Robert J. Buckley
Thank you, Matthijs. I will start by reviewing some of the key performance metrics of the company. In the fourth quarter, Novanta Inc. bookings increased 25% year over year and 12% sequentially, with a book-to-bill of 1.11, indicating a stronger backlog and a positive outlook. All of Novanta Inc.’s businesses had double-digit bookings growth and all had a positive book-to-bill in the fourth quarter. As Matthijs mentioned, this has not happened in a single quarter since 2022, and is strong empirical evidence that our organic growth outlook for 2026 is demand-driven and not aspirational. For the full year, bookings increased 14% and the book-to-bill was 1.01. New product sales in the fourth quarter grew over 80% year over year, raising the vitality index to 24% of sales, and for the full year, new product sales grew over 60% versus the prior year, and the full year vitality index was 22%. Our design wins were also strong, with company-wide design wins for the full year up over 20% versus the prior year. For both the fourth quarter and full year, our sales to the medical end markets represented 53% of total sales, while sales in advanced industrial markets were 47%. Also, for the full year, our medical consumable sales were 15% of total company sales with this category growing at a strong double-digit rate versus the prior year, due to the high attachment rate we see in our next-generation insufflator product launches. Now moving on to the financial results. Our fourth quarter 2025 non-GAAP adjusted gross profit was $118 million or 45.5% adjusted gross margin compared to $112 million or 47% adjusted gross margin in 2024. Adjusted gross margins were down 150 basis points year over year and down sequentially by 100 basis points. Gross margins came in below our November guidance, a direct consequence of the decision Matthijs described. Prioritizing customer deliveries over transfer timing created higher dual running costs in the quarter, with more than a 100 basis point impact to gross margin and a 400 basis point increase to net working capital as a percent of sales. In January, we adjusted the cost structure without disrupting deliveries or revenue momentum. Gross margins are expected to step up sequentially in the first quarter and the transfer will be completed by the end of the second quarter. As a result, our full year 2026 gross margin expansion target of approximately 100 basis points of expansion versus 2025 is intact. For the full year of 2025, non-GAAP adjusted gross profit was $452 million or 46% adjusted gross margin compared to $442 million or 46.5% adjusted gross margin. Moving on to the fourth quarter, R&D expenses were $23 million or approximately 9% of sales. For the full year, R&D expenses were $95 million or approximately 10% of sales. Fourth quarter SG&A expenses, excluding certain adjustments, were $46 million or approximately 18% of sales. Full year SG&A expenses, excluding certain adjustments, were $181 million or approximately 18% of sales. Adjusted EBITDA was $61 million in the quarter, demonstrating strong growth of 17% year over year and achieving a 23.5% adjusted EBITDA margin. On the tax front, our non-GAAP tax rate in 2025 was 20.5% versus 24% in 2024. Our tax rate for the full year was 21% versus 20% in the prior year, and our tax rate increased year over year due to jurisdictional mix of pre-tax income. Our non-GAAP adjusted earnings per share were $0.91 in the fourth quarter, up 20% versus the prior year. This result was achieved despite adding 2.7 million incremental shares to our diluted share count from the November equity fundraise. For the full year 2025, our non-GAAP adjusted EPS was $3.29, an increase of 7% versus the prior year. Operating cash flow in the fourth quarter was $9 million compared to $62 million in 2024. For the full year, operating cash flow was $64 million. Cash flow was impacted by the same regional manufacturing dynamics, higher inventory builds, and temporary accounts receivable timing items, most of which have already been collected in January. As these site moves complete in the first half, we expect a significant inventory drawdown and strong cash rebound. Operating cash flow guidance for the full year is $145 million to $185 million, more than double our 2025 results. We ended the fourth quarter with gross debt of $260 million and a gross leverage ratio of 1.2 times. Our cash balance at year end was $381 million, and so our net debt was negative $121 million, giving us a net leverage ratio of negative 0.5 times, which means we are in a positive net cash position for the first time in over a decade. Our debt balance was significantly reduced during the fourth quarter as we used the proceeds from the November fundraise to pay down over $300 million of our revolving credit facility, giving us near-term savings in interest expense. Partly offsetting this revolver paydown is the addition of the amortizing notes that were issued as part of the November offering, which added approximately $111 million in debt to our balance sheet. The remaining funds from the November offering are shown as an increase in the equity section of the balance sheet. In the fourth quarter, we repurchased $19 million worth of company stock, and for the full year, we repurchased nearly $40 million of shares. While acquisitions remain our top capital allocation priority, we will still repurchase shares under our approved repurchase program when the value of purchasing the stock gives us a greater cash return versus the intrinsic future value of Novanta Inc. I will now share some details on the operating expenses. In the fourth quarter, Automation Enabling Technologies segment revenue grew by 2% year over year, better than expected. The book-to-bill in this segment was 1.16, and bookings were up 33% year over year. For the full year, Automation Enabling Technologies grew sales by 2%, and bookings grew by 20%, and the full year book-to-bill was 1.02. Our precision manufacturing business, which mainly serves the industrial equipment market, saw year-over-year revenue decline of 3% in the fourth quarter. However, this business saw sequential revenue growth of 8% and double-digit growth in bookings in the quarter, and we continue to see momentum build in this business. Our robotics and automation business grew revenues 6% year over year in the fourth quarter, and 2% sequentially. We continue to see a healthy outlook in this business with solid demand for advanced robotic applications and increasing strength in some semiconductor applications benefiting from the investment in artificial intelligence. For the Automation Enabling Technologies segment, adjusted gross margins were 49%, up sequentially but down year over year, driven by the site regionalization dynamics as discussed. For the full year, adjusted gross margins were 49%, roughly flat year over year. New product revenue for the segment grew over 80% year over year in the quarter, and nearly 90% for the full year. Customer design wins for the full year grew over 30% on the back of both innovation and stronger commercial execution by our team. In addition, the vitality index was above 20% in the fourth quarter and high-teens percent for the full year. This is double last year’s performance. Moving on to Medical Solutions segment. Revenue in this segment grew 16% year over year. This segment saw a book-to-bill of 1.07 in the fourth quarter, and bookings were up 17% year over year. For the full year, Medical Solutions grew sales by 5%. Bookings grew by 8%, and the book-to-bill was 1.01. New product sales in the fourth quarter grew by nearly 80% year over year, and the vitality index in this segment was nearly 28% of sales. For the full year, new product sales grew by over 50% and the vitality index was 27% of sales. Our advanced surgery business experienced 15% growth year over year, driven by both strong patient procedural surgical growth rates and from our new product launches of our second-generation insufflators, which continue to see favorable demand from our OEM customers. These growth dynamics are expected to continue into 2026 and beyond. In our precision medicine business, which serves the life science and multiomics market, sales in the fourth quarter grew by 16% year over year and grew sequentially by 4%. The year-over-year growth in this business was largely driven by the Keyon acquisition, as well as some favorable year-over-year comparables. In the Medical Solutions segment, adjusted gross margins were approximately 43%, which is roughly flat year over year. The margin performance was impacted by the manufacturing site dynamics as discussed. Now turning to guidance. We see steady improvement in customer sentiment for capital equipment demand as OEMs and end users have largely adjusted to the current macroeconomic dynamics. As Matthijs covered in his remarks, we see a very favorable growth outlook for three of the four businesses in 2026. For the full year of 2026, we expect GAAP revenue to be approximately $1,030 million to $1,050 million, which represents 4% to 6% organic revenue growth. Within the full year range, we expect to see sequentially increasing momentum in our quarterly organic growth. In the first quarter, we expect to see organic growth in the positive 1% to positive 3% range, and in the second quarter, we expect to see organic growth in the positive 5% to positive 7%, with a similar level of organic growth in the back half of the year. This confidence in the faster pace of organic revenue growth in the second quarter and beyond is driven by the good visibility we have in the recent booking strength and a growing backlog. For adjusted gross margins for the full year, we expect to achieve approximately 47%, which is 100 basis points of expansion year over year. This expansion is coming from completing the regional manufacturing production moves in the second quarter. Based on progress made thus far in the quarter, we feel good about the momentum we have here. We expect R&D and SG&A expenses for the full year to be approximately $294 million to $298 million. This represents roughly 28% of sales. This guidance excludes expected costs associated with our manufacturing MRP system, which is being deployed to support our regional manufacturing initiative and to position Novanta Inc. for further site consolidations and reduced complexity. Depreciation expense will be approximately $17 million in the full year, and we expect this to be approximately evenly split in each quarter. Stock compensation expense will be nearly $38 million for the full year, but the quarterly amount will vary due to the specific timing of some of our equity awards, including the one-time award that was granted in mid-2025 to replace the normal employee cash bonus program for that year. In the first quarter, we expect approximately $12 million of stock expense. In the second quarter, we expect approximately $11 million of stock compensation expense, and then fall to approximately $8 million a quarter in 2026. For adjusted EBITDA in the full year 2026, we expect to be between $245 million and $250 million, representing a low double-digit increase year over year, and we expect to achieve approximately a 24% EBITDA margin. Interest expense, net of interest income, is expected to be roughly $8 million for the full year of 2026, excluding any material changes in debt balances. This includes the interest expense associated with the recently issued amortizing notes. We expect our non-GAAP tax rate to be around 21% for the full year of 2026, roughly in line with 2025. Diluted weighted average shares outstanding will be approximately 41 million shares in 2026. This includes an estimate for the dilutive effect of our equity offering. As explained in detail in our filings, the dilutive effect of the equity offering can vary based on the market price of Novanta Inc.’s common shares, and so this guidance only factors in an estimate for dilution based on our recent share price performance and does not anticipate material declines in our share price in the future. For the full year, we expect diluted earnings per share to be in the range of $3.50 and $3.65, representing growth of up to 11% year over year. Included in this guidance is the unfavorable impact from our equity fundraise in the range of $0.22 to $0.24, spread evenly through the first four quarters. This reflects the impact of the higher share count, partially offset by lower interest expense. Also included in the guidance is the temporary unfavorable impact due to the one-time 2025 all-employee equity grant, which I just discussed. This was a $0.14 impact in 2026 only. Cash flow conversion for the full year is expected to rebound versus 2025. Full year 2026 operating cash flow will be approximately $145 million to $185 million, with the bottom end of the range driven by higher inventory levels to mitigate risk of manufacturing moves and vendor disruptions, and the upper end of the range representing the successful mitigation of these risks. Turning to the first quarter of 2026, we expect GAAP revenues to be in a range of $250 million to $255 million, which represents a year-over-year organic growth of positive 1% to positive 3%, and reported revenue growth of positive 7% to positive 9%. Looking at growth in our segments in the first quarter, Automation Enabling Technologies segment is expected to achieve low to mid-single-digit growth versus the prior year, which represents an acceleration in growth rate versus the fourth quarter based on the building momentum we see in the businesses, bookings, and backlog. Medical Solutions segment is expected to achieve high single-digit to low double-digit reported growth in the quarter. On a sequential basis, the Medical Solutions segment is expected to see a normal decline in the first quarter versus the fourth quarter due to seasonality. However, this business will still see solid year-over-year growth in the first quarter, and as already mentioned, the full year outlook for this business is extremely strong. For adjusted gross margin, we expect to achieve approximately 46.5% in the first quarter. This is a sequential step up from the fourth quarter and roughly flat year over year, representing the progress we have already made in the regional manufacturing moves. And as indicated in our full year guide, we expect stronger year-over-year margin expansion in the second quarter and beyond. We expect R&D and SG&A expenses in the first quarter to be approximately $76 million to $77 million, which represents roughly 30% of sales. This is a higher percent of sales than the rest of the year will be based on two factors. First, we are aggressively deploying artificial intelligence tools and resources to our teams to deliver upside to our productivity goals for the year. We are seeing great progress in the adoption of these tools to help us with many different areas, including selling processes, R&D programs, regulatory programs, and back-office processes. Second, there is a higher impact from the stock compensation expense associated with the all-employee grant that only impacts the first half. Depreciation expense and stock compensation expense in the first quarter will be in line with what I covered in the full year guidance. For adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter, we expect a range of $56 million to $58 million, which represents plus 12% to plus 17% growth year over year, and an adjusted EBITDA margin roughly 100 basis points higher than the prior year. Interest expense will be approximately $2 million in the first quarter. We expect our non-GAAP tax rate to be between 19% and 20% in the first quarter, lower than the full year based on the timing of recognition of certain tax benefits. Diluted weighted average shares outstanding will be in line with what was covered in the full year guidance. For the first quarter, we expect adjusted diluted earnings per share to be in the range of $0.75 to $0.80, growing up 8% year over year. Again, this growth rate is impacted by both the share count increase from the equity issuance and the timing of stock compensation expense in the quarter. Cash flow conversion in the first quarter should improve versus the fourth quarter and should achieve our goal of hitting cash conversion of greater than 100% of GAAP net income. However, with regionalization site initiatives still underway, we see stronger cash flow materializing after these are completed in the second quarter. In summary, we remain confident in our long-term strategy and business model. We see growing momentum which will help us achieve mid-single-digit organic growth for the full year. We are excited about our customer wins, our bookings growth, and the continued momentum of our new product launches. We continue to make progress in high-growth markets, particularly in medical technology markets and physical AI robotic markets. And finally, with the successful fundraise we have nearly $1.5 billion in acquisition capacity. This fundraise has unlocked our ability to explore multiple large potential opportunities and we have a very robust acquisition pipeline. Combined with our track record and discipline of acquiring businesses that exceed our cost of capital within five years and are free cash flow accretive day one, we feel confident in our ability to deploy meaningful capital in 2026 that will drive strong long-term shareholder returns. This concludes our prepared remarks. We will now open the call up for questions.