NYSE:CNH CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign Q1 2025 Earnings Report $12.39 -0.02 (-0.16%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$11.54 -0.86 (-6.90%) As of 06:57 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.10Consensus EPS $0.09Beat/MissBeat by +$0.01One Year Ago EPSN/ACNH GLOBAL N V Foreign Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$3.83 billionExpected Revenue$4.47 billionBeat/MissMissed by -$639.12 millionYoY Revenue Growth-20.50%CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date5/1/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, May 1, 2025Conference Call Time9:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 1, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the CNH twenty twenty five First Quarter Results Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Thank you. I will now turn the call over to Jason Amersa, Vice President of Investor Relations. Operator00:00:24Please go ahead. Jason OmerzaVP of Investor Relations at CNH Industrial00:00:27Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. We would like to welcome you to the webcast and conference call for CNH Industrial's first quarter results for the period ending 03/31/2025. This call is being broadcast live and is copyrighted by CNH. Any recording, transmission or other use of any portion of this broadcast without the express written consent of CNH is strictly prohibited. Hosting today's call are CNH CEO, Garrett Marks and CFO, Adone Enchiza. Jason OmerzaVP of Investor Relations at CNH Industrial00:00:55They will reference the material available for download from our website. Please note that any forward looking statements that we make during today's call are subject to the risks and uncertainties mentioned in the Safe Harbor statement included in the presentation material. Additional information pertaining to factors that could cause actual results to differ materially is contained in the company's most recent annual report on Form 10 ks as well as other periodic reports and filings with the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Jason OmerzaVP of Investor Relations at CNH Industrial00:01:24Our presentation includes certain non GAAP financial measures. Additional information including reconciliations to the most directly comparable U. S. GAAP financial measures is included in the presentation material. I will now turn the call over to Garrett. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:01:39Thank you, Jason, and good morning to everyone joining our call originating here from Oak Brook, Illinois. Before we begin, I want to address announcement that Odone will be stepping down from his role as Chief Financial Officer effective May 6 after more than five years as our CFO safely navigating our path during COVID and the subsequent global recovery of our exciting industry all the way to this very phase of our cyclical markets. On behalf of the Board and the entire company, I want to extend my sincere thanks to Odone for his outstanding leadership and unwavering dedication over his impressive twenty eight year career with CNH and related companies. He has been a key force in leading and growing our Financial Services business first and then in shaping our financial strategy. And I wish him all the best for his future endeavors. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:02:32We're also grateful that Odone is working closely with us to ensure a seamless transition with his successor Jim Nicholas, who joins us from Martin Marietta, a company that is a global leader in its space and shares some of our analyst coverage to Connected today. We are thrilled to welcome Jim to the team as CNH's incoming Chief Financial Officer. Jim brings a strong background of over thirty years of experience in corporate finance, M and A, tax, investment banking and business strategy. You will all get a chance to meet Jim in person and on stage when he presents at our Investor Day in New York next week alongside me and the other members of our global leadership team. With that, let's look at the first quarter results where we kept production very low to reduce inventories while defending our growing market shares. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:03:25So in line with expectations, our financial results came in at a low point. We are focused on what we can control while the industry demand remains soft and we do our homework on multiple commercial and operational fronts. Our ag dealers continue to make meaningful progress in reducing their inventory with another $100,000,000 reduction in the quarter or about $1,000,000,000 lower since Q1 twenty twenty four. Typically, we and our dealers in the Northern Hemisphere built up inventories in the first quarter in preparation for the spring selling season. So while this decrease may seem modest when compared to the larger reduction we saw in Q4, this is actually great progress and right in line with where we expect retail deliveries to be in the coming months, defending our strong market shares in key segments. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:04:20While some of the dealer inventory reductions, particularly the more aged and special purpose units were supported by additional incentives in the quarter, we remain disciplined in balancing price and costs particularly for our latest machines. Price cost was favorable even with ag pricing slightly lower year over year in the quarter as targeted and we expect to have better pricing comparisons in the second half, which depends on how the various factors governing our end markets will play out. Construction price cost was nearly even. We launched a great new automated spraying solution for farmers, Case IH SENSE Apply and New Holland IntelliSense using Vision technology from Augmenta, the startup we acquired in 2023. This Sense and Act technology offers great flexibility with a range of spraying application options. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:05:15And it is a very cost effective solution for farmers as it requires no annual subscriptions or pay acre fees, which drives efficiency and profitability using our world class iron and precision technology. Besides the addition of Jim as our new CFO, we also announced some other leadership changes. Luis Abreu as our Chief Information Officer Francesco Tutino as our Chief Human Resources Officer and Cameron Batten as our Chief Communications Officer. Welcome to the CNH team. Luis was promoted from our internal bench, while Francesco has returned to CNH just as I did almost a year ago. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:05:55Cameron joined us after growing roles in high-tech and automotive players and is supporting our internal external messaging as you will experience next week during our Investor Day. We remain relentlessly focused on driving operational excellence across the company, advancing cutting edge technologies and deepening the execution of our cost saving initiatives. We are looking forward to going into more detail during our Investor Day next week. We will review our mid cycle 02/1930 profitability targets with you well past the certainly relevant short term impacts from global uncertainties around tariffs and of course the cyclicality of our business. CNH is long term oriented and focused on what doing on doing the right thing regardless of what we might face in the near term. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:06:46We will always find the best choice that balances all stakeholder interests. The Q1 results reflect the expected and guided market headwinds and our decision to keep production low. I'm confident we are taking the right steps to navigate this period and position the business for the next cycle upturn and our long term success. Consolidated revenues for the first quarter were down 21% at $3,800,000,000 Industrial adjusted EBIT was $101,000,000 down 73% compared to last year and EPS for the quarter was $0.10 While some commodity prices have improved year over year, farm incomes remain depressed and relevant boundary conditions are quite uncertain, which leads to softness in equipment demand. The adjustments to our manufacturing cadence, while painful, are necessary to position us to weather the equipment demand downturn in a healthy way that balances our various priorities and they also provide an opportunity to improve and change our processes to come out stronger on the other side while our operations run at a slow pace. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:08:00As expected, retail demand was slow in the quarter. Our production hours were down 26% when compared to Q1 twenty twenty four with agriculture down 27% versus 2024 and construction down 19%. For context, Q1 twenty twenty five production hours were down 41% versus Q1 twenty twenty three with Ag down 43% and construction down 33%. Large ag was down 36% versus 2024 and fifty percent versus 2023. Small ag was down 12% versus 2020 four and twenty nine percent versus 2023. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:08:49We are working very closely with our dealer network and supporting them with marketing actions and to reciprocal exchange of information to achieve lower healthy inventory levels while preparing for a great fresh model year 2026 lineup to come very soon. By staying close to the dealer network and focusing on market shares, we are well positioned to reach our year end inventory targets. We are proud of the performance of our Financial Services segment that yielded sound results while facing the market slowdown and higher risk provisioning needs. This is an important strategic part of our business that provides our farmers and builders with access to competitive financing even when the macro environment becomes more uncertain and less stable. We are seeing once again the value of operating a captive financial services business in volatile times. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:09:45Later on, we will speak in greater detail about the current tariff discussions and actions. But let me say that we are obviously monitoring the situation very closely given the speed with which things are changing and we have the team and resources in place to respond and act swiftly. As prior moments of profound change and challenge in our industry have shown, there are some thoughtful actions that can be taken immediately, while other more structural changes will require more certainty and visibility. We act on both sides. Effective today and in alignment with our dealers, we implemented a modest price adjustment in North America for new orders while sharing the tariff cost impact with our supply base. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:10:32We have been and always will be committed to the North American home of our global brands and we see multiple ways to address the possible change of global trade, not only of commodities, but also of agriculture and construction equipment. Historically, the ag equipment end market has been more resilient than other industries in terms of GDP contraction, but the uncertainty is not helping an already depressed market. Facing those challenges head on, I'm very proud of our team for continuing to execute in an effective, thoughtful and calm way, keeping the long term picture and profound underlying drivers that define our business ecosystem in mind. With that, I will now turn the call over to Adonis to take us through the details of our financial results. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:11:19Thank you, Garik, and good morning, everyone. Before I dive in into prepared remarks, let me take a moment to express my gratitude to the colleagues and partners who have made the past twelve years on the CNH Global Executive team so meaningful. There's never a perfect time that Gerrit and I concur that this was the right moment for me to hand over my role as CNH has transformed into a focused U. S.-listed industrial company serving the demands of our farmers and builders. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:11:47It has been an Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:11:47honor to grow alongside such a special organization, and I'm proud of what we have accomplished together. Special thanks also to this very audience of analysts and investors. It has been a privilege working with you all. Last but not least, I'm very happy that with Jim, CNH has found an experienced, capable and trusted person to bring things forward. Now to the financials. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:12:11Fourth quarter Industrial net sales were down 23% year over year to just below $3,200,000,000 This decline was mainly due to lower shipment volumes given the weak demand environment and a reduced production in both industrial segments. Adjusted net income decreased by two thirds, also affected by a higher tax rate and lower Financial Services results, with adjusted diluted earnings per share down from $0.30 to $0.10 Q1 free cash flow for Industrial Activities was at $567,000,000 outflow in line with the working capital seasonality for the first quarter. The cash absorption is significantly better compared to Q1 of twenty twenty four, mainly due to a more contained growth of finished goods and component inventories. In agriculture, net sales decreased 23% in the quarter with lower shipment across all regions driven by lower industry demand and network destocking in 2025 compared to stocking in 2024. Q1 gross margin was 20%, down three eighty basis points year over year, driven mainly by the lower production volumes and unfavorable mix, partially offset by operational cost reductions. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:13:28Volume and mix were clearly the largest driver for our performance. As Garrett mentioned, pricing was slightly negative in the quarter as we increased our incentives for our dealers to retail age and use inventory. This was planned and full year pricing is forecast to be positive even before the moderate price adjustments that are effective as of today. Production costs were down more than pricing, keeping a positive price cost relationship, even though quality costs still have a negative impact in the year over year comparison, which we expect to reverse in the coming quarters. R and D and SG and A expenses for the quarter were lower than in Q1 twenty twenty four, reflecting the continuation of our efforts to contain cost in this environment. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:14:12We continue to see softness in the Turkish market, which is shown in lower JV results in the Other category. Adjusted EBIT margin for Agriculture was 5.4%, which we expect to be the lowest profitability for any quarter this year. Moving to Construction. Net sales for the first quarter were $591,000,000 down 22% year over year, driven by lower shipment volumes mostly in North America. Gross margin for the first quarter was 14.9%, down two fifty basis points compared to the first quarter of twenty twenty four, mostly driven by the lower volumes. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:14:51SG and A and R and D expenses were both favorable year over year and first quarter adjusted EBIT margin was 2.4%. On Financial Service, net income for the first quarter was $90,000,000 The year over year decrease was mainly driven by higher expected risk cost, higher taxes due to prior year one off adjustments in Argentina, partially offset by favorable volumes across all regions except EMEA. Retail originations in the first quarter were $2,400,000,000 slightly down, but flat on a constant currency basis, reflecting higher penetration rates in our lower equipment sales scenario. The managed portfolio ended the quarter at $28,000,000,000 It is worth noting that within the total portfolio balance, the wholesale portfolio, which represents dealer receivables, is down $1,500,000,000 of constant currencies since March 2024. The dealers have reduced their inventory, adapting to the changed market conditions. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:15:56Delinquencies are higher with continued pressure in South America, particularly in Brazil and growing delinquencies in North America. This is in line with what we expect while in a downturn and we are focusing our efforts on collections. Financial Services has its own predictable cycle in our industry. Moving to our capital allocation priorities, which remains unchanged and jumping directly to the shareholder returns. After the dividend proposal is approved at our Annual General Meeting of Shareholders on May 12, we expect to pay an annual dividend of $0.25 per share or over $300,000,000 We also expect the shareholders to reapprove and extend our standing share buyback authorization. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:16:40Before I turn it back to Garrett, I want to align how we source the machines that we sell in The U. S. To frame our exposure to the announced import tariffs. The bar across the top of the slide shows the 2024 breakdown in dollar terms of where machines sold in U. S. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:16:58Came from. About two thirds were manufactured in our U. S. Plants and about one third of the machines by value were imported from other countries. You can see the breakdown of those imports by origin on the right side of the slide. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:17:16The CNH supply chain footprint is designed to balance cost, center of product excellence, local content and proximity to our key markets. As you can see in the pie chart, last year, our U. S. Plants sourced 70% of their components from U. S. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:17:31Suppliers, with about an additional 10% coming from Mexico and Canada. We have been working with our suppliers to ensure that we have USMCA documentation for those parts. That leaves the remaining 20% of components sources mainly from Europe and China. Also keep in mind that U. S. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:17:48Plants export to other regions, mainly to APAC and EMEA. We are proud of the significant production and engineering capabilities in The U. S. And CNH is committed to continuing to further enhance those capabilities in a thoughtful balance as a global engineering production and sales company. With that, I will turn it back to Gareth. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:18:08Thank you, Adona, for that important context around the tariff exposure. To say that the past month evolving trade environment has been highly dynamic would be an understatement. But I've experienced that in CNH. We have the right teams and tools in place to turn challenges into opportunities to gain ground and claim our very own turf. We are actively engaged in robust scenario planning around the tariffs, while recognizing that long term decision making is difficult when the policies shift so rapidly. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:18:41But we are viewing the tariff impact through several lenses and understanding impacts on our business, our suppliers, our network partners, our farmers and our industry overall. A growing global population will have an even greater demand for not only commodities directly, but also indirectly through a shift towards more animal protein consumption. The mechanization and automation of our machines is imperative. And as the global number two player with a pronounced strength in harvesting, we are looking forward to those rising opportunities, particularly when the cycle turns again as it always does. When we look the impact to CNH, there are a few points to keep in mind. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:19:26We import planters from our factory in Saskatoon, Canada and they are fully USMCA compliant. We're also working on getting all the paperwork in place for the very small number of tractors that come from our joint venture in Mexico. Also 95% of steel directly purchased by our U. S. Plants come from American mills. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:19:50We are currently producing at very low levels in The U. S. Given the industry demand, so the immediate tariff impact isn't the same as if we were at the peak of the industry. We have said before that we will need to look at price adjustments to mitigate tariff impacts that can't otherwise be offset through sourcing or other mechanisms. We want to balance that with being mindful of our farmers and builders and the modest price adjustment on model year 2024 products sold in North America expected to have offset the net tariff impact after supplier actions. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:20:30Existing pre sold retail orders will not be affected. That will bridge us to our model year 2026 pricing later this year with which we expect as we regularly do to fully offset any net cost impact as we move into next year. Next, looking at the impact on our farmers. When tariffs one point zero were implemented in 2018, we did see some shift in demand for food and feed commodities, which depressed their prices. That could happen again. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:21:03Now U. S. Farmers do expect that if they are negatively impacted by the tariffs, there will be federal support payments to act as a buffer and that has kept farmer sentiment relatively stable in the past. However, we do think that the continued macroeconomic uncertainty may drive a wait and see conservative approach to capital expenditure. Hence, we might only see more clearly after the summer where and when demand is coming back. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:21:32At an industry level, the North American ag machinery market was already forecasted to reach cyclical trough levels in 2025, which implies that demand levels should not get much lower. However, lower farm income or restricted access to financing could drive demand lower or drag out the cycle recovery. We will reevaluate a narrow range of potential outcomes later this year. On the other hand, we may see a shift in commodity demand away from The U. S. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:22:02And towards other regions such as Brazil like we saw with Tariffs one point zero. We are uniquely positioned to benefit from that kind of shift because CNH is the most geographically balanced of the major ag OEMs. Beyond this global rebalancing of commodity trade and farm equipment supply, please allow me to stress that we are confident that the U. S. Administration will define a support package that is not just short term, but also provides mid to long term certainty for our farmers in the heartlands of The United States Of America. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:22:37With those considerations in mind, we wanted to walk you through two of the many possible scenarios that we may face as we frame how we are evolving our playbooks to manage through the market uncertainty. The full year 2025 guidance we issued last quarter obviously did not assume the significant global tariff implications that were announced on April 2 and the multiple reactions to them. On the far right of the slide, we outline the major assumptions of our upper end scenario. In that scenario, we assume that the current level of tariffs 25% on steel, 145% on China, Twenty Five Percent on Mexico and Canada for non USMCA compliant products and 10% on other countries will continue for the remainder of the year. We assume no further demand erosion on already very low projected levels. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:23:34The middle column outlines the lower end scenario, which assumes that once the ninety day pause is over, the full level of tariffs announced on April 2 will kick in, which might be too pessimistic in light of reports of progressing bilateral discussions between The U. S. And other governments on the subject. We have already we have also assumed that North America industry demand could fall another five percentage points to the lowest historic levels since the early 2000s. So as we move forward with our revised forecast for the year, keep these assumptions in mind for the upper end and the lower end. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:24:15They widen the range of outcomes, but hopefully, we have given you enough context to understand what is behind these ranges. We are not going into detail today on the portfolio of possible actions we are preparing to align CNH in a new reality. We will talk about those once the boundary conditions have stabilized and structural decisions are sensible to be taken. Now let's review our latest outlook for AG in 2025. Overall, we had expected the global industry demand to be down 5% to 10% from 2024. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:24:50With the additional risk in North America that I outlined before that could look like 10% to 15% down. We have widened the range of our sales forecast to account for additional pricing on one side, but also for potential industry demand drop on the other side. We've also widened our Ag EBIT margin forecast to between 79%, recognizing a partial absorption of the tariff impact to do right by our farmers and the potential that we may need to lower production even further, while staying on our path of inventory reductions and pricing discipline. In construction, the new impacts that we have reflected are very similar to ag. It is important to point out however that construction as an industry is more tied to GDP growth than agriculture. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:25:40We have widened the sales forecast range to down 4% to 15% and the EBIT margin range to 2% to 4% for 2025. We've had active discussions with potential strategic partners for our construction business. However, we have paused any decision on pathways until the current levels of uncertainty have settled and we get the full visibility on what lies ahead. Case constructions lineup at the recent Bauma Fair in Munich was very well received with new compact and large machines all equipped with digital functionalities and connected services. We feel very good about Case Construction's path ahead as we evolve its partnerships in this environment. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:26:26Putting the two industrial segments together, we forecast 2025 net sales to be 11% to 19% lower than 2024 with an industrial adjusted EBIT margin between 4.56.5%. We have taken the lower end of the free cash flow range a bit down, but we maintained the upper end on better working capital assumptions. So free cash flow is now forecasted to be between 100,000,000 to $500,000,000 in 2025, a definite positive recovery from 2024 when we took the swing in working capital on the back of deep production cuts by design. With the dispersion of potential tariff outcomes, we have widened the EPS forecast to between €0.50 and $0.07 0 Looking at our priorities for the remainder of the year. We are navigating the regional demand trends to ensure responsive to ongoing shifts in the market, especially as we are dealing with the rapidly changing trade environment. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:27:28Q2 production slots for both agriculture and construction are already full with orders and Q3 is more than 50% booked with most products with some products already completely sold out. We at CNH are staying focused on mission critical initiatives and not getting distracted by all the trade noise. Nothing about what is happening changes our long term trajectory. Rather, it is a near term obstacle that we will navigate. Our production levels will remain intentionally lower at least through the first half of the year as planned. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:28:03After this period of observing and adjusting, we will move into aligning our production for the second half in tandem with the realities of the trade impacts. We made total quality a part of our mindset, driving quality in everything that we do. We will continue to invest in our products and we continue to work on our manufacturing and sourcing efficiencies. You will see next week what we have in store as we evolve the mid cycle profitability of our company. At the Investor Day on May 8, our team will provide more insight into our product roadmap, precision technology, our go to market strategy and quality. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:28:45We are really excited about it and I hope that you are all planning to tune in. In conclusion, it's a difficult market today, but it's also something quite exciting. Change options and then decisively pursue map pathways. We are monitoring the demand indicators closely and the overall macro environment. With our balanced global exposure, CNH is well positioned to navigate the current market and additional policy shifts. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:29:15We remain committed to providing our farmers and builders with excellent quality products and services while continuing to improve and innovate our technology. That concludes our prepared remarks and we are ready for the Q and A. Operator00:29:31Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session of the call. And if you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star one again. To allow time for any for as many questions as possible, please limit yourself to one question, then return to the queue for any follow ups. If you are called upon to ask your question and are listening via loudspeaker on your device, The first question comes from the line of Angel Castillo with Morgan Stanley. Operator00:30:08Please go ahead. Angel CastilloExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:30:10Thanks and good morning everyone. Adana, I just wanted to wish you all the best. And Jim, also looking forward to working with you here at CNH as we did at MLM. With that, just a quick question. Wanted to dig in a little bit more on the tariffs. Angel CastilloExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:30:24Apologies if I missed this, Garrett, but just can you help us quantify exactly how much is kind of implied in terms of from an EPS perspective in terms of a headwind in kind of the low end and the high end? Another way of kind of saying like how much would be your EPS if you hadn't included any incremental for tariffs? Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:30:46Oduna here. Angela, I would say that most of I mean, all of the change in our guidance is due to the tariff scenarios, right? And we put there two scenarios because of the high level of uncertainty that we have here. So if you take the move of the midpoint, that is where we think that's the number that you need to take. And then depending on how things evolves, we will move on that range. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:31:17Profoundly nothing has changed except for the tariffs. And we have thoughtfully widened our guidance range to 200 basis points in order to account for the scenarios that we see ahead. And we'll need to see what this is going to clear up over the course of the summer. But I think as Sildonne said, it's also the move of the midpoint that we see as a possible impact from a certain tariff scenario. Operator00:31:44Your next question comes from the line of Tim Taine with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Tim TheinManaging Director & Research Analyst at Raymond James Financial00:31:50Hi. Thank you. Good morning. Maybe just from my one question, if we could drill down a bit into the production cost within the Ag business, the favorable, I think it was $39,000,000 Just thinking how you're thinking about the spend on related to within that, the spend related to quality. Believe the expectation coming into the year was for that warranty spend to still be a year over year headwind to the first half. Tim TheinManaging Director & Research Analyst at Raymond James Financial00:32:26I guess just how we're thinking about this cost outlook taking the tariff discussion albeit an important one out of the equation, just how we're thinking about that kind of component between quality spend and then just separately your outlook from our manufacturing costs? Thank you. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:32:48Yes, you're right. I mean, is still negative in the quarter, as we said in our prepared remarks. So we have a reduction in production costs, which includes a charge an additional charge or additional delta for last year for quality. We expect to revert that in the coming quarters because last year, particularly in the second part of the year, we spent additional dollars on quality, which we expect not to repeat this year because we have improved the quality of the products coming out of the plants and we have preventively cured some of the issues that we had. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:33:26Yes. And I think on the seasonality, we accelerated our accruals on quality in the second half of last year. So on a year on year basis year over year basis in the first quarter we are still on the quality side up. Yet I can already tell you that we are seeing a much better quality leaving our factories today and there is much more to go after with our global quality teams now being laser focused on making sure that what leaves our factories meets or exceeds customer expectations. So we are on a very good path here. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:34:00And as these quality accruals are trailing, we are still in Q1, we're still up year over year on that side. But despite that cost of production is lower. So we see a good potential here in the second half of the year and as we enter into 2026. Operator00:34:16Your Operator00:34:18next question comes from the line of Kristen Owen with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead. Kristen OwenManaging Director at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:34:23Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking the question. And regards to Adone, thank you for all the help over the years. Wanted to ask if you could elaborate, Garrett, on some of the prepared remarks that you made about the price adjustments and sharing some of the costs with your suppliers. If you could just elaborate on that and perhaps address longer term, I wanted to ask you about the efforts you've undertaken on the procurement program over the last couple of years and how the tariff landscape might impact that ongoing effort? Kristen OwenManaging Director at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:34:55Thank you. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:34:57Thank you for the question. So look the price adjustments we have implemented actually effective today May 1 are moderate and low single digit balancing what we already see to come our way with the run out of model year 2025 that is in production for the second and the third quarter. So this is a moderate adjustment and then we'll see what it means to make machines in the fourth quarter and that is predominantly then model year 2026 that will be shipped in Q4 and sold in Q4 and then starting from the beginning of twenty twenty six onwards. So that is a regular price adjustment on the back of let's say cost movements And this is well aligned with our network and we don't consider that to be a major issue. On the sharing with suppliers, I mean obviously we are working very actively with our supply base on the impacts from this tariff exposure from the exposure that is certain at this point, the 10% for everyone and obviously also the exposure on China and certain materials like steel. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:36:12But that is from our point of view pretty logical to approach suppliers and that is also common in the industry to approach suppliers to have a sharing of those cost increases as we are going through this phase of uncertainty, which will trigger a obviously resourcing and probably also most likely relocation of certain production facilities of suppliers into countries with more favorable tariff exposure including obviously The United States. So these types of discussions are ongoing. Such relocations will take time. And I think sharing such costs with our supply base keeps both of us pretty alerted to get it done quickly. So that is our mindset that we deploy at this point. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:36:57And you mentioned the strategic sourcing program, which comes together quite nicely. And you see these the early results of those wave one and wave two coming through in our production costs as I replied to in the first previous question. We are continuing that and we obviously have a very close look at those sources and origins of components that we consider to resource to get to a better cost position. And certain countries where the exposure is more elevated and higher obviously those countries and those sources are probably less favorable to be considered in our strategic sourcing program. So it has an immediate impact and the teams are super well prepared to take the right choice in between the various options that we have. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:37:47Because for every component that we resource or we have in the resourcing program, we have somewhere between four to six alternative suppliers from various different countries. So I think this tariff situation is going to impact decisions, but it's not going to slow us down by any way and doesn't deviate our attention to away from getting the best outcome at a better cost position for CNH. Operator00:38:16Your next question comes from the line of Tammy Zacario with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Tami ZakariaExecutive Director at JP Morgan00:38:22Hey, good morning and farewell to Donne. It was an honor to work with you. So question on the ag margin, I think I heard you say 1Q was going to be the low point. So if you could provide some color on how to think about the cadence of ag segment margin as the year progresses 2Q through 4Q? Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:38:47Yes. I mean, the first quarter is typically a low quarter. And this year, we took I mean, by design, we took production down significantly. We didn't produce that level of inventory and sales to our dealers that we typically do in the first quarter because we are assessing what demand is. And we as we discussed through our last year also we are assessing what is already available on the field. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:39:14The second quarter would still be relatively low. And then our expectation is to have a second half much more much better going back to the double digit profitability. Operator00:39:35Next question comes from the line of Carl Mingus with Citigroup. Please go ahead. Kyle MengesVice President - Equity Research Analyst at Citi00:39:42Thank you. Just following up on that question, how should we be thinking about earnings in the second quarter? Should we still be pretty confident in a seasonal step up in earnings from the first quarter to the second quarter despite tariff impacts? And then how should we be thinking about possible outcomes for EPS in the second half? And then just also more of a clarifying question on the price adjustments and when those might actually show up in the P and L just given production slots are full for the second quarter and 50% or so for the third quarter? Kyle MengesVice President - Equity Research Analyst at Citi00:40:17Does that basically price adjustments don't show up at all in the second quarter, then a little in the third and then more so in the fourth quarter? It would be helpful to hear how to think about that. Thank you. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:40:29Maybe let me start from the price adjustment. They will likely show up when the product with higher cost will come in. And those price adjustments are specific for North America, right? And they start today. So they will come they will flow through the P and L at the same time where higher costs will flow through the P and L. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:40:52And then we will have Gary talk about other price adjustments that we will have in the normal cycle at the end of the year for the model year 2026. Then of course on the P and L, you don't only have the lease price, but you also have the discounted incentives that we gave and we say that we have a higher level of incentives on the first we had a higher level of incentive on the first quarter. And we are and those are moderating in the coming quarter. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:41:24And let me build on the actually make allow me to make the link to the imperative to reduce inventories further over the course of the year. I mean, our machines have appreciated the price quite a bit and we keep increasing that net price in light of the current situation we're going through, but also the improved functionalities and the additional technology that we are engineering and loading into those machines. Given that these machines on average are getting more and more pricey obviously, we need to be as an industry and so are we be very, very cautious when it comes to dealer inventories because these numbers carry interest. And having our dealers at a low level of inventories is not only in itself, let's say healthy at times like these during times like these, but with increasing machine prices, I mean lower inventories on the dealer side are needed to lower the financial exposure for them on the interest side. So I think this is why we are convinced that the choice we made driving inventories down while making thoughtful interventions on the price side vis a vis the global scenario is the right choice, is the right trade off. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:42:38And we will keep adjusting that over the course of the year as we see clearer how this whole tariff exposure and global trade will unfold. So this is connected tariffs and or not tariffs, pricing of machines and inventory. Operator00:42:57Your next question comes from the line of Danielle Costa with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Daniela CostaManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:43:03Hi, good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. I actually wanted to ask on three, if possible at all, but they're quick. You commented extensively very helpful data on the tariffs and the impact on yourself. Wondering if you see your peers more or less similarly positioned or it's sort of are you at a disadvantage of or an advantage in certain pockets? Daniela CostaManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:43:26That's number one. I'll ask them one at a time. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:43:31Hi, Daniela. Well, look, we obviously have no insights into their real exposure of supply chain. So we don't know. So we can only look at where machines are made and from where they are shipped because that is public knowledge. So I think from a U. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:43:50S. Point of view, I think we are pretty we are more or less exposed similar to the larger competitor in The United States when it comes to these tariffs, while I think obviously being attached to the European production predominantly that is not exactly helpful at this point in time. However, the other side, the European market as we see it is going to enter a lower decline phase in 2025 and when we look at the early outs of 2026 than The United States. So being more exposed to European market might provide lower volatility in the very near term given the decline in The United States and large cash crop as we alluded to last time, which we see in the 30% minus range for large machines working in cash crop. We need to see by the way the harvesting segment in itself is slightly higher impacted than the tractor segment in itself. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:44:53So there are let's say different exposures if you split tractors versus combines and then you look at regions Europe versus U. S. But I consider this exposure to be pretty short term and that it will wash out certainly over the next twelve to eighteen months. But that is what I see at this point. We feel with our heavy machines, the big machines, the four wheel drives, the sprayers, the magnums, the combines all made in The United States for The United States, we feel very well positioned to keep track and be very close to our dealers and customers and farmers providing them world class equipment at competitive pricing. Operator00:45:40Our next question comes from the line of Mig Dobre with Baird. Please go ahead. Mircea DobreAssociate Director of Research & Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co00:45:46Thank you. Good morning and appreciate the helpful detail on tariffs. I guess the question that I'm looking to get at is your comment on dealer inventories. The $100,000,000 destock was encouraging. Where do you see dealer inventories currently? Mircea DobreAssociate Director of Research & Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co00:46:04Maybe globally, you can comment on that. And I'm curious as well on construction, not just on ag. At what point in time do you think you're going to be right sized given where current level of demand are? Thank you. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:46:19Thanks for the question. Look, we the way we look at it is always forward month sales. This is the indicator, so month of forward sales. And one impact big impact is also our projection of expected sales in the market that impacts that KPI. As per the prior call, we made an announcement that we are aiming at about €1,000,000,000 inventory reduction. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:46:45We clocked €100,000,000 now in the first quarter, as I mentioned, which is a great accomplishment by our network and team given that usually from a seasonality point of view the Q1 is up in inventory. So having a net minus 100 is as you said promising and quite encouraging. We'll continue to do to be on that path and we will continue to keep production levels low in the second quarter carefully observing how demand will evolve. We have not yet opened obviously our order books for the model year 2026, which we will do over summer. And then we will start filling Q4 production with the new model year. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:47:26And I think in this overall mix of pace on retail and a careful very careful view on production speed and capacity, we believe that we will definitely continue on this path in the second quarter and in the second half. Somewhere in the second half, we shall see our production pace in the line equal retail pace on a global level, yet this might look quite different by region. So as we mentioned before as well, I mean Brazil is now in the third year of a downturn. As we speak right now, there is the AgriShow hosted in Brazil. Our team is there super engaged showing the latest of our product innovations. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:48:14And we are engaging with farmers in Brazil as we speak right now even closer during the agri show. And what we hear is a positive sentiment about what might come, but this is not yet has not yet reached a level where it would trigger CapEx expenditures. So procurement of ag machines in Brazil have remained on a low level in the first quarter. Confidence levels are improving. And now it all comes down to what is going to be announced as, let's say finer in global trade over the course of the summer and before the end of the year in order to bring back the confidence to the Brazilian farmers. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:48:51And that should restart considerate equipment purchases in that region. And I think that is a market to come back. Europe, we need to see. In Europe, there are these ongoing discussions around, let's say, a piece in Ukraine and that would obviously also impact the commodity production in the country. Once there is certainty, I think the production levels will keep coming up. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:49:20And here this is a supply of commodities. We'll also need to see what will the summer bring in terms of deals, bilateral trade deals and how will also other nations like China ink their deals with Brazil even further. You know that soybeans imports to China predominantly coming already from Brazil to a very large extent. And I think if there was a further shift away from soybean imports from The U. S. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:49:51Into China, I think the only source for getting those in quantity is Brazil. However, production level is already quite high. So we might see there some interesting dynamics on that end in global trade and that will also drive our production decisions in the third and the fourth quarter by region. So but on a global level, I think we expect production pace to equal retail pace somewhere in the second quarter sorry second half, so somewhere in the second half with the second quarter still being on a similar trend like the first quarter by design. As I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we keep production levels at this level, which is quite painful, but it is needed. Operator00:50:42The next question comes from the line of Jamie Cook with Truist Securities. Please go ahead. Jamie CookManaging Director - Equity Research at Truist Securities00:50:48Hi, good morning. I guess my question, the dealer inventory color was helpful. Can you just speak to what you're seeing sort of by region on the pricing or the competitive landscape, whether that's gotten better? And then I guess just following on that, your commentary on tariffs, I'm wondering if that is could potentially help at all with dealer inventories, I. E. Jamie CookManaging Director - Equity Research at Truist Securities00:51:11They want to buy the equipment on the lot because they're worried about tariffs and to what degree that could help support used pricing? Thank you. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:51:19Well, I'll start from the second question. That is an effect you are describing that is called in several industries pre buy effect. So whether there's when there's something coming that would pick up demand for certain products and commodities. Mean, on low levels, again, low levels, we do see a good interest in our machines and a good retail pace, again, on low levels also in The United States. And here we I would not speak about a I wouldn't call it a pre buy effect. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:51:56I wouldn't call it a big wave. But I think there's a continued interest in the machines. And now that moderate price increases are coming and the model year '26 is entering production in the fourth quarter. I think there might be a certain helpful demand coming towards used machines and machines in the lot, but that isn't a major it is not a major thing at this point. So we are not seeing it yet unfolding to a great extent. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:52:30In terms of pricing and competition across the different regions, whether that something has changed. Well, look, we are we keep seeing good demand in regions like Australia, New Zealand, also in Europe. See on a low level, we're going to we see good pace, good interest and that gives us confidence in the strength of our sector vis a vis GDP and that people need to eat. Population is growing and our farmers need to produce even more efficiently the food for the world and the growing population. And with all of that including a shift, as I mentioned from a direct consumption if you will of commodity or carbon hydrate based products towards protein based and more animal protein based nutrition. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:53:24We see overall an even slight acceleration of commodity consumption given that it takes quite a bit of soybean and corn in order to grow animal protein. So there's an underlying shift and push in the direction of our industry in the long term. But at this very moment, I think we feel very competitive competitively positioned in all regions vis a vis our other market participants. Yet we have slight differences here and there depending on how we source and where we make machines. But again, I mean we all start now in Q2 to adjust pricing and with that we will see how markets will react and also how the market in terms of volume will evolve over the next, yes, two, three quarters. Operator00:54:18The next question comes from the line of David Grasso with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. David RasoSenior Managing Director & Partner at Evercore00:54:23Hi, thank you. Actually a little more just a clarification. When you're saying pricing is hitting today, is that on new orders or any shipments from today onward? Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:54:34When the price increase that has become effective today is on new customer and new obviously dealer orders. The customer orders that were placed prior to the announcement of the tariffs and prior to the effectiveness of the related increases in costs, those orders are protected and we are not changing prices where customers have given us their definite order before this before the change happened in April. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:55:07So we are having the impact the effectiveness of this price increase is in Q2 and is in Q3 on dealer orders and on new customer orders coming in. Operator00:55:21Our last question for today comes from the line of Avi Jaroslavitz with UBS. Please go ahead. Avi JaroslawiczEquity Research Associate at UBS Group00:55:27Hi. Good morning. Thanks, guys. Just of the finished products that you're importing from overseas, how are you handling the price adjustments there? Are you just taking the baseline tariff or whatever the effective tariff rate is for that country and applying that on a surcharge or on sticker price? Avi JaroslawiczEquity Research Associate at UBS Group00:55:46And also within that bucket of products, are there any products that you think it just doesn't make economic sense due to competitive factors to continue offering with the tariffs that we have in place today? Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:56:01All machines, equipment that we import to The U. S. Still makes very much sense to be imported and to be made. The 10% flat on everybody does not change that attractiveness of the product. And the machines that we are mid range tractors for example or light tractors that are coming from Europe, those machines we are not applying flat the percentage and then call it price. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:56:38What we're doing, we thoughtfully go obviously through the bill of material how these tariffs do apply to the various different aspects of the machine. We then thoughtfully go through the list of suppliers and the sources of supply seek for a reasonable sharing of those tariffs. And then the remainder is rolled up into a price increase on the machine, on the retail price, on the wholesale price and then eventually on the retail price here in The U. S. So that is how done. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:57:14But we also have a very thorough look at the inventory levels of those machines in the country. When you look at our when we talk about our inventory, dealer inventory levels being still €900,000,000 towards the end of the year, 900,000,000 too high versus the expectations that we had at that moment in time and those are confirmed for now. We have on the imported machines from Europe rather higher inventory levels than on the locally made machines, because the supply chain from Europe is obviously longer than from The U. S. So we have higher inventory levels on average when you look at mid range or smaller tractors across the board. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:57:57And that means we are very carefully observing how this tariff situation will evolve and we are pacing well imports from Europe to The U. S, accelerating the inventory reduction on the one side, but also avoiding stocking up on units at higher prices too early. So it's a it really goes machine by machine and we look at inventory levels where they are and how retail pace and retail interest for these machines materializes and that would drive, let's say, the orders from our North American team towards the European team when it comes to mid range and small range tractors. And so it's a more sophisticated than a line in an Excel sheet, but it's certainly it's carried out very thoughtfully by our teams in Europe and in The U. S. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:58:56Always with an eye on inventory levels. Operator00:59:02Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's question and answer session in today's conference call. We thank you for your participation today. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesGerrit MarxCEO & Head of AgricultureOddone IncisaCFOAnalystsJason OmerzaVP of Investor Relations at CNH IndustrialAngel CastilloExecutive Director at Morgan StanleyTim TheinManaging Director & Research Analyst at Raymond James FinancialKristen OwenManaging Director at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.Tami ZakariaExecutive Director at JP MorganKyle MengesVice President - Equity Research Analyst at CitiDaniela CostaManaging Director at Goldman SachsMircea DobreAssociate Director of Research & Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & CoJamie CookManaging Director - Equity Research at Truist SecuritiesDavid RasoSenior Managing Director & Partner at EvercoreAvi JaroslawiczEquity Research Associate at UBS GroupPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCNH GLOBAL N V Foreign Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipants Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K) CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign Earnings HeadlinesStockNews.com Initiates Coverage on CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign (NYSE:CNH)May 2 at 1:17 AM | americanbankingnews.comCNH Industrial N.V. (CNH) Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 1 at 2:13 PM | seekingalpha.comSilicon Valley Gold RushA new technology has sparked a modern-day gold rush in Silicon Valley. OpenAI’s Sam Altman invested $375M. Bill Gates has backed four companies in this space. The World Economic Forum calls it “the most exciting human discovery since fire.” Whitney Tilson believes this trend could mint a new class of wealthy investors—and he’s sharing one stock to watch now, for free.May 2, 2025 | Stansberry Research (Ad)CNH Industrial N.V. 2025 Q1 - Results - Earnings Call PresentationMay 1 at 1:28 PM | seekingalpha.comCNH Industrial NV Q1 2025 Earnings: EPS of $0.10 and Revenue of $3. ...May 1 at 7:15 AM | gurufocus.comCNH Industrial N.V. Reports First Quarter 2025 ResultsMay 1 at 6:40 AM | financialpost.comSee More CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About CNH GLOBAL N V ForeignCNH Industrial NV is an equipment and services company, which develops, manufactures and sells specialized machines and services for the farming and construction industries, and supplies replacement parts and accessories. It operates through the following operating segments: Agriculture, Construction, and Financial Services. The Agriculture segment designs, manufactures, and distributes a full line of farm machinery and implements, including two-wheel and four-wheel drive tractors, crawler tractors, combines, grape and sugar cane harvesters, hay and forage equipment, planting and seeding equipment, soil preparation and cultivation implements and material handling equipment. The Construction segment comprises of a full line of construction equipment including excavators, crawler dozers, graders, wheel loaders, backhoe loaders, skid steer loaders, and compact track loaders. The Financial Services segment offers retail note and lease financing to end-use customers for the purchase of new and used agricultural and construction equipment and components. The company was founded in 1866 and is headquartered in London, the United Kingdom.View CNH GLOBAL N V Foreign ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Amazon Earnings: 2 Reasons to Love It, 1 Reason to Be CautiousMeta Takes A Bow With Q1 Earnings - Watch For Tariff Impact in Q2Palantir Earnings: 1 Bullish Signal and 1 Area of ConcernMicrosoft Crushes Earnings, What’s Next for MSFT Stock?Qualcomm's Earnings: 2 Reasons to Buy, 1 to Stay AwayAMD Stock Signals Strong Buy Ahead of EarningsAmazon's Earnings Will Make or Break the Stock's Comeback Upcoming Earnings Palantir Technologies (5/5/2025)Vertex Pharmaceuticals (5/5/2025)CRH (5/5/2025)Realty Income (5/5/2025)Williams Companies (5/5/2025)American Electric Power (5/6/2025)Advanced Micro Devices (5/6/2025)Marriott International (5/6/2025)Constellation Energy (5/6/2025)Arista Networks (5/6/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the CNH twenty twenty five First Quarter Results Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Thank you. I will now turn the call over to Jason Amersa, Vice President of Investor Relations. Operator00:00:24Please go ahead. Jason OmerzaVP of Investor Relations at CNH Industrial00:00:27Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. We would like to welcome you to the webcast and conference call for CNH Industrial's first quarter results for the period ending 03/31/2025. This call is being broadcast live and is copyrighted by CNH. Any recording, transmission or other use of any portion of this broadcast without the express written consent of CNH is strictly prohibited. Hosting today's call are CNH CEO, Garrett Marks and CFO, Adone Enchiza. Jason OmerzaVP of Investor Relations at CNH Industrial00:00:55They will reference the material available for download from our website. Please note that any forward looking statements that we make during today's call are subject to the risks and uncertainties mentioned in the Safe Harbor statement included in the presentation material. Additional information pertaining to factors that could cause actual results to differ materially is contained in the company's most recent annual report on Form 10 ks as well as other periodic reports and filings with the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Jason OmerzaVP of Investor Relations at CNH Industrial00:01:24Our presentation includes certain non GAAP financial measures. Additional information including reconciliations to the most directly comparable U. S. GAAP financial measures is included in the presentation material. I will now turn the call over to Garrett. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:01:39Thank you, Jason, and good morning to everyone joining our call originating here from Oak Brook, Illinois. Before we begin, I want to address announcement that Odone will be stepping down from his role as Chief Financial Officer effective May 6 after more than five years as our CFO safely navigating our path during COVID and the subsequent global recovery of our exciting industry all the way to this very phase of our cyclical markets. On behalf of the Board and the entire company, I want to extend my sincere thanks to Odone for his outstanding leadership and unwavering dedication over his impressive twenty eight year career with CNH and related companies. He has been a key force in leading and growing our Financial Services business first and then in shaping our financial strategy. And I wish him all the best for his future endeavors. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:02:32We're also grateful that Odone is working closely with us to ensure a seamless transition with his successor Jim Nicholas, who joins us from Martin Marietta, a company that is a global leader in its space and shares some of our analyst coverage to Connected today. We are thrilled to welcome Jim to the team as CNH's incoming Chief Financial Officer. Jim brings a strong background of over thirty years of experience in corporate finance, M and A, tax, investment banking and business strategy. You will all get a chance to meet Jim in person and on stage when he presents at our Investor Day in New York next week alongside me and the other members of our global leadership team. With that, let's look at the first quarter results where we kept production very low to reduce inventories while defending our growing market shares. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:03:25So in line with expectations, our financial results came in at a low point. We are focused on what we can control while the industry demand remains soft and we do our homework on multiple commercial and operational fronts. Our ag dealers continue to make meaningful progress in reducing their inventory with another $100,000,000 reduction in the quarter or about $1,000,000,000 lower since Q1 twenty twenty four. Typically, we and our dealers in the Northern Hemisphere built up inventories in the first quarter in preparation for the spring selling season. So while this decrease may seem modest when compared to the larger reduction we saw in Q4, this is actually great progress and right in line with where we expect retail deliveries to be in the coming months, defending our strong market shares in key segments. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:04:20While some of the dealer inventory reductions, particularly the more aged and special purpose units were supported by additional incentives in the quarter, we remain disciplined in balancing price and costs particularly for our latest machines. Price cost was favorable even with ag pricing slightly lower year over year in the quarter as targeted and we expect to have better pricing comparisons in the second half, which depends on how the various factors governing our end markets will play out. Construction price cost was nearly even. We launched a great new automated spraying solution for farmers, Case IH SENSE Apply and New Holland IntelliSense using Vision technology from Augmenta, the startup we acquired in 2023. This Sense and Act technology offers great flexibility with a range of spraying application options. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:05:15And it is a very cost effective solution for farmers as it requires no annual subscriptions or pay acre fees, which drives efficiency and profitability using our world class iron and precision technology. Besides the addition of Jim as our new CFO, we also announced some other leadership changes. Luis Abreu as our Chief Information Officer Francesco Tutino as our Chief Human Resources Officer and Cameron Batten as our Chief Communications Officer. Welcome to the CNH team. Luis was promoted from our internal bench, while Francesco has returned to CNH just as I did almost a year ago. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:05:55Cameron joined us after growing roles in high-tech and automotive players and is supporting our internal external messaging as you will experience next week during our Investor Day. We remain relentlessly focused on driving operational excellence across the company, advancing cutting edge technologies and deepening the execution of our cost saving initiatives. We are looking forward to going into more detail during our Investor Day next week. We will review our mid cycle 02/1930 profitability targets with you well past the certainly relevant short term impacts from global uncertainties around tariffs and of course the cyclicality of our business. CNH is long term oriented and focused on what doing on doing the right thing regardless of what we might face in the near term. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:06:46We will always find the best choice that balances all stakeholder interests. The Q1 results reflect the expected and guided market headwinds and our decision to keep production low. I'm confident we are taking the right steps to navigate this period and position the business for the next cycle upturn and our long term success. Consolidated revenues for the first quarter were down 21% at $3,800,000,000 Industrial adjusted EBIT was $101,000,000 down 73% compared to last year and EPS for the quarter was $0.10 While some commodity prices have improved year over year, farm incomes remain depressed and relevant boundary conditions are quite uncertain, which leads to softness in equipment demand. The adjustments to our manufacturing cadence, while painful, are necessary to position us to weather the equipment demand downturn in a healthy way that balances our various priorities and they also provide an opportunity to improve and change our processes to come out stronger on the other side while our operations run at a slow pace. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:08:00As expected, retail demand was slow in the quarter. Our production hours were down 26% when compared to Q1 twenty twenty four with agriculture down 27% versus 2024 and construction down 19%. For context, Q1 twenty twenty five production hours were down 41% versus Q1 twenty twenty three with Ag down 43% and construction down 33%. Large ag was down 36% versus 2024 and fifty percent versus 2023. Small ag was down 12% versus 2020 four and twenty nine percent versus 2023. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:08:49We are working very closely with our dealer network and supporting them with marketing actions and to reciprocal exchange of information to achieve lower healthy inventory levels while preparing for a great fresh model year 2026 lineup to come very soon. By staying close to the dealer network and focusing on market shares, we are well positioned to reach our year end inventory targets. We are proud of the performance of our Financial Services segment that yielded sound results while facing the market slowdown and higher risk provisioning needs. This is an important strategic part of our business that provides our farmers and builders with access to competitive financing even when the macro environment becomes more uncertain and less stable. We are seeing once again the value of operating a captive financial services business in volatile times. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:09:45Later on, we will speak in greater detail about the current tariff discussions and actions. But let me say that we are obviously monitoring the situation very closely given the speed with which things are changing and we have the team and resources in place to respond and act swiftly. As prior moments of profound change and challenge in our industry have shown, there are some thoughtful actions that can be taken immediately, while other more structural changes will require more certainty and visibility. We act on both sides. Effective today and in alignment with our dealers, we implemented a modest price adjustment in North America for new orders while sharing the tariff cost impact with our supply base. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:10:32We have been and always will be committed to the North American home of our global brands and we see multiple ways to address the possible change of global trade, not only of commodities, but also of agriculture and construction equipment. Historically, the ag equipment end market has been more resilient than other industries in terms of GDP contraction, but the uncertainty is not helping an already depressed market. Facing those challenges head on, I'm very proud of our team for continuing to execute in an effective, thoughtful and calm way, keeping the long term picture and profound underlying drivers that define our business ecosystem in mind. With that, I will now turn the call over to Adonis to take us through the details of our financial results. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:11:19Thank you, Garik, and good morning, everyone. Before I dive in into prepared remarks, let me take a moment to express my gratitude to the colleagues and partners who have made the past twelve years on the CNH Global Executive team so meaningful. There's never a perfect time that Gerrit and I concur that this was the right moment for me to hand over my role as CNH has transformed into a focused U. S.-listed industrial company serving the demands of our farmers and builders. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:11:47It has been an Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:11:47honor to grow alongside such a special organization, and I'm proud of what we have accomplished together. Special thanks also to this very audience of analysts and investors. It has been a privilege working with you all. Last but not least, I'm very happy that with Jim, CNH has found an experienced, capable and trusted person to bring things forward. Now to the financials. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:12:11Fourth quarter Industrial net sales were down 23% year over year to just below $3,200,000,000 This decline was mainly due to lower shipment volumes given the weak demand environment and a reduced production in both industrial segments. Adjusted net income decreased by two thirds, also affected by a higher tax rate and lower Financial Services results, with adjusted diluted earnings per share down from $0.30 to $0.10 Q1 free cash flow for Industrial Activities was at $567,000,000 outflow in line with the working capital seasonality for the first quarter. The cash absorption is significantly better compared to Q1 of twenty twenty four, mainly due to a more contained growth of finished goods and component inventories. In agriculture, net sales decreased 23% in the quarter with lower shipment across all regions driven by lower industry demand and network destocking in 2025 compared to stocking in 2024. Q1 gross margin was 20%, down three eighty basis points year over year, driven mainly by the lower production volumes and unfavorable mix, partially offset by operational cost reductions. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:13:28Volume and mix were clearly the largest driver for our performance. As Garrett mentioned, pricing was slightly negative in the quarter as we increased our incentives for our dealers to retail age and use inventory. This was planned and full year pricing is forecast to be positive even before the moderate price adjustments that are effective as of today. Production costs were down more than pricing, keeping a positive price cost relationship, even though quality costs still have a negative impact in the year over year comparison, which we expect to reverse in the coming quarters. R and D and SG and A expenses for the quarter were lower than in Q1 twenty twenty four, reflecting the continuation of our efforts to contain cost in this environment. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:14:12We continue to see softness in the Turkish market, which is shown in lower JV results in the Other category. Adjusted EBIT margin for Agriculture was 5.4%, which we expect to be the lowest profitability for any quarter this year. Moving to Construction. Net sales for the first quarter were $591,000,000 down 22% year over year, driven by lower shipment volumes mostly in North America. Gross margin for the first quarter was 14.9%, down two fifty basis points compared to the first quarter of twenty twenty four, mostly driven by the lower volumes. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:14:51SG and A and R and D expenses were both favorable year over year and first quarter adjusted EBIT margin was 2.4%. On Financial Service, net income for the first quarter was $90,000,000 The year over year decrease was mainly driven by higher expected risk cost, higher taxes due to prior year one off adjustments in Argentina, partially offset by favorable volumes across all regions except EMEA. Retail originations in the first quarter were $2,400,000,000 slightly down, but flat on a constant currency basis, reflecting higher penetration rates in our lower equipment sales scenario. The managed portfolio ended the quarter at $28,000,000,000 It is worth noting that within the total portfolio balance, the wholesale portfolio, which represents dealer receivables, is down $1,500,000,000 of constant currencies since March 2024. The dealers have reduced their inventory, adapting to the changed market conditions. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:15:56Delinquencies are higher with continued pressure in South America, particularly in Brazil and growing delinquencies in North America. This is in line with what we expect while in a downturn and we are focusing our efforts on collections. Financial Services has its own predictable cycle in our industry. Moving to our capital allocation priorities, which remains unchanged and jumping directly to the shareholder returns. After the dividend proposal is approved at our Annual General Meeting of Shareholders on May 12, we expect to pay an annual dividend of $0.25 per share or over $300,000,000 We also expect the shareholders to reapprove and extend our standing share buyback authorization. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:16:40Before I turn it back to Garrett, I want to align how we source the machines that we sell in The U. S. To frame our exposure to the announced import tariffs. The bar across the top of the slide shows the 2024 breakdown in dollar terms of where machines sold in U. S. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:16:58Came from. About two thirds were manufactured in our U. S. Plants and about one third of the machines by value were imported from other countries. You can see the breakdown of those imports by origin on the right side of the slide. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:17:16The CNH supply chain footprint is designed to balance cost, center of product excellence, local content and proximity to our key markets. As you can see in the pie chart, last year, our U. S. Plants sourced 70% of their components from U. S. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:17:31Suppliers, with about an additional 10% coming from Mexico and Canada. We have been working with our suppliers to ensure that we have USMCA documentation for those parts. That leaves the remaining 20% of components sources mainly from Europe and China. Also keep in mind that U. S. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:17:48Plants export to other regions, mainly to APAC and EMEA. We are proud of the significant production and engineering capabilities in The U. S. And CNH is committed to continuing to further enhance those capabilities in a thoughtful balance as a global engineering production and sales company. With that, I will turn it back to Gareth. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:18:08Thank you, Adona, for that important context around the tariff exposure. To say that the past month evolving trade environment has been highly dynamic would be an understatement. But I've experienced that in CNH. We have the right teams and tools in place to turn challenges into opportunities to gain ground and claim our very own turf. We are actively engaged in robust scenario planning around the tariffs, while recognizing that long term decision making is difficult when the policies shift so rapidly. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:18:41But we are viewing the tariff impact through several lenses and understanding impacts on our business, our suppliers, our network partners, our farmers and our industry overall. A growing global population will have an even greater demand for not only commodities directly, but also indirectly through a shift towards more animal protein consumption. The mechanization and automation of our machines is imperative. And as the global number two player with a pronounced strength in harvesting, we are looking forward to those rising opportunities, particularly when the cycle turns again as it always does. When we look the impact to CNH, there are a few points to keep in mind. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:19:26We import planters from our factory in Saskatoon, Canada and they are fully USMCA compliant. We're also working on getting all the paperwork in place for the very small number of tractors that come from our joint venture in Mexico. Also 95% of steel directly purchased by our U. S. Plants come from American mills. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:19:50We are currently producing at very low levels in The U. S. Given the industry demand, so the immediate tariff impact isn't the same as if we were at the peak of the industry. We have said before that we will need to look at price adjustments to mitigate tariff impacts that can't otherwise be offset through sourcing or other mechanisms. We want to balance that with being mindful of our farmers and builders and the modest price adjustment on model year 2024 products sold in North America expected to have offset the net tariff impact after supplier actions. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:20:30Existing pre sold retail orders will not be affected. That will bridge us to our model year 2026 pricing later this year with which we expect as we regularly do to fully offset any net cost impact as we move into next year. Next, looking at the impact on our farmers. When tariffs one point zero were implemented in 2018, we did see some shift in demand for food and feed commodities, which depressed their prices. That could happen again. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:21:03Now U. S. Farmers do expect that if they are negatively impacted by the tariffs, there will be federal support payments to act as a buffer and that has kept farmer sentiment relatively stable in the past. However, we do think that the continued macroeconomic uncertainty may drive a wait and see conservative approach to capital expenditure. Hence, we might only see more clearly after the summer where and when demand is coming back. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:21:32At an industry level, the North American ag machinery market was already forecasted to reach cyclical trough levels in 2025, which implies that demand levels should not get much lower. However, lower farm income or restricted access to financing could drive demand lower or drag out the cycle recovery. We will reevaluate a narrow range of potential outcomes later this year. On the other hand, we may see a shift in commodity demand away from The U. S. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:22:02And towards other regions such as Brazil like we saw with Tariffs one point zero. We are uniquely positioned to benefit from that kind of shift because CNH is the most geographically balanced of the major ag OEMs. Beyond this global rebalancing of commodity trade and farm equipment supply, please allow me to stress that we are confident that the U. S. Administration will define a support package that is not just short term, but also provides mid to long term certainty for our farmers in the heartlands of The United States Of America. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:22:37With those considerations in mind, we wanted to walk you through two of the many possible scenarios that we may face as we frame how we are evolving our playbooks to manage through the market uncertainty. The full year 2025 guidance we issued last quarter obviously did not assume the significant global tariff implications that were announced on April 2 and the multiple reactions to them. On the far right of the slide, we outline the major assumptions of our upper end scenario. In that scenario, we assume that the current level of tariffs 25% on steel, 145% on China, Twenty Five Percent on Mexico and Canada for non USMCA compliant products and 10% on other countries will continue for the remainder of the year. We assume no further demand erosion on already very low projected levels. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:23:34The middle column outlines the lower end scenario, which assumes that once the ninety day pause is over, the full level of tariffs announced on April 2 will kick in, which might be too pessimistic in light of reports of progressing bilateral discussions between The U. S. And other governments on the subject. We have already we have also assumed that North America industry demand could fall another five percentage points to the lowest historic levels since the early 2000s. So as we move forward with our revised forecast for the year, keep these assumptions in mind for the upper end and the lower end. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:24:15They widen the range of outcomes, but hopefully, we have given you enough context to understand what is behind these ranges. We are not going into detail today on the portfolio of possible actions we are preparing to align CNH in a new reality. We will talk about those once the boundary conditions have stabilized and structural decisions are sensible to be taken. Now let's review our latest outlook for AG in 2025. Overall, we had expected the global industry demand to be down 5% to 10% from 2024. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:24:50With the additional risk in North America that I outlined before that could look like 10% to 15% down. We have widened the range of our sales forecast to account for additional pricing on one side, but also for potential industry demand drop on the other side. We've also widened our Ag EBIT margin forecast to between 79%, recognizing a partial absorption of the tariff impact to do right by our farmers and the potential that we may need to lower production even further, while staying on our path of inventory reductions and pricing discipline. In construction, the new impacts that we have reflected are very similar to ag. It is important to point out however that construction as an industry is more tied to GDP growth than agriculture. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:25:40We have widened the sales forecast range to down 4% to 15% and the EBIT margin range to 2% to 4% for 2025. We've had active discussions with potential strategic partners for our construction business. However, we have paused any decision on pathways until the current levels of uncertainty have settled and we get the full visibility on what lies ahead. Case constructions lineup at the recent Bauma Fair in Munich was very well received with new compact and large machines all equipped with digital functionalities and connected services. We feel very good about Case Construction's path ahead as we evolve its partnerships in this environment. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:26:26Putting the two industrial segments together, we forecast 2025 net sales to be 11% to 19% lower than 2024 with an industrial adjusted EBIT margin between 4.56.5%. We have taken the lower end of the free cash flow range a bit down, but we maintained the upper end on better working capital assumptions. So free cash flow is now forecasted to be between 100,000,000 to $500,000,000 in 2025, a definite positive recovery from 2024 when we took the swing in working capital on the back of deep production cuts by design. With the dispersion of potential tariff outcomes, we have widened the EPS forecast to between €0.50 and $0.07 0 Looking at our priorities for the remainder of the year. We are navigating the regional demand trends to ensure responsive to ongoing shifts in the market, especially as we are dealing with the rapidly changing trade environment. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:27:28Q2 production slots for both agriculture and construction are already full with orders and Q3 is more than 50% booked with most products with some products already completely sold out. We at CNH are staying focused on mission critical initiatives and not getting distracted by all the trade noise. Nothing about what is happening changes our long term trajectory. Rather, it is a near term obstacle that we will navigate. Our production levels will remain intentionally lower at least through the first half of the year as planned. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:28:03After this period of observing and adjusting, we will move into aligning our production for the second half in tandem with the realities of the trade impacts. We made total quality a part of our mindset, driving quality in everything that we do. We will continue to invest in our products and we continue to work on our manufacturing and sourcing efficiencies. You will see next week what we have in store as we evolve the mid cycle profitability of our company. At the Investor Day on May 8, our team will provide more insight into our product roadmap, precision technology, our go to market strategy and quality. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:28:45We are really excited about it and I hope that you are all planning to tune in. In conclusion, it's a difficult market today, but it's also something quite exciting. Change options and then decisively pursue map pathways. We are monitoring the demand indicators closely and the overall macro environment. With our balanced global exposure, CNH is well positioned to navigate the current market and additional policy shifts. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:29:15We remain committed to providing our farmers and builders with excellent quality products and services while continuing to improve and innovate our technology. That concludes our prepared remarks and we are ready for the Q and A. Operator00:29:31Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session of the call. And if you would like to withdraw your question, simply press star one again. To allow time for any for as many questions as possible, please limit yourself to one question, then return to the queue for any follow ups. If you are called upon to ask your question and are listening via loudspeaker on your device, The first question comes from the line of Angel Castillo with Morgan Stanley. Operator00:30:08Please go ahead. Angel CastilloExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:30:10Thanks and good morning everyone. Adana, I just wanted to wish you all the best. And Jim, also looking forward to working with you here at CNH as we did at MLM. With that, just a quick question. Wanted to dig in a little bit more on the tariffs. Angel CastilloExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:30:24Apologies if I missed this, Garrett, but just can you help us quantify exactly how much is kind of implied in terms of from an EPS perspective in terms of a headwind in kind of the low end and the high end? Another way of kind of saying like how much would be your EPS if you hadn't included any incremental for tariffs? Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:30:46Oduna here. Angela, I would say that most of I mean, all of the change in our guidance is due to the tariff scenarios, right? And we put there two scenarios because of the high level of uncertainty that we have here. So if you take the move of the midpoint, that is where we think that's the number that you need to take. And then depending on how things evolves, we will move on that range. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:31:17Profoundly nothing has changed except for the tariffs. And we have thoughtfully widened our guidance range to 200 basis points in order to account for the scenarios that we see ahead. And we'll need to see what this is going to clear up over the course of the summer. But I think as Sildonne said, it's also the move of the midpoint that we see as a possible impact from a certain tariff scenario. Operator00:31:44Your next question comes from the line of Tim Taine with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Tim TheinManaging Director & Research Analyst at Raymond James Financial00:31:50Hi. Thank you. Good morning. Maybe just from my one question, if we could drill down a bit into the production cost within the Ag business, the favorable, I think it was $39,000,000 Just thinking how you're thinking about the spend on related to within that, the spend related to quality. Believe the expectation coming into the year was for that warranty spend to still be a year over year headwind to the first half. Tim TheinManaging Director & Research Analyst at Raymond James Financial00:32:26I guess just how we're thinking about this cost outlook taking the tariff discussion albeit an important one out of the equation, just how we're thinking about that kind of component between quality spend and then just separately your outlook from our manufacturing costs? Thank you. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:32:48Yes, you're right. I mean, is still negative in the quarter, as we said in our prepared remarks. So we have a reduction in production costs, which includes a charge an additional charge or additional delta for last year for quality. We expect to revert that in the coming quarters because last year, particularly in the second part of the year, we spent additional dollars on quality, which we expect not to repeat this year because we have improved the quality of the products coming out of the plants and we have preventively cured some of the issues that we had. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:33:26Yes. And I think on the seasonality, we accelerated our accruals on quality in the second half of last year. So on a year on year basis year over year basis in the first quarter we are still on the quality side up. Yet I can already tell you that we are seeing a much better quality leaving our factories today and there is much more to go after with our global quality teams now being laser focused on making sure that what leaves our factories meets or exceeds customer expectations. So we are on a very good path here. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:34:00And as these quality accruals are trailing, we are still in Q1, we're still up year over year on that side. But despite that cost of production is lower. So we see a good potential here in the second half of the year and as we enter into 2026. Operator00:34:16Your Operator00:34:18next question comes from the line of Kristen Owen with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead. Kristen OwenManaging Director at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:34:23Hi, good morning. Thank you for taking the question. And regards to Adone, thank you for all the help over the years. Wanted to ask if you could elaborate, Garrett, on some of the prepared remarks that you made about the price adjustments and sharing some of the costs with your suppliers. If you could just elaborate on that and perhaps address longer term, I wanted to ask you about the efforts you've undertaken on the procurement program over the last couple of years and how the tariff landscape might impact that ongoing effort? Kristen OwenManaging Director at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.00:34:55Thank you. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:34:57Thank you for the question. So look the price adjustments we have implemented actually effective today May 1 are moderate and low single digit balancing what we already see to come our way with the run out of model year 2025 that is in production for the second and the third quarter. So this is a moderate adjustment and then we'll see what it means to make machines in the fourth quarter and that is predominantly then model year 2026 that will be shipped in Q4 and sold in Q4 and then starting from the beginning of twenty twenty six onwards. So that is a regular price adjustment on the back of let's say cost movements And this is well aligned with our network and we don't consider that to be a major issue. On the sharing with suppliers, I mean obviously we are working very actively with our supply base on the impacts from this tariff exposure from the exposure that is certain at this point, the 10% for everyone and obviously also the exposure on China and certain materials like steel. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:36:12But that is from our point of view pretty logical to approach suppliers and that is also common in the industry to approach suppliers to have a sharing of those cost increases as we are going through this phase of uncertainty, which will trigger a obviously resourcing and probably also most likely relocation of certain production facilities of suppliers into countries with more favorable tariff exposure including obviously The United States. So these types of discussions are ongoing. Such relocations will take time. And I think sharing such costs with our supply base keeps both of us pretty alerted to get it done quickly. So that is our mindset that we deploy at this point. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:36:57And you mentioned the strategic sourcing program, which comes together quite nicely. And you see these the early results of those wave one and wave two coming through in our production costs as I replied to in the first previous question. We are continuing that and we obviously have a very close look at those sources and origins of components that we consider to resource to get to a better cost position. And certain countries where the exposure is more elevated and higher obviously those countries and those sources are probably less favorable to be considered in our strategic sourcing program. So it has an immediate impact and the teams are super well prepared to take the right choice in between the various options that we have. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:37:47Because for every component that we resource or we have in the resourcing program, we have somewhere between four to six alternative suppliers from various different countries. So I think this tariff situation is going to impact decisions, but it's not going to slow us down by any way and doesn't deviate our attention to away from getting the best outcome at a better cost position for CNH. Operator00:38:16Your next question comes from the line of Tammy Zacario with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Tami ZakariaExecutive Director at JP Morgan00:38:22Hey, good morning and farewell to Donne. It was an honor to work with you. So question on the ag margin, I think I heard you say 1Q was going to be the low point. So if you could provide some color on how to think about the cadence of ag segment margin as the year progresses 2Q through 4Q? Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:38:47Yes. I mean, the first quarter is typically a low quarter. And this year, we took I mean, by design, we took production down significantly. We didn't produce that level of inventory and sales to our dealers that we typically do in the first quarter because we are assessing what demand is. And we as we discussed through our last year also we are assessing what is already available on the field. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:39:14The second quarter would still be relatively low. And then our expectation is to have a second half much more much better going back to the double digit profitability. Operator00:39:35Next question comes from the line of Carl Mingus with Citigroup. Please go ahead. Kyle MengesVice President - Equity Research Analyst at Citi00:39:42Thank you. Just following up on that question, how should we be thinking about earnings in the second quarter? Should we still be pretty confident in a seasonal step up in earnings from the first quarter to the second quarter despite tariff impacts? And then how should we be thinking about possible outcomes for EPS in the second half? And then just also more of a clarifying question on the price adjustments and when those might actually show up in the P and L just given production slots are full for the second quarter and 50% or so for the third quarter? Kyle MengesVice President - Equity Research Analyst at Citi00:40:17Does that basically price adjustments don't show up at all in the second quarter, then a little in the third and then more so in the fourth quarter? It would be helpful to hear how to think about that. Thank you. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:40:29Maybe let me start from the price adjustment. They will likely show up when the product with higher cost will come in. And those price adjustments are specific for North America, right? And they start today. So they will come they will flow through the P and L at the same time where higher costs will flow through the P and L. Oddone IncisaCFO at CNH Industrial00:40:52And then we will have Gary talk about other price adjustments that we will have in the normal cycle at the end of the year for the model year 2026. Then of course on the P and L, you don't only have the lease price, but you also have the discounted incentives that we gave and we say that we have a higher level of incentives on the first we had a higher level of incentive on the first quarter. And we are and those are moderating in the coming quarter. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:41:24And let me build on the actually make allow me to make the link to the imperative to reduce inventories further over the course of the year. I mean, our machines have appreciated the price quite a bit and we keep increasing that net price in light of the current situation we're going through, but also the improved functionalities and the additional technology that we are engineering and loading into those machines. Given that these machines on average are getting more and more pricey obviously, we need to be as an industry and so are we be very, very cautious when it comes to dealer inventories because these numbers carry interest. And having our dealers at a low level of inventories is not only in itself, let's say healthy at times like these during times like these, but with increasing machine prices, I mean lower inventories on the dealer side are needed to lower the financial exposure for them on the interest side. So I think this is why we are convinced that the choice we made driving inventories down while making thoughtful interventions on the price side vis a vis the global scenario is the right choice, is the right trade off. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:42:38And we will keep adjusting that over the course of the year as we see clearer how this whole tariff exposure and global trade will unfold. So this is connected tariffs and or not tariffs, pricing of machines and inventory. Operator00:42:57Your next question comes from the line of Danielle Costa with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Daniela CostaManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:43:03Hi, good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. I actually wanted to ask on three, if possible at all, but they're quick. You commented extensively very helpful data on the tariffs and the impact on yourself. Wondering if you see your peers more or less similarly positioned or it's sort of are you at a disadvantage of or an advantage in certain pockets? Daniela CostaManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:43:26That's number one. I'll ask them one at a time. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:43:31Hi, Daniela. Well, look, we obviously have no insights into their real exposure of supply chain. So we don't know. So we can only look at where machines are made and from where they are shipped because that is public knowledge. So I think from a U. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:43:50S. Point of view, I think we are pretty we are more or less exposed similar to the larger competitor in The United States when it comes to these tariffs, while I think obviously being attached to the European production predominantly that is not exactly helpful at this point in time. However, the other side, the European market as we see it is going to enter a lower decline phase in 2025 and when we look at the early outs of 2026 than The United States. So being more exposed to European market might provide lower volatility in the very near term given the decline in The United States and large cash crop as we alluded to last time, which we see in the 30% minus range for large machines working in cash crop. We need to see by the way the harvesting segment in itself is slightly higher impacted than the tractor segment in itself. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:44:53So there are let's say different exposures if you split tractors versus combines and then you look at regions Europe versus U. S. But I consider this exposure to be pretty short term and that it will wash out certainly over the next twelve to eighteen months. But that is what I see at this point. We feel with our heavy machines, the big machines, the four wheel drives, the sprayers, the magnums, the combines all made in The United States for The United States, we feel very well positioned to keep track and be very close to our dealers and customers and farmers providing them world class equipment at competitive pricing. Operator00:45:40Our next question comes from the line of Mig Dobre with Baird. Please go ahead. Mircea DobreAssociate Director of Research & Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co00:45:46Thank you. Good morning and appreciate the helpful detail on tariffs. I guess the question that I'm looking to get at is your comment on dealer inventories. The $100,000,000 destock was encouraging. Where do you see dealer inventories currently? Mircea DobreAssociate Director of Research & Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & Co00:46:04Maybe globally, you can comment on that. And I'm curious as well on construction, not just on ag. At what point in time do you think you're going to be right sized given where current level of demand are? Thank you. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:46:19Thanks for the question. Look, we the way we look at it is always forward month sales. This is the indicator, so month of forward sales. And one impact big impact is also our projection of expected sales in the market that impacts that KPI. As per the prior call, we made an announcement that we are aiming at about €1,000,000,000 inventory reduction. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:46:45We clocked €100,000,000 now in the first quarter, as I mentioned, which is a great accomplishment by our network and team given that usually from a seasonality point of view the Q1 is up in inventory. So having a net minus 100 is as you said promising and quite encouraging. We'll continue to do to be on that path and we will continue to keep production levels low in the second quarter carefully observing how demand will evolve. We have not yet opened obviously our order books for the model year 2026, which we will do over summer. And then we will start filling Q4 production with the new model year. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:47:26And I think in this overall mix of pace on retail and a careful very careful view on production speed and capacity, we believe that we will definitely continue on this path in the second quarter and in the second half. Somewhere in the second half, we shall see our production pace in the line equal retail pace on a global level, yet this might look quite different by region. So as we mentioned before as well, I mean Brazil is now in the third year of a downturn. As we speak right now, there is the AgriShow hosted in Brazil. Our team is there super engaged showing the latest of our product innovations. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:48:14And we are engaging with farmers in Brazil as we speak right now even closer during the agri show. And what we hear is a positive sentiment about what might come, but this is not yet has not yet reached a level where it would trigger CapEx expenditures. So procurement of ag machines in Brazil have remained on a low level in the first quarter. Confidence levels are improving. And now it all comes down to what is going to be announced as, let's say finer in global trade over the course of the summer and before the end of the year in order to bring back the confidence to the Brazilian farmers. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:48:51And that should restart considerate equipment purchases in that region. And I think that is a market to come back. Europe, we need to see. In Europe, there are these ongoing discussions around, let's say, a piece in Ukraine and that would obviously also impact the commodity production in the country. Once there is certainty, I think the production levels will keep coming up. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:49:20And here this is a supply of commodities. We'll also need to see what will the summer bring in terms of deals, bilateral trade deals and how will also other nations like China ink their deals with Brazil even further. You know that soybeans imports to China predominantly coming already from Brazil to a very large extent. And I think if there was a further shift away from soybean imports from The U. S. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:49:51Into China, I think the only source for getting those in quantity is Brazil. However, production level is already quite high. So we might see there some interesting dynamics on that end in global trade and that will also drive our production decisions in the third and the fourth quarter by region. So but on a global level, I think we expect production pace to equal retail pace somewhere in the second quarter sorry second half, so somewhere in the second half with the second quarter still being on a similar trend like the first quarter by design. As I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we keep production levels at this level, which is quite painful, but it is needed. Operator00:50:42The next question comes from the line of Jamie Cook with Truist Securities. Please go ahead. Jamie CookManaging Director - Equity Research at Truist Securities00:50:48Hi, good morning. I guess my question, the dealer inventory color was helpful. Can you just speak to what you're seeing sort of by region on the pricing or the competitive landscape, whether that's gotten better? And then I guess just following on that, your commentary on tariffs, I'm wondering if that is could potentially help at all with dealer inventories, I. E. Jamie CookManaging Director - Equity Research at Truist Securities00:51:11They want to buy the equipment on the lot because they're worried about tariffs and to what degree that could help support used pricing? Thank you. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:51:19Well, I'll start from the second question. That is an effect you are describing that is called in several industries pre buy effect. So whether there's when there's something coming that would pick up demand for certain products and commodities. Mean, on low levels, again, low levels, we do see a good interest in our machines and a good retail pace, again, on low levels also in The United States. And here we I would not speak about a I wouldn't call it a pre buy effect. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:51:56I wouldn't call it a big wave. But I think there's a continued interest in the machines. And now that moderate price increases are coming and the model year '26 is entering production in the fourth quarter. I think there might be a certain helpful demand coming towards used machines and machines in the lot, but that isn't a major it is not a major thing at this point. So we are not seeing it yet unfolding to a great extent. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:52:30In terms of pricing and competition across the different regions, whether that something has changed. Well, look, we are we keep seeing good demand in regions like Australia, New Zealand, also in Europe. See on a low level, we're going to we see good pace, good interest and that gives us confidence in the strength of our sector vis a vis GDP and that people need to eat. Population is growing and our farmers need to produce even more efficiently the food for the world and the growing population. And with all of that including a shift, as I mentioned from a direct consumption if you will of commodity or carbon hydrate based products towards protein based and more animal protein based nutrition. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:53:24We see overall an even slight acceleration of commodity consumption given that it takes quite a bit of soybean and corn in order to grow animal protein. So there's an underlying shift and push in the direction of our industry in the long term. But at this very moment, I think we feel very competitive competitively positioned in all regions vis a vis our other market participants. Yet we have slight differences here and there depending on how we source and where we make machines. But again, I mean we all start now in Q2 to adjust pricing and with that we will see how markets will react and also how the market in terms of volume will evolve over the next, yes, two, three quarters. Operator00:54:18The next question comes from the line of David Grasso with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. David RasoSenior Managing Director & Partner at Evercore00:54:23Hi, thank you. Actually a little more just a clarification. When you're saying pricing is hitting today, is that on new orders or any shipments from today onward? Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:54:34When the price increase that has become effective today is on new customer and new obviously dealer orders. The customer orders that were placed prior to the announcement of the tariffs and prior to the effectiveness of the related increases in costs, those orders are protected and we are not changing prices where customers have given us their definite order before this before the change happened in April. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:55:07So we are having the impact the effectiveness of this price increase is in Q2 and is in Q3 on dealer orders and on new customer orders coming in. Operator00:55:21Our last question for today comes from the line of Avi Jaroslavitz with UBS. Please go ahead. Avi JaroslawiczEquity Research Associate at UBS Group00:55:27Hi. Good morning. Thanks, guys. Just of the finished products that you're importing from overseas, how are you handling the price adjustments there? Are you just taking the baseline tariff or whatever the effective tariff rate is for that country and applying that on a surcharge or on sticker price? Avi JaroslawiczEquity Research Associate at UBS Group00:55:46And also within that bucket of products, are there any products that you think it just doesn't make economic sense due to competitive factors to continue offering with the tariffs that we have in place today? Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:56:01All machines, equipment that we import to The U. S. Still makes very much sense to be imported and to be made. The 10% flat on everybody does not change that attractiveness of the product. And the machines that we are mid range tractors for example or light tractors that are coming from Europe, those machines we are not applying flat the percentage and then call it price. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:56:38What we're doing, we thoughtfully go obviously through the bill of material how these tariffs do apply to the various different aspects of the machine. We then thoughtfully go through the list of suppliers and the sources of supply seek for a reasonable sharing of those tariffs. And then the remainder is rolled up into a price increase on the machine, on the retail price, on the wholesale price and then eventually on the retail price here in The U. S. So that is how done. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:57:14But we also have a very thorough look at the inventory levels of those machines in the country. When you look at our when we talk about our inventory, dealer inventory levels being still €900,000,000 towards the end of the year, 900,000,000 too high versus the expectations that we had at that moment in time and those are confirmed for now. We have on the imported machines from Europe rather higher inventory levels than on the locally made machines, because the supply chain from Europe is obviously longer than from The U. S. So we have higher inventory levels on average when you look at mid range or smaller tractors across the board. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:57:57And that means we are very carefully observing how this tariff situation will evolve and we are pacing well imports from Europe to The U. S, accelerating the inventory reduction on the one side, but also avoiding stocking up on units at higher prices too early. So it's a it really goes machine by machine and we look at inventory levels where they are and how retail pace and retail interest for these machines materializes and that would drive, let's say, the orders from our North American team towards the European team when it comes to mid range and small range tractors. And so it's a more sophisticated than a line in an Excel sheet, but it's certainly it's carried out very thoughtfully by our teams in Europe and in The U. S. Gerrit MarxCEO & Head of Agriculture at CNH Industrial00:58:56Always with an eye on inventory levels. Operator00:59:02Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's question and answer session in today's conference call. We thank you for your participation today. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesGerrit MarxCEO & Head of AgricultureOddone IncisaCFOAnalystsJason OmerzaVP of Investor Relations at CNH IndustrialAngel CastilloExecutive Director at Morgan StanleyTim TheinManaging Director & Research Analyst at Raymond James FinancialKristen OwenManaging Director at Oppenheimer & Co. Inc.Tami ZakariaExecutive Director at JP MorganKyle MengesVice President - Equity Research Analyst at CitiDaniela CostaManaging Director at Goldman SachsMircea DobreAssociate Director of Research & Senior Research Analyst at Robert W. Baird & CoJamie CookManaging Director - Equity Research at Truist SecuritiesDavid RasoSenior Managing Director & Partner at EvercoreAvi JaroslawiczEquity Research Associate at UBS GroupPowered by