Jason Winkler
Analyst · Barclays
Thank you, Greg. Revenue for the quarter grew 7% and was above our guidance with growth in both segments and in all 3 technologies. This included $60 million of FX tailwinds and $219 million from acquisitions, which was consistent with our Q1 expectations. GAAP operating earnings were $525 million or 19.3% of sales, down from 23% in the year ago quarter, driven by a $75 million noncash charge for the increase in the Silvus earnout, which is aligned to stronger performance of the business and increased intangible amortization in the current quarter. Non-GAAP operating earnings were $781 million, up 9% from the year ago quarter, and non-GAAP operating margin was 28.8%, up 50 basis points, driven by higher sales and improved operating leverage, partially offset by higher supply chain costs. GAAP earnings per share was $2.18, down from $2.53 in the year ago quarter, primarily due to the $0.45 noncash charge for the Silvus earnout that I mentioned earlier. Non-GAAP EPS was $3.37, up 6% from $3.18 last year. Our growth in EPS was driven by higher operating margins, partially offset by higher interest expense. OpEx in Q1 was $607 million, up $4 million versus last year due to acquisitions. Turning to cash flow. Q1 operating cash flow was $451 million, down $59 million versus last year, and free cash flow was $389 million, down $84 million. The decrease in year-over-year cash flows was primarily driven by increased investments in inventory and higher interest, partially offset by higher earnings. Capital allocation during Q1 included $201 million in cash dividends, $118 million in share repurchases and $62 million of CapEx. We closed 2 acquisitions during the quarter, Exacom and Hyper for a total of $90 million, net of cash acquired. We also entered into a definitive agreement to acquire the LMR network services business from Bell Canada, which is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2026. Additionally, the company repaid $200 million of the $1.5 billion term loans issued to fund the Silvus acquisition, leaving a balance of $1.3 billion outstanding. Moving next to our segment results. In Products and SI, sales were up 1% versus last year, driven by growth in video. Revenue from acquisitions was $181 million and foreign currency tailwinds were $30 million in the quarter. Operating earnings were $386 million or 24.8% of sales, down from 28.1% in the year prior, primarily driven by unfavorable mix and higher supply chain costs, partially offset by improved operating leverage. Some notable Q1 wins and achievements in the Products and SI segment include $148 million P25 device and SVX body-worn assistant orders for the U.S. federal government, a $16 million P25 device order for a U.S. state and local customer, a $14 million fixed video order for a large U.S. fitness company and a $10 million fixed video order for Duke Energy. During the quarter, the company also secured $78 million of Silvus orders from an unmanned systems provider in Germany with an expected delivery schedule over the next few quarters. In Software and Services, revenue was up 18% compared to last year, driven by strong growth across all 3 technologies. Revenue from acquisitions was $38 million and currency tailwinds were $30 million in the quarter. Operating earnings in the segment were $395 million or 34.2% of sales, up from 28.7% last year, driven by higher sales, inclusive of favorable mix and improved operating leverage. Some notable Q1 highlights in this segment include a $41 million 5-year P25 services renewal for the Minnesota Department of Transportation, a $24 million Command Center order for Denver, Colorado, a $16 million Command Center order for Anne Arundel County in Maryland, a $10 million P25 services order for Paraíba, Brazil Department of Social Services and a $9 million mobile video order for a U.S. state and local customer. Looking now at our regional results. North America Q1 revenue was $1.9 billion, flat compared to the prior year with growth in Video and Command Center. International Q1 revenue was $857 million, up 27% versus last year, driven by Mission Critical Networks, Video and Command Center. Moving to backlog. Ending backlog for Q1 was $15.7 billion, up $1.6 billion or 11% versus last year, primarily driven by record Q1 orders, which was our fourth consecutive quarter of double-digit orders growth in both segments. Sequentially, backlog declined $60 million, driven primarily by revenue recognition for the U.K. Home Office, partially offset by strong demand in Video and Command Center. In Products and SI, ending backlog increased $255 million versus last year due to strong demand in video and Mission Critical Networks. Sequentially, ending backlog increased $45 million, driven by strong demand in video. In Software and Services, backlog increased $1.3 billion compared to last year, driven by strong demand for multiyear contracts across all 3 technologies and favorable foreign currency impacts. Sequentially, the ending backlog declined $105 million, primarily driven by the revenue recognition for the U.K. Home Office, partially offset by strong demand in Command Center and Video. Turning to our outlook. We expect Q2 sales growth of approximately 8.5% with non-GAAP earnings per share between $3.82 and $3.88 per share. This assumes a weighted average diluted share count of approximately 168 million shares and an effective tax rate of approximately 23%. For the full year, we now expect revenue of approximately $12.8 billion, up from our prior guidance of $12.7 billion and non-GAAP earnings per share between $16.87 and $16.99 per share, up from our prior guide of between $16.70 and $16.85 per share. This full year outlook assumes a weighted average diluted share count of approximately 168 million shares, an effective tax rate of approximately 22.5% and favorable FX of about $100 million, which is unchanged from our prior outlook. Additionally, we continue to expect another strong year of cash flow generation with approximately $3 billion of operating cash flow for the full year. Before turning the call back to Greg, I want to highlight a couple of items. First, we are raising our top line revenue expectations $100 million, driven by strength from both Silvus, which we now expect to generate $750 million in full year revenue, up $75 million from our prior expectations, and as well our core public safety business increasing. With these increased top line expectations, we now expect Products and SI to grow between 8% and 9%, up from 7% to 8% and Mission Critical Networks, the technology to grow between 8% and 9%, up from 7% to 8% previously. Second, we continue to navigate a dynamic supply chain environment that includes tariffs and rising memory costs. Regarding tariffs, the Supreme Court ruled against the IEEPA duties in February. However, these were promptly replaced by new Section 122 tariffs, which we're subject to, and a broader tariff framework of uncertainty remains on the horizon. The net impact of these changes is that we continue to project $60 million in tariff headwinds this year, primarily in the first half of the year. And we continue to monitor the IEEPA refund process. Turning to memory. On our last call, we dimensionalized our direct memory spend at approximately $50 million last year. We now expect this to a little more than double in '26, and we are actively pursuing mitigation strategies, including accelerating inventory, deeper strategic partnerships and surgical price adjustments to offset these memory cost increases. As a result, we still expect to expand our operating margins by 100 basis points for the full year, with operating margin expansion in both segments. With that, I'd like to turn the call back to Greg.