM, right, which is the latest and greatest at high capacities. We're typically using DDR3, DDR4 and low capacities and then some nonvolatile memory. Will it have the same duration of impact as some of the high-capacity high-performance, high-speed memory?

I wouldn't think so, but we are making sure that we're taking the actions to secure our allocation as far out as we can.

Operator: There are no further questions at this time. This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.

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