Brian J. Webb-Walsh
Our results for the quarter and for the year were in line with our expectations and reflect the progress we have made to streamline our organization and reposition the company as a platform-led business supported by our leading services offerings and integrated payments capabilities. For the quarter, total revenue increased 6% to $720 million due to higher hardware sales in the period, partially offset by lower fees earned from the transitional service agreements with NCR Atleos and Conduent. Reported recurring revenue increased 1% to $422 million, and 3% when excluding a certain divestiture. Software ARR and total ARR both increased 3%. Platform sites increased 8% to 80,000, and payment sites increased 4% to 8,600. Adjusted EBITDA increased 17% to $130 million as margin expanded 170 basis points to 18.1%, driven primarily by our cost containment actions. Non-GAAP EPS increased 48% to $0.31, while GAAP EPS was $0.49 in the fourth quarter. The GAAP EPS included a $65 million tax benefit related to a legal entity restructuring we completed in Q4. The cash from this will likely be received in 2027. Turning to our segment results. Retail segment revenue increased 9% to $508 million, primarily due to higher hardware sales. Recurring revenue increased 3% to $279 million, driven by an improvement in software revenue. Segment adjusted EBITDA increased 12% to $114 million, as margin increased 70 basis points year over year to 22.8%, driven by revenue growth coupled with our cost initiatives. Turning to restaurants. Total segment revenue of $212 million was flat, which reflects hardware growth offset by a decline in one-time software and services revenue. Recurring revenue increased 6% within our enterprise and mid-market businesses, and weaker performance in the SMB business, as Benny outlined. Segment adjusted EBITDA decreased 3% to $66 million, as margin decreased 110 basis points to 31.1% due to lower one-time software and services revenue compared to the prior-year period. Lastly, net corporate and other expenses decreased $9 million, or 15%, to $50 million. Turning to our cash flow. Adjusted free cash flow, excluding restructuring, for the full year was $136 million, about $40 million below expectations due to timing, including a $13 million delayed tax refund and higher working capital use primarily from increased hardware sales and inventory. Restructuring cash outflows of $109 million were related to severance, stranded costs from the spin-off of the ATM business and the sale of the digital banking business, internal infrastructure investments, and, to a lesser extent, ODM transition costs. We invested $46 million in capital expenditures during the quarter and $165 million for the year, inclusive of accelerated product investments. These investments directly enable the launch of our new platform solutions unveiled at the NAC show last October and the NRF show this January. In December, we also sold a non-core warehouse and training facility, which generated an additional $60 million in cash for the quarter as we continue to streamline our footprint. We ended the quarter with net leverage of 2.1x based on our net debt as of December 31 and the full-year adjusted EBITDA. Finally, we repurchased approximately 69,000 shares, or 25%, of the Series A convertible preferred stock for $74 million, in addition to $4 million of common shares. We expect to complete the ODM transition by March 31. Thereafter, hardware will be sourced through EnerCom, and we will earn a commission rather than carry it in inventory. Turning to our 2026 outlook, we expect reported revenue of $2.210 billion to $2.325 billion, down 13% to 18% due to the ODM implementation, effective April 1. On a pro forma basis, adjusting for the change in hardware revenue recognition, revenue is expected to be down 2% to up 3%. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be $440 million to $445 million, or 4% to 7% growth, and non-GAAP adjusted EPS is expected to be between $0.93 and $0.96, or 3% to 6% growth. Seasonality remains consistent with 2025, with Q1 expected to be the lowest quarter. For both retail and restaurants, we expect recurring revenue to improve throughout the year. We expect margins for both segments to step up in Q2 upon implementing the hardware ODM model. Restaurant margin will improve modestly through the year, and retail margin should show additional expansion. Adjusted free cash flow is expected to be between $190 million to $220 million, reflecting the partial-year working capital benefit from the ODM transition, offset by approximately $120 million of anticipated cash outlays related to the following: severance actions taken in 2025 and 2026, stranded costs associated with the completion of the spin-off, internal infrastructure investments, costs related to the ODM transition, and an accrued litigation matter. We anticipate the elevated restructuring will step down in 2027. I will now turn the call over to James for closing remarks.