Flex Q4 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Key Takeaways

  • Positive Sentiment: Flex announced the intent to spin off its Cloud and Power Infrastructure (CPI) segment into a standalone public company expected to close in Q1 2027, with Revathi Advaithi named CEO of SpinCo and Michael Hartung to lead the remaining Flex.
  • Positive Sentiment: Management is targeting very steep CPI growth—65%–75% revenue growth in FY2027 and 80%+ in FY2028—driven by multi‑year program wins across hyperscalers (including Google), colos, neo‑clouds and utilities.
  • Positive Sentiment: Flex delivered strong Q4/FY26 results and capital returns—Q4 revenue of $7.5B (+17% YoY), record adjusted gross margin of 9.9%, Q4 adj. EPS $0.93 (+27% YoY), FY26 adj. EPS $3.30 (+25%), and ~$944M of share repurchases in the year.
  • Neutral Sentiment: The company resegmented into RMS, ITS, and CPI and says post‑spin Flex will focus on higher‑return markets (healthcare, robotics, warehouse automation, networking) targeting low‑ to mid‑single‑digit revenue growth.
  • Negative Sentiment: CPI margins were pressured by infrastructure investments and cloud ramp costs, and Flex expects materially higher CapEx in FY2027 ($1.4B–$1.6B) to scale capacity, which may weigh on near‑term free cash flow before normalization in FY2028.
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Earnings Conference Call
Flex Q4 2026
00:00 / 00:00

Transcript Sections

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Operator

Thank you for standing by. Welcome to Flex's fourth quarter and fiscal 2026 earnings conference call. Presently, all participants are in listen-only mode. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a Q&A session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your phone. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star two. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to Mrs. Michelle Simmons. You may begin.

Michelle Simmons
Michelle Simmons
SVP of Investor and Public Relations at Flex

Good morning, thank you for joining us today for Flex's fourth quarter and fiscal year 2026 earnings conference call. With me today is our Chief Executive Officer, Revathi Advaithi, our Chief Financial Officer, Kevin Krumm, and our Chief Commercial Officer, Michael Hartung. We'll give brief remarks followed by Q&A. Slides for today's call, as well as a copy of the earnings press release, are available on the investor relations section at flex.com. This call is being recorded and will be available for replay on our corporate website. Today's call contains forward-looking statements which are based on our current expectations and assumptions. These statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. These statements reflect expected results for the full fiscal year and do not give effect to the planned spin-off of the Cloud and Power Infrastructure segment.

Michelle Simmons
Michelle Simmons
SVP of Investor and Public Relations at Flex

For a full discussion of these risks and uncertainties, please see the cautionary statements in our presentation, press release, or in the Risk Factors section in our most recent filings with the SEC. Note this information is subject to change, and we undertake no obligation to update these forward-looking statements. Please note all growth metrics will be on a year-over-year basis unless stated otherwise. Additionally, all results will be on a non-GAAP basis unless we specifically state it's a GAAP result. The full non-GAAP to GAAP reconciliations can be found in the appendix slides of today's presentation, as well as in the summary financials posted on the investor relations website. In addition to our earnings presentation, we also published a separate presentation regarding the proposed transaction which will be discussed on today's call. Please refer to the earnings presentation to follow along.

Michelle Simmons
Michelle Simmons
SVP of Investor and Public Relations at Flex

Before we begin, I want to share a brief update on our Investor Day. In light of yesterday's announcement, we are postponing the event until the fall, when we expect to have more information to share. We will provide more details as the year progresses. Now I'd like to turn the call over to our CEO. Revathi.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Thank you, Michelle. Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. We have a lot to cover this morning, so let me begin with an important milestone that reflects how our business has evolved and where we are headed. Seven years ago, we set out to transform Flex. The strategy was simple. Focus on the right end markets, divest non-core assets, invest in the technologies that matter, and execute with discipline. Since then, we have exited consumer-focused markets, spun off Nextracker into a leading solar business, and created tremendous value for our shareholders, and invested ahead of the curve in electrical products, recognizing early that compute would become power-hungry and that data centers would need an integrated architecture. We have built a productivity machine in our factories, and most importantly, we have invested in our teams, creating one of the best high-performing values-based culture.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Yesterday brought the next milestone in that journey. We announced our intent to spin off our Cloud and Power Infrastructure business into a new publicly traded company, with the spin expected to complete in the first quarter of calendar 2027. This decision reflects our conviction that the business has achieved the scale, growth profile, and strategic importance to stand on its own. It also positions Flex to sharpen its identity and invest more aggressively in its highest growth, highest technology opportunities. Turning to slide five. SpinCo, historically our data center business, now captured in our CPI segment, will be a global critical digital infrastructure company delivering end-to-end power and thermal management from grid to chip for AI data centers and mission-critical applications like utilities. What differentiates SpinCo is its depth across power, thermal, and compute integration.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

That depth lets us replace the fragmented multi-vendor approach market-leading customers are actively moving away from and gives us the opportunity to build one of the largest electrical companies purpose-built to deliver from utility to chip with cooling and compute integration designed in from day one. The timing is clear for two reasons. First, AI is driving compute density to levels that require power and thermal to be engineered as a unified system, not bolted on after the fact. Customers no longer want individual subsystems. They want a single partner who can deliver from grid to chip. SpinCo is purpose-built for this moment. Secondly, electrical infrastructure is entering a generational transformation. The shift to solid-state transformers and 800 volt DC distribution will reshape how power moves from grid to chip, unlocking the density and efficiency AI demands.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

SpinCo is the only company with embedded power, distributed power, thermal, and systems depth to lead it. Following the spin, Flex will continue to execute its proven playbook as a leading advanced manufacturing company, designing and building highly complex products at global scale for premier brands across diversified end markets. Global supply chains undergo structural changes, shorter technology cycles, rising system complexity, and persistent constraints, customers are rethinking how products are designed, manufactured, and scaled. These shifts are expanding opportunities for Flex to deepen customer relationships and capture greater system-level engagement. Post-spin, as Flex allocates capital towards higher growth industries such as healthcare, robotics, warehouse automation, and networking, we believe the company is entering its next phase of transformation.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

With a simplified portfolio and a sharpened strategic focus, Flex is positioned to expand margins and continue to actively optimizing its portfolio towards higher growth opportunities that will drive strong cash flows and shareholder returns. Turning to slide six. We believe spinning Flex into two distinct companies positions both to sharpen strategic focus, improve operating discipline, and align capital allocation with their respective growth and margin priorities. This is not about changing our strategy. It is about unlocking value through simplification and clarity for customers, for employees, and for shareholders. From a financial perspective, both businesses have demonstrated strong fundamentals, and we expect the spin to enhance transparency while allowing each management team to pursue tailored investment priorities. We plan to provide additional details over the upcoming quarters, including standalone financials at the appropriate time. Turning to slide seven. To a recently announced acquisition.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Over the past several years, we have deliberately evolved our portfolio across thermal technologies, around integrated structure, and power. Earlier this week, we closed our acquisition of Electrical Power Products or EP², strengthening our power portfolio with utility-grade specification-driven solutions for grid modernization and electrification. These capabilities are becoming critical as data center growth places greater demands on power availability and reliability. Combined with our existing power distribution, switchgear, thermal management, and integrated rack scale capabilities, EP² enhances our ability to deliver end-to-end solutions for utility and infrastructure customers, and it increases our exposure to long cycle margin accretive programs that support grid resiliency. To put a point on that momentum, we've recently secured substantial incremental business with several hyperscaler and data center customers, including Google. These are not single product manufacturing engagements.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

They span power infrastructure, thermal systems, and complex hardware manufacturing deployed at scale across our global footprint. Capital deployment for these projects is already underway, it will remain elevated through FY 2027 as this growth, alongside broader CPI growth, requires expanded investment. We expect this level of investment to be unique to fiscal year 2027. We have line of sight into fiscal year 2028 and 29 requirements and expect CapEx to normalize in fiscal year 2028. Awards of this scope are exactly why we believe the spin is the right move. These deployments require the integrated end-to-end capability that SpinCo will deliver as a focus company. Turning to slide eight. Let me put some numbers around the growth opportunity. For SpinCo, we're targeting revenue growth of 65%-75% in fiscal year 2027, a significant step up from fiscal year 2026.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

For FY 2028, we expect further acceleration with growth of over 80%. Going to slide nine. Flex, post-spin, is targeting low to mid-single-digit revenue growth in that same timeframe and will invest in areas where growth is accelerating, including regulated and technology-driven markets such as healthcare, warehouse automation, and networking tied to data center infrastructure growth. When you put all this together, it is clear that this is the right moment for this milestone. It is also clear that this leadership team has the credibility to deliver this milestone, having already executed and delivered spins like Nextracker. Talking about leadership, I want to briefly address leadership as we take our next step. Turning to slide 10. I'm excited to share that I will serve as CEO of SpinCo as we build a focused, purpose-driven platform designed to lead the future of compute infrastructure.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

I'm equally confident in the future of Flex, and I'm pleased to leave it in Michael Hartung's very capable hands as CEO. Michael joined Flex in 2007 through the acquisition of Solectron and has since held a range of senior leadership roles, most recently as our Chief Commercial Officer. Over the past seven years, Michael and I have worked closely to transform this company, driving disciplined portfolio optimization, margin expansion, targeted acquisition, and building a stronger and a more resilient Flex. This playbook has delivered stronger customer relationships and meaningful returns for shareholders. Michael, thank you for your trusted partnership over the years and for stepping into this role. I look forward to supporting you and the entire leadership team as we embark on this next chapter.

Michael Hartung
Michael Hartung
CCO at Flex

Thank you, Revathi. I'm honored to step into the role of CEO of Flex and to build on the strong foundation this team has created. As we sharpen our focus, I'm confident Flex is well-positioned to build on its legacy of global manufacturing and supply chain excellence while serving customers across diversified end markets. I'm excited about the opportunities ahead and what this team can accomplish together. With that, I'll turn the call over to Kevin Krumm, who will walk through the financials in more detail.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Thank you, Michael, and good morning, everyone. I'd like to add that I too am excited about yesterday's announcement of the spin, and I'm looking forward to working with Revathi and Michael throughout this transition. Before I discuss our financial results, I'd like to take a moment to explain our new segmentation outlined on slide 12. From this quarter moving forward, we will be reporting in three new segments: Regulated Manufacturing Solutions, Integrated Technology Solutions, and Cloud and Power Infrastructure. This new segmentation will provide clearer visibility into our business units as our portfolio evolves. Upfront, I will make a few comments about our new segments. Regulated Manufacturing Solutions, or RMS, like Reliability Solutions before it, will house our industrial, automotive, and healthcare business units. RMS is focused on specialized products with longer life cycles that demand a greater level of precision and consistency.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Our critical and embedded power businesses have been removed from Industrial and are now reported in a new segment. Integrated Technology Solutions, or ITS, consists of our Communications and Lifestyle business units. Similar to our previous Agility Solutions segments, ITS serves customers in fast-moving industries with shorter product life cycles, with a focus on adaptability and time to market to meet the ever-changing needs of evolving industries. Communications includes what was previously our non-cloud CEC businesses, and Lifestyle now includes our former consumer device businesses. Finally, we have consolidated our data center power and cloud businesses, once housed within Industrial and CEC, into a new segment, Cloud and Power Infrastructure, or CPI. This new segment represents the business previously included in our data center disclosures and will now be reported via our Cloud and cooling and power business units.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

As Revathi previously announced, we intend to spin this segment into a new publicly traded company and will provide segment-level disclosures until the transaction closes next year. I will now discuss our financial results for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026. Starting with our key financials on slide 13. Fourth quarter revenue came in at $7.5 billion, up 17% year-over-year. Adjusted gross profit totaled $737 million, and adjusted gross margin improved to a record level 9.9%, up 50 basis points from the prior year. Adjusted operating profit was $500 million, with adjusted operating margins at 6.7%, up 50 basis points from the prior year, and another company record due to improved operational efficiency and product mix.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Finally, adjusted earnings per share for the quarter increased 27% year-over-year to $0.93 per share. Turning to our quarterly segment results on the next slide. RMS revenue was $2.7 billion, up 13% from the prior year, driven by strong growth in industrial and healthcare. Adjusted operating income totaled $180 million, and adjusted operating margin was 6.6%, up 80 basis points year-over-year, driven by strong improvements in industrial and automotive. ITS revenue totaled $2.9 billion, an increase of 13% year-over-year. The increase in revenue was primarily driven by strength in communications. Adjusted operating income was $147 million, and adjusted operating margin was 5%, unchanged from the prior year.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Finally, CPI revenue totaled $1.8 billion, up 31% versus the prior year, driven by growth in both business units, with Power's growth rate exceeding Cloud's. Adjusted operating income was $182 million, and adjusted operating margin was 9.9%, largely in line with the prior year, with favorable mix impacts from Power offset by infrastructure investment in critical Power and ramp costs in Cloud. Looking at our full-year results on slide 15. Revenue was $27.9 billion, up 8% on continued strong growth in Cloud, Power, and Industrial, offset by persistent softness in our consumer-related end markets. Adjusted gross profit totaled $2.7 billion, and adjusted gross margin improved to 9.5%, up 70 basis points from the prior year.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Adjusted operating income totaled $1.8 billion, up 21%, and adjusted operating margin was 6.3%, up 70 basis points year-over-year, primarily driven by favorable product mix and continued improvements in operational efficiency. For the full year, Flex achieved adjusted EPS of $3.30 per share, up 25%, driven by increased adjusted operating income and strong share repurchases. Turning to our segment results for the year on slide 16. Similar to fiscal 2025, fiscal 2026 was a dynamic year, characterized by macroeconomic uncertainties and rapidly accelerating AI deployment. I'm proud to say that once again, we delivered on our expectations for growth, exceeding our revenue expectations for all segments. We have also maintained our focus on operational efficiency and execution, which led to another record year for adjusted growth and adjusted operating margins.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

RMS revenue was $10.2 billion for the year, a year-over-year increase of 5%, driven by Industrial and Healthcare, and delivered an adjusted operating margin of 6%, up 80 basis points, primarily driven by improvements in Industrial. ITS revenue totaled $11.1 billion, down 2% from the prior year due to persistent softness in Lifestyle, offset by growth in Communications. Adjusted operating margin was 5.4%, an increase of 60 basis points, driven by improvements in Communications. CPI revenue was $6.6 billion, up 38% year-over-year, exceeding our target of 35%. Adjusted operating margin was 9.2%, down 100 basis points year-over-year, reflecting incremental infrastructure investments in critical power and ramp costs in cloud.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

While these investments temporarily weighed on our margins, we expect to recoup the full 100 basis points in FY 2027 and see further expansion of 50-100 basis points in FY 2028 as we grow into these investments. Moving to cash on slide 18. Free cash flow in the quarter was $212 million, and for the full fiscal year, we delivered approximately $1.1 billion in free cash flow. Q4 inventory was up 5% sequentially and 15% year-over-year, mostly supporting our CPI and RMS segment growth year-over-year. Inventory net of working capital advances was 55 days, a reduction of one day versus the prior year. Fourth quarter net CapEx totaled $201 million, bringing full year CapEx to $625 million, or approximately 2.2% of revenue.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

In the fourth quarter, we repurchased $200 million of stock, or approximately 3 million shares. For the full year, we repurchased $944 million of stock, or approximately 19 million shares. Moving on to our fiscal 2027 outlook on slide 19. For fiscal 2027, our expectations are the following: revenue to be between $32.3 billion and $33.8 billion, up 18% at the midpoint. Adjusted operating margin to be between 7% and 7.1%, an increase of approximately 80 basis points, driven in large part by recouped FY 2026 investments in CPI. We expect an adjusted tax rate of 21%. We expect adjusted EPS to be between $4.21 and $4.51, up 32% at the midpoint.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Finally, we expect CapEx to be in the range of $1.4 billion-$1.6 billion, and free cash flow conversion of approximately 60%, excluding costs associated with the spin transaction. As Revathi mentioned, we secured significant business with multiple customers, including a multi-year contract with Google, underpinning our strong CPI growth expectations of 65%-75% in FY 2027 and 80%+ for FY 2028. What we're putting in place today is foundational. Power and cooling infrastructure to manufacture for the data center market to support a broad set of hyperscaler and AI programs, products, and partnerships through FY 2028 and FY 2029. As we scale these investments, we expect incremental investments, but at levels materially lower than the upfront investment required to establish the core infrastructure and capabilities for this next phase of robust growth.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

To put a finer point on it, we expect CapEx to return to historical levels in FY 2028, with CPI returning to approximately 2.5%-3% of revenue, and ITS and RMS below 2% of revenues. Post-spin, both companies will be well-positioned to capture growth from this generational AI-driven build-out. Moving on to our fiscal 2027 segment outlook. For RMS, we expect revenue to be up low to mid-single digits, driven by strength in industrial and healthcare as automotive continues to stabilize. For ITS, we expect revenue to be flat to up low single digits as strength in communications is offset by softness and our continued de-emphasis of low-value markets and lifestyle. For CPI, we expect revenue to be up 65%-75%, driven by continued accelerating demand in both cloud and power, with power growth again outpacing cloud growth.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Finishing off with our guidance for the first quarter on slide 21, we expect RMS to be up high single digits to low double digits, driven by industrial and healthcare. We expect ITS to be up high single digits to low double digits based on strength in communications offset by weakness in lifestyle. We expect CPI revenue to be up 20%-30%, driven by continued growth in power and cloud. We expect CPI growth to ramp in the second half of FY 2027 as investments made in FY 2026 allow us to deliver against robust demand from recent program wins. For total Flex, we expect revenue in the range of $7.35 billion-$7.65 billion, up 14% at the midpoint, with adjusted operating income between $469 million and $499 million.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Interest and other expense is estimated to be around $65 million, the adjusted tax rate to be around 21%. Lastly, we anticipate adjusted EPS to be between $0.86 and $0.92 per share, up 24% at the midpoint based on approximately 374 million weighted average shares outstanding. In summary, we finished FY 2026 in a position of strength, delivering record margins, strong cash flow, and growth across critical end markets. As we look ahead to FY 2027 and our announcement yesterday to spin off our Cloud and Power Infrastructure segment, we believe both companies are well-positioned for their next phases of value creation. Flex's disciplined playbook under Revathi Advaithi and Michael Hartung has driven shareholder returns that have consistently outperformed market benchmarks. Current planned investments are intended to support continued progress post-spin.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

We are excited about the prospects of these businesses moving forward, and we are confident in the continued value they will create for investors, customers, and our employees. With that, I will now turn the call back over to the operator to begin Q&A.

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the Q&A portion of today's call. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your phone. As a reminder, we ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. One moment please for the first question. Our first question comes from the line of Samik Chatterjee with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question.

Samik Chatterjee
Samik Chatterjee
Analyst at JPMorgan

Hi, thanks for taking my questions. A lot to digest here in terms of information over last night and today morning, so thank you for all the presentations here. Revathi, maybe if I can start with the decision to do a SpinCo here with the power and cloud asset. I understand the sort of value unlock that might, that might create, but how did you sort of balance that against looking at the scale of the business, the sort of diversification across end markets and also customer concentration that that business might have? How did you sort of weigh those opportunities and sort of those drivers before taking the spin? I'm interested to hear your thoughts on that. Another follow-up.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Samik, thank you for the question. I would say that, you know, a value unlock story is absolutely very clear, like you said. I think the important part to understand is, you know, if you look at what's happening in the AI data center space and across power infrastructure in the U.S. and across the world, it is a one-time change that is happening in the architecture of power and in the architecture of data centers. If you look at the portfolio that we have very thoughtfully built out in the last four, five years, we do everything from rack and pod scale system integration. You know, we have the power and thermal architecture we talk about. We've been investing in building out all the way from the data center out to the substation with our utility investments that we have done.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

We've built a very diversified portfolio across power, across thermal, across compute. I think the beauty of the whole thing is with a very diversified customer base, not just hyperscalers, but also across colos, across neoclouds, and then across a wide variety of utility customers. Diversified customers, diversified product portfolio, fantastic forward-looking growth rates, which is clear in terms of the value unlock story. Samik, it definitely felt like it was a no-brainer to do it at this point in time with the business that we have built, and it is very well set up to run as a standalone company.

Samik Chatterjee
Samik Chatterjee
Analyst at JPMorgan

Perfect. Got it. Maybe just a quick follow-up, and thank you for all the details. The acceleration that you're expecting in CPI's growth rate, can you just flesh that out a bit more? How much of that is attributable to your multi-year agreement with Google related to maybe power, which you've obviously also invested in over the last year? Thank you.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Yeah. I'd say, Samik, that the acceleration of the CPI growth rate is related to Google and multiple other hyperscalers, including the growth that we're going to see across colos and neoclouds. It's a very diversified kind of customer growth rate. It feels like almost every utility customer and almost every data center AI customer is seeing some very significant expansion. We feel really good about the 65%-75% and the 80%+ growth rate that we're seeing that we have said. It's across all the three end markets. Which is our product lines, cooling, computer integration and power and across multiple customers. Well-distributed between power and cloud, well-distributed across multiple customers.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

As I said, you know, earlier in my interview earlier today, is that we're also booked out in terms of capacity and backlog for the next two years.

Samik Chatterjee
Samik Chatterjee
Analyst at JPMorgan

Great. Thank you. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Luke Junk with Baird. Please proceed with your question.

Luke Junk
Luke Junk
Analyst at Baird

Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Be curious just to get some additional color now that it's a bigger part of the SpinCo on the power franchise and just how we should think about some of the major subcomponents in terms of embedded and critical power in that business. Just thinking about relative growth rates backwards looking, and as you think about some of the discrete opportunities for those parts of the business going forward as well. Thank you.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Yeah. Luke, I would say that in terms of subcomponents of power, you know, I've said this before, is what started our journey was the fact that Flex was already doing work around embedded power, which was power for the chip itself. Small business many years ago, with the acceleration and the focus on power density for chip, obviously that business is accelerating pretty significantly looking forward. Plus, with the change in technology happening with 400 volt DC and 800 volt DC, embedded power is growing significantly. You can't grow by yourself just with embedded power, right? What affects the power in the rack also affects all the power outside.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Distributed power, which is low voltage switchgear, medium voltage switchgear, all the way out to power pods outside the data center, all the way up to the substation or utility-grade power infrastructure. We're seeing growth across all of it end-to-end. I'd say in terms of growth rates, we're gonna share more as we've, you know, we've already given a lot of transparency into the new segmentation, and as every quarter gets announced, you will see all the comparisons get more clear. I'd say feeling very good in terms of how the business is performing across the power franchise, and then you'll see further information on all the financials as we look forward.

Luke Junk
Luke Junk
Analyst at Baird

Thank you for that. Then for my follow-up, just hoping maybe you could give us some more texture on the multi-year contract with Google that you mentioned and, you know, the pipeline and sorts of opportunities that you're seeing in total. You know, it sounds like these awards are fairly foundational in terms of materiality, and I'm just hoping you can maybe double-click on where customers are coming from incrementally, and it feels like this is maybe a different type of opportunity. You know, you mentioned kind of meeting the moment of this generational change. Is that kind of what you're seeing in these awards opportunities as well? Thank you.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Yeah. I would say that the multi-year contract, you know, is with Google, as we talked about in the call itself, but it's also across multiple hyperscalers. It's also across neoclouds and across colos. I think that's a very important diversification story. I think the cool part about all of this is it's not just in the compute integration side or in terms of, you know, building mechanical structures like racks and enclosures, but it's also across things like 400 volt DC, 800 volt DC power architecture for hyperscalers or distributed power, you know, in terms of the data center and the utility itself. These multi-year contracts are really across multiple product lines, across multiple hyperscalers and other customers like neoclouds, colos, and utilities. Let's not forget utilities also.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

You know, we feel good about the fact that we're adding capacity to meet this kind of multi-year commitment that we have from numerous customers, and we're setting up our factories to enable that kind of growth.

Luke Junk
Luke Junk
Analyst at Baird

Excellent. I'll leave it there. Thank you so much.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ruben Roy with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.

Analyst at Stifel

Hi, guys. This is Seth standing on for Ruben Roy. Good morning. Thank you for the question. Revathi Advaithi, you know, Kevin Krumm sort of called out Power as the favorable mix driver in the fourth quarter and Cloud as the ramp cost drag. As Cloud, you know, that's to say sort of compute, cooling, data center architecture business units. As they scale through FY 2027, now with the Google multi-year contract that you've mentioned and the GPU programs that we know of, you know, does this Cloud's margin profile once ramp costs digest converge toward the segment average? To the degree you're able to speak to it, you know, in a normalized FY 2028, you know, what's the rough margin spread between the two business units within CPI?

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Kevin, you wanna take that?

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Yeah. Yeah, hi. I'll take that question. Your question on sort of cloud margins, as we move into FY 2028, we did have ramp costs in FY 2027. We do expect to absorb those costs and continue to scale through that. When looking at CPI though, I will say that our cloud margins are lower than our power margins, and we've been talking about that for the last few years. Power in FY 2027, we also invested in infrastructure costs that we expect to grow into in FY 2028 as well, and that's the improvement that I pointed to in the script where we see CPI margin improving 100 basis points, largely driven by us growing into those investments that we made.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Just to put a finer point on your question, our power margins are gonna be and will continue to be higher than our cloud margins in that segment.

Analyst at Stifel

Thank you. That's, that's helpful. Just to follow up, Michael, you know, congrats on the role. RMS came in at, I believe you said 6% operating margin in FY 2026, and ITS is a tad below that. I guess without front running the long-term framework you'll lay out in fall, can you help us directionally think about the margin progression for RemainCo? You know, is mid 6% achievable through FY 2027, FY 2028 on the trajectory you're laying out? You know, is that further out as healthcare and auto recovery take time to filter?

Analyst at Stifel

I guess on the continued de-emphasis on, you know, lifestyle, low-value markets, you know, should we think of that as a more meaningful revenue exit that benefits margin or just a, you know, more a portfolio refinement at the edges? Thank you. I'll stop there.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Michael?

Michael Hartung
Michael Hartung
CCO at Flex

Yeah. First, thank you for the congratulations. I appreciate it. In terms of the story for this year, if we start with the margin perspective, let's start with first what our result was in the FY 2026 period, where both ITS and RMS were up 80 basis points from 4.6%-5.4%. That strength came from across the portfolio, with the exception of Lifestyle. Remember that Lifestyle now includes our Consumer Devices business, so this does reflect our deliberate repositioning away from those lower value end markets. I would also say that when you think about the playbook going forward, that we will continue to, from a financial perspective, prioritize high-quality earnings that maximize cash generation.

Michael Hartung
Michael Hartung
CCO at Flex

We'll continue to drive the margin expansion story through some of the similar themes we've talked about in the past, starting with productivity on the very early stages of driving improvement on our cost structure, on the advent of using AI-enabled technologies going forward, and then we'll continue to optimize the mix going forward as well. From a margin standpoint, strength in Q4, similar progress into Q1. As you think about going forward, we think there's a lot of room for improvement given that productivity improvement we've been driving, the value of AI in the future, and still there's gas in the tank to continue optimizing that portfolio. If you think about the near term, we're early in the year. Strong Q4, strong guide in Q1. Still have a balanced perspective first half, second half. Relatively measured view on the second half today.

Michael Hartung
Michael Hartung
CCO at Flex

Don't forget we're lapping a really strong comparable in the second half, including that strong Q4. Really pleased with how we're positioned and really optimistic about where we can take this story from here, in particular from a margin perspective and a revenue story.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Yeah. I think the only thing I would add, Michael, is that, you know, just to put a finer point on everything you've said is the framework for Flex post SpinCo is to basically focus on the things we're focused on. You'll see strong margin improvement. You'll see focus on growth in the areas of highest return. You'll see great cash generation and buyback invested with it, and investments into new areas and technologies we want to lean into, like areas like healthcare or associated with other infrastructure spend you're seeing. The game plan is to continue to replicate what we have done and really lean into areas of investment that we haven't been able to focus on because of the focus on data centers.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Delaney with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.

Mark Delaney
Mark Delaney
Analyst at Goldman Sachs

Yes, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Congratulations on the strong results and to both Revathi and Michael on the upcoming new roles. My first question was related to the plans for the spin. I'm hoping you can help investors better understand the potential for the two companies to grow faster on a standalone basis than they could together, perhaps with some examples. If an aspect is to be able to better grow the products portion of the CPI business.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Yeah. Mark, first, just thank you for the congratulations. You know, we've been seeing this story with Flex together for a few years. I would say for the spin portion of the business for CPI, we've already given a pretty strong guide in terms of growth. We've talked about 65%-75% and 80%+ for the year after. I would say the focus, and you've also seen us focus on adding more to the product portfolio. We just announced the acquisition of EP², so we're obviously continuing to expand our geographic reach and our product portfolio within the CPI portion of the business.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

I feel very good about the overall architecture we have put together with thermal management on cooling, with power both in the rack, outside the rack, now heading all the way to the utilities, and then the whole focus in terms of rack and scale integration, bringing that together. I would say the potential to grow is pretty significant. It is gonna be all about kind of continuing to focus on adding capacity and bringing it on in a disciplined way, which is our biggest focus right now. We'll keep looking for areas of technology that we can invest in.

Mark Delaney
Mark Delaney
Analyst at Goldman Sachs

Understood. My other question was to better understand the medium to longer term outlook for CPI. You guided for 65%-75% growth for FY 2027, another 80%+ in FY 2028. Does that growth represent Flex getting to the full run rate of the deals it's already signed across multiple hyperscalers in that FY 2028 timeframe? Do the deals that you signed ramp even beyond 2028? Maybe help investors understand where margins and CPI can get to over that two to three year out timeframe. I mean, already 9.2% in FY 2026, maybe give us a sense of where that could go over the medium to longer term as you ramp the programs you discussed today. Thanks.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Yeah, Kevin, you want to start off?

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Yeah, sure. Hi, Mark. Your questions on the programs that we've signed up commensurate with the investments we're making, I would say that we would continue to see those programs expand beyond FY 2028. The numbers we're giving you today is through FY 2028, but we would see some of those programs continue to grow into FY 2029. From a margin standpoint, we've talked about it, and CPI, we expect to recoup the investment we made this year. We've said that's 100 basis points plus. As we move into FY 2028, we expect additional margin expansion in CPI. On the script, I said 50-100 basis points. The drivers of that are gonna be mix from the product businesses continuing to grow, faster as a % of revenue than the cloud side.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Additionally, it's continued improvement on margins in our products business, really both, but our products business as we move through FY 2028. Moving FY 2028 to FY 2029, I guess I would say our expectations are, we'll continue to raise the bar as we move through FY 2028, and our expectations will continue to go up as we move into FY 2029.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Mark, our framework of whether it's for CPI or for Flex won't change in the sense that we will focus on growth, but margin expansion will be a huge part of the story. Again, we're gonna do both in both of the companies and whether it's coming from mix or accelerated growth or continued investment in our products business, our expectation is that we'll see margin expansion in both businesses.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Thanks. I'll pass it on.

Operator

Thank you. Again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your phone. Next question comes from the line of Steve Barger with KeyBanc. Please proceed with your question.

Steve Barger
Steve Barger
Analyst at KeyBanc

Hi, thanks. Revathi, how much of the CPI growth forecast is just this incredible demand environment versus your own success in pitching the full product and service integration model to customers? Are you allocating capacity to customers who are willing to commit to the full suite?

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

I would say, Steve, first is that's a really important question because a lot of what you are seeing today in terms of expectations from customers is still individual product based. What you're seeing moving forward from a technology architecture perspective and what we're working with customer in the next generation of products is more full architecture based. You'll continue to see that migration from individual products to complete architecture. I would say that there's more to come on that. You're definitely seeing that both hyperscalers, colos, neoclouds are re-architecting their organizations to be able to deal with this change. Today, I would say a lot of our growth is individual products, but a lot of our technology roadmaps are based on a complete architecture.

Steve Barger
Steve Barger
Analyst at KeyBanc

Got it. Thank you. You know, obviously the addressable market is just expanding really fast. It's hard to know how that, you know, where that stops, if it does. Just thinking about the portfolio you've assembled, what has become the hardest part of the business to replicate? Just talk about how you view your durable moat in a business that's growing the way it is.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

I'd say, Steve, first is addressable market does continue to expand. You know, I'd say U.S. data center capacity still is seeing a considerable shortfall, you know, in terms of what we're seeing today, but even the future looking projections we're seeing in terms of what we're hearing from customers and what you're all seeing publicly. I'd say in terms of the addressable moat, for me, the addressable moat always comes down to two things. One is, you know, what is your performance in terms of capacity, growth, and schedule? Today, customers want everything fully assembled, fully tested, just drop it off, ready to go in my data centers. To do that at scale with the complexity that customers are expecting, very few companies can do this.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

You know, I've done three decades of this, and it's very hard to bring that scale together and that architecture together and deploy it fully tested at customers. I'd say that is a very significant moat that we have. I saw that day one when I came to Flex is you can combine the complexity of power and cooling and compute, and then put it together in one architecture with Flex's scale. I think that's the big moat that we're seeing, Steve, I expect that that'll continue and actually will get even more complex as we move forward.

Steve Barger
Steve Barger
Analyst at KeyBanc

Excellent. Thanks for the time.

Kevin Krumm
Kevin Krumm
CFO at Flex

Thanks, Steve.

Operator

Thank you. I'll now turn the call back over to the CEO for any closing remarks.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Thank you. Hey, yesterday's announcement marks another foundational step in the transformation of our business, and we are really excited about the opportunities ahead of us. On behalf of the entire Flex leadership team, I want to say a sincere thank you to our customers for their trust and partnership, of course, to our shareholders for their support and the global Flex team for their dedication and contributions. We look forward to sharing further updates in the coming months. Thank you, everyone.

Operator

Thank you.

Revathi Advaithi
Revathi Advaithi
CEO at Flex

Goodbye

Operator

This now concludes today's call. Thank you for joining. You may now disconnect.

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