2/17/2026

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Good morning and welcome to ENKON's Q4 report presentation. We're also going to have a short review of 2025. My name is Christer Blomgren and I'm the CEO here at ENKON. And with me today, as usual, I have our CFO, Markus Asplund. We will guide you through our Q4 report and 2025 review also. And also answer questions in the Q&A afterwards. Let's go into the presentation. 2025 has been a year of clear highs and lows across the global economy, and Encon has experienced a similar dynamic, navigating market volatility while continuing to strengthen its strategic position, operational efficiency, and long-term growth potential for shareholders. If we take a look at the bigger developments for Encon during the year, it's clear that 2025 has brought both ups and downs, so let's take a review of 2025. We launched Encon's Generation 3 that brings faster hydraulics, smoother precision, and smarter efficiency to make every excavated job feel easier and more controlled. Encon also took the step into the large cap segment, an important milestone that strengthens our visibility, broadens our investor base, and supports our continued growth journey. And we established our sales company in Japan during the year and supported by government subsidies. We have achieved a solid start laying a strong foundation for long-term growth in an important strategic market. The so-called liberation day led to a period of more cautious behavior across the global markets. And during the year, we also faced challenges from tariffs and strengthening Swedish Corona. Factors that have influenced demand and currency dynamics. Our participation in Bauma, the world's leading construction exhibition, where tilt-to-tails were visible everywhere, and Enco stood out as a clear reference brand. The strong presence confirms that OEMs are accelerating their integration efforts, and we see a growing interest and traction in the German market as awareness and adoption continue to build. We are now beginning to see the results of the long-term work we have done together with the OEMs. as more excavators are being prepared for tilt-rotators from the factory, an encouraging sign that our efforts are translating into real market progress. We have also started to establish a presence in Italy, the third largest excavator market in Europe, through a collaboration with TM Benne, an important first step that allows us to enter the market in a focused and capital-efficient way while building long-term growth opportunities. Stig Engström, founder of Encon, was honored with an Entrepreneur of the Year award during the year. Well-deserved recognition of the long-term vision and entrepreneurial drive that laid the foundation for the company's success and still continues to inspire its development today. We also won in the second instance in our patent dispute with Rototilt during the spring regarding alleged patent infringement. But however, we were later subject to a new lawsuit in the autumn concerning the same patent, so it's an ongoing matter that we continue to handle with confidence and a structured legal approach. A recent market study by Strategy& showed that Encon has increased its market share by 5 percentage points, reaching now 49% market share. That's a strong indication that our long-term investments and focused execution continue to strengthen our leading position in the market. With this broader review of 2025 in mind, we will now turn our attention to the fourth quarter and take a closer look at the developments during the final part of the year. The fourth quarter was characterized by strong growth with support from all regions. Net sales for the quarter amounted to 419 million SEK, an organic increase of 34% compared with the same period last year. Order intake increased organically by 12% from 506 million SEK to 539 million SEK, with the Swedish market making a particularly strong contribution, driven in part by a significant share of pre-orders. And we also saw some pre-orders from European market like Netherlands and France. And gross margin in quarter amounted to 40% down from 43% last year. This was mainly due to negative currency effects and a less favorable market mix. The operating margin was 15%, slightly lower than the previous year impact by the lower gross margin, a strong Swedish Corona and increased administrative costs related to IT and legal services. Over the last couple of years, we have taken an important step in how Encon operates as a group. As part of our long-term strategy, all Encon companies are now working within one common ERP system. And bringing an entire organization onto a single platform is not just a technical change. It is a transformation. During the implementation phase, this has naturally meant higher costs. We have invested money and time in systems integration, harmonizing processes, training our people and adapting the organization these efforts have increased our costs but they are laying a stronger foundation for the future we can now have a focus on our core business and improve even more from there if you're taking a look on the numbers then net sales when they are really strong with a 34 organic net sales increase 498 million SEK is a high level for fourth quarter and we need to go back to 2022 to see a higher level. Order intake, we have a 12% organic increase in order intake compared to the previous year. And I will come back to talk more about that when we also go into the regions then. The gross margin amounts to 40% and is squeezed from several directions. For example, net sales are impacted mainly by the strong Swedish krona and at the same time a negative market mix as growth is occurring in markets with the lower margins like Sweden. The EBIT margin amounts to 15% which is low provided the strong revenue. The margin is affected by a negative cocktail with the main ingredients that are the weaker gross profit, revaluations of balance sheet items linked to a strong Swedish Corona and high costs related to IT and legal services. As I mentioned earlier, the cost of getting all company to the same ERP system is the biggest part of those costs. At the same time, we have also faced extraordinary costs outside our day-to-day operations. Rototilt have sued us again for the same patent as mentioned earlier. These costs have therefore also contributed to higher expenses for the group. When we look at these two topics together, they explain a lot why costs have been elevated during the period. But now when we have the largest part of the ERP behind us and profitability is currently below our target levels, we are therefore looking to implement targeted measures to ensure continued profitability growth with a strong focus on strategic priorities, pricing and product packaging, and an increased cost discipline. And our rose amounts to 36%. That's also below our target of 40%. and is affected by the lower profitability level and higher inventory levels we have seen during the year. And Marcus will talk more about these financial development a little bit later on in presentation. Going into the order intake and net sales then, and to look at the fourth quarter as a whole, both net sales and order intake are at high levels. Order intake increased by 12% organically. Net sales increased by 34% organically. This is a strong performance, driven primarily by solid demand in Europe and the Nordics, even though the conditions have been more challenging in the American Asia and Oceania regions. As we expected, order intake in Q4 was supported by pre-ordering effects like last year, mainly from the Nordic region, but also Europe. These signals higher excavator sales and growing optimists among customers and dealers. An outlook that is also supported by reports from the construction equipment market. Overall, this gives us a positive picture, shows that Europe and the Nordic continue to perform well and are the key contributors to our growth and result. Now I will go over to each region to describe that a little bit more. And we start with the Nordics. The Nordic region ended 2025 with a continued robust recovery. Order intake increased by 35%, and net sales grew by 37% during the quarter. We're seeing a clear signs of improving end market demand. Recent reports from Volvo CE indicate higher excavator sales, supporting our view that activity levels are gradually normalizing. Residential construction is recovering from historically low levels, while overall sentiment is increasingly supported by infrastructure-driven investments. Together, these factors are contributing to more constructive demand and environment across our core markets. If we're looking ahead, we expect this gradual recovery to continue, supported by infrastructure pipelines, improving financing conditions, and stabilizing dealer inventories. While short-term volatility may persist, the underlying demand drivers in our key regions remain intact. In the fourth quarter, the Nordic region narrowly surpassed Europe to become our largest region once again. We're going over to Europe. Europe showed a strong recovery during the fourth quarter with organic net sales growth of 39%. an increase in order intake of 9%. In France, our collaboration with BELOC marks an important strategic milestone. France is a key market for us, and gaining traction within the rental segment, traditionally more conservative in adopting new technologies, is a strong validation of both our product offering and long-term market potential. Increased penetration in rental increase the visibility, accelerates fleet exposure, and support structural adoption over time. In Netherlands, we are seeing encouraging momentum with customers placing pre-orders in a way that increasingly resembles to the Nordic markets. These signals growing confidence in the tilt rotators as a standard solution rather than an optional add-on. Customers are planning ahead and committing earlier, which indicates maturing demand and improving predictability. The fourth quarter reached a record high level for a fourth quarter in Europe. Importantly, this performance helps mitigate traditional seasonality effects related to the excavation cycle. It demonstrates greater stability in our revenue base and a broader market acceptance of our solution. Order intake in Europe is also stronger than it may initially appear. Our German partners, who typically place largely less frequent orders, did not place an order this quarter due to timing, as they prepare to move into a new facility expected to be completed in the beginning of March. So we view this as a temporary effect rather than a change in underlying demand in Germany. Looking ahead here in Europe, we see continued growth potential in Europe driven by increasing penetration, stronger OM collaboration and expanding rental exposure. While quarterly order patterns may fluctuate, the structural adoption trend remains intact and we expect Europe to continue playing central role in our long-term growth strategy. Moving over to Americas. In the Americas, the performance during the year was weaker than expected, primarily due to the tariffs introduced in April. Increased uncertainty has dampened the investment appetite in the industry, as the clear long-term conditions are still lacking. Despite this, net sales increased organically by 7%, mainly as a result of price adjustments. Order intake, however, declined by 13%, clearly reflecting the cautious market environment. We remain confident in the long-term potential of the US tilt-rotator market. The structural opportunity is significant, supported by the productivity gains and efficiency improvements that are increasingly relevant to contractors facing labor constraints and higher operating costs. That said, the introduction of the tariffs has added uncertainty and may delay the pace of market adoption in the near term. We expect the development in the US to take time, particularly as customers navigate pricing dynamics and investment decisions in the current environment. However, we see this as a timing factor rather than a structural limitation. The underlying value proposition of tilt rotators remains strong in the long term in the US. We also have ConExpo in Las Vegas that will be an important exhibition for us. It will provide a valuable opportunity to assess how far the market has progressed in terms of our awareness and understanding of tilt rotator solutions. We see not only as a commercial platform, but also a strategic checkpoint for measuring adoption readiness in the US market. Over time, we believe the US represents one of our most significant growth opportunities, even if the ramp up will be gradual. In Asia Oceania, we expect Japan to remain the primary growth engine within the region. The market fundamentals are supportive, particularly given ongoing government initiatives. including the programs led by MLIT and SME-related incentives that are aimed to encouraging investments in increased efficiency technologies. These incentive structures align well with our value proposition, as tilt-rotators directly contribute to productivity gains and improved capital efficiency. As we previously communicated, the region is characterized by significant quarter-to-quarter volatility. The fourth quarter, net sales increased organically by 33%, while order intake declined by 32%, clearly illustrating the timing effects that can occur in this market. A good example of this is the Kobelco order received in the third quarter and invoiced in the fourth quarter. This type of timing difference contributes to quarterly fluctuations rather than reflecting any structural change in underlying demand. Kobelco, our earlier partner there, has also taken proactive steps to support adoption by developing a dedicated catalog aligned with SME subsidies program. This catalog then simplifies the process for end customer and increases confidence that incentives will be secured, lowering the barriers to investment and supporting a more predictable uptake over time. In Asia, Oceania, the region, the development remains gradual, but strategically important. Awareness is increasing, although the penetration remains at an early stage. We continue to focus on the education and dealer partnerships and building references cases to strengthen long-term demand. If you're looking ahead here, The 2032 Olympic Games in Brisbane are expected to act as a meaningful infrastructure catalyst. Large-scale infrastructure and construction projects linked to the Games are likely to support equipment demand and create a favourable environment for productivity-increasing solutions. Overall, we expect Japan to drive near-term growth in the region, while the rest of the region represents a long-term opportunity, supported by infrastructure investment and increasing adoption. although we will continue to see quarterly volatility in the region. The structured drivers across Asia and Oceania are intact and supported of sustained expansion over time. With that, I will hand it over to Marcus that will guide you through the financial development.

speaker
Markus Asplund
CFO, ENKON

Thank you, Krister. Good morning. EBIT landed on 72 million SEC for the quarter, an increase of around 15%. Our operating margin stands at 14.5%, which is below expectations. Although Q4 typically a weaker quarter, our strong net sales aren't translating into bottom line growth. We are seeing margin compression at both the gross and operating levels due to several negative factors that are preventing us from achieving leverage in this quarter. Now let's go through the P&L in more detail. Revenues came in strong this quarter at 498 million SEK, representing a solid 34% organic increase year on year. The momentum is driven primarily by the Nordics with our home market Sweden leading the way, and we're also been able to release the European backlog that held down revenues last quarter. Overall, we are pleased with this level. At 40.2%, gross margin finishes below last year's level. This contraction is the result of a couple of headwinds converging simultaneously, which have collectively diluted our profitability this quarter. We're seeing a less favorable market mix as the Swedish home market has rebounded more strongly than expected. This is one of our most mature market, which naturally comes with higher competitive pressure. In addition, the margin is being weighed down by a few deals with rental companies and bigger dealers. And continued currency headwinds persist. When we get to the OPEX, we can see that we are benefiting from operating leverage as a result of the higher revenues. However, administrative expenses are somewhat burdened this quarter by IT and consultancy related costs. which is a natural consequence of the intensive work required to bring all our companies into one ERP system. On top of this, the ongoing lawsuit with Rottotilt is also adding costs related to legal advisory. Looking at other operating income and expenses, we can also see the impact of the Swedish krona here. a hit of roughly 6 million SEK related to the revaluation of balance sheet items. When everything lands on the bottom line, EBIT comes in at 72 million SEK, corresponding to a margin just above 14.5%. We can conclude that we're benefiting somewhat from a stronger revenue level, although the stronger Swedish krona and higher costs offsets part of that effect. All in all, EBIT is partly affected by external factors and could have been stronger. But it's a reality we must navigate. We are fully committed to active margin improvement and value-driven initiatives, such as the review of our pricing and product packaging, as well as our strategic priorities, as Krister mentioned. Looking at the cash flow from operating activities before changes in working capital, it actually improved full year on year, mainly due to higher operating profit. This is, however, offset by increase in working capital, mainly inventory. Inventories has been increased to show. important lead times during the BCD Nordics and Europe. Hence, inventories are expected to decrease during the first half of this year. For return on capital employed, not enough leverage on currency headwinds and increase in networking capital pulls low where we sustainably should be. To summarize, looking at our financial, while the organic net sales growth is strong, the EBIT level is not where we want to be. And as was mentioned, with extra costs connected to one offs pulls us down. As both I and Krister has been into, we are addressing these challenges. These challenges together with higher inventory also weighs on the capital efficiency. Capital structure, however, continues to be at a satisfactory level. The board of directors proposes a dividend of one Swedish krona per share to be paid in two equal installments. And with that, I hand it over back to Krister to summarize it all.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Thank you, Marcus. I will try to summarize the presentation then. And we have a great quarter if we look at the net sales and order intake. And it's our key regions, Nordic and Europe, that delivers. Europe's order intake is better than what it looks, as I mentioned earlier, since our partners in Germany didn't place in a bigger order this quarter, since the extension will not be ready until the beginning of March. We see and hear positive signs about that excavator sales is picking up in all Europe, including the Nordics. And this pickup is from low levels, so it's a lot of growth left. Our profitability remains below target and we are not pleased with that. And we need to plan for actions like reviewing pricing, the product packaging, strategic priorities for improved profitability and reinforced cost discipline. After a major transformation like the ERP implementation, it's easy for higher cost base to become the new normal. As we move forward, we are sharpening our cost discipline and reinforcing the entrepreneurial mindset that continues to define our culture. This means maintaining tight control over expenses while ensuring we remain adaptive and focus on long-term value creation. So we also have the second largest exhibition in our industry in Las Vegas in the beginning of March, Conexpo. And it will be interesting to see, as I mentioned earlier, to see the knowledge level where it is right now then in the Americas. I would also like to extend my sincere thanks to our employees and partners around the world. Your commitment and dedication are the foundation of our success. With a year marked by strong growth and increased market presence and a deepened partnership, we continue to strengthen our position as a global market leader, now with a market share of 49%. Despite an uncertain external environment, we have established a stable and sustainable foundation for continued profitability growth. Together, we will continue to change the world of digging and create value for our customers, partners, and shareholders. That was everything we had for today's presentation. And now we're happy to open up for your questions. So feel free to jump in through the telephone conference. So operator, whenever you are ready, please bring in the first question.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

The next question comes from Zeno Englund-Ricciuti from Handelsbanken. Please go ahead.

speaker
Zeno Englund-Ricciuti
Analyst, Handelsbanken

Yes, good day and thanks for the presentation and for taking our questions. Starting off on the order intake side in Europe, you mentioned now that you didn't get this order from one of your partners. Could you elaborate a bit on it, on the consequence or the scale of it?

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

I mean, Germany is one of our biggest markets in total then. Absolutely, that are important for us and I don't know if we communicate exactly how much they normally place or anything like that, but they place fewer orders and pretty large orders in that way, but it didn't come because they are building a new assembly factory for tilt rotators. And that was not ready yet. And they were now using other places for keeping the stock and so on. So they wanted to wait to place it later when they knew that the new facility would be ready. So they keep in pretty large stocks, of course, also normally. But now they try to slim it down a little bit. So they are an important market. So it would have been an important add on for us on the order intake in Europe.

speaker
Zeno Englund-Ricciuti
Analyst, Handelsbanken

And if it's possible to say, for your partner, are they increasing capacity with the new factory or anything like that?

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Yeah, there is a new factory that they are earlier. They've been having the assembling part of the tilt rotators in their old factory. Now they're building a totally new factory and demo area for a total of 25 million euros. So they are I don't remember exactly the size of it, but it's more than double up what they're having in in capacity in that way. So it's a big investment they're doing, and they're doing because they believe in the tilt-rotators in the Dutch region.

speaker
Zeno Englund-Ricciuti
Analyst, Handelsbanken

Very interesting. I'm also wondering a bit on the gross margin. You mentioned that Sweden has negative pressure, but there are, I guess, since Germany maybe didn't get No, that wasn't over the front. What I'm wondering is, did the higher deliveries to Europe, because they were a bit lowered last quarter, did that have a negative effect on the gross margin in this quarter?

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Now, Europe is normally a good gross margin country for us. Of course, it's been a little bit lowered with the currency effects and so on. But as Marcus there and I also mentioned, The rental fleet there with Belok, it's always a little bit squeezed orders that you're getting like that and so on. But otherwise, they're normally good getting orders to the European market. It might be depending, of course, a little bit like we're also having in the Netherlands, we're having the local coupler there where you're getting a little bit less margin on normally. But I would say Europe is good for us to get orders to.

speaker
Zeno Englund-Ricciuti
Analyst, Handelsbanken

And I'll also ask on the IT costs what we should expect ahead, how much of it has been taken and maybe also elaborate a bit on the positive effects you expect to see from this implementation.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

We expect, I would say Marcus, that we will still have costs during Q1 because it's been like hyper care and so on during the q1 and then from q2 we would see that our cost for the erp system would go down in in a bigger bigger way than compared to q1 will still be higher and q2 would supposed to be much lower than that

speaker
Markus Asplund
CFO, ENKON

Yeah, I mean, the project phase of it all ending, of course, that will take down some of the extra consultancy costs that we had connected to this, of course. And then some of the other legacy systems with licenses and so forth will come down as well. But we will see this trend more clearly in the Q2 for the IT, I would say. And then, yeah. continue to come down after that with improvements that we make in the new whole setup as well.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

And then that will also hopefully then for safety reasons, we've also been having higher stock for not running into problems or anything like with that. But that will also work with that.

speaker
Zeno Englund-Ricciuti
Analyst, Handelsbanken

Very clear. Thank you. I will get back in line. Thank you. Thanks.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

The next question comes from Agnieszka Vilela from Nordia. Please go ahead. Thank you.

speaker
Agnieszka Vilela
Analyst, Nordia

I have a few questions. Maybe starting with order intake in Q4 and also expectations for Q1. I can see that in the past two years usually the Q1 orders in absolute terms were flat compared to Q4. Now we had this dynamic in Q4 that you had some pre-ordering but also lower orders from Germany. So putting it all together, what do you think will happen in Q1 for you in terms of orders? Do you see a risk for any setback or do you think that you can kind of carry this solid momentum into Q1? Thanks.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

The feeling we're having as a trend presentation is that we are optimistic about the outlook for our key markets, Europe and the Nordics, where we see positive trends and we expect Q1 to be good in order intake for both Europe and the Nordics. America, it's hard to tell. It's depending a little bit what happens with the Conexpo and stuff like that, if we can expect anything particular from there. Asia Oceania is a little bit fluctuation all the time regarding what happens and so on. But I would say our expectations is to be keeping the momentum and being better each quarter than what we was last year.

speaker
Agnieszka Vilela
Analyst, Nordia

Perfect, thank you. And maybe a question to Marcus really. Looking at 2026, what tailwinds and what headwinds do you see for your profitability? And maybe also if you could quantify the IT costs that you had in total for 2025.

speaker
Markus Asplund
CFO, ENKON

Quantifying the IT, I'm not prepared to say any specific figures there, but talking about then, I mean, a tailwind there, it will be a tailwind on the IT side, as we said, but starting to show in Q2 mainly before that, I think we still have to, we have a higher level than we should have on a normal operational level. a tailwind from currency. I know I'm not expecting but but then of course, we will look at as Krister and I was into regarding the pricing and packaging for product packaging part. I think that will will bring us back to to a better position, especially coming into the second half of the year. So Yeah, as I said, there are some challenges and we really need to address them. And we are, I believe, so this is my expectations at least.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

But we also think we can get some tailwind from the volume, like we expect to keep growing. And that will, of course, help us on the profitability level the more volume we get. Yeah, definitely, definitely.

speaker
Agnieszka Vilela
Analyst, Nordia

Yeah. So just maybe to end my questions here, you ended 2025 with 17% EBIT margins. So what measures really can you as a company yourself take now to push the margins towards 20% target? And do you think that it could be feasible to reaching that already in 26?

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

We're at least aiming at that. we believe that we with the packaging and then the price adapting to the package and so on we believe we can get the margins up and also the volume and also then as we talked about that we not will have the cost for for the erp system change then at least after the q2 or sorry after q1 I think we will work our margin up. If we manage to reach 20 or more, that will be, of course, a challenge, depending on now the Swedish Crown has just been kept on strengthening itself. But if we don't count on any help from that part, of course, we will have a challenge to reach it. But we still think it's possible to do it. We are not saying that we have not reached it, but we need to make some actions as we have mentioned during this call that we will launch pretty soon then what we need to do.

speaker
Agnieszka Vilela
Analyst, Nordia

Thank you.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Thank you very much. Thanks.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

The next question comes from Anna Woodstrom from DNB Carnegie. Please go ahead.

speaker
Anna Woodstrom
Analyst, DNB Carnegie

Hi, Krister. Hi, Marcus. Thank you for taking my questions as well. So my first one is on how we should think about the pre-ordering in the Nordics and Netherlands. Is there a substantial part of the ordering that we should rather expect to be delivered in Q2 than Q1?

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Yeah, it's like last year, it's probably spread out in that way, both Q1 and Q2. We had a pretty good pre-ordering effect last year, not from Europe, but then from the Nordics. So I would consider it to be similar to that, like last year. It spread out both Q1 and Q2.

speaker
Anna Woodstrom
Analyst, DNB Carnegie

Perfect, thank you. And then on the demand situation in the other Nordic countries, How is it in comparison to Sweden and is Sweden expected to be sort of the main driver for the upcoming year in the Nordic?

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Sweden is the country where we have seen the upturn or coming back the longest, I would say at least. But we see also positive signs in in the other, maybe not Finland. Finland's economy is not that strong, but Finland normally delivers pretty good anyway then. But we will see there. But we believe that the rest of the Nordic countries will come back also this year. So we expect a pretty good growth in the Nordics together with Europe then. Also, if you're looking on the excavator sales there on Volvo Sea reports, even if you don't see the Nordics separate, but you see that there are big increase of excavator sales in Europe then.

speaker
Anna Woodstrom
Analyst, DNB Carnegie

Great. And do you have any plans on increasing capacity in reproduction and sales in any of the regions from today's level during that coming year?

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Yes, we are working with changing a little bit where we are improving our possibilities of producing more in the same facilities like that. So there are no really big changes. that we see right now, then at least not in the in the strums in Poland, we're talking about extension and so on, finding more more space there, because we will need that, especially since Europe is growing good. And we also selling more and more tools and so on there.

speaker
Anna Woodstrom
Analyst, DNB Carnegie

Could you give us some idea of how how the EBIT margin would look if we were to exclude

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

the americas excuse me exclude what americas uh no we don't uh have a profit loss on on regions and then we would report each region in that way also okay but we could sort of assume that the cost levels should remain steady or maybe even increase from current levels given that we still have the

speaker
Anna Woodstrom
Analyst, DNB Carnegie

positive view of the long-term possibilities in the region, even as it's quite uncertain in the near term?

speaker
Markus Asplund
CFO, ENKON

I wouldn't say the cost level to increase since, as we said, long-term we believe in it, but short-term it's more of a wait-and-see game in presence. So I wouldn't expect an increase in the cost base in the Americas.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

No, I mean, that's part of the strategic priorities that we need to look at where we believe we can get the most bang for the buck. That's part of what we need to look into. And that's where we should invest more money in that case.

speaker
Anna Woodstrom
Analyst, DNB Carnegie

Okay, great. That was my question. Thank you.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Thank you very much.

speaker
Operator
Conference Operator

As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please dial pound key 5 on your telephone keypad. There are no more questions at this time, so I hand the conference back to the speakers for any closing comments.

speaker
Christer Blomgren
CEO, ENKON

Thank you again for tuning in today and we really look forward to seeing you all again soon. Take care and have a good day. Thank you. Thank you.

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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