Jonathan H. Baksht
we believe our balance sheet provides the flexibility to execute our strategy, support disciplined capital deployment, and continue investing in the long-term growth and transformation of Fortune Brands Innovations, Inc. We are also taking deliberate actions to reduce our working capital levels, with a particular focus on a multiyear initiative to optimize our inventory position across the organization. Turning now to our outlook for full-year 2026. Our guidance takes into account the continued uncertainty around the timing and pace of improvement in our end markets and does not include a second-half inflection. We do, however, contemplate a relatively modest market recovery from first-quarter levels through the balance of the year. For 2026, we assume global market declines of low single digits, reflecting continued headwinds in the early part of the year, followed by modest improvements as conditions stabilize. Within that, we assume the U.S. market for our products declines low single digits, driven primarily by repair and remodel activity, with new construction contributing later in the year. For U.S. repair and remodel, which comprises most of our portfolio, our assumptions contemplate a decline of low single digits, reflecting deferred project activity and aging housing stock, with gradual improvement in consumer confidence. For U.S. single-family new construction, we assume a decline of mid single digits, reflecting continued near-term uncertainty and a more modest recovery profile relative to longer-term fundamentals, while also taking into consideration that the vast majority of our products are installed later in the construction process. Finally, for China, our guidance assumes a market decline of low double digits, consistent with current conditions and our expectations for demand trends in that market. For 2026, we expect net sales growth of approximately flat to 2%, reflecting our view of the macro environment as well as our expectation for continued market outperformance across our portfolio and the full-year impact of tariff-related pricing actions taken last year. We expect operating income margin of approximately 14.5% to 15.5%, supported by share gains and pricing discipline, offset by higher manufacturing costs driven by tariffs and inflation, including commodity inflation, offset by productivity initiatives. Our guidance assumes that tariffs continue at current rates through 2026. Our guidance also assumes a more normalized level of incentive compensation, additional systems investments, and incremental strategic brand spend. Together, these account for over $80,000,000 of incremental SG&A relative to 2025. On an earnings per share basis, we expect EPS of approximately $3.35 to $3.65. Consistent with past practices, any share repurchase beyond equity compensation dilution is not included in our guidance, nor is the annualized run-rate operating income savings of $35,000,000. Lastly, to put our EPS guidance range in perspective relative to our market outlook for 2026, we would have the opportunity to exceed the high end of our range if the market were flat instead of down low single digits. From a quarterly phasing standpoint, our year-end 2025 balance sheet includes the impact of tariffs as well as lower-volume-related absorption incurred during 2025. Those tariff costs and under-absorption of manufacturing capacity will flow into our income statement during the first half of 2026. Additionally, the reduced incentive compensation this past year was weighted to 2025 and will impact the comparability during 2026. We expect to generate free cash flow of approximately $400,000,000 to $450,000,000 in 2026, supported by our operating performance and continued progress on working capital initiatives. Our free cash flow guidance assumes capital expenditures of approximately $110,000,000 to $140,000,000 and cash restructuring costs of approximately $25,000,000. Our capital mix is roughly 50% weighted towards growth or return-generating initiatives. One item to note to drive increased transparency into our cost structure: as we report SG&A in 2026, we expect to see a reclassification of over $100,000,000 from SG&A to cost of goods sold. This is largely related to customer freight that is activity driven. It is only a reclassification and will not impact company or segment margins. Before concluding my remarks, I want to put our 2026 guidance into the proper context. As Nick mentioned, the market backdrop has been challenging, and there remains uncertainty on the timing and pace of recovery. We are not satisfied with our margins, have identified initiatives we are actioning, and will continue to identify opportunities to drive shareholder value. In summary, we are navigating the current environment, and while the improved sales performance relative to the market in the back half of the year demonstrates the resilience of Fortune Brands Innovations, Inc.'s portfolio, we are not standing still. We have a strong portfolio of brands that reflect the effectiveness of our advantaged capabilities. We continue to take actions to improve efficiency while investing in the innovations and capabilities that support sustainable, long-term growth. As we close out 2025 and look ahead to 2026, I am confident in our ability to execute at a high level, supported by our strong balance sheet, disciplined cost structure, and the strategic actions we have outlined today. With that, I will now turn the call back to Nick for final thoughts. Before we wrap up this call, I want to express my gratitude.