3/5/2026

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

Welcome to the RENC Group AG FY 2025 call. Please note that this call will be recorded. During today's call, webcast participants will be in listen-only mode while we conduct the question and answer session. If you wish to ask a question, we ask that you please use the raised hand function at the bottom of your Zoom screen, or if you've dialled in, please press star 9. Further instructions will follow at the time of the Q&A. I now like to turn the call over to Christian Weiss, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

speaker
Christian Weiss
Head of Investor Relations

Thank you very much, operator. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our financial year 2025 conference call. With me today are our CEO, Dr. Alexander Sage, and our CFO, Anja Menzipje. Alexander and Anja will take you through the highlights of 2025, our financials, and of course, the outlook. Afterwards, we will open the floor to your questions. But now, I will hand over to Alexander. Please go ahead.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, Christian, thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, also from my side, a very warm welcome and many thanks for joining today's conference call. Before we go into many details, let me summarize the key messages up front. Rank has once again proven that we can perform. We delivered what we promised. We walked our talk. First, we have fully delivered on our 2025 guidance on revenue and adjusted EBIT. Massive kudos to all 4,400 Rankies worldwide for this tremendous effort. Second, we are proud to say that 2025 was once again a year of new all-time highs, record order backlog, record revenues, and record adjusted EBIT. Clearly a proof of our strategic focus and above all operational excellence and execution. Third, and this is important to emphasize, We deliver this performance despite facing several external headwinds. Exchange rate movement with the weak US dollar. tariff affects a weak industrial market and most significantly the Israel export embargo. Our results in 2025 are therefore even more remarkable and I think they speak very clearly for the resilience and the strength of our business model. To sum it up, a very strong year. Having said this, let's move now into more details. Let me start with the highlights of the past 12 months by walking you through the four key takeaways on this slide. RENK has again demonstrated strong execution in the Q4 2025 year-end race. We can perform when it counts simply. As a result, and as mentioned before, we have clearly achieved our 2025 guidance on revenue as well as on adjusted EBIT. We recorded a strong 2025 order intake of roughly 1.6 billion euros plus 9% year-on-year versus 2024, which leads to a book-to-bill ratio of 1.2. Let me be very clear here. This is a new all-time high in order intake despite the fact that we had a shift of approximately 200 million of expected defense-related order intake from Q4 2025 into 2026. these are not lost contracts they just shifted purely due to minor delays in the final contract negotiations they have a budget they are approved and they will come in 2026. so the underlying demand momentum is even stronger than the headline numbers implies our total order backlog reached a new autumn high of 6.7 billion up from 5.0 billion at year end 2024. This corresponds to approximately five times our 2025 revenues and providing a very high level of visibility going forward and underpins our confidence for the years ahead. Our defense business was once again the main growth driver in 2025. Defense revenues grew by 24% and defense-related order intake by 4%, which should be put in context with the before-mentioned project shift. Let me also briefly walk you through some of the key order intakes from 2025, where the majority of the program should be very familiar to you. Starting, of course, with the contract where we realized approximately 254 million as order intake. Then our large transmission and engine business with an international customer in the range of 130 million. various international naval programs of approximately 110 million for the full year, VTA or Augsburg spare parts for MBTs, IFVs and APCs in the range of 90 million for 2025, including the first orders from a frame contract for spare parts between Bank Germany and the Ukrainian MoD during Q4. Furthermore, and not shown here, we also realized the service contract with the Ukrainian MoD and Rank America during Q4. And finally, the K2 platform for Poland, which continued to be a very successful platform and driving our order intake also during 2025. Ladies and gentlemen, slides to summarize the group performance for 2025. And as you can see in the five orange boxes at the top, all presented financial KPIs are showing a very positive development. We already talked about the order intake performance, so let's move directly to the revenue. where we realized with 1.366 billion euro or approximately 1.4 euro plus 20% year on year, which is the result of our focus operational execution and conversion of our order backlog into revenues. The adjusted EBIT is with 230 million plus 22% above 2024 level. The adjusted EBIT growth is once again outpacing revenue growth, and this despite low double-digit EBIT headwinds due to the factors mentioned before, which indicates the operating leverage in our business model, the quality of our growth, and our disciplined cost management. The adjusted EBIT margin improved to 60.9% or 30 basis points. And last but not least, we will propose a dividend of €58 per share for 2025 at the upcoming AGM in June. An impressive increase of 38% year-on-year, reflecting our confidence in the business and our commitment to deliver value to our shareholders. Regarding the end markets, we are currently at a defense business share of 74%, which will further increase in the coming years to approximately 90% plus, driven by our sector strategy. Finally, and looking at the revenue split between new build versus aftermarket, we see our typical current range of aftermarket business between 35% to 40%, which is depending, like always, on the specific product mix quarter by quarter. You will see later in the outlook for 2026 that we will have a special focus this year on our group-wide aftermarket strategy in order to further drive this important, sustainable and highly profitable business segment on the short term, but also on the midterm towards 2035 to levels north of 40 to 50%. Let's move now to slide number three. As you know, our defense sector is the core of our business and the main driving force behind our crew performance. On order intake, let me repeat the approximately 200 million of order intake, which shifted from Q4 2025 into 2026. Adjusting for this effect, order intake growth would have been at approximately 19%, close to 1.37 billion, instead of the reported 4% growth of 1.17 billion. The mentioned shifts include a larger international amputee program in the lower three-digit million euro range, two naval programs from international customers, and finally a German Navy R&D project. On the revenue side, our defense business once again grew with plus 24% strongly, fully reflecting the ongoing ramp up of our production output and the strong execution on our existing backlog. Ladies and gentlemen, now let's move on and have a quick look at our segment performance, starting, of course, with our largest and most important segment, vehicle mobility solutions. VMS continues to be our strongest growth driver in 2025. On the revenue side, VMS realized significant growth in 2025, both in Q4 and in the full year, exceeding current market expectations. As you know, we had a planned temporary slowdown in Augsburg during Q3 in order to implement our new modular production line. By Q4, the new line was simply up and running and the global ranked team delivered an outstanding performance in the year-end race. The order intake was for 2025 with 1.129 billion and a book-to-bill ratio of 1.3 high and plus 11% compared to 2024, which was driven by ongoing and widespread demand for our high-performance mobility systems across various land vehicle programs. Let me now turn to slide five in our marine and industry segment. M&I also delivered a very solid performance in 2025, mainly driven by the naval side of the business. Revenue came in at 380 million Euro plus 15% versus 2024. Our strong naval business realized a new all-time high for the full year and could overcompensate missing revenues from our industrial part of the business, which was impacted by the GDP-related overall weak market environment in 2025. Strong execution on ongoing projects and the successful integration of our new U.S. operations, RAMI, We are key for this performance, and we are prepared to fully leverage our strategic positioning in the largest Navy market in the world, the U.S. market, for future strategic programs such as the FFX 3-day program. Regarding the order intake of 307 at 27 million Euro plus 6% versus 2024, you should please keep in mind the mentioned shift of three naval projects from 2025 to 2026 in the range of a mid-double-digit Euro figure and missing order intakes from the industry business due to the mentioned market challenges. Last but not least, a few words on our slide-bearing segment. 2025 was a very challenging year for our slide bearing segment due to a weak industrial market for the entire year and operational challenges during Q3. However, we managed to stabilize and improve our production and realized, finally, Not only a very strong Q4, but also a solid full year 2025 with slight revenue growth and very solid results on the adjusted EBIT line. Anja will talk more about this. One fact I would like to highlight. December 2025 was the strongest month in the slide-bearing segment, entire history in terms of revenues, which is a great indicator for the execution quality of our team in the final sprint of the year. Now let's move to the last slide of my introduction, our total order backlog. For 2025, we have reached a new record level of 6.7 billion in total order backlog, plus 34% compared to year-end 2024, which corresponds to approximately five times our current LVM revenue and providing us with an extraordinary quality of visibility for the years to come. Our fixed order backlog has continued to grow, driven by the strong order intake and including our strong conversion of existing orders into revenues. The soft order backlog has grown strongly, mainly driven by German but also international programs. Having said this, I would like now to hand over to Anja for a deeper look into our full year 2025 financials. Anja, over to you.

speaker
Anja Menzipje
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Alexander, and a very warm welcome from my side as well. In line with our usual structure, I will begin with an overview of our full year group performance before guiding you through our segments, followed by a review of networking capital, cash generation, and the returns we have generated. Fiscal year 25 marked another year of strong execution and progress for Rank Group. Order intake remained at an elevated level, supported by strong demand in defense-related mobility solutions. Despite record high revenue conversion throughout the year, our total order backlog amounts to 6.7 billion, underlining the current dynamics in the defense market and the long-term visibility of our business model. Alexander has already referenced the growing share of defense in our portfolio. Revenue developed in line with our growth strategy and reflects our focus on operational excellence across our sites. Most importantly, profitability improved disproportionately to revenue, confirming once again the operating leverage embedded in our business model. Moving to our group performance, fiscal year 25 was characterized by persistently strong demand across our core end markets, most notably in defense-related mobility solutions. At the same time, we faced several headwinds, including Israel export embargo, FX trends, volatile tariffs themes, and a weak macroeconomic environment related to industrial applications. Nevertheless, we successfully mitigated these effects and maintained our positive growth trajectory. All the intake came in at about 1.6 million euro plus 9% compared to prior year and therefore remained at an elevated level. With a look at Q4 25 intake was significantly lower than Q4 24, but as you know already based on Alexander's explanation, the timing of contract sign off is subject to market specific factors like budgets and the speed of decision making processes at the customer's end. And once again, it is only a shift in timing. The order intake will occur. With a book-to-bill ratio above one, order intake continued to exceed revenue conversion during the full year 25. As a result, fixed order backlog increased to around 2.3 billion euro after 2.1 billion euro at the end of 24. Revenue increased notably and landed at around 1.2 billion euro up around 1.1 billion euro in the prior period. Q4 with its €438 million came in significantly better compared to prior year's Q4 revenue of €362 million. An approximate 20% increase year-over-year in revenues reflects a successful scaling up of our production, efficient utilization of our installed asset base, and significant employee engagement. I would like to repeat and extend our sincere thanks to our entire workforce. Their dedication, professionalism and team spirit were the decisive factors in delivering this performance. Turning to adjusted gross profit. It increased from 327 million euro in fiscal year 24 to 391 million euro in 25. while the adjusted gross profit margin remained essentially stable at 28.6%. These outputs provide a clear indication of our earnings quality. We are scaling up the business in absolute profit terms without margin dilution. Nevertheless, our product mix continues to change from quarter to quarter as reflected in Q4. While nominal amounts have risen from 110 million euro in Q4 24 to 130 million euro in Q4 25, the adjusted cross profit margin for Q4 25 at 29.6% is moderately behind the prior year figure. Adjusted EBIT for the full year rose from €189 million to €230 million, and the adjusted EBIT margin improved from 16.6% to 16.9%. Q4-25 contributed €89 million and was very strong compared to Q4-24 at €77 million. Our earnings growth is outpacing revenue growth with higher output translating into higher profitability rather than being bought through higher cost. On the balance sheet, net debt increased moderately from 375 million euro at the end of 24 to 391 million at the end of 25. At the same time, leverage improved from 1.7 times to 1.5 times, meaning the earnings base extended faster than the net debt. We see this as a constructive signal with growth is being financed with discipline while credit metrics improve to higher profitability. Let's have a quick look what all this means in terms of adjusted EPS and dividend and the payout ratio. Before I start with the figures, I would like to recap that the bottom line is affected by positive tax effects that came in in Q2. Based on a control and profit transfer agreement between Rank Group AG and Rank GMBH, we could effectively make use of tax losses carry forwards of Rank Group AG. In addition to that, we now can utilize until 27 our U.S. interest carry forwards due to a debt to equity conversion related to our U.S. entities. This actually translates into a strong decrease in the group's tax rate that will normalize over time. That said, our adjusted earnings per share sharply increased by 38% to 1.42 euro per share compared to 1.03 euro per share in 24. With our proposed dividend of 58 cents per share, we intend to pass on the same growth rate to our shareholders. This would be equal to a payout ratio of 40.9% in 25 after 40.7% in the prior period. Now, I will move on to a detailed look into our segments. Turning to VMS, this segment again underlined its role as our key earnings machine. Order intake increased from around 1 billion euro to around 1.1 billion euro, confirming that demand remains strong and program driven rather than short cycle. Our order intake is consistent with the broader defense spending environment. Q4 order intake was lower at 225 million euro compared to 467 million euro in Q4 24. But as we have previously stated, these timing driven effects do not reflect any reduction in our participation in the demands of the defense sector. Revenue for the year rose from 699 million euro to 872 million euro, indicating continued conversion of the order book into delivery output and reinforcing that the current growth profile is primarily execution and capacity driven. Going forward, execution will further benefit from our modular production system introduced mid-year. I should stress that the 25 revenue increase was achieved despite the embargo on planned deliveries to Israel. Looking at Q4, VMS contributed 293 million euro to the total revenue figure in 25 compared to 235 million euro in the prior period. So from a group's perspective, we can say that VMS is our strongest pillar for growth and profitability. The significant role of EMS for the group is also demonstrated by our adjusted EBIT improvement reflected in an increase from 140 million euro to 178 million euro on a yearly basis and from 63 million euro in Q4 24 to 74 million euro in Q4 25. Margins were held at a high level with 20.4% at the end of the reporting period, despite the Israel embargo impact, again demonstrating that product mix changes quarter to quarter do not impact the annualized profitability trajectory. To sum up, Earnings expand in line with volume, while margins remain firmly above 20%, supporting our view that VMS continues to scale without sacrificing profitability. Now, let's have a look at M&I. M&I continue to deliver a steady and dependable performance profile, combining marine resilience with more cyclical industrial exposure. Order intake increased from €307 million to €327 million, which reflects a steady activity level and indicates that demand remained intact over the year. Main drivers are the marine business and aftermarket activities. Q4-25 was weaker than the prior year's period as it came in at €72 million compared to €92 million in the prior year's Q4. As previously mentioned, the order intake shift included M&I Navy contracts that are scheduled for sign-off in 26. Full year revenue rose from 330 million to 380 million euros, reflecting solid execution and continued throughput in the segment. And I would like to add, in addition to Alexander's earlier comment, that a portion of around 20 million euro is attributable to rank America marine and industry. Our newly acquired marine business in the US on a quarterly basis revenue increased by 14.9% and landed at 113 million euro at the end of Q4 25. This revenue increase of about 50% came with a favorable product mix that led to a corresponding profitability increase. Adjusted EBIT for the full year improved by around 30% from 33 million to 45 million euro and the adjusted EBIT margin expanded from 10.6 to 11.9%. Q4 25 added 14 million euro to the positive development after 11 million euro in the prior year period. On a full year basis, adjusted EBIT also benefited from one time effects of approximately a low to mid single digit million Euro amount. These included insurance payments received in Q3 and the release of voluntary provisions in Q4. But the key takeaway should be that we were able to successfully mitigate strong headwinds related to the industrial market that had the potential to hold back M&I's overall development. The shift towards marine, especially naval applications, helped to overcome that industry-related contraction. Turning to side bearings, this picture is slightly different. Our intake softened on a full-year basis while the revenue and profitability remained stable. Order intake decreased moderately from 133 million euro to 126 million euro, whereas a weakened industrial environment is responsible for the general trend of softened order intake. The year-end picture is actually driven by delayed order placement from defense-related customers. As you see, Q4 nevertheless showed a good order momentum of 30 million euro compared to 26 million euro in Q4 24. Revenue for the full year increased slightly by around €3 million to €128 million, despite the softer industrial demand environment. Q4 2025, with €36 million, made a remarkable contribution, representing an uplift of around 10% compared to the prior year quarter. The story behind this is straightforward. After the resolution of temporary staffing constraints this year, we were able to sustain the prior year output level on a full year basis. Revenue was mainly generated from bearings for electric motors, generators and marine applications. On profitability, adjusted EBIT for the fiscal year 2025 increased from €21 million to €23 million, and the adjusted EBIT margin improved from 72% to 17.9%. Q4 showed an uplift of around 56% to €8 million. The key takeaway is that the segment maintained and slightly extended its high margin profile despite the challenging industrial environment underlining the robustness of its operating model. Overall, its slide-bearing continues to provide a high margin and comparatively low volatility contribution within the group, as seen in prior years. Group operating profit came in at around 169 million euro after 116 million euro in the prior year. As Alexander has already said, the drivers continue to be our strong operational performance, higher output levels, and the resulting operating leverage. After adjusting for the effects of purchase price allocation, operating profit before PPA, depreciation, and amortization, as well as income and losses from PPA asset disposals, increased to around 250 million euro, compared to around 160 million euro in fiscal year 24. Adjustment came in at a significantly lower level than the prior year and totaled around 15 million Euro down from around 29 million Euro and mainly relate to global process and system improvements, whereas the corresponding period of the prior year was mainly impacted by our efficiency programs in Muskegon US. In total, we recorded an adjusted EBIT of around 230 million euro 25 against around 189 million euro in the comparative period. Adjusted EBITDA increased to around 264 million euro from around 222 million euro. Let me continue with a detailed look at our net working capital development. Networking capital increased to €345 million at the end of 25, up from €284 million in 24 and €248 million in 23. The increase of €61 million in 25 was primarily driven by customer receivables, which rose from €268 million to €370 million. The underlying explanation is our typical year-end acceleration in production and reliant timing effects when it comes to customer payments. Inventories also increased from 391 million euro to 436 million euro and therefore contributed to the higher working capital leverage. However, to a lesser extent than receivables and with a reduced growth rate compared to prior year's development. On the funding side, the increase in working capital was partly offset by higher liabilities. Prepayments received increased from 258 million to 322 million euro, and trade payables increased from 117 million euro to 144 million euro, both supporting working capital financing. The rise in prepayments has its roots in the first three quarters of the year, whereas the shift of major orders, Alexander already referred to, came with a corresponding deferral of prepayments. So on pure Q4 to Q4 basis, we were behind 24. Importantly, net working capital as a percentage of last 12 months revenue remained broadly stable at 25.2% compared to 24.9% at the end of 24 and below the 26.8% level seen at the end of 23. Overall, the chart shows a higher absolute working capital base in line with higher activity levels while the ratio remains contained. On free cash flow, the starting point is our adjusted EBITDA of 264 million euro, which reflects the strong operating leverage I already referred to. The latter also is true for the increase in net working capital that had an impact on cash for period end of around 20, sorry, around 80 million euro. Please remember that a significant portion of that increase is attributable to customer receivables and so close to cash. The slippage of major orders from Q4 25 to 26 and the corresponding absence of related prepayments negatively amplified that effect on the financing side. CapEx, excluding addition from M&A transactions, amounted to 39 million Euro, representing 2.8% of revenues and so slightly below our reference point of 3% on average during 24 until 2030. Prior year's ratio was 2.7%, creating some headroom for our proposed capex increase in 26 and 27. Besides organic growth, we will pursue M&A opportunities that fit well to our financial framework. Not surprisingly, and given our earlier communications, our M&A focus is directed at potential growth opportunities in the defense sector. After considering income taxes of 33 million Euro, we generated an unlevered free cash flow of 94 million Euro. Free cash flow amounted to 67 million Euro for the year with an interest result of minus 27 million Euro as a reconciling item. Our networking capital increase resulted in a below target CCR of 47.2% for fiscal year 25. The current year's figure negatively impacted the three-year average of the years 23 to 25 that landed at 54.6%. If you add the bar factors together, you can see that our operating performance in 25 funded our investments and financing costs, resulting in a positive generation which stands on solid grounds. Now let me move on to our approach to shareholder value creation. With an emphasis on returns in line with our capital market discussion directed on return on capital employed, I would like to state or start with the key drivers of the denominator of that performance indicator. The number one message is that we adhere to our CapEx target of 3% in relation to revenue in a medium timeframe. For fiscal year 25, we are below that figure, namely 2.8%, benefiting from our preceding investments in our productive basis. Nevertheless, given our growth ambitions that are enhanced by significant increases in proposed defense spendings, our message is that we foresee a capex increase beyond our average capex target in the years 26 and 27. As communicated earlier, we foresee a capex ratio in 26 below but close to 5% and for 27 below but close to 4%. Put differently, an average is an average and not meant to be a limiting factor for profitable growth that drives the numerator. And as already said, our capital allocation policy continues to embrace the potential for M&A activity as a driver of growth for the business. Secondly, the leveraging. In terms of net debt in relation to adjusted EBITDA is on its way with a ratio of 1.5 times at the end of fiscal year 25. We are confident to bring that number down further and below our benchmark. Finally, we're committed to provide for an appropriate payout ratio, which we locate somewhere between 40 to 50% of adjusted net income. Our 25 dividend proposal, mentioned by Alexander and addressed by me earlier, would equate to a payout ratio of 41%. We will balance these three elements to ensure our envisioned ROTI development over time. And fiscal year 25 adds credibility related to that ambition. Now let's put things into perspective. When we reiterated our strategy at our Capital Markets Day in November 25, we laid out a clear set of building blocks that would drive financial returns and ultimately link the strategy to a valuation outcome. These building blocks remain, and I'm delighted to report the progress we are making in reaching our objectives. With a ROCE of 23.5%, we laid a sound starting point for our midterm goal. Key driver is the increase of our adjusted EBIT by 21.7% on a year-on-year basis. At the same time, we saw a relatively small increase in capital employed that ultimately amounted to 2.3%. Besides our networking capital development mentioned earlier, CapEx and M&A activities are accountable for that lift up, whereas amortization of intangibles and negative foreign currency effects had a mitigating effect. Our current year's cash conversion rate is clearly below our mid-term orientation mark. The same is true for networking capital in relation to revenues. As I said earlier, we need to acknowledge adverse timing effects that has driven these figures. However, we are committed to manage the manageable, especially when it comes to inventory management. Now, I would like to hand back to Alexander, and thank you for your attention.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, thank you, Anja. Ladies and gentlemen, Let me come back with a few words on our outlook and guidance for 2026. Looking back on 2025, and as mentioned several times before, we are proud to confirm that we met our guidance 2025 for revenue and adjusted EBIT. Regarding 2026, we are guiding for revenues of more than 1.5 billion and an adjusted EBIT range between 255 up to 285. Let me be crystal clear at this point. Like in the previous year, we will also do whatever is possible to position us in the upper half of the EBIT range. We see the overall market environment, including a potential peace deal in Ukraine, for 2026 as strong and positive, and we do expect major order intakes, which I will touch later on in more detail. From the operation side, our modular production line in Augsburg is, as mentioned before, up and running and just performing well, while we are consequently executing our investment and capacity expansion program with a strong focus on our German production sites. From our growing supply chain, we also do not expect major issues, and therefore we are very focused on converting during 2026 Our strong order backlog according to our customer delivery schedules into revenues. Including our investment plan for 2026, which I will discuss on the next chart, we do expect a quarterly revenue profile with a stronger H2 loading. Fair to say that we also need to manage some challenges during 2026, similar to what we did, by the way, successfully in 2025. Besides geopolitical impacts on exchange rate movements and tariffs, the export approval process regarding Israel is key. We have considered approximately 80 to 100 million of revenues for 2026 and we are, of course, in very close and so far positive discussions with relevant authorities in Germany and in Israel, and we are currently preparing our production for meeting the production and delivery schedule for 2026. Regarding our midterm targets, we fully reconfirm what we communicated during our Capital Markets Day back in November 2025. Organic revenues between 2.8 up to 3.2 billion, an adjusted EBIT margin above 20%, The underlying assumptions on capex, ROSI, cash conversion rate, networking capital and leverage as shown before Vanya, all of these remain unchanged. Ladies and gentlemen, to make it simple, we are on track in executing our strategy. Now let's move on to the next page and having a quick look on our operational priorities for 2026, which are very clear and concerning for focus areas. First, production and delivery according to schedules, full stop. We have the order book, we have the backlog, now we execute it. Second, the capacity ramp up with focus on Augsburg and Rhine. The investments are on track and we are preparing to almost triple our capacities for land transmissions in the coming years. Furthermore, Augsburg will increase 2026 the output north of 800 land transmission including additional capacities for the machining areas and still running, most likely, in a single shift mode regarding the modular production line. Third, and as mentioned before, growing our supply chain and increasing the resilience, robust, flexible and scalable. We work on this continuously and we do not see for 2026, as mentioned before, major issues besides normal day-to-day operational topics. Finally, rolling out our operation and excellence program and the rain production system from Augsburg, which started in 2024, and Muskegon started in 2025, now to Horstmann for 2026. Slide 23 shows the installation sequence of new capacities in Augsburg and Rhine for land transmissions for 2026. In Augsburg, and starting during Q2, new machining and heat treatment capacities will be installed and immediately starting production. For Q4, finally, a new test cell for land transmissions will also go live. Same for our former pure civil plant, Reiner, where we are installing new machining equipment for land transmissions during the second and third quarter of 2026. Very important, the entire capacity ramp-up performs according to schedule and will continue during 2027 and 2028. A strong focus on execution plus a high level of standardization remains the key for our performance. Ladies and gentlemen, moving now to slide 24. As said before, we do see the overall market situation for 2026 very positive. The potential order intake pipeline is full and we currently have a strong order visibility, I mean order intake visibility of approximately 2 billion for 2026. Just to give you some example for key order intakes, we do expect for 2026 and here only talking about OE business. For example, the various German programs for land and sea platforms. Just talking about land, we do expect the Puma IFV, the Boxer Arminius, the Leopard 2 additional MBTs and plus some Leopard 2 based family vehicles and also some Panzerhaubitze 2000. From the Navy side, we see the F-127, the Mato A-200, and finally a larger R&D program, which shifted from 2025 into 2026. We also see new transmission orders from the Store 4 contract, which is currently in the final phase of negotiations with the U.S. customer, and worth of approximately $800 million, up to $1 billion over three plus two optional years. Also, a larger MBT order intake from an international customer, which also shifted from 25 to 26 and further paid two orders for Poland. Also first orders from the Italian MBT and IFV programs and some additional larger IFV programs, for example, Romania and Austria. And as a kind of base business, More spare part contracts from Germany, Europe, Ukraine and international customers, specifically for land platforms. Regarding Navy, more international FreeGate programs from various customers, including the two FreeGate programs, which shifted from Q4 2025 to 2026. Fair to say that we might also see for 2026 some order intake shifts into 2027, like, for example, the German F127 program. But we see, as said earlier, the approximately 2 billion of order intake as highly visible. Looking on Q1 2026, we currently see an order intake range between 400 to 500 million, depending, of course, on the final timeline of the specific programs. Ladies and gentlemen, the good news, we are almost done. So let's move to the next slide. The main priorities for 2026 are crystal clear and straightforward. First, execution, execution, and again, execution. Our modular production line in Augsburg is running and we are investing, according to our CAPEX guidance shown before by Anja, into capacity expansion per our 2030 strategy. The foundation is set. Now we deliver on our financial KPIs and reaching new all-time highs. Second, we have for 2026 a very attractive hunting list with major programs from Germany, Europe, and the rest of the world, but also for future key order intake programs beyond 2026, such as, for example, the M1 platform and the large SSX Navy program in the U.S. Third, the optimization of our portfolio. Defense is the center of gravity, the core of our business, and always in the focus of value-accretive M&A. Moreover, the execution of our next-gen mobility roadmap during 2026 with important milestones through the entire year, is key in order to develop needed future technologies and new product segments for the defense sector. And fourth, aftermarket. RENK is today the peer with the highest aftermarket share in our space, but we want to expand this segment further. For 2026, we will review and define our new aftermarket strategy, including a better understanding of the market mechanics and analytics. We want to be more proactive, more systematic, and more ambitious in order to build a strong and profitable resilience into our business model. Ladies and gentlemen, before we open the floor to your questions, let me take final, final 30 seconds to sum it up. 2025 was a strong year for rank with new all-time highs across the board. A year-end race that, once again, has proven the true capability of our team and a strong order backlog which is providing us with a visibility like never ever before. The appetite for what we produce has never been stronger. Land, sea, new build, aftermarket. Across all our core programs and geographies, the momentum is strong and driving our business. Furthermore, we are not just collecting all our intakes. We have built up and are building up further the structure to convert them into revenues. Augsburg, Rheine or Muskegon. Investments are on track. Capacity is growing and the operational performance is further improving. Finally, we are going into 2026 with a clear guidance, a full order book and a proven ability to execute. Ladies and gentlemen, now really finally a few concluding comments regarding our financial calendar. Our capital market activities continue, as you can see, to be very busy, and we are very much looking forward to meeting many of you in the coming weeks and months at road shows, conferences, and bilaterals. Some of these key dates are shown on this slide. So, ladies and gentlemen, RENC has delivered a successful year. We have delivered what we promised. The challenge is absolutely clear, the focus is clear, and the team is ready. Thank you very, very much for your attention. We are now looking forward for your questions.

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin our Q&A session. If you have a question, we ask that you please use the raised hand function at the bottom of your Zoom screen. If you've dialed in by phone, please select star nine on your keypad to raise your hand and star six to unmute. Once your name has been announced, please unmute and ask your question. If you want to withdraw your question, please lower your hand using the raised hand function. Thank you. And a moment for the first question, please. Our first question will come from Sebastian Groh with BNB Paribas. Please unmute and go ahead.

speaker
Sebastian Groh
Analyst, BNB Paribas

Good morning, everybody. First of all, can you hear me? Beautiful note. Perfect, Sebastian. Okay, perfect. Okay, then let's get the ball rolling. The first one is on VMS, and sorry for being a bit picky here. Can you comment on what has driven the margin decline at VMS in the fourth quarter? It was down like 150 basis points. And how do you view the margin trajectory into 26? And I'm asking that question in the wake of having seen the shift in the production concept in Augsburg now behind, and as you also labeled the importance of the aftermarket business. So how fast might we simply get to tangible results here? That's the first question I have. And then I have another one on the guidance, please.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Good morning. I mean, I will try, of course, to answer your question if you talk about the VMS margin. I think we always communicated this, that we had, as a result of the export embargo, we were missing profitable business from the Israeli customer in the last quarter. And this, of course, was one of the main factors. We could partially compensate the missing revenues from the Israeli business from the planned and scheduled deliveries in the final quarter, but we could not compensate it with the same kind of margin quality like we were assuming for the Israeli orders. And talking about the overall margin projections of the BMS segment, I think you see, and this is the first general answer, you see the potential if the plant is running under full production. You see the 25%. And I think if we look in the year 2026, we also would expect further margin improvement, of course, driven by the operational leverage.

speaker
Sebastian Groh
Analyst, BNB Paribas

That makes sense. And then on the aftermarket part, so how quickly might this really turn out to be even stronger from a contribution perspective?

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

I think here we need to be fair. And as you know, I'm always saying this, so far we have this beautiful aftermarket share in a kind of not really proactive business approach. We are waiting for the customer and if the customer is coming to us, and usually we are the only source in order to support our customers. We need to better understand what will change in the market coming from more platforms, more training, more exercises and a different perspective from the customer side, from the end customer side, from the end user side, sorry, how they will run their spare parts strategy in order to increase the mission readiness of the platforms, the existing platforms but also the new platforms. Besides this modeling of the markets, we will define in 2026 different improvement measures, which are for short-term perspective, but the majority of this business, when I talk about north of 40 or 50%, I think it's fair to say that this really change on the value and change on the share of the aftermarket business on the overall group performance will kick in beyond 2030.

speaker
Sebastian Groh
Analyst, BNB Paribas

Okay, understood. Thank you for that. And then do the guidance quickly. You said that you were striving for double-digit growth every year. Now you're 26 sales target of more than 1.5 billion. It's implying just that, so it's just above 10. So the questions that I'm having around this one is then... what might lead to growth meeting the consensus expectation, which is 1.55, as you will know, billions. And can you also provide more color with regard to the growth rates by segments that you have on mind at this stage?

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Well, I think the guidance and what we communicated on the capital market day, I think it's consistent. So when we talk about double digit growth, and this is clearly our target and approach for 2026, I think when we look on the current consensus of the 1.55, I think this is something what we... I'm not waking up in the night and be full of sweat just referring to the question and feedback, of David Perry during the pre-close call. And I think the main growth driver, like on the segment level, if you look on the segment level, the main growth drivers will be again on the VMS side. On the slide bearing side, we do expect a normal, I mean, like in the past shown growth rate in the higher single digit, but this is from the total value. is not the real driver. The real driver was, is and will be our land defense business for the next year.

speaker
Sebastian Groh
Analyst, BNB Paribas

I sort of may very quickly follow up just on how the current discussions with Israel with the German government are going in the wake of the conflict in the Middle East. Can this unlock to get to that approval any earlier and eventually even then further boost revenues beyond the 8200 million or would that be going way too far?

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

I think it's a fair answer to say that and as I mentioned this during my little speech here that we are in good discussions with the German customer and the German government. We are in good discussions with the Israelian government in order to align delivery and production volumes. So far, I do not see that there's any negative impact from, for example, the current crisis in the Middle East, the Iran war. This might lead overall, and this is really a gut feeling to an overall increasing demand for defense capabilities in this region. this will be i think or i could imagine pretty much on ammunition on air defense capabilities but it will also could impact land defense capabilities just a quick side note and if it's brand new we just received yesterday the first orders of a for prototypes for a new IFV from a Gulf state which should be developed in the next two to three years. So it's a kind of indication, I don't know if this was an incident, But it's a kind of indication that I think this conflict could drive further defense spendings, not only on air and not only on ammunition and not only on air defense systems, but also on ground-based. And you notice it's public. Israel has a strong demand for land platforms. Israel has announced to invest billions of euros into additional Macava tanks. So there should be on the midterm, short to midterm, additional benefits, of course, for the suppliers who are supporting these platforms.

speaker
Sebastian Groh
Analyst, BNB Paribas

Yeah, makes sense. Thank you very much for the comprehensive answers. Thank you very much, Sebastian.

speaker
David Perry
Analyst, JP Morgan

thank you our next question will come from david perry with jp morgan please press star six to unmute yourself and go ahead yeah holly alexander and yes david perry hope you're well um can i just get a couple of some quick detailed questions and then one big picture question please um the detailed questions maybe for you and yet the um Central cost line, I don't know if it's an elimination line or a central cost line on EBIT came in at minus 16, so it was much higher than previous years. Can you just explain why and what that will be going forward? Second question is, and apologies if I missed it, did you give any guidance on free cash flow in 2026? And then the big picture question maybe for you, Alexander, is just if Donald Trump is successful in getting a big increase in U.S. defense, the U.S. defense budget. What do you think the key opportunities might be for you in land? Thank you. Daniel?

speaker
Anja Menzipje
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Okay. Let me start with the central cost line. So, this is basically the reconciling item for the segments for adjusted EBIT. What we have in there is consolidation effects, and if we compare it 24 to 25, but it's not only consolidation effects, it's also central cost asset. So, in 24, we had our IPO in February, and we had a newly set up AG. So, in 24, the AG was starting to be populated. So, the very first year is 2025, where we have the full setup of the AG. So, that is partially due for the rising costs. And what we have in there is we have central function costs, which we are not charging to the segments because these central function costs, they are providing stewardship work. Yeah. So, and stewardship work, which is related to a listed company in Germany, that cannot be charged to the operations. So, therefore, that remains in that line, and it's not get charged out to the segments. And obviously, as we have the very first full year in 2025, where we have the full AG set up and also the full central function set up for a listed company in Germany, that increased and it increased significantly. And so going forward, we, so I would say that feeling at around, we're staying at around that level.

speaker
David Perry
Analyst, JP Morgan

But it stays around the sort of mid-teens, Don't grow in line with the business.

speaker
Anja Menzipje
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. No, no, no. We have, well, it would go up if we would have other regulative topics where we are required by regulation to do further work on stewardship. Yeah, some new regulation coming up, solicited companies in Germany and things like that. But it's not in relation to our operations or something.

speaker
David Perry
Analyst, JP Morgan

Okay. Thank you. Okay, thank you.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Our next question will come from... Sorry, we have two more questions from David. Anja, I think a statement on cash flow.

speaker
Anja Menzipje
Chief Financial Officer

Okay, so cash flow 2026, as you've seen, so we have parts what we can manage and that we will be managing, but we also have parts which are depending on our customer behaviors. So for 2026, we just stay in line as in prior years. So, and I assume that we're hopefully have a more favorable cutoff topics in 2026. And we will be at the same levels as in prior years.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

David, good morning.

speaker
David Perry
Analyst, JP Morgan

I'm sorry. Sorry, sorry, sorry. Same level as prior years, you're talking an absolute amount or a conversion?

speaker
Anja Menzipje
Chief Financial Officer

We're talking cash conversion rate.

speaker
David Perry
Analyst, JP Morgan

Yeah, but what is your reference here? Because we only have a limited history. You had a very good 24 and a much weaker 23. So I don't know what normal is when you say prior years.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

No, David, I think the message is clear and we always communicated that we are looking driven by the nature of the defense business on an average cash conversion rate over at least two or three years. And what we communicated always in the past to be on or above the 80% is our targeted average cash conversion rate. So we had in 2024, I mean, not 2024, 2025, if you would, not have these kind of 200 million of order shifts. And if you take from this 200 million, to be fair, there's one R&D project in the range of 20 to 30 million, which was not with advance payments. But if you take an average of 20 to 30% for these international programs on 180 million and at this resulting advance payments, before the fiscal year end on the 31st of December on our 67 million, we would be in a very favorable range also in relation to our consensus. We could not, I mean, you know this on the defense business, unfortunately, we cannot finally control our customer. So we had this shift of the projects with this shift in the order intake, the advanced payments will also shift into 2026. And so our target, and this is underlined, is to have clearly on the average, our target is above 80%. Okay, very helpful. And then now finally myself, good morning. And talking about the bigger picture about US, I mean, we had this discussion and Mr. Trump is, I think has set a very ambitious, but also I think fair target to increase significantly today's defense budget of round about 1 billion to significantly higher values, 1.5 in this range. I still do believe that the main The main benefit if you talk about domains will clearly be on the Navy side. The US Navy has since 70 years the lowest number of vessel or fighting vessels and if you see the geopolitics in especially in Asia or when you see the number of vessels to aircraft carrier striking groups now in the Middle East, they need to build up and to ramp up through free gauge destroyers and whatever it's the same if you talk air defense if you talk about cyber and space capabilities on the land side i still see that the budget will be maybe not so much under constraint but i do not expect So I think in our today's positioning by serving the majority of the legacy platforms except the M1, fair comment. And seeing that if you talk about M1 future, I think you talked about repowering, I think that RENK is in a good position. RENK is in a very good position from my personal point of view if you're talking about the naval programs. With the acquisition of Cincinnati Gearing Systems, today ranked American Marine and Industry, we have the needed footprint in U.S. On top, if you talk about the large FFX program, I think there are numbers between 50 to 65 over lifetime. It's a huge number. I would consider rank in a very good position. We need to book it, of course, because the reference vessel of this FFX is the so-called national sea cutter from the Coast Guard, and the supplier of this transmission is ranked today. Okay.

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

Very clear. Thank you for the comment. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Our next question will come from Joe Orchard from Rothschild and Co Redburn. Please unmute your line and go ahead.

speaker
Joe Orchard
Analyst, Rothschild & Co

Good morning, thank you for taking my questions. Just a quick clarification to begin with. Please could you just confirm that you have included that 80 to 100 million of potential revenue from Israel in your FY26 guidance? And then secondly, please could you talk about how you expect your revenue by region to evolve in FY26? It looks from the annual report that you had very strong revenue growth in FY25 in Asia and the US, whereas in Europe it was a little bit more muted. How do you see your revenue growth by region evolving in FY26? Thank you.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Joe, good morning. I will do my very best to answer your questions, of course. If you talk about first our guidance, of course we have in our guidance, we have Israel included, 80 to 100 million, and there is nothing to talk more about. As I just said before, we are in positive discussions with both authorities. I was last week also in Berlin, and as I said in my presentation, we are currently preparing our production and delivery schedules according to the needs of the Israeli government. So from my side, yeah, full stop. The second point, if you talk about regions, I think we will have pretty much a similar pattern that in Germany, in Europe, and in U.S., we will have a growth mode. Asia, if you talk about the end customer, Korea will also contribute. But I would assume pretty much a similar effect like or a similar pattern like in 2025. Okay. Thank you very much. You're more than welcome.

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

Our next question will come from Sven Suar from Kepler Chevro. Please unmute your line and ask your question. Please unmute your line by pressing star six. Thank you.

speaker
Sven Suar
Analyst, Kepler Cheuvreux

yes hello uh good morning uh thank you for taking my questions the first one is could you maybe provide some more color on the comments you made regarding the tax rate in the coming years you mentioned a strong decrease of the tax rate that will normalize over time um yeah it would be great if you could maybe quantify this a bit more and my second question is uh on the main ground combat system. There's some news out that it's looking like it's going to be even more unlikely to materialize. Just wanted to hear your thoughts on this, what this could mean for RENK in the long term.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Yes, good morning and I would start with the easy question at least for me because I'm not a tech expert. So I would like to start with your main ground comment question. I think we talked about this at least two years now. And I always said I do not believe on the main ground combat systems. And if we read carefully the current planning of the Bundeswehr, the German army, and talking about the so-called bridge bridging solution based on the leopard basis it's a kind of leopard a3 or whatever no a leopard three um i think if the german customer and this our understanding is is procuring beyond 2030 quite significant numbers of these so-called bridge solutions i think from my point of view this makes it even more unlikely that then 10 years later there will be a new main battle tank platform. But this is my own personal judgment on this. Now I would like to hand over to Texas.

speaker
Anja Menzipje
Chief Financial Officer

Okay, Texas. So our effective tax rate for 2025 was around 18% and in prior year it was around 40%. So what happened in 2025 is we were able to implement the control and profit transfer agreement between the AT and the GmbH and we did a debt to equity swap in the U.S. These two measures actually enabled us to to activate on losses carried forward. So we are only talking about deferred taxes. So we're not talking extra taxes. So there is no cash impact related to that. That is important. And that was and why did we have this huge increase in 2025? Because that was a catch-up effect which accumulated over the whole years where we increased the the interest on the debt to equity swap in the US and where we weren't able to deduct that. So we were for the first time in 2025 able to really capitalize on that. And obviously it's a catch up effect and it will not recur in any going forward years. So that will basically defer out. And when you talk about going forwards tax rates, It will further flow out and we will be very soon based on a normalized German company tax rate of 30 to 32%.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

And then just to really complete my answer, I forgot your question. You talked about the implications on rank. There are no implications. I mean, main cloud complex system is wood from the original planning beyond 2030, 40 somewhere. If you talk about the frishing solution, it's rank. So for us, there's no implication. Perfect. Thank you.

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

You're welcome. Thank you. Our next question will come from Charles Armitage from Citi. Please unmute your line and ask your question.

speaker
Charles Armitage
Analyst, Citi

Yes, thank you. Good morning. A couple of quick ones. Unfortunately, I dropped off at the critical moment and you're answering David's question, so you might have answered this already. What do you typically get as a customer prepayment on orders? Does 20% sound about right?

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Good morning, Alexander here. This depends really on the customer contract. I mean, it depends on how we negotiate with the customer, of course, but I think it's fair to say in the range of 20%, it's a good average indication.

speaker
Charles Armitage
Analyst, Citi

Excellent. And again, I think you mentioned this previously, but I've mislaid my notes. Israel sales last year loss were about 80 million, is that right?

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

No, no, no, no. Last year sales, I mean, when we talk about the impact of the export embargo, which was materializing in form of missing revenues in Q4 was in the range of 20 million. This were 20 million. But if you look on 2026, We have of course included and we communicated this I think several times in the range between 80 and 200 million and as I just said before, what I can say is we are in positive discussions with both authorities and as I just said it, I think it was Sven or I don't know exactly, we are just preparing our production and our delivery schedules according to the needs of Israel.

speaker
Charles Armitage
Analyst, Citi

Lovely. Thanks very much indeed.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Very nice. Thank you very much.

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

Our next question will come from George McWhirter from Berenberg. Please unmute your line and go ahead. Please unmute your line by pressing star six.

speaker
George McWhirter
Analyst, Berenberg

Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions. I have two, please. Firstly, on order pipeline, please can you provide an update on the Saudi Arabia and Egypt Abrams M1A2 repowering contracts? And the second one, is on aftermarkets. I think aftermarket growth, revenue growth in FY25 was 8% versus OE at 28%. Was there something specific in the aftermarket business there to explain the lower growth? And do you expect aftermarket growth to be quite similar to OE growth this year? Thank you.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Hi, John. Good morning. I mean, I would like to start with a second question, if I got it correctly. I mean, the aftermarket pros in general. I mean, if you look on 2026, and I think I mentioned this in my speech, we're looking forward to receive more aftermarket, and I really talk about aftermarket stair parts. We are looking forward to receive more of these orders from the German customer, from the European customers, from international customers as well. We also do see that So what we started successfully for the very first time, by the way, during Q4 2025 to start to have direct contracts between the Ukraine and MOD and a rank entity to continue this also in 2026. And if you talk on the long run, I mean, all the new business, which is kicking really in from the rearmament in Europe from the 3.5% plus 1.5% increase, All this new business coming 2028 is, of course, adding up transmission by transmission, engine by engine, system by system, additional aftermarket layer. And that's the reason why I'm saying if you look really on the mid to long term beyond 2035, I see our business model developing more with a higher aftermarket share north of 40%, where I cannot tell you this to be honest, for this reason, we need to make our homeworks this year. But what is clear is really so far rank was more in a really reactive mode in driving the business. This means organization maybe needs to be aligned. This needs to be much more activities, even in our industrial segment. If you talk about branding strategies, et cetera, et cetera, more and new service ideas. Also, if you talk to our land customers, it's a broad spectrum. Coming to your first question, the order intake pipeline, you asked about the Egypt and Saudi Arabia, so we talk about the FMS repowering idea and potential program of the M1 airbrands, the M1A2 current airbrands model. Well, as I said earlier, we do expect from our potential customer, GD, a decision during the summertime. We We are preparing a quote from the physical setting of this repowering. As you know, the turbine should be replaced with a diesel engine and there should be a new transmission. The only supplier who has a transmission besides Allison, who is capable to run this 70 ton tank, is RENK. So we do see us in a good position, but unfortunately we need to wait a little bit more for the summertime. And then during the summertime, of course, there should be a guidance for this FMS business towards Saudi Arabia and Egypt. And as I just said before, if you look on the current crisis, my gut feeling tells me it will accelerate defense spending in this region simply. Thank you. You're welcome, George.

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

Thank you. And we have a written question from Marie-Therese Grubner from Canter Fitzgerald. The question is, what are your expectations on German orders in FY26? Do you have any visibility on where major orders will come in, meaning in which quarters, or seeing anything hinting at delays on that front?

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Marie-Thérèse Sautier otherwise would welcome her. But nevertheless, I mean, first of all, the orders and the expected order intakes are pretty much exactly what we had on our radar in our expectations since month and quarter. So to be more precise, we have seen in the presentation, we talked about the Puma, the additional batch or the additional roundabout 200 Pumas for the second batch. We do expect, and this depends really on the timing, Q1 or Q2 in 2026. The Boxer Arminius program in the range of 1,800 boxers somewhere during the summertime, Q2, Q3. What else do we have? The Leo additional main battle tanks, 75 to 80. I would say there's more in the second half. Leo family, if you talk about , they will come scattered throughout the year. The 2000, Q2, Q3, and I think I covered, if I'm correct, the current land programs. If you talk about the Navy programs, we do expect the F-127 in Q4. Why? Originally, we expected the order intake somewhere at the end of Q2, but as you know, the German Navy has currently quite some topics to manage. The F-126, the exhaustive negotiations regarding F-127, and on top to include somewhere the MECO A200. So there's a lot of work for the German government and the Bayern BB And we do see that for this new missile destroyer, air defense destroyer, we would expect simply ongoing discussions. And so it could happen that this might slip into 2027, but we have it in our visibility for Q4. as a bridging solution on the seaside, because F-126 will have a delay, a massive delay. This first feeling of the first vessels will be somewhere beyond 2030. So there's an urgent need for the German Navy to have mass and capabilities in 2029, 2030. So we do expect that the Mako A200 4 plus 4 shifts somewhere Q2, Q3.

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

Thank you very much. Well, that concludes the Q&A session. I'll now hand back to Dr. Alexander Segal for closing remarks.

speaker
Dr. Alexander Sage
Chief Executive Officer

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much for this open discussion and your patience. It's a little bit longer than usual, but please take it as granted. We are fully aware about your expectations. We are well prepared not only to collect orders, to execute these orders, we are just precisely following our capacity expansion plan, always staying in our targeted CapEx range, and we will execute. We are on track in executing our strategy. We have for 2026 a fantastic total order book. I think we have proven in the year end and through the entire year 2025, by the way, that, again, operational execution, including supply chain, we have under control. And for this reason, again, I would like to reconfirm, if we talk about our adjusted EBIT range, we do feel well to position us well in the upper half of this range. Having said this, thank you very much for your patience, and see you soon. Bye-bye.

speaker
Operator
Conference Moderator

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

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

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