Matthew Crawford
Management
Sure. I mean, I think that we've been repositioning the portfolio for really going back to 2018 and 2019, and we've been doing it in several different ways. You know, I hesitate to use the word restructuring, but I think that we underwent a strategy to make our core manufacturing and distribution operations more nimble and more profitable, as I say, through the business cycle. As you know, we invested a lot in increasing productivity, whether it be plant closures or repositioning over a million square feet in the US. So we divested ourselves of some low-margin, high-capital businesses. So to begin answering your question, I want to talk about capital allocation and say the first horse at the trough, which I like to say, is making our business better and our earnings more sustainable. And that's true across the board. We like our portfolio. We like the businesses we're in. And, you know, we believe we can invest in those current business portfolios and be better at what we do to reposition ourselves for landing more business. And we're seeing that happen. We are absolutely seeing our new business pipelines get more robust every day. We've seen it in firm backlogs in the equipment business, but we've also seen it, I think, across the portfolio from automotive to the more diverse industrial businesses where we see a more robust pipeline of new inquiries and top-of-the-funnel action. So, first and foremost, I want to speak to that. Second of all, I think that we will continue to look at each of our businesses and really do a deep dive in understanding where the sustainable investment opportunities are. And, candidly, given the opportunity to invest in businesses that are not just high IRR but high margin. We've got some wonderful pockets in the business. I would highlight aftermarket in our equipment business. I would highlight adjacent markets like aerospace in our supply tech business. I would highlight some new business in the automotive segment that leans on some innovation that isn't new to us, but one plus one equals three in the extruded hose and bed metal space. So, I don't want to suggest that we're doing a different allocation broadly across the portfolio. What I'm saying is we're more cognizant inside each business of making sure we're investing for sustainable higher-margin businesses long term. Whether that be a new business or, again, the first horse at the trough is making our current businesses better. I think I've highlighted in the past, and I'll highlight again, we invested in vertical integration and mixing capacity in the automotive space. Again, that positions us for long-term sustainable growth. So I'm not using those terms to pick one business over the other. I'm using those terms to say we challenge each business unit to invest in their highest-margin, most sustainable innovations.