NYSE:ETN Eaton Q1 2026 Earnings Report $374.58 -7.30 (-1.91%) As of 02:02 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Eaton EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.81Consensus EPS $2.73Beat/MissBeat by +$0.08One Year Ago EPS$2.72Eaton Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$7.45 billionExpected Revenue$7.14 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$307.26 millionYoY Revenue Growth+16.80%Eaton Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/5/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, May 5, 2026Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsEaton's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, August 4, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled at 11:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Eaton Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 5, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Record demand and backlog: Rolling 12‑month orders accelerated across businesses (Electrical Americas +42%, Aerospace +13%), data center orders were up ~240%, and combined book‑to‑bill rose to 1.2, giving multi‑quarter revenue visibility. Positive Sentiment: Strong Q1 financials and raised guidance: Eaton reported record Q1 revenue of $7.5B, segment profit of $1.7B, an adjusted EPS beat ($2.81), and raised 2026 organic growth to a 10% midpoint and EPS midpoint to $13.28. Positive Sentiment: Boyd Thermal acquisition strengthens data‑center offering: The deal adds liquid‑cooling and white‑space capabilities (Boyd Q1 >100% YoY; backlog doubled), with cooling expected to hit ~$1.7B revenue in 2026 (≈$1.4B reported to Eaton), expanding Eaton’s grid‑to‑chip solution set. Negative Sentiment: Electrical Americas margin pressure: Q1 margins lagged due to higher input costs and front‑loaded ramp costs; the company trimmed segment margin guidance by ~50 bps and called the hit temporary but near‑term profit recovery depends on pricing and utilization gains. Neutral Sentiment: Cash flow and leadership focus: Free cash flow jumped ~245% YoY, Dave Foster returned as CFO and emphasized integration of acquisitions (Boyd, Ultra PCS, Fibrebond) and the planned mobility spin, reinforcing execution priorities that underpin the outlook. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallEaton Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by, and welcome to Eaton's first quarter 2026 earnings results conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during this session, you'll need to press star one one on your telephone. If your question has been answered and you'd like to remove yourself from the queue, simply press star one one again. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question each. You may get back in the queue as time allows. As a reminder, today's program is being recorded. Now I'd like to introduce your host for today's program, Yan Jin, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir. Yan JinSVP of Investor Relations at Eaton00:00:43Hey, good morning. Thank you all for joining us for Eaton first quarter 2026 earnings call. With me today are Paulo Ruiz, Chief Executive Officer, and Dave Foster, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Our agenda today including opening remarks by Paulo, then we'll turn it over to Dave, who will highlight the company's performance in the first quarter. As we have done on our past calls, we'll be taking questions at the end of Paulo's closing commentary. The press release and the presentation we'll go through today, including reconciliations to non-GAAP measures, have been posted on our website. A replay of this webcast will be accessible on our website after the call. Before we begin, I would like to note that our comments today will include forward-looking statements with respect to sales, earnings, and other matters. Yan JinSVP of Investor Relations at Eaton00:01:33Our actual results may differ materially from our forecasted projections due to a wide range of risks and uncertainties that are described in our recent SEC filings. With that, I will turn it over to Paulo. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:01:47Thanks, Yan, and thanks everyone for joining us. Starting on page three, I'm happy to report we have delivered solid results to start the year. From a demand perspective, we continue to see tremendous strength. Rolling 12-month orders are up in all businesses, 42% in Electrical Americas and 13% in both Electrical Global and Aerospace. We are winning business at unprecedented rates, resulting in our backlogs hitting a new record high in both Electrical and Aerospace, with book-to-bill increasing to 1.2 combined on a rolling 12-month basis and even stronger than that year-over-year. Our accelerating orders, driven by data center orders up 240%, prove continued strong demand and our winning value proposition as an end-to-end solutions provider. Overall, the businesses are executing nicely to start the year. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:02:49We posted record revenue of $7.5 billion, along with Q1 record segment profit of $1.7 billion and margins of 22.7%. We are pleased to beat our adjusted EPS guide and consensus. All the beat was operational. We delivered strong total revenue growth of 17% and higher margins than anticipated. We are executing well on our deals to boost growth. We closed Ultra PCS in January and Boyd Thermal in March, both ahead of schedule. Our partnerships with NVIDIA resulted in a complete solution for their generation of chips, Vera Rubin. Thanks to our teams for the strong work as we keep shaping our portfolio. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:03:40As we look toward the rest of the year with an unprecedented demand backdrop, we raised our organic growth outlook by 200 basis points to a midpoint of 10% and also raised our adjusted EPS midpoint expectations to now $13.28 for the year, which covers the EPS dilution from the Boyd acquisition. Another important update, on March 2nd, we announced Dave Foster as CFO. We are thrilled to have you back, Dave, and he has 29 years career with Eaton, which brings deep understanding of our business and markets, as well as a proven ability to drive performance. Dave and I will dive into Q1 and the 2026 outlook. First, let's move to slide four. We continue to drive Eaton forward with our bold strategy to lead, invest, and execute for growth. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:04:41All three pillars are designed to accelerate our growth and create sustained value for shareholders. Today, we'll discuss how we are executing for growth in Electrical Americas, investing for growth, including the Boyd Thermal acquisition, and leading for growth with a customer-centric approach. Slide five includes an update on how we are executing for growth in Electrical Americas. Demand remains incredibly robust. We are winning like never before, and the order and the backlog growth supports that. Meanwhile, we're accelerating our production ramp in the Americas to meet demand. The investments we are making, over $1 billion in CapEx, are at record scale for us, but well within our capability to navigate. Most importantly, we are on track as planned and feel confident on our path forward, given our strong position in growing markets and proven track record of solid execution at Eaton. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:05:43Americas recovered well from a tough January and February with impacts from the winter storms in our facilities and across the supply chain. Our team recovered well in March. April was another strong month. From both sales and margin perspective, Q1 will be the trough as mentioned in our last earnings call in February. We expect progress as we enter Q2 and momentum Q3 and Q4, which will set up the business to meet or exceed our margin target of 32% by 2030. Turning to page six in our investing for growth strategic pillar, where we are doubling down on high growth, high margin markets to capitalize on once in a lifetime opportunities. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:06:32We've taken bold portfolio actions in the last one year, including the successful integration of Fibrebond, which enhances our modular approach, Resilient Power, which fast tracks our solid-state transformer technology, and various partnerships like the design partnership with NVIDIA and the on-site power partnership with Siemens Energy to help solve for global power constraints. Now, Eaton's broad portfolio has been further enhanced by the acquisition of Boyd Thermal. Our complete offering to data centers now has leading liquid cooling solutions, a true grid-to-chip approach that is unique to Eaton. We have solutions from power generation and the grid, gray space power infrastructure, and now a stronger presence in the white space along with cooling solutions. More specifically on Eaton's Boyd Thermal, this business is a core design partner to leading hyperscalers and silicon providers. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:07:35As cold plates expand across compute, networking, and rack-level components, Boyd system-level position drives also increased CDU adoption. Embedded at the chip and system level, Boyd Thermal expands Eaton's presence in the white space and gives Eaton early visibility into evolving data center platform requirements, advancing next-generation power and cooling management. The cooling business is on track to record $1.7 billion or better in revenue in the full year of 2026, of which about $1.4 billion will be included in Eaton financials for the year, with margins generally in line with the prior expectations. The Boyd business had a very strong start of the year, up well over 100% in Q1 versus prior year. In fact, Boyd's backlog doubled over the last six months. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:08:37Boyd's recent wins underscore strong momentum in liquid cooling, reflecting customer preference for its deep engineering integration, early design engagement, speed of execution, manufacturing readiness, and ability to scale globally. We are confident in 2026 outlook. We are very excited to welcome this strong team to the Eaton portfolio and look forward to continued success together. Turning to page seven, we are leading for growth by striving to move fast, co-creating innovative solutions with our customers at the center of everything we do. Here, we highlight the Eaton Beam Rubin DSX platform as part of our collaboration with NVIDIA to support the next generation of AI factories with end-to-end grid-to-chip infrastructure. AI factories represent a new class of infrastructure, and they are driving a massive global build-out, where data center power demand could nearly triple between 2025 and 2030. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:09:43This unprecedented demand requires end-to-end solutions for faster builds and more efficient energy usage. That's why we developed the Eaton Beam Rubin DSX platform. It delivers a complete modularized implementation of AI factory infrastructure, spanning grid connection, power distribution, advanced cooling, and structural architectures engineered for higher speed, efficiency, and resilience. Truly an ideal solution. By integrating Eaton's grid-to-chip architecture, we are enabling our customers to move beyond custom designs toward efficient, reliable, and modular solutions. It's a unique collaboration tailored to help our customers with their greatest challenges, and we couldn't be more excited for our customers to benefit from this technology. Now, I will turn over to Dave to walk through the financials. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:10:44Thanks, Paulo Ruiz. I would first like to say how honored I am to be back at Eaton. I've seen a lot of great changes in my almost 30 years with the company, but I've never been more excited than I am today to be part of Eaton's growth journey by how well-positioned we are to deliver on our commitments. I'll start by providing a brief summary of Q1 results on page eight. Organic growth for the quarter was 10%, driven by strength in Electrical Americas, Electrical Global and Aerospace, partially offset by lower sales and eMobility, primarily by a deliberate action to fix the tail, exiting a low-margin North America light vehicle business. Excluding declines in eMobility, our organic growth would have been almost 12%. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:11:29We generated record Q1 revenue of $7.5 billion and a Q1 record $1.7 billion of segment operating profit. Adjusted EPS of $2.81 is a Q1 record and $0.06 above the midpoint of our guidance range. We also had a strong quarter for free cash flow, which was up 245% over prior year. Let's move on to the segment details. On slide nine, we highlight the Electrical Americas segment. Demand is accelerating. Our negotiations pipeline was up 81% in Q1 over prior year, translating to record orders and backlog. The business maintains strong operational momentum, delivering record sales in Q1 record operating profit. Organic sales of 14% was driven primarily by strength in data centers, up about 50%, along with strong growth in commercial and institutional and machine OEM. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:12:28Operating margin was 25.6%. As we discussed last quarter, we expected early 2026 headwinds as Electrical Americas is ramping capacity at an unprecedented scale to meet the accelerating demand. While revenue growth was very strong, we faced additional headwinds in the quarter from higher input costs than originally planned, along with costs related to delivering higher volumes in the quarter. The higher costs are short-term timing headwind, which is being offset with an announced April 1st price increase and other additional price actions. We have confidence to execute on our commitments for 2026. Now I will summarize the results for our Electrical Global segment. Total growth of 21% included organic growth of 9% and 6% attributed to the Boyd acquisition. Overall, a very strong performance for the quarter. We had strength in data center, residential, and machine OEM. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:13:27Operating margin of 19.2% was up 60 basis points over prior years, driven primarily by higher sales and continued operational efficiencies. As you can see on the chart, demand in global remains incredibly strong, driven by strong orders up 13% on a rolling 12-month basis, with broad end market momentum and exceptional strength in data center demand. This reinforces a powerful growth trajectory ahead for the business. Before moving on to our industrial businesses, I'd like to briefly recap the combined Electrical segment's performance. For Q1, we posted organic growth of 13% and total growth of 20%. A great start to the year, and we are pleased with the progress we are making on all of our acquisitions. Segment margins were 23.4%. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:14:18On a rolling 12-month basis, orders accelerated up 32%, and our book-to-bill ratio for our Electrical Sector grew to 1.2 from 1.1 last quarter. In the quarter, Electrical Sector orders were up 47%. As a result, total electrical backlog increased 48% over prior year. Demand continues to surge, providing tremendous visibility and underpins our confidence in the electrical business. Page 11 highlights our Aerospace segment. Organic sales growth of 9% remained at a high level and resulted in record sales with particular strength in defense aftermarket along with strength in commercial OEM and commercial aftermarket. We closed the acquisition of Ultra PCS in January, and the business performed in line with our expectations, contributing 5 points of total sales growth. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:15:14Operating margin expanded by 360 basis points to a record 26.7%, driven primarily by sales growth and a one-time facility sale gain in the quarter. Even excluding the one-time gain, Aerospace margin expanded 80 basis points over prior year. Very strong performance to start the year. The robust orders and a growing backlog continue to position Aerospace for growth. Moving to our mobility segment on page 12. In the quarter, the business, now including both vehicle and eMobility, declined by 6% on an organic basis, driven primarily by the decision I mentioned earlier to exit a low-margin business. Margins are flat year-over-year, primarily driven by mix and operational improvements to offset higher commodity and wage inflation. We remain on track to execute the spin of the segment by the first quarter of 2027. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:16:09Now I will turn it back to Paulo to discuss our updated guidance and close out the presentation. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:16:14Thanks, Dave. Page 13 includes our end market growth assumptions. The demand in data center and Distributed IT market continues to grow even faster than we estimated three months ago. We now estimate 32 GW of total data center capacity under construction in the U.S., of which 70% is AI. Total data center backlog has grown to 228 GW or 12 years of backlog at the 2025 build rates, up from the 11 years in our last update. As you can see on the chart, data center is not our only strong market. We see durable strength in many electrical markets and in Aerospace. These many paths for sustainable growth gives confidence to deliver continued differentiated growth in 2026 and beyond. Moving now to page 14, we summarize our 2026 revenue and margin guidance. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:17:20Following a strong quarter, we now expect total company organic growth to be between 9%-11%, up 200 basis points at the midpoint, with strength in Electrical Americas and Electrical Global, which both increased 300 basis points at the midpoint. For segment margins, our guidance range of 24.1%-24.5% is 50 basis points lower than the prior guide, primarily due to Electrical Americas' Q1 performance. We are taking decisive actions to offset temporary cost headwinds in Electrical Americas. As we discussed earlier, we are confident with our sequential margin improvement in Electrical Americas and expect to exit the year with margins north of 30%. On the next page, we have the balance of our guidance for 2026 and Q2. For 2026, we are raising the low end of our adjusted EPS guide. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:18:24We expect full year EPS to be between $13.05 and $13.50, $13.28 at the midpoint. For the full year, adjusted EPS guidance includes flowing through the full Q1 beat and absorbing the Boyd dilution to EPS. The tariff impacts are included in this guidance and considered immaterial. We are reaffirming our cash flow expectations for the year, and we have provided a guidance for Q2 on this page. Healthy end markets, combined with our record backlog, provide strong visibility into our outlook for the year. With the industry's best position portfolio, we are highly focused on disciplined execution throughout 2026. I will close with a quick summary on page 16. Our strategy to lead, invest, and execute for growth is working. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:19:25We continue to transform our portfolio, allocating capital and resources towards higher growth, higher margin businesses. The demand environment remains exceptional. We are winning at unprecedented rates. Our orders accelerated once again, and our record backlogs provide visibility going forward. This was another strong quarter for Eaton. We delivered record Q1 adjusted EPS and segment profit, along with record revenue reflecting improved execution, ramping capacity, as well as the impact of strategic actions we have taken to drive earnings performance. Bottom line, we see a compelling and exciting runway ahead with our strongest growth opportunities still in front of us. With that, I look forward to taking your questions. Yan JinSVP of Investor Relations at Eaton00:20:21Hey, thanks, Paulo. Moving to the Q&A, we ask you to please limit your opportunity to just one question per person. We appreciate your cooperation so we can accommodate as many participants as possible today. With that, I will turn it over to the operator for instructions. Operator00:20:41Certainly. Our first question for today comes from the line of Scott Davis from Melius Research. Your question, please. Scott DavisChairman and CEO at Melius Research00:20:49Hey, good morning, guys. I'm sure you're gonna get a lot of questions on margins, so I'll go a different direction. There's a lot of debate around you know, the long-term architectures and data centers, and I think a lot of confusion out there. Can you guys just talk a little bit about your competitive position in the landscape for solid-state transformers or, you know, at least on the medium voltage side? Maybe even a TAM, if you could address that. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:21:18Yeah, sure. Well, thanks, and thanks for starting with a strategic question. Appreciate that. I will start talking about this in broader terms. You said it correctly, a lot of the discussions around the medium voltage solid-state transformers technology, but we also lead in the pack more broadly as a company on how to transform the complete data centers into direct current technology. It's broader than just the power transformers, right? All the way from the utility down to the chips. We got to think about, you know, power distribution as well, power protection, 800V DC or higher, actually, for future, you know, applications. This is exactly, I wanna clarify, this is exactly the broad scope of our partnership with NVIDIA that we launched for the new generation of Rubin chips. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:22:14That's exactly the scope, is already 800V DC. You know, the most important question for investors is why does this matter? Why does it matter so much for data center operators? I would say it is because the industry wants to increase tokens per megawatt. In other words, to increase the efficiency of the data centers. If you look at where we operate as a company and other companies operate as well, the biggest lever to increase this efficiency is to reduce the use of chillers, because today, chillers consume around 20% of the data center power. With the new chip technology, for example, the one that NVIDIA announced at the beginning of the year, as they can run hotter and counting our advanced cooling solutions from Boyd, we can make this possible. That's the biggest lever. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:23:08The second biggest lever is exactly what you mentioned here, Scott, is to move from AC architectures to DC architectures. If you look at today's efficiency, even in the most, you know, improved designs in AC, efficiency runs at 93%. We estimate, and all the industry leaders estimate, that switching to this direct current technology in a 800V or above can save up to 5% from data center operations, moving the efficiency all the way up to 98%. If you think about this is huge dollars and huge efficiency gains that can change completely the economics of the data center. I wanna get that out. I would say this, we as a company, we are in a leading position to commercialize our medium voltage solid-state transformers to get more specific to your question. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:24:08The fact that we acquired Resilient Power Systems accelerated our tech development. We acquired an immersion-cooled offering that drives much more power density in a much smaller footprint, so it really leapfrogged our evolution here. We have more than a handful of solid-state transformer pilots actually approaching two handful, including hyperscaler customers. What we are getting from those discussions with them is a lot of positive feedback. We are working through those pilots. In the meantime, we start taking the leading role, also developing industry codes and standards in the U.S., but also in Europe. As I mentioned before, as we are taking the commercial lead here, we're already providing quotes on 800V DC projects now. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:25:01We expect orders in the second half of the year for shipments starting in late 2027, and some of those also beginning of 2028. We're making solid progress there. If I'm to conclude here, in summary, while there are other companies working on this technology, which I would say is good for quicker adoption of the industry, we are very confident in our leadership position in the solid-state transformers, and I would say more broadly to lead the complete power conversion to DC. Scott DavisChairman and CEO at Melius Research00:25:33Great. Best of luck, Paulo. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:25:37Thank you. Operator00:25:39Our next question comes from the line of Chris Snyder from Morgan Stanley. Your question please. Chris SnyderExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:25:45Thank you. Maybe I'll balance for Scott and ask more of a near-term one here. Q1 Electrical Americas margins came in below expectations. It sounded like there was maybe some unexpected cost inflation. Maybe just some incremental color on that. You know, what gives you confidence, or could you help unpack the drivers that get that Americas margin to 30% or maybe even a little bit higher into the back half? It sounds like from the prepared remarks that there's price coming. Just anything on how material that could be in the timeline there to lift those back half margins. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:26:22Great. Thanks, Chris. Well, thanks for this question. Certainly top of mind for all investors. I'd like to get started by providing a little bit of context to this margin discussion because we need to take this discussion in a broader sense of our growth trajectory. As you heard in our prepared remarks, the demand is fantastic. I just wanna give this team, this group of people, three data points for us to reflect on. The first one, look at orders, right? 60% up year-over-year. This is on top of a very strong base in 2025, having data centers being 240% growth validating our strategic choices. This is a one strong data point. The second one I will mention, as you heard, our backlogs are up 44% in Electrical Americas. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:27:19This was a high bar in 2025, and this business added $4.4 billion to the backlog in just one year. It's incredible what the team was able to add, while we're still delivering double-digit growths on top line. That's the second data point. The third one is the negotiation pipeline, as you heard from Dave, is up 81%. If you take a step back here and look at all those data points, I would say we are at the precipice of a new growth cycle here for this business, a real growth cycle, an inflection point, and we are starting to get ready for it. We need to get ready for that inflection point. As a reminder to everyone, I'm getting into the weeds of the margin development. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:28:04As a reminder to everyone, we finalized the construction, and we are currently ramping up 12 factories as we speak to handle this growth. The bulk of this ramp-up cost is concentrated in Q4 last year and the first half of this year. These expansions are going well. They're progressing as planned. Now, to the details on the margin development, the year-over-year margin is temporarily impacted by two reasons. I reemphasize temporarily impacted. The first temporary impact is a negative price cost lag based on, you know, commodity inflation beginning of the year. This temporary impact will be more than offset in the full year by pricing that we already implemented on April 1st. That's the 1st part of the margin recovery. The second one, we accelerated ramp-up costs in Q1 to deliver 30% higher revenue growth. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:29:07As you remember, in February, when we discussed, we committed to a 10% midpoint growth for Electrical Americas. Now we are committing to 13% growth. We needed to upload, you know, investments in Q1, so this is part of it. It's also a temporary effect. Given this order strength, we took this deliberate action and front-loaded investments in Q1, and we are accelerating our ramp. As you know, we discussed in the last earnings call, every time you add fixed cost, labor, depreciation of new CapEx and start up expenses ahead of volume, it creates this temporary margin headwind. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:29:47Most importantly, I wanna report that if you look at the product unit economics, the product margins remain very healthy, and we continue to expect in this new guidance, we continue to expect our full year 2026 segment profit in dollars to be roughly the same, around $4.4 billion as per prior guide. If you ask what the confidence we have, I have and the team has on our second half margins, I would say, we're on the right trajectory to get started. We finished March with strong performance in Q1, April was also a good start for Q2. That's the first point I want to get out. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:30:31The second, and most importantly, looking towards the second half, as utilization increases and recent pricing actions take effect, we expect to have strong operating leverage and margin recovery over the coming quarters, which reflects into our guidance, as you see, that shows sequential margin improvement starting from Q2 and gaining momentum towards the second half. As explained through our last two earnings calls, this is the year of execution for the Americas, for sure. The team is very focused. I want to report the team is really focused and very supported by the whole corporation. The progress is tangible. At even weekly meetings we have with the team, we can see progress week over week. We remain confident about the strong exit rate for 2026, and we are committed to the 32% margin by 2030. Chris SnyderExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:31:31Thank you, Paulo. Appreciate that. Operator00:31:34Thank you. As a reminder, ladies and gentlemen, if you do have a question at this time, please press star one one on your telephone. Our next question comes from the line of Deane Dray from RBC Capital Markets. Your question, please. You might have your phone on mute. Deane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:59Yes. Sorry. Can you hear me now? Operator00:32:01Yes. Deane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:32:02Okay. Appreciate that. Thank you. Operator00:32:03Yes. Deane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:32:04Good morning, everyone. I'll also add my welcome back to Dave. My question is directed to Dave. I'd be really interested in hearing about your early observations now that you're back at Eaton, and where are your priorities and focus as CFO. Thanks. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:32:22Deane. Thanks for the welcome. Let me start with culture, which is one of the reasons I've worked at Eaton for almost 30 years. I can already see and feel positive changes within the company. We have an increased focus on our customers. We've had a lot of focus on improving our team operating dynamics. It's been great to see. You know, if I look at growth, I've never seen this level of organic growth across the company in my career. It's more than just an Electrical Americas story. You know, we see it in Electrical Global, we see it in Aerospace. Then, you know, Paulo talked about it a little bit in his last answer. The commitment that we've made to invest to grow the company organically really stands out to me, both people and assets. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:33:04You know, I personally reviewed the growth projects in the Americas during my first three weeks on the job, and I came away very confident in our ability to deliver 2026. Now this will be a little different take, but you know, for me, coming back, I clearly see the benefits of functional transformation efforts that have been ongoing at Eaton over the last four years. I see it across the enterprise, but let me share one of the many examples from the finance function. In late 2023, we went all in on centralizing and specializing our credit and collections teams. I'm really happy to say that we delivered record past due percentage performance at the end of 2025, and then we beat it again by 100 basis points at the end of Q1. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:33:46The end result is improved cash flow and reduced risk, but it also helps us free up time in our plants and divisions to focus on operations. Very similar to what Paulo sees, you know, since I've been back for nine weeks, I can see visible progress and improvement across the total company. I see it in the numbers. I see it in the reviews that I sit in. Again, you know, seconding what Paulo said, we finished March very strong, and the preliminary results for April are, continue to build the momentum that we, you know, take into the second half of the year. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:34:18If I look at the top priorities for myself and the company, one, obviously deliver our commitments for growth, margins, and cash flow in 2026 and make sure we're positioned well to exceed or meet or exceed our expectations for 2030. For me personally, I get a chance to leverage my strong operations background and my pricing experience with large direct customers. I understand the Eaton Business System very well and how we operate as a company, so it's made it very easy for me to plug back into the company. I have strong relationships with all the operating leaders across the globe, that really helps to drive results and resolve issues as they come up. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:34:59You know, if I look at it, You know, one of the big objectives this year is to successfully integrate the Boyd Thermal, Ultra PCS, and Fibrebond acquisitions, as well as execute the spin of our mobility business. Maybe many of you don't know, but last year, I supported the businesses at Eaton on both the Boyd and Ultra PCS acquisitions, and I also spent some time on the mobility spin in the fourth quarter of last year. That experience has allowed me to hit the ground running and engage with our efforts involving all of these projects. I clearly know what we need to do to deliver synergies in both of the deals, as well as understanding the base business. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:35:35You know, finally, on a functional point of view, you know, I'm gonna continue to work with our leadership team in finance to drive finance transformation objectives. And personally, I'm gonna really lead a continuous improvement culture across all of finance that mirrors the rest of the enterprise with the simple goal of, you know, just getting better every day. Hopefully that answers your question. Deane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:35:55It does. Thank you, and best of luck. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:35:58Thank you. Operator00:36:00Thank you. Our next question comes from the line with Nicole DeBlase from Deutsche Bank. Your question, please. Nicole DeBlaseAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:36:08Yeah, thanks. Good morning, guys. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:36:11Hi, Nicole. Nicole DeBlaseAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:36:13Hello. I guess just kind of following on to all the highlights of the strong order growth that we're seeing and, you know, Paulo, what you said about this kind of being an inflection with respect to demand, I'm just thinking about, you know, do you have enough capacity to address that inflection in demand based on what's been done so far and what's ongoing within Electrical Americas? Or, you know, should we be expecting maybe another tranche of capacity expansion in the, you know, quarters and years to come? If so, like, could that expansion be of a similar size to what you guys have embarked upon in EA already? Or could it be a bit smaller? Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:36:54Yeah, thanks. As we stated before, we announced the expansion of 24 facilities, and we are done with 12 of them. We are ramping. There are still six to come online by the end of the year, that we're gonna ramp next year, and the other six beyond 2027. Of course, there's a lot of success in our orders. There's a lot of success in our combined portfolio and our growing backlogs, negotiation pipeline, all of that. I wouldn't expect to see such an increase in capacity investments all at once hitting our business anytime soon. It's gonna be more like a continuous investment over time. Something that we are really focused as well as a team is to sweat those assets, right? We are inserting very good operators inside every part of the electrical business. They're showing results. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:37:54We're gonna make those new plans work, and we're gonna get, you know, the high returns from our investment. In short, I would say, more than half of the pain is gone, is highly concentrated in Q4, as I said before, Q1, and then starts to get back a much better situation for the second half as we ramp those volumes. There'll be a continuous improvement and continuous investment, but nothing of this magnitude of 24 plans in a space of two years. Nicole DeBlaseAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:38:29Understood. Thanks, Paulo. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:38:31Thank you. Operator00:38:33Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Chad Dillard from Bernstein. Your question please. Chad DillardAnalyst at Bernstein00:38:41Hi. Good morning, guys. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:38:44Hi, Chad. Chad DillardAnalyst at Bernstein00:38:46Okay. I've got a quick question for you on competitors buying into the cold plate market. I guess part 1 is what share of cold plates is represented in Boyd? Part two is how do these acquisitions impact the competitive landscape? Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:39:08Great question. Another top of mind topic for investors. Thanks for that question. I would just start by just showing my welcome and my excitement to have the Boyd team as part of Eaton. I would say it's a winning team in the fastest-growing portion of the data center market, the advanced liquid cooling. We are really happy to be able to count the support of that talented team. I'm glad I told you, I hope you were in our last earnings call. I made a short comment sarcastically, that we should brace for comments around cooling coming up every month. I would say this is truer than ever with the latest news we saw from the market. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:39:56Now, seriously, if I look back even a space of three months, I would say that I believe this investor community evolved in their thinking in the last months, and I believe most understand now that cold plates are not commodities. I saw a couple of really good reports coming out from analysts. There's understanding that cold plates are actually strategic assets for our customer co-development, customer centricity, and future wings that actually can be paired and can pull wings for system business like CDUs for cooling and power management, especially want those three things under the same roof. There is much more understanding of its growth potential. I'm happy that's the case now. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:40:49If we start looking at the recent cold plate acquisitions, I would say that they further, in my opinion, further validate our strategy because it demonstrate the attractiveness of this tremendous market growth opportunity we saw earlier on. The other thing I wanna highlight in terms of landscape, competitive landscape to the second part of your question, before acquiring Boyd, our team really did the homework, and we systematically evaluated the market landscape for over one year. We did that on our own. We hired an external consultant. We hired a cooling expert from the Department of Energy. All those three independent data points of browsing the market pointed to Boyd. We are confident we bought the best business, the market leader at the right multiple. Also very important to say that. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:41:45Based on Boyd's world-leading market position, we are also very happy about their capabilities and the scale they can, you know, implement, in the next months and years. As, as you said, there's a lot of deals. We are familiar with those deals. In my opinion, that does not change our view of the market because, as I said before, we browse the market, for the best deal possible. This game around liquid cooling is a game, in my opinion, I would define as a game of trust, given the high stakes of being so close to the chips and keeping the servers working and then revenue generation assets operating well. It's a game of trust. It's a game of speed. Constant innovation. Constant innovation is what marks this market, very strongly. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:42:38The other thing I want to say, and this is the mindset of our team here, that we will protect, we will learn from, and we will augment what made Boyd great, which is their speed, the superior engineering they have, the manufacturing quality at increased scale. We are really focused there. If I stop, this is a big picture for the business and the cooling markets. We know that the future is bright for this technology, we should ask ourselves what make us feel good about the shorter term. Here, once again, if you look at the Boyd's business, and now we call it our liquid cooling business at Eaton, revenues should meet or exceed this $1.7 billion in revenue. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:43:26Certainly a huge growth over $1.1 billion this team achieved last year. We feel really confident. Why we feel confident on that number? Q1 revenues from this cooling business at Boyd more than doubled year-over-year. Also the backlog doubled from six months ago. The business is really growing really fast and winning big. The second thing I would say, the run rate in Q1 was already around $400 million. We modeled to stay at that level in Q2 and raised the second half to $450 million per quarter. It's reasonable, it's conservative, and we think it's perfectly feasible as the business is ramping. We only own the business for three weeks, we thought it was premature to raise the full-year forecast at this time. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:44:20I wanna reassure everyone we are aiming for an upside, and we'll be prepared for that upside. In summary, just to give you my final words on this topic, market validation of our strategy, given the last deals, we're extremely happy to have Boyd in our portfolio, and I'm very confident in delivering our own growth plans for 2026 and beyond. Operator00:44:50Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Kaplowitz from Citi. Your question please. Andrew KaplowitzManaging Director at Citi00:44:57Good morning, everyone. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:45:00Hi, Andrew. Good morning. Andrew KaplowitzManaging Director at Citi00:45:02Paulo, obviously Good morning. Obviously, you raised your organic revenue guide for the year, which seems like it's mostly coming from data center strength. What are you seeing in terms of other mega projects? Are you seeing any further unlock there? Maybe your thoughts on broader economic trends impacting EA and Electrical Global. Any impact from the Middle East on your business, for instance? Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:45:23Yeah, very good question. I'll give you a flavor on mega projects first. Another strong quarter. The announcements were up 29% year-over-year, growing 36% in full year 2025. If you put a two-year stack, it's staggeringly 65% up. Very strong development in mega projects. The backlog of mega projects now is around $3.3 trillion and is up 31% year-over-year. The most important thing for Q1 is that we saw an uptick on mega project starts, which is when people start spending money and buying equipment. Mega project starts reached $54 billion in Q1, so it's more than double same period last year. Since we start tracking that in 2021, it's the third best quarter on record. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:46:24Very strong tailwinds that will come from mega projects in the years to come. You have a second and third part to your question. I will just give you some flavor on the other markets so we allow other colleagues to ask questions. We also had strength, we see strength in utility orders, we see strength in, you know, machine OEM. We see strength in Aerospace more broadly for the company. We have different vectors of growth which are not necessarily data center only. I'll not give full details now, we allow other colleagues to ask their questions as well. Thanks for your highlights on the mega projects. Strong quarter once again. Andrew KaplowitzManaging Director at Citi00:47:08Appreciate it, Paulo. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:47:10Thank you. Operator00:47:11Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Patrick Baumann from JPMorgan. Your question please. Patrick BaumannAnalyst at JPMorgan00:47:20Thanks. Good morning. I just had a quick one on the EA margin again for the commentary you made on March and April being better and then, you know, the incremental pricing you put through in April. I'm just wondering if you give any insight into how much improvement you saw in those months, and then what kind of improvement you expect in margin from first quarter to second quarter. It does sound like you expect it to get better, but it's not really clear to what extent. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:47:50Great. I would get started. We'll also allow Dave to make some comments later. We see the biggest mission for this business actually to reach the top line and keep growing, and they did that exceptionally well in March. We had a very strong end of the quarter. That performance repeated in April. In terms of margin development, the two things I said before, I shared before, they're temporary headwinds. They will be solved as we execute on the volume ramp. This is on the right track, and that give us confidence. The second thing which hasn't hit our numbers yet entirely is the pricing that we implemented beginning of April. If you put these two together, the business is demonstrating top line growth and executing on the expansion well. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:48:41Also took, you know, the right measures in terms of pricing, already implemented, so we'll see that coming in the second half. To just go back to what we said last year in terms of the EPS split between first and second half, is pretty much what we see in this guidance as well, right? I will start by making those comments, and allow Dave to give some color here from his perspective. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:49:09Yeah. You know, based on our, how we finished March and April, you know, with our guidance, we're up 150 basis points from Q1 to Q2 in the Electrical Americas. Keep in mind, you know, on the price actions, you know, we don't get the full take in the first quarter when we execute them. You know, that tends to come through in the following quarter. Again, we're confident in our guide for Q2 for Electrical Americas. Again, April demonstrated that we're, you know, continuing the momentum that we saw at the end of Q1. Patrick BaumannAnalyst at JPMorgan00:49:39Thanks. That's 150 basis points you're saying from Q1 to Q2 is the expectation? Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:49:45Correct. Patrick BaumannAnalyst at JPMorgan00:49:47Thank you very much. Best luck. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:49:49Thank you. Operator00:49:51Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Buscaglia from BNP. Your question please. Andrew BuscagliaAnalyst at BNP00:50:00Hey, thanks guys. Morning. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:50:02Hi, Andrew. Andrew BuscagliaAnalyst at BNP00:50:05Just wanted to check on, you know, a lot of discussion on the data center front, and orders were quite strong, there. Could you give some commentary what's going on order-wise and trend-wise by the other sub-segments within Electrical Americas? Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:50:22Sure. I will give you commentary. Let me talk about utilities, because it's an important market, and it's tightly connected with the data center boom as well, as you guys know. We continue to see very strong momentum in terms of orders for the utility business here. We had double-digit growth on a 12-month rolling basis for Electrical Americas, and for Electrical Global, mid-single-digits. Strong orders coming our way on the utility side. On the strategic commentary, I want to say that we continue to make progress gaining share in voltage regulators, capacitors and switchgear, which are actually three product groups we are ramping up with our investments, so we keep winning shares in that area. That's our focus because it has most differentiated performance. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:51:22We are a bit more selective on single-phase transformers because it's the smallest part of our portfolio, also the least differentiated. I would say this, we expect the market to remain strong for a very long period of time. Just, you know, if you recall all those data center announcements triggered what I would say, everyone already sees, the power generation and transmission investment. It's very well reflected in power gen and power transmission, but it's not so much yet reflected in the power distribution utility business, right? Just to remind everyone how good it is to see investment in power generation for us at Eaton, every investment in generation creates a compounding opportunity for Eaton. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:52:19First of all, when there is a power generation project, we sell the medium voltage gear required for this project. Then in the later stage, you know, when there's power to get distributed by the grid, once again, opportunity for us to distribute, protect those electrons. Then lastly, and even more impactful to us, is when this power reaches our end customers, being data centers, being, you know, commercial, institutional, any other end market, because we need to manage that power reliably and safely. We are very, very convinced that utility business is going to remain stronger for longer. We also, I would say this, I will give you some color on the short cycle businesses we have. Again, short cycle, high single digits in Q1, revenues from mid-single digits in Q4. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:53:20We see this continued momentum quarter-over-quarter. If you go to the details of what makes the short cycle businesses, we saw some recovery in Americas for Resi, low single digits. Once again, we are not counting on the Resi market to be strong for us to make our numbers by any means. We saw also stronger recovery in the EMEA business in the residential space. MOM is back up for both Americas and global. Distributed IT, we see high single digit in the Americas up. High single digits up, it was a little bit down global versus last year. We see green shoots coming from Q4 extending to Q1 on the short cycle markets. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:54:13I will say this, I'm proud to say our team is capitalizing on this market recovery and winning. This is important because we also drive utilization of our factories that serve those end markets. I hope that helps. Andrew BuscagliaAnalyst at BNP00:54:30Very helpful. Yeah. Thank you very much. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:54:33Thank you. Operator00:54:34Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Joe Ritchie from Goldman Sachs. Your question please. Joe RitchieManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:54:41Hey, guys. Good morning. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:54:44Hi. Good morning. Morning, Joe. Joe RitchieManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:54:46Yeah, I wanted to circle back on Boyd. Clearly, off to a great start this year. I'm curious, Paulo, how are you managing, like, potential disruption from the integration of this asset with legacy Eaton? Also, as it relates to capacity, I know you addressed the capacity for your core business, but I guess with Boyd coming in, what kind of capacity additions are necessary in order to fulfill, like, their backlog and how fast they're growing? Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:55:19Great question. To the first one, first part of your question, as I said before, it's a game of trust, it's a game of speed, it's a game of, you know, getting the technology implemented and also getting the ramp done in the right way. We are taking a very cautious and deliberate approach to integrating this business into Eaton. The reason we went after Boyd was that they were the market leader. We didn't want to go for a smaller asset, which we've found will be very difficult to make it work in our organization. Here, they know what they're doing. They were part of Goldman before, and they were performing before. Our philosophies cannot be any harder or more difficult inside Eaton at all. We are taking very good care of the team, a very talented team. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:56:14We are retaining them. They report directly to our COO at the sector level. They report directly to Heath, so high visibility, high attention. In terms of investment, over time, this business grew fantastic rates at very low CapEx rates versus sales, like think about 3%, 4%. With this explosive growth they have now, they have more investment in terms of sales approaching double digits temporarily. It's already part of our guidance for the year, and it's all been implemented. The teams are running, and as I said before, a very good Q1 in terms of output and growth. We just got the April numbers yesterday, also very strong performance. We are really excited about the business. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:57:13We are respectful of what they built, and we're actually leveraging some of their connections with the chip manufacturers to be a lead for other technologies of Eaton to win. A good example of that could be also what we are doing with NVIDIA and other companies. We keep high touch, you know, connection with this team. We want them to run fast, and we are supporting them to run fast. Joe RitchieManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:57:43Very helpful. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:57:45Thanks. Operator00:57:46Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Julian Mitchell from Barclays. Your question, please. Julian MitchellAnalyst at Barclays00:57:53Hi, good morning. Thanks for the question. Maybe just to circle back to the sort of ramp-up slope that the guidance is predicated on, and I suppose two sides to that. One is, just overall firm-wide EPS is the sort of guide based on a $4-type number in Q4. Allied to that, on the Electrical Americas division, I think incremental margins, you're guiding year-on-year at about 10% in Q2 year-on-year. Should we think about third quarter in the 20% and then fourth quarter in the sort of 50% type incremental margin? Thank you very much. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:58:40I'll start. Allow also Dave to provide color. Thanks for your question. Here I would say a couple of things. Once again, you're perfectly right in your analysis. That's exactly what we're committing to. The reasons behind are, once again, twofold. One is the pricing we've already implemented, and two, we're gonna get the leverage from the ramp-up investments that we have that's gonna start incrementing our profits, improving our incremental here. Also, all the inefficiencies we are dealing with as we learn how to operate in those plants will be behind us. Yes, absolutely in line, and this is perfectly feasible and aligned with the previous guidance we had between first half and second half EPS breakdown. Any additional comments, Dave? Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:59:32The only thing I would add is, you know, in addition to the benefits we see of the scale of the growth on the manufacturing costs, we also see the benefit on reducing support costs as a percentage of sales in the back half of the year. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:59:45True. Okay. Julian MitchellAnalyst at Barclays00:59:47That's great. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:59:48No, thanks. I'd like to make a couple of comments just to close here the call, some closing remarks. Very interesting questions. I'm glad we moved to this one question per analyst format, made it more dynamic. We could talk to more people. Let me just make a couple of comments to conclude the call. I would start by saying that I would say our strategy is working, right? We are, in my opinion, we are closer to our customers, and we are designing the future together with them. This is really important for the future development of this company. We are shaping our portfolio at fast pace. Just think about how much ground we covered last year. We allocated capital boldly, and I also say surgically. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton01:00:37The proof point, in our numbers, you can see the Electrical business grew 20% total sales with 13% organic. Aerospace grew 16% total sales with 9% organic. Those were two markets where we decided to invest and allocate capital. In terms of execution, I would just highlight once again, we are executing on unprecedented demand. Record orders and backlogs are paired with strong negotiation pipeline, and this give us very high level of visibility and confidence moving forward. I would say also we showed demonstrated operational improvements that allow us to beat our top line commitment for the quarter, also to raise organic growth guidance for the full year. In terms of margins and the Americas development, the ramp is on track. We are accelerating the execution, as I said before. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton01:01:38We have confidence in the top line and the margin upside as the year progresses. In a nutshell, this allowed us to beat the Q1 EPS, have confidence to absorb the EPS impact of our acquisitions, and still be able to raise the full-year EPS guides. Thanks to everyone for your time, and thanks for your questions. Thank you. Operator01:02:02Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Good day.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDave FosterEVP and CFOPaulo RuizCEOYan JinSVP of Investor RelationsAnalystsAndrew BuscagliaAnalyst at BNPAndrew KaplowitzManaging Director at CitiChad DillardAnalyst at BernsteinChris SnyderExecutive Director at Morgan StanleyDeane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital MarketsJoe RitchieManaging Director at Goldman SachsJulian MitchellAnalyst at BarclaysNicole DeBlaseAnalyst at Deutsche BankPatrick BaumannAnalyst at JPMorganScott DavisChairman and CEO at Melius ResearchPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Eaton Earnings HeadlinesForget Vistra. One Quarter of Orders at GE Vernova Exceeded All of Last Year.55 minutes ago | 247wallst.comForget Hyperscalers, These Stocks Are The New AI PlaysMay 18 at 3:26 PM | 247wallst.comThe REAL Reason Trump is Invading IranFor a moment… Forget about Trump’s ties to Israel. Forget about reports of Iran’s nuclear program. Because my research has led me to believe we’re risking World War 3 with Iran for a completely different reason.May 19 at 1:00 AM | Banyan Hill Publishing (Ad)Forget Hyperscalers, These Stocks Are The New AI PlaysMay 18 at 1:14 PM | 247wallst.comEaton stock slips as risk-off tape and higher yields weigh on high-multiple electrification namesMay 18 at 11:10 AM | quiverquant.comQETN Stock Price PredictionMay 17 at 11:42 PM | 247wallst.comSee More Eaton Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Eaton? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Eaton and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About EatonEaton (NYSE:ETN) (NYSE: ETN) is a diversified power management company that designs, manufactures and distributes products and systems to manage electrical, hydraulic and mechanical power. The company’s offerings are used to improve energy efficiency, reliability and safety across a wide range of applications, with core capabilities in electrical distribution and control, industrial hydraulics and aerospace systems. Its product portfolio includes switchgear, circuit breakers, transformers, power distribution units, uninterruptible power supplies and surge protection devices for electrical infrastructure, along with hydraulic pumps, valves and filtration systems for industrial and mobile equipment. Eaton also supplies systems and components to the aerospace sector, including fuel, hydraulics and motion control solutions. In addition to hardware, the company provides lifecycle services, aftermarket support and digital solutions for power monitoring, control and asset management. Eaton serves a broad set of end markets worldwide, including utilities, construction, industrial and manufacturing firms, data centers, commercial buildings, and original equipment manufacturers in the automotive and aerospace industries. The company emphasizes innovation, reliability and sustainability in its product development and deployment, positioning its technologies to help customers reduce energy use, increase uptime and meet regulatory and environmental goals.View Eaton 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 Latest Articles Why Home Depot’s Sell-Off Could Become a Huge OpportunityBrady Corp Wires Up a Massive AI-Powered BreakoutDillard’s Posted a Huge Earnings Beat—So Why Did the Rally Fade?Why Applied Optoelectronics Stock May Be Near a Turning PointIs Everspin Technologies the Next AI Edge Breakout?Peloton Stock Gives Back Gains After Upbeat Earnings ReportDatavault Gains Traction: 5 Reasons to Sell Now Upcoming Earnings Analog Devices (5/20/2026)Intuit (5/20/2026)NVIDIA (5/20/2026)Lowe's Companies (5/20/2026)Medtronic (5/20/2026)Target (5/20/2026)TJX Companies (5/20/2026)NetEase (5/21/2026)Ross Stores (5/21/2026)Walmart (5/21/2026) 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 Email Me a Login Link 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 Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by, and welcome to Eaton's first quarter 2026 earnings results conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during this session, you'll need to press star one one on your telephone. If your question has been answered and you'd like to remove yourself from the queue, simply press star one one again. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question each. You may get back in the queue as time allows. As a reminder, today's program is being recorded. Now I'd like to introduce your host for today's program, Yan Jin, Senior Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir. Yan JinSVP of Investor Relations at Eaton00:00:43Hey, good morning. Thank you all for joining us for Eaton first quarter 2026 earnings call. With me today are Paulo Ruiz, Chief Executive Officer, and Dave Foster, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Our agenda today including opening remarks by Paulo, then we'll turn it over to Dave, who will highlight the company's performance in the first quarter. As we have done on our past calls, we'll be taking questions at the end of Paulo's closing commentary. The press release and the presentation we'll go through today, including reconciliations to non-GAAP measures, have been posted on our website. A replay of this webcast will be accessible on our website after the call. Before we begin, I would like to note that our comments today will include forward-looking statements with respect to sales, earnings, and other matters. Yan JinSVP of Investor Relations at Eaton00:01:33Our actual results may differ materially from our forecasted projections due to a wide range of risks and uncertainties that are described in our recent SEC filings. With that, I will turn it over to Paulo. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:01:47Thanks, Yan, and thanks everyone for joining us. Starting on page three, I'm happy to report we have delivered solid results to start the year. From a demand perspective, we continue to see tremendous strength. Rolling 12-month orders are up in all businesses, 42% in Electrical Americas and 13% in both Electrical Global and Aerospace. We are winning business at unprecedented rates, resulting in our backlogs hitting a new record high in both Electrical and Aerospace, with book-to-bill increasing to 1.2 combined on a rolling 12-month basis and even stronger than that year-over-year. Our accelerating orders, driven by data center orders up 240%, prove continued strong demand and our winning value proposition as an end-to-end solutions provider. Overall, the businesses are executing nicely to start the year. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:02:49We posted record revenue of $7.5 billion, along with Q1 record segment profit of $1.7 billion and margins of 22.7%. We are pleased to beat our adjusted EPS guide and consensus. All the beat was operational. We delivered strong total revenue growth of 17% and higher margins than anticipated. We are executing well on our deals to boost growth. We closed Ultra PCS in January and Boyd Thermal in March, both ahead of schedule. Our partnerships with NVIDIA resulted in a complete solution for their generation of chips, Vera Rubin. Thanks to our teams for the strong work as we keep shaping our portfolio. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:03:40As we look toward the rest of the year with an unprecedented demand backdrop, we raised our organic growth outlook by 200 basis points to a midpoint of 10% and also raised our adjusted EPS midpoint expectations to now $13.28 for the year, which covers the EPS dilution from the Boyd acquisition. Another important update, on March 2nd, we announced Dave Foster as CFO. We are thrilled to have you back, Dave, and he has 29 years career with Eaton, which brings deep understanding of our business and markets, as well as a proven ability to drive performance. Dave and I will dive into Q1 and the 2026 outlook. First, let's move to slide four. We continue to drive Eaton forward with our bold strategy to lead, invest, and execute for growth. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:04:41All three pillars are designed to accelerate our growth and create sustained value for shareholders. Today, we'll discuss how we are executing for growth in Electrical Americas, investing for growth, including the Boyd Thermal acquisition, and leading for growth with a customer-centric approach. Slide five includes an update on how we are executing for growth in Electrical Americas. Demand remains incredibly robust. We are winning like never before, and the order and the backlog growth supports that. Meanwhile, we're accelerating our production ramp in the Americas to meet demand. The investments we are making, over $1 billion in CapEx, are at record scale for us, but well within our capability to navigate. Most importantly, we are on track as planned and feel confident on our path forward, given our strong position in growing markets and proven track record of solid execution at Eaton. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:05:43Americas recovered well from a tough January and February with impacts from the winter storms in our facilities and across the supply chain. Our team recovered well in March. April was another strong month. From both sales and margin perspective, Q1 will be the trough as mentioned in our last earnings call in February. We expect progress as we enter Q2 and momentum Q3 and Q4, which will set up the business to meet or exceed our margin target of 32% by 2030. Turning to page six in our investing for growth strategic pillar, where we are doubling down on high growth, high margin markets to capitalize on once in a lifetime opportunities. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:06:32We've taken bold portfolio actions in the last one year, including the successful integration of Fibrebond, which enhances our modular approach, Resilient Power, which fast tracks our solid-state transformer technology, and various partnerships like the design partnership with NVIDIA and the on-site power partnership with Siemens Energy to help solve for global power constraints. Now, Eaton's broad portfolio has been further enhanced by the acquisition of Boyd Thermal. Our complete offering to data centers now has leading liquid cooling solutions, a true grid-to-chip approach that is unique to Eaton. We have solutions from power generation and the grid, gray space power infrastructure, and now a stronger presence in the white space along with cooling solutions. More specifically on Eaton's Boyd Thermal, this business is a core design partner to leading hyperscalers and silicon providers. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:07:35As cold plates expand across compute, networking, and rack-level components, Boyd system-level position drives also increased CDU adoption. Embedded at the chip and system level, Boyd Thermal expands Eaton's presence in the white space and gives Eaton early visibility into evolving data center platform requirements, advancing next-generation power and cooling management. The cooling business is on track to record $1.7 billion or better in revenue in the full year of 2026, of which about $1.4 billion will be included in Eaton financials for the year, with margins generally in line with the prior expectations. The Boyd business had a very strong start of the year, up well over 100% in Q1 versus prior year. In fact, Boyd's backlog doubled over the last six months. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:08:37Boyd's recent wins underscore strong momentum in liquid cooling, reflecting customer preference for its deep engineering integration, early design engagement, speed of execution, manufacturing readiness, and ability to scale globally. We are confident in 2026 outlook. We are very excited to welcome this strong team to the Eaton portfolio and look forward to continued success together. Turning to page seven, we are leading for growth by striving to move fast, co-creating innovative solutions with our customers at the center of everything we do. Here, we highlight the Eaton Beam Rubin DSX platform as part of our collaboration with NVIDIA to support the next generation of AI factories with end-to-end grid-to-chip infrastructure. AI factories represent a new class of infrastructure, and they are driving a massive global build-out, where data center power demand could nearly triple between 2025 and 2030. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:09:43This unprecedented demand requires end-to-end solutions for faster builds and more efficient energy usage. That's why we developed the Eaton Beam Rubin DSX platform. It delivers a complete modularized implementation of AI factory infrastructure, spanning grid connection, power distribution, advanced cooling, and structural architectures engineered for higher speed, efficiency, and resilience. Truly an ideal solution. By integrating Eaton's grid-to-chip architecture, we are enabling our customers to move beyond custom designs toward efficient, reliable, and modular solutions. It's a unique collaboration tailored to help our customers with their greatest challenges, and we couldn't be more excited for our customers to benefit from this technology. Now, I will turn over to Dave to walk through the financials. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:10:44Thanks, Paulo Ruiz. I would first like to say how honored I am to be back at Eaton. I've seen a lot of great changes in my almost 30 years with the company, but I've never been more excited than I am today to be part of Eaton's growth journey by how well-positioned we are to deliver on our commitments. I'll start by providing a brief summary of Q1 results on page eight. Organic growth for the quarter was 10%, driven by strength in Electrical Americas, Electrical Global and Aerospace, partially offset by lower sales and eMobility, primarily by a deliberate action to fix the tail, exiting a low-margin North America light vehicle business. Excluding declines in eMobility, our organic growth would have been almost 12%. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:11:29We generated record Q1 revenue of $7.5 billion and a Q1 record $1.7 billion of segment operating profit. Adjusted EPS of $2.81 is a Q1 record and $0.06 above the midpoint of our guidance range. We also had a strong quarter for free cash flow, which was up 245% over prior year. Let's move on to the segment details. On slide nine, we highlight the Electrical Americas segment. Demand is accelerating. Our negotiations pipeline was up 81% in Q1 over prior year, translating to record orders and backlog. The business maintains strong operational momentum, delivering record sales in Q1 record operating profit. Organic sales of 14% was driven primarily by strength in data centers, up about 50%, along with strong growth in commercial and institutional and machine OEM. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:12:28Operating margin was 25.6%. As we discussed last quarter, we expected early 2026 headwinds as Electrical Americas is ramping capacity at an unprecedented scale to meet the accelerating demand. While revenue growth was very strong, we faced additional headwinds in the quarter from higher input costs than originally planned, along with costs related to delivering higher volumes in the quarter. The higher costs are short-term timing headwind, which is being offset with an announced April 1st price increase and other additional price actions. We have confidence to execute on our commitments for 2026. Now I will summarize the results for our Electrical Global segment. Total growth of 21% included organic growth of 9% and 6% attributed to the Boyd acquisition. Overall, a very strong performance for the quarter. We had strength in data center, residential, and machine OEM. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:13:27Operating margin of 19.2% was up 60 basis points over prior years, driven primarily by higher sales and continued operational efficiencies. As you can see on the chart, demand in global remains incredibly strong, driven by strong orders up 13% on a rolling 12-month basis, with broad end market momentum and exceptional strength in data center demand. This reinforces a powerful growth trajectory ahead for the business. Before moving on to our industrial businesses, I'd like to briefly recap the combined Electrical segment's performance. For Q1, we posted organic growth of 13% and total growth of 20%. A great start to the year, and we are pleased with the progress we are making on all of our acquisitions. Segment margins were 23.4%. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:14:18On a rolling 12-month basis, orders accelerated up 32%, and our book-to-bill ratio for our Electrical Sector grew to 1.2 from 1.1 last quarter. In the quarter, Electrical Sector orders were up 47%. As a result, total electrical backlog increased 48% over prior year. Demand continues to surge, providing tremendous visibility and underpins our confidence in the electrical business. Page 11 highlights our Aerospace segment. Organic sales growth of 9% remained at a high level and resulted in record sales with particular strength in defense aftermarket along with strength in commercial OEM and commercial aftermarket. We closed the acquisition of Ultra PCS in January, and the business performed in line with our expectations, contributing 5 points of total sales growth. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:15:14Operating margin expanded by 360 basis points to a record 26.7%, driven primarily by sales growth and a one-time facility sale gain in the quarter. Even excluding the one-time gain, Aerospace margin expanded 80 basis points over prior year. Very strong performance to start the year. The robust orders and a growing backlog continue to position Aerospace for growth. Moving to our mobility segment on page 12. In the quarter, the business, now including both vehicle and eMobility, declined by 6% on an organic basis, driven primarily by the decision I mentioned earlier to exit a low-margin business. Margins are flat year-over-year, primarily driven by mix and operational improvements to offset higher commodity and wage inflation. We remain on track to execute the spin of the segment by the first quarter of 2027. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:16:09Now I will turn it back to Paulo to discuss our updated guidance and close out the presentation. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:16:14Thanks, Dave. Page 13 includes our end market growth assumptions. The demand in data center and Distributed IT market continues to grow even faster than we estimated three months ago. We now estimate 32 GW of total data center capacity under construction in the U.S., of which 70% is AI. Total data center backlog has grown to 228 GW or 12 years of backlog at the 2025 build rates, up from the 11 years in our last update. As you can see on the chart, data center is not our only strong market. We see durable strength in many electrical markets and in Aerospace. These many paths for sustainable growth gives confidence to deliver continued differentiated growth in 2026 and beyond. Moving now to page 14, we summarize our 2026 revenue and margin guidance. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:17:20Following a strong quarter, we now expect total company organic growth to be between 9%-11%, up 200 basis points at the midpoint, with strength in Electrical Americas and Electrical Global, which both increased 300 basis points at the midpoint. For segment margins, our guidance range of 24.1%-24.5% is 50 basis points lower than the prior guide, primarily due to Electrical Americas' Q1 performance. We are taking decisive actions to offset temporary cost headwinds in Electrical Americas. As we discussed earlier, we are confident with our sequential margin improvement in Electrical Americas and expect to exit the year with margins north of 30%. On the next page, we have the balance of our guidance for 2026 and Q2. For 2026, we are raising the low end of our adjusted EPS guide. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:18:24We expect full year EPS to be between $13.05 and $13.50, $13.28 at the midpoint. For the full year, adjusted EPS guidance includes flowing through the full Q1 beat and absorbing the Boyd dilution to EPS. The tariff impacts are included in this guidance and considered immaterial. We are reaffirming our cash flow expectations for the year, and we have provided a guidance for Q2 on this page. Healthy end markets, combined with our record backlog, provide strong visibility into our outlook for the year. With the industry's best position portfolio, we are highly focused on disciplined execution throughout 2026. I will close with a quick summary on page 16. Our strategy to lead, invest, and execute for growth is working. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:19:25We continue to transform our portfolio, allocating capital and resources towards higher growth, higher margin businesses. The demand environment remains exceptional. We are winning at unprecedented rates. Our orders accelerated once again, and our record backlogs provide visibility going forward. This was another strong quarter for Eaton. We delivered record Q1 adjusted EPS and segment profit, along with record revenue reflecting improved execution, ramping capacity, as well as the impact of strategic actions we have taken to drive earnings performance. Bottom line, we see a compelling and exciting runway ahead with our strongest growth opportunities still in front of us. With that, I look forward to taking your questions. Yan JinSVP of Investor Relations at Eaton00:20:21Hey, thanks, Paulo. Moving to the Q&A, we ask you to please limit your opportunity to just one question per person. We appreciate your cooperation so we can accommodate as many participants as possible today. With that, I will turn it over to the operator for instructions. Operator00:20:41Certainly. Our first question for today comes from the line of Scott Davis from Melius Research. Your question, please. Scott DavisChairman and CEO at Melius Research00:20:49Hey, good morning, guys. I'm sure you're gonna get a lot of questions on margins, so I'll go a different direction. There's a lot of debate around you know, the long-term architectures and data centers, and I think a lot of confusion out there. Can you guys just talk a little bit about your competitive position in the landscape for solid-state transformers or, you know, at least on the medium voltage side? Maybe even a TAM, if you could address that. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:21:18Yeah, sure. Well, thanks, and thanks for starting with a strategic question. Appreciate that. I will start talking about this in broader terms. You said it correctly, a lot of the discussions around the medium voltage solid-state transformers technology, but we also lead in the pack more broadly as a company on how to transform the complete data centers into direct current technology. It's broader than just the power transformers, right? All the way from the utility down to the chips. We got to think about, you know, power distribution as well, power protection, 800V DC or higher, actually, for future, you know, applications. This is exactly, I wanna clarify, this is exactly the broad scope of our partnership with NVIDIA that we launched for the new generation of Rubin chips. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:22:14That's exactly the scope, is already 800V DC. You know, the most important question for investors is why does this matter? Why does it matter so much for data center operators? I would say it is because the industry wants to increase tokens per megawatt. In other words, to increase the efficiency of the data centers. If you look at where we operate as a company and other companies operate as well, the biggest lever to increase this efficiency is to reduce the use of chillers, because today, chillers consume around 20% of the data center power. With the new chip technology, for example, the one that NVIDIA announced at the beginning of the year, as they can run hotter and counting our advanced cooling solutions from Boyd, we can make this possible. That's the biggest lever. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:23:08The second biggest lever is exactly what you mentioned here, Scott, is to move from AC architectures to DC architectures. If you look at today's efficiency, even in the most, you know, improved designs in AC, efficiency runs at 93%. We estimate, and all the industry leaders estimate, that switching to this direct current technology in a 800V or above can save up to 5% from data center operations, moving the efficiency all the way up to 98%. If you think about this is huge dollars and huge efficiency gains that can change completely the economics of the data center. I wanna get that out. I would say this, we as a company, we are in a leading position to commercialize our medium voltage solid-state transformers to get more specific to your question. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:24:08The fact that we acquired Resilient Power Systems accelerated our tech development. We acquired an immersion-cooled offering that drives much more power density in a much smaller footprint, so it really leapfrogged our evolution here. We have more than a handful of solid-state transformer pilots actually approaching two handful, including hyperscaler customers. What we are getting from those discussions with them is a lot of positive feedback. We are working through those pilots. In the meantime, we start taking the leading role, also developing industry codes and standards in the U.S., but also in Europe. As I mentioned before, as we are taking the commercial lead here, we're already providing quotes on 800V DC projects now. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:25:01We expect orders in the second half of the year for shipments starting in late 2027, and some of those also beginning of 2028. We're making solid progress there. If I'm to conclude here, in summary, while there are other companies working on this technology, which I would say is good for quicker adoption of the industry, we are very confident in our leadership position in the solid-state transformers, and I would say more broadly to lead the complete power conversion to DC. Scott DavisChairman and CEO at Melius Research00:25:33Great. Best of luck, Paulo. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:25:37Thank you. Operator00:25:39Our next question comes from the line of Chris Snyder from Morgan Stanley. Your question please. Chris SnyderExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:25:45Thank you. Maybe I'll balance for Scott and ask more of a near-term one here. Q1 Electrical Americas margins came in below expectations. It sounded like there was maybe some unexpected cost inflation. Maybe just some incremental color on that. You know, what gives you confidence, or could you help unpack the drivers that get that Americas margin to 30% or maybe even a little bit higher into the back half? It sounds like from the prepared remarks that there's price coming. Just anything on how material that could be in the timeline there to lift those back half margins. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:26:22Great. Thanks, Chris. Well, thanks for this question. Certainly top of mind for all investors. I'd like to get started by providing a little bit of context to this margin discussion because we need to take this discussion in a broader sense of our growth trajectory. As you heard in our prepared remarks, the demand is fantastic. I just wanna give this team, this group of people, three data points for us to reflect on. The first one, look at orders, right? 60% up year-over-year. This is on top of a very strong base in 2025, having data centers being 240% growth validating our strategic choices. This is a one strong data point. The second one I will mention, as you heard, our backlogs are up 44% in Electrical Americas. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:27:19This was a high bar in 2025, and this business added $4.4 billion to the backlog in just one year. It's incredible what the team was able to add, while we're still delivering double-digit growths on top line. That's the second data point. The third one is the negotiation pipeline, as you heard from Dave, is up 81%. If you take a step back here and look at all those data points, I would say we are at the precipice of a new growth cycle here for this business, a real growth cycle, an inflection point, and we are starting to get ready for it. We need to get ready for that inflection point. As a reminder to everyone, I'm getting into the weeds of the margin development. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:28:04As a reminder to everyone, we finalized the construction, and we are currently ramping up 12 factories as we speak to handle this growth. The bulk of this ramp-up cost is concentrated in Q4 last year and the first half of this year. These expansions are going well. They're progressing as planned. Now, to the details on the margin development, the year-over-year margin is temporarily impacted by two reasons. I reemphasize temporarily impacted. The first temporary impact is a negative price cost lag based on, you know, commodity inflation beginning of the year. This temporary impact will be more than offset in the full year by pricing that we already implemented on April 1st. That's the 1st part of the margin recovery. The second one, we accelerated ramp-up costs in Q1 to deliver 30% higher revenue growth. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:29:07As you remember, in February, when we discussed, we committed to a 10% midpoint growth for Electrical Americas. Now we are committing to 13% growth. We needed to upload, you know, investments in Q1, so this is part of it. It's also a temporary effect. Given this order strength, we took this deliberate action and front-loaded investments in Q1, and we are accelerating our ramp. As you know, we discussed in the last earnings call, every time you add fixed cost, labor, depreciation of new CapEx and start up expenses ahead of volume, it creates this temporary margin headwind. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:29:47Most importantly, I wanna report that if you look at the product unit economics, the product margins remain very healthy, and we continue to expect in this new guidance, we continue to expect our full year 2026 segment profit in dollars to be roughly the same, around $4.4 billion as per prior guide. If you ask what the confidence we have, I have and the team has on our second half margins, I would say, we're on the right trajectory to get started. We finished March with strong performance in Q1, April was also a good start for Q2. That's the first point I want to get out. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:30:31The second, and most importantly, looking towards the second half, as utilization increases and recent pricing actions take effect, we expect to have strong operating leverage and margin recovery over the coming quarters, which reflects into our guidance, as you see, that shows sequential margin improvement starting from Q2 and gaining momentum towards the second half. As explained through our last two earnings calls, this is the year of execution for the Americas, for sure. The team is very focused. I want to report the team is really focused and very supported by the whole corporation. The progress is tangible. At even weekly meetings we have with the team, we can see progress week over week. We remain confident about the strong exit rate for 2026, and we are committed to the 32% margin by 2030. Chris SnyderExecutive Director at Morgan Stanley00:31:31Thank you, Paulo. Appreciate that. Operator00:31:34Thank you. As a reminder, ladies and gentlemen, if you do have a question at this time, please press star one one on your telephone. Our next question comes from the line of Deane Dray from RBC Capital Markets. Your question, please. You might have your phone on mute. Deane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:31:59Yes. Sorry. Can you hear me now? Operator00:32:01Yes. Deane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:32:02Okay. Appreciate that. Thank you. Operator00:32:03Yes. Deane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:32:04Good morning, everyone. I'll also add my welcome back to Dave. My question is directed to Dave. I'd be really interested in hearing about your early observations now that you're back at Eaton, and where are your priorities and focus as CFO. Thanks. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:32:22Deane. Thanks for the welcome. Let me start with culture, which is one of the reasons I've worked at Eaton for almost 30 years. I can already see and feel positive changes within the company. We have an increased focus on our customers. We've had a lot of focus on improving our team operating dynamics. It's been great to see. You know, if I look at growth, I've never seen this level of organic growth across the company in my career. It's more than just an Electrical Americas story. You know, we see it in Electrical Global, we see it in Aerospace. Then, you know, Paulo talked about it a little bit in his last answer. The commitment that we've made to invest to grow the company organically really stands out to me, both people and assets. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:33:04You know, I personally reviewed the growth projects in the Americas during my first three weeks on the job, and I came away very confident in our ability to deliver 2026. Now this will be a little different take, but you know, for me, coming back, I clearly see the benefits of functional transformation efforts that have been ongoing at Eaton over the last four years. I see it across the enterprise, but let me share one of the many examples from the finance function. In late 2023, we went all in on centralizing and specializing our credit and collections teams. I'm really happy to say that we delivered record past due percentage performance at the end of 2025, and then we beat it again by 100 basis points at the end of Q1. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:33:46The end result is improved cash flow and reduced risk, but it also helps us free up time in our plants and divisions to focus on operations. Very similar to what Paulo sees, you know, since I've been back for nine weeks, I can see visible progress and improvement across the total company. I see it in the numbers. I see it in the reviews that I sit in. Again, you know, seconding what Paulo said, we finished March very strong, and the preliminary results for April are, continue to build the momentum that we, you know, take into the second half of the year. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:34:18If I look at the top priorities for myself and the company, one, obviously deliver our commitments for growth, margins, and cash flow in 2026 and make sure we're positioned well to exceed or meet or exceed our expectations for 2030. For me personally, I get a chance to leverage my strong operations background and my pricing experience with large direct customers. I understand the Eaton Business System very well and how we operate as a company, so it's made it very easy for me to plug back into the company. I have strong relationships with all the operating leaders across the globe, that really helps to drive results and resolve issues as they come up. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:34:59You know, if I look at it, You know, one of the big objectives this year is to successfully integrate the Boyd Thermal, Ultra PCS, and Fibrebond acquisitions, as well as execute the spin of our mobility business. Maybe many of you don't know, but last year, I supported the businesses at Eaton on both the Boyd and Ultra PCS acquisitions, and I also spent some time on the mobility spin in the fourth quarter of last year. That experience has allowed me to hit the ground running and engage with our efforts involving all of these projects. I clearly know what we need to do to deliver synergies in both of the deals, as well as understanding the base business. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:35:35You know, finally, on a functional point of view, you know, I'm gonna continue to work with our leadership team in finance to drive finance transformation objectives. And personally, I'm gonna really lead a continuous improvement culture across all of finance that mirrors the rest of the enterprise with the simple goal of, you know, just getting better every day. Hopefully that answers your question. Deane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital Markets00:35:55It does. Thank you, and best of luck. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:35:58Thank you. Operator00:36:00Thank you. Our next question comes from the line with Nicole DeBlase from Deutsche Bank. Your question, please. Nicole DeBlaseAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:36:08Yeah, thanks. Good morning, guys. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:36:11Hi, Nicole. Nicole DeBlaseAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:36:13Hello. I guess just kind of following on to all the highlights of the strong order growth that we're seeing and, you know, Paulo, what you said about this kind of being an inflection with respect to demand, I'm just thinking about, you know, do you have enough capacity to address that inflection in demand based on what's been done so far and what's ongoing within Electrical Americas? Or, you know, should we be expecting maybe another tranche of capacity expansion in the, you know, quarters and years to come? If so, like, could that expansion be of a similar size to what you guys have embarked upon in EA already? Or could it be a bit smaller? Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:36:54Yeah, thanks. As we stated before, we announced the expansion of 24 facilities, and we are done with 12 of them. We are ramping. There are still six to come online by the end of the year, that we're gonna ramp next year, and the other six beyond 2027. Of course, there's a lot of success in our orders. There's a lot of success in our combined portfolio and our growing backlogs, negotiation pipeline, all of that. I wouldn't expect to see such an increase in capacity investments all at once hitting our business anytime soon. It's gonna be more like a continuous investment over time. Something that we are really focused as well as a team is to sweat those assets, right? We are inserting very good operators inside every part of the electrical business. They're showing results. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:37:54We're gonna make those new plans work, and we're gonna get, you know, the high returns from our investment. In short, I would say, more than half of the pain is gone, is highly concentrated in Q4, as I said before, Q1, and then starts to get back a much better situation for the second half as we ramp those volumes. There'll be a continuous improvement and continuous investment, but nothing of this magnitude of 24 plans in a space of two years. Nicole DeBlaseAnalyst at Deutsche Bank00:38:29Understood. Thanks, Paulo. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:38:31Thank you. Operator00:38:33Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Chad Dillard from Bernstein. Your question please. Chad DillardAnalyst at Bernstein00:38:41Hi. Good morning, guys. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:38:44Hi, Chad. Chad DillardAnalyst at Bernstein00:38:46Okay. I've got a quick question for you on competitors buying into the cold plate market. I guess part 1 is what share of cold plates is represented in Boyd? Part two is how do these acquisitions impact the competitive landscape? Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:39:08Great question. Another top of mind topic for investors. Thanks for that question. I would just start by just showing my welcome and my excitement to have the Boyd team as part of Eaton. I would say it's a winning team in the fastest-growing portion of the data center market, the advanced liquid cooling. We are really happy to be able to count the support of that talented team. I'm glad I told you, I hope you were in our last earnings call. I made a short comment sarcastically, that we should brace for comments around cooling coming up every month. I would say this is truer than ever with the latest news we saw from the market. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:39:56Now, seriously, if I look back even a space of three months, I would say that I believe this investor community evolved in their thinking in the last months, and I believe most understand now that cold plates are not commodities. I saw a couple of really good reports coming out from analysts. There's understanding that cold plates are actually strategic assets for our customer co-development, customer centricity, and future wings that actually can be paired and can pull wings for system business like CDUs for cooling and power management, especially want those three things under the same roof. There is much more understanding of its growth potential. I'm happy that's the case now. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:40:49If we start looking at the recent cold plate acquisitions, I would say that they further, in my opinion, further validate our strategy because it demonstrate the attractiveness of this tremendous market growth opportunity we saw earlier on. The other thing I wanna highlight in terms of landscape, competitive landscape to the second part of your question, before acquiring Boyd, our team really did the homework, and we systematically evaluated the market landscape for over one year. We did that on our own. We hired an external consultant. We hired a cooling expert from the Department of Energy. All those three independent data points of browsing the market pointed to Boyd. We are confident we bought the best business, the market leader at the right multiple. Also very important to say that. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:41:45Based on Boyd's world-leading market position, we are also very happy about their capabilities and the scale they can, you know, implement, in the next months and years. As, as you said, there's a lot of deals. We are familiar with those deals. In my opinion, that does not change our view of the market because, as I said before, we browse the market, for the best deal possible. This game around liquid cooling is a game, in my opinion, I would define as a game of trust, given the high stakes of being so close to the chips and keeping the servers working and then revenue generation assets operating well. It's a game of trust. It's a game of speed. Constant innovation. Constant innovation is what marks this market, very strongly. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:42:38The other thing I want to say, and this is the mindset of our team here, that we will protect, we will learn from, and we will augment what made Boyd great, which is their speed, the superior engineering they have, the manufacturing quality at increased scale. We are really focused there. If I stop, this is a big picture for the business and the cooling markets. We know that the future is bright for this technology, we should ask ourselves what make us feel good about the shorter term. Here, once again, if you look at the Boyd's business, and now we call it our liquid cooling business at Eaton, revenues should meet or exceed this $1.7 billion in revenue. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:43:26Certainly a huge growth over $1.1 billion this team achieved last year. We feel really confident. Why we feel confident on that number? Q1 revenues from this cooling business at Boyd more than doubled year-over-year. Also the backlog doubled from six months ago. The business is really growing really fast and winning big. The second thing I would say, the run rate in Q1 was already around $400 million. We modeled to stay at that level in Q2 and raised the second half to $450 million per quarter. It's reasonable, it's conservative, and we think it's perfectly feasible as the business is ramping. We only own the business for three weeks, we thought it was premature to raise the full-year forecast at this time. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:44:20I wanna reassure everyone we are aiming for an upside, and we'll be prepared for that upside. In summary, just to give you my final words on this topic, market validation of our strategy, given the last deals, we're extremely happy to have Boyd in our portfolio, and I'm very confident in delivering our own growth plans for 2026 and beyond. Operator00:44:50Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Kaplowitz from Citi. Your question please. Andrew KaplowitzManaging Director at Citi00:44:57Good morning, everyone. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:45:00Hi, Andrew. Good morning. Andrew KaplowitzManaging Director at Citi00:45:02Paulo, obviously Good morning. Obviously, you raised your organic revenue guide for the year, which seems like it's mostly coming from data center strength. What are you seeing in terms of other mega projects? Are you seeing any further unlock there? Maybe your thoughts on broader economic trends impacting EA and Electrical Global. Any impact from the Middle East on your business, for instance? Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:45:23Yeah, very good question. I'll give you a flavor on mega projects first. Another strong quarter. The announcements were up 29% year-over-year, growing 36% in full year 2025. If you put a two-year stack, it's staggeringly 65% up. Very strong development in mega projects. The backlog of mega projects now is around $3.3 trillion and is up 31% year-over-year. The most important thing for Q1 is that we saw an uptick on mega project starts, which is when people start spending money and buying equipment. Mega project starts reached $54 billion in Q1, so it's more than double same period last year. Since we start tracking that in 2021, it's the third best quarter on record. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:46:24Very strong tailwinds that will come from mega projects in the years to come. You have a second and third part to your question. I will just give you some flavor on the other markets so we allow other colleagues to ask questions. We also had strength, we see strength in utility orders, we see strength in, you know, machine OEM. We see strength in Aerospace more broadly for the company. We have different vectors of growth which are not necessarily data center only. I'll not give full details now, we allow other colleagues to ask their questions as well. Thanks for your highlights on the mega projects. Strong quarter once again. Andrew KaplowitzManaging Director at Citi00:47:08Appreciate it, Paulo. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:47:10Thank you. Operator00:47:11Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Patrick Baumann from JPMorgan. Your question please. Patrick BaumannAnalyst at JPMorgan00:47:20Thanks. Good morning. I just had a quick one on the EA margin again for the commentary you made on March and April being better and then, you know, the incremental pricing you put through in April. I'm just wondering if you give any insight into how much improvement you saw in those months, and then what kind of improvement you expect in margin from first quarter to second quarter. It does sound like you expect it to get better, but it's not really clear to what extent. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:47:50Great. I would get started. We'll also allow Dave to make some comments later. We see the biggest mission for this business actually to reach the top line and keep growing, and they did that exceptionally well in March. We had a very strong end of the quarter. That performance repeated in April. In terms of margin development, the two things I said before, I shared before, they're temporary headwinds. They will be solved as we execute on the volume ramp. This is on the right track, and that give us confidence. The second thing which hasn't hit our numbers yet entirely is the pricing that we implemented beginning of April. If you put these two together, the business is demonstrating top line growth and executing on the expansion well. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:48:41Also took, you know, the right measures in terms of pricing, already implemented, so we'll see that coming in the second half. To just go back to what we said last year in terms of the EPS split between first and second half, is pretty much what we see in this guidance as well, right? I will start by making those comments, and allow Dave to give some color here from his perspective. Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:49:09Yeah. You know, based on our, how we finished March and April, you know, with our guidance, we're up 150 basis points from Q1 to Q2 in the Electrical Americas. Keep in mind, you know, on the price actions, you know, we don't get the full take in the first quarter when we execute them. You know, that tends to come through in the following quarter. Again, we're confident in our guide for Q2 for Electrical Americas. Again, April demonstrated that we're, you know, continuing the momentum that we saw at the end of Q1. Patrick BaumannAnalyst at JPMorgan00:49:39Thanks. That's 150 basis points you're saying from Q1 to Q2 is the expectation? Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:49:45Correct. Patrick BaumannAnalyst at JPMorgan00:49:47Thank you very much. Best luck. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:49:49Thank you. Operator00:49:51Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Buscaglia from BNP. Your question please. Andrew BuscagliaAnalyst at BNP00:50:00Hey, thanks guys. Morning. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:50:02Hi, Andrew. Andrew BuscagliaAnalyst at BNP00:50:05Just wanted to check on, you know, a lot of discussion on the data center front, and orders were quite strong, there. Could you give some commentary what's going on order-wise and trend-wise by the other sub-segments within Electrical Americas? Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:50:22Sure. I will give you commentary. Let me talk about utilities, because it's an important market, and it's tightly connected with the data center boom as well, as you guys know. We continue to see very strong momentum in terms of orders for the utility business here. We had double-digit growth on a 12-month rolling basis for Electrical Americas, and for Electrical Global, mid-single-digits. Strong orders coming our way on the utility side. On the strategic commentary, I want to say that we continue to make progress gaining share in voltage regulators, capacitors and switchgear, which are actually three product groups we are ramping up with our investments, so we keep winning shares in that area. That's our focus because it has most differentiated performance. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:51:22We are a bit more selective on single-phase transformers because it's the smallest part of our portfolio, also the least differentiated. I would say this, we expect the market to remain strong for a very long period of time. Just, you know, if you recall all those data center announcements triggered what I would say, everyone already sees, the power generation and transmission investment. It's very well reflected in power gen and power transmission, but it's not so much yet reflected in the power distribution utility business, right? Just to remind everyone how good it is to see investment in power generation for us at Eaton, every investment in generation creates a compounding opportunity for Eaton. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:52:19First of all, when there is a power generation project, we sell the medium voltage gear required for this project. Then in the later stage, you know, when there's power to get distributed by the grid, once again, opportunity for us to distribute, protect those electrons. Then lastly, and even more impactful to us, is when this power reaches our end customers, being data centers, being, you know, commercial, institutional, any other end market, because we need to manage that power reliably and safely. We are very, very convinced that utility business is going to remain stronger for longer. We also, I would say this, I will give you some color on the short cycle businesses we have. Again, short cycle, high single digits in Q1, revenues from mid-single digits in Q4. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:53:20We see this continued momentum quarter-over-quarter. If you go to the details of what makes the short cycle businesses, we saw some recovery in Americas for Resi, low single digits. Once again, we are not counting on the Resi market to be strong for us to make our numbers by any means. We saw also stronger recovery in the EMEA business in the residential space. MOM is back up for both Americas and global. Distributed IT, we see high single digit in the Americas up. High single digits up, it was a little bit down global versus last year. We see green shoots coming from Q4 extending to Q1 on the short cycle markets. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:54:13I will say this, I'm proud to say our team is capitalizing on this market recovery and winning. This is important because we also drive utilization of our factories that serve those end markets. I hope that helps. Andrew BuscagliaAnalyst at BNP00:54:30Very helpful. Yeah. Thank you very much. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:54:33Thank you. Operator00:54:34Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Joe Ritchie from Goldman Sachs. Your question please. Joe RitchieManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:54:41Hey, guys. Good morning. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:54:44Hi. Good morning. Morning, Joe. Joe RitchieManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:54:46Yeah, I wanted to circle back on Boyd. Clearly, off to a great start this year. I'm curious, Paulo, how are you managing, like, potential disruption from the integration of this asset with legacy Eaton? Also, as it relates to capacity, I know you addressed the capacity for your core business, but I guess with Boyd coming in, what kind of capacity additions are necessary in order to fulfill, like, their backlog and how fast they're growing? Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:55:19Great question. To the first one, first part of your question, as I said before, it's a game of trust, it's a game of speed, it's a game of, you know, getting the technology implemented and also getting the ramp done in the right way. We are taking a very cautious and deliberate approach to integrating this business into Eaton. The reason we went after Boyd was that they were the market leader. We didn't want to go for a smaller asset, which we've found will be very difficult to make it work in our organization. Here, they know what they're doing. They were part of Goldman before, and they were performing before. Our philosophies cannot be any harder or more difficult inside Eaton at all. We are taking very good care of the team, a very talented team. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:56:14We are retaining them. They report directly to our COO at the sector level. They report directly to Heath, so high visibility, high attention. In terms of investment, over time, this business grew fantastic rates at very low CapEx rates versus sales, like think about 3%, 4%. With this explosive growth they have now, they have more investment in terms of sales approaching double digits temporarily. It's already part of our guidance for the year, and it's all been implemented. The teams are running, and as I said before, a very good Q1 in terms of output and growth. We just got the April numbers yesterday, also very strong performance. We are really excited about the business. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:57:13We are respectful of what they built, and we're actually leveraging some of their connections with the chip manufacturers to be a lead for other technologies of Eaton to win. A good example of that could be also what we are doing with NVIDIA and other companies. We keep high touch, you know, connection with this team. We want them to run fast, and we are supporting them to run fast. Joe RitchieManaging Director at Goldman Sachs00:57:43Very helpful. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:57:45Thanks. Operator00:57:46Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Julian Mitchell from Barclays. Your question, please. Julian MitchellAnalyst at Barclays00:57:53Hi, good morning. Thanks for the question. Maybe just to circle back to the sort of ramp-up slope that the guidance is predicated on, and I suppose two sides to that. One is, just overall firm-wide EPS is the sort of guide based on a $4-type number in Q4. Allied to that, on the Electrical Americas division, I think incremental margins, you're guiding year-on-year at about 10% in Q2 year-on-year. Should we think about third quarter in the 20% and then fourth quarter in the sort of 50% type incremental margin? Thank you very much. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:58:40I'll start. Allow also Dave to provide color. Thanks for your question. Here I would say a couple of things. Once again, you're perfectly right in your analysis. That's exactly what we're committing to. The reasons behind are, once again, twofold. One is the pricing we've already implemented, and two, we're gonna get the leverage from the ramp-up investments that we have that's gonna start incrementing our profits, improving our incremental here. Also, all the inefficiencies we are dealing with as we learn how to operate in those plants will be behind us. Yes, absolutely in line, and this is perfectly feasible and aligned with the previous guidance we had between first half and second half EPS breakdown. Any additional comments, Dave? Dave FosterEVP and CFO at Eaton00:59:32The only thing I would add is, you know, in addition to the benefits we see of the scale of the growth on the manufacturing costs, we also see the benefit on reducing support costs as a percentage of sales in the back half of the year. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:59:45True. Okay. Julian MitchellAnalyst at Barclays00:59:47That's great. Thank you. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton00:59:48No, thanks. I'd like to make a couple of comments just to close here the call, some closing remarks. Very interesting questions. I'm glad we moved to this one question per analyst format, made it more dynamic. We could talk to more people. Let me just make a couple of comments to conclude the call. I would start by saying that I would say our strategy is working, right? We are, in my opinion, we are closer to our customers, and we are designing the future together with them. This is really important for the future development of this company. We are shaping our portfolio at fast pace. Just think about how much ground we covered last year. We allocated capital boldly, and I also say surgically. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton01:00:37The proof point, in our numbers, you can see the Electrical business grew 20% total sales with 13% organic. Aerospace grew 16% total sales with 9% organic. Those were two markets where we decided to invest and allocate capital. In terms of execution, I would just highlight once again, we are executing on unprecedented demand. Record orders and backlogs are paired with strong negotiation pipeline, and this give us very high level of visibility and confidence moving forward. I would say also we showed demonstrated operational improvements that allow us to beat our top line commitment for the quarter, also to raise organic growth guidance for the full year. In terms of margins and the Americas development, the ramp is on track. We are accelerating the execution, as I said before. Paulo RuizCEO at Eaton01:01:38We have confidence in the top line and the margin upside as the year progresses. In a nutshell, this allowed us to beat the Q1 EPS, have confidence to absorb the EPS impact of our acquisitions, and still be able to raise the full-year EPS guides. Thanks to everyone for your time, and thanks for your questions. Thank you. Operator01:02:02Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Good day.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDave FosterEVP and CFOPaulo RuizCEOYan JinSVP of Investor RelationsAnalystsAndrew BuscagliaAnalyst at BNPAndrew KaplowitzManaging Director at CitiChad DillardAnalyst at BernsteinChris SnyderExecutive Director at Morgan StanleyDeane DrayManaging Director at RBC Capital MarketsJoe RitchieManaging Director at Goldman SachsJulian MitchellAnalyst at BarclaysNicole DeBlaseAnalyst at Deutsche BankPatrick BaumannAnalyst at JPMorganScott DavisChairman and CEO at Melius ResearchPowered by