Richard Dierker
Management
Okay. I think we're ready to get started. So thank you for coming out today, especially in a cold, blistery New York City day. I really appreciate it. I want to walk you through a quick 170 slides and the management team is going to come up and talk as well. But we're just a ecstatic to be here, and we finished the year with momentum, in 2026, the future looks bright. So just as a reminder, we have a safe harbor statement. We're going to make forward-looking statements today. So please check this out on our website. So who's going to be presenting. I'm going to start and end the presentation. Lee is going to come up and talk about our financials and our outlook. And then Chuck will talk about our brands and the categories; Andrea is here, Founder of Touchland. She's going to talk about that business and how excited we are about it. Carlos is innovation. Surabhi is all things digital, and then Mike Read will talk about international and SPD. I'll also go through some of the growth initiatives today as well. I'll just walk through the agenda. I already told you welcome. So let's look back at 2025. We grew faster than all of our categories across all 3 divisions. That is quite the accomplishment in a tough and rugged 2025. 4 of our 8 power brands grew share. 4 of 7 if you exclude Vitamins. Hero and TheraBreath are growing double digits. Strong innovation and marketing spend supports these brands and growth. And then we acquired Touchland this year. Tariff response and mitigation. These 3 bullets are really important to me. I would say our tariff mitigation and response wasn't just industry-leading, I would say it's just leading. I was super impressed with how the company reacted to that. Portfolio. Portfolio changes were executed. We divested Spinbrush and Vitamins. We shut down Flawless and Showerheads. There is a lot of momentum because of the portfolio changes we were able to make in 2025. So we also have a strong balance sheet, 1.5x levered. You know this, right? Our long-term investors know this. We have been able to acquire businesses. We have the ability to identify, acquire, integrate and grow brands and the future is bright for that as well. Joe, can you just let them know they switched the prompter up here. It doesn't have anything on it anymore. It's fine. But -- this is one of the most important things to understand about the business portfolio. In 2025, our brands grew about 1% consumption. If you strip out all the businesses and portfolio changes we made, it would have grown 3.5%. What a great resilient portfolio to have the wind at our back for 2026 and beyond. Lee will talk about the Evergreen model in detail. I will tell you that Evergreen model is alive and well. You saw how we had those brackets in our outlook today for 2026. There's a lot that goes into this, but this is the output. We have to make sure we have innovation and brands consumers love. We have to make sure we have productivity programs, the right advertising. All those things are the inputs. And we have a strong track record of TSR. If you look back at 3, 5, 10 years, we're always near the top. 2025, we went backwards and we're off to a great start in 2026. What's our winning formula? We have a balanced and diversified portfolio. We have low private label exposure. This is going to be my new favorite slide. You're going to see the updated one in a few minutes. We have online success and strong, consistent category-leading innovation. Half of our growth to fleet comes from innovation. And again, we're an acquisitive company. We know how to identify, acquire, integrate and grow brands. Church & Dwight is about a $6.2 billion company, 77% domestic, 18% international and 5% SPD. 7 brands make up 75% of our sales and profits. And we have a balanced and diversified portfolio. About half of our portfolio is personal care, the other half is household. 64% premium, 36% value. low private label exposure. So for many years, we've been showing this slide that weighted average exposure to private label across all of our brands, across all of our categories is around 12%. And it's been very consistent 12% year after year after year. And why is that? We don't have private label exposure, for example, in laundry. But look what the portfolio reshaping did to that stat. We're down to 5%, right? Vitamins was an extremely large private label business. So we went from 12% to 5% because of portfolio reshaping. Online success, all things digital. We went from laggard to leader, 2% to 24%. Surabhi and her team are doing a fantastic job. Strong and consistent category-leading innovation. About -- again, half of our growth is typically tied to new products. We measure this maniacally, incremental net sales growth, not gross sales, stand-alone but incremental net sales growth. And this drives our brands. It creates value for the consumer. Acquisitive company, #1 or #2 share brand is one of the first things that we always want to make sure when we buy a brand or a business. Number two, high growth and high margin, fast moving consumable, that's what we're focused on. Asset-light, leverage our manufacturing skill set and then deliver a sustainable competitive advantage. And we're as excited today about acquisitions, both in the U.S. and probably also internationally, right? I think that's the nuance. It's always been the U.S. It's an and. Now we're talking about international as well. And why is that? Like this company has been transformed through acquisition, and I'll show you in a few minutes. We have a slide, $6 billion, $2 billion is really the ARM & HAMMER brand, $4 billion is from the brands we've built and bought over the many years. And that tranche started back in 2004. We go from $1.5 billion to almost $3 billion. And then you go from $3 billion to $5 billion. And now we're about $5.5 billion go into what? We're $6.2 billion this year, and we think that's going to continue to grow through acquisitions. Okay. So here's the new news. We haven't talked about this before. I think the reality in the world that we live in is categories have decelerated, right? Our categories have grown for a decade or longer at 3%. And if you look back at 2024, it was closer to 4%. And then in 2025, the first half grew 2%, the second half grew 1.3% and the full year grew 1.8%. That was not just us, that was everybody. Many categories were doing the same thing. Bad things happen and you have people to react to it. Consumer sentiment is weak, right, 5-year lows on consumer confidence. So we have to be able to control our own future. And so what are we doing about it? We're focused on these 3 aspects of growth internally to help drive results in the future. So that if categories slow, we can still hit our Evergreen model. If categories don't slow, we can do even better. So grow ARM & HAMMER from $2 billion to $3 billion. There's 3 or 4 pillars behind that. Number one is continue to do what we've been doing, grow the core, ARM & HAMMER laundry, ARM & HAMMER litter. Good, better, best. We can round out our portfolio for good, better, best across the ARM & HAMMER sub-brands. In-house licensing. We're going to consider that more of an incubator, and I'll talk through that in a few minutes. And then new categories. So we're going to launch a couple of new categories this year. But over the next few years, you're going to see a handful of other categories. And those are going to be fewer, bigger, better. We're not going to go everywhere to every one. That's not the strategy, is to make sure that we're in the right category where ARM & HAMMER can play and win. Drive oral care expansion through TheraBreath, really behind TheraBreath from $1 billion to $1.5 billion. And then to scale our international business. We've been doing a great job doing that for many years, and now it's a little bit double down on M&A. We have the scale. We have the infrastructure to do it. So that would go from $1 billion to $2 billion over time. Here's the slide that we've shown before. This is the makeup of the $6.2 billion over time, $4 billion is really from acquisitions. But I'm going to talk about it in the inverse for a second. It means that we've gone for ARM & HAMMER from $1 billion to $2 billion over the last 25 years. Our aspiration is to go from $2 billion to $3 billion a heck of a lot faster than that. And again, this is the core, grow the core. Look at the stair step up over time for liquid laundry and for clumping cat litter. We have a great brand. It's the innovation behind laundry, the marketing behind laundry. We're hitting the consumer right where they are. And year after year, we continue to gain share. What are some reasons to believe in the ARM & HAMMER strategy? Well, number one, we've proven over time that we can go into other categories. And it's not 1846 anymore, but baking soda was founded back in 1846 with Church & Dwight. Laundry was in 1970. Toothpaste was in 1980s. Deodorant and cat litter were in the 1990s. We know we can do this. We've been in large categories before. Our equity is fantastic. Our brand stacks up with other brands like Nike and McDonald's in terms of awareness. And then the last one, which I believe is a competitive advantage is the ARM & HAMMER brand has a halo effect on advertising. If we advertise cat litter, baking soda and laundry benefit. If we advertise laundry, ARM & HAMMER toothpaste benefits. That's a unique position and capability that we have. ARM & HAMMER is known for cleaning, deodorization, cooking, laundry, the list goes on. It's a premium in some categories, it's a value in others. It's personal care in some categories, it's household in others. There's very few brands. I can't name one that has the ability to do that. It's also uniquely extendable. It's in more aisles of the grocery store than almost any other brand through either our owned brands or licensees. There's over 100 uses of baking soda. It's used everywhere. It's in the laundry room, of course, it's in the kitchen. It's in the bathroom. It's everywhere. So there we go. So grow the core we talked about. Good, better, best. Again, there are subsegments within the ARM & HAMMER portfolio that can get rounded out. We've proven time and time again that we're good at ARM & HAMMER doing good, better, best. I'm going to show you those 2 examples. I'm not going to go through them today, but there are new categories that are ripe for ARM & HAMMER. And then number four is the in-house licensed brand concept to be an incubator, to be able to say, here are some categories that we may want to go into. How do we explore that? How do we get a business up to $10 million or $20 million or $30 million. And then when it makes sense, to actually buy that back and be able to scale it like we normally do. So here are the 2 examples that I would tell you are just textbook for good, better, best. First one is litter. Orange box is good, black box is better and then HardBall is best. And HardBall is known for the best, we're trying to make that the best lightweight litter. We think that might be the best litter period, full stop. We also have laundry, good, which is the ARM & HAMMER model, better, which is ARM & HAMMER plus Oxi and then the best, which is deep clean. We have almost $1 billion of licensing and retail sales out there with partners. There are many categories in which ARM & HAMMER has already proven that can play in. And once we decide that we think that we can be a better owner at some point in time with the right partner, then we believe we can scale it and take it to the next chapter of growth, like we did for Hero and TheraBreath. Okay. Next pillar of growth is really oral care. Now as we grow, we want to make sure we're focused on the right large categories. And mouthwash and toothpaste are huge categories. On the far right, $2.4 billion and $4.8 billion. We would much rather have a share point in toothpaste and even in dry shampoo as an example. So we're laser-focused on mouthwash and toothpaste. And what's uniquely different about us is TheraBreath gives us a great entry point for oral care now, right? ARM & HAMMER is always to a select subset of the market because of the taste profile and for baking soda, but TheraBreath can reach and penetrate a lot more households. Speaking of penetration, TheraBreath is 12% household penetration. Mouthwash is 65%. Chuck is going to go through more details, but we have a lot of room to still run. We have aspirations to be the #1 mouthwash. Number 2 is toothpaste, huge category, almost $4 billion. We have been playing in toothpaste for quite some time. And collectively, we're a small player, if you add up all of our brands. We think TheraBreath has a unique right to win. We think there's a loyal following for TheraBreath. It hits on best-in-class performance. It's better for you. It has superior flavor. So all those things come together to make this a great chance for TheraBreath to become a meaningful brand in toothpaste. Last but not least is International growth. And Mike will walk you through the reasons to believe as well. But we have a long track record of organic growth. This has been a fantastic story for Church & Dwight and for International. And there's a lot of room to run. We're underpenetrated, our company versus most other multinationals. And we've done a fantastic job taking businesses even faster than our history, I would say, and applying those distribution gains. So Hero, TheraBreath, Touchland, they have all expanded rapidly, and a large part of that is because of international. And so today, I'm just saying we're doubling down M&A within our international business. It doesn't mean we're doubling down less in the U.S. It's just an and, not an or. But we want to acquire brands because we already have a great footprint or we want to shortcut like we did with Graphico in Japan, right? We added our OxiClean distributor, and now we can start to add some of the brands that we have into that infrastructure. All right. With that, I will ask Lee to come up and talk about the financials.