Earnings Labs

Xylem Inc. (XYL)

Q4 2025 Earnings Call· Tue, Feb 10, 2026

$117.81

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, everyone, and welcome to Xylem's Fourth Quarter 2025 Results Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star and then one on your telephone keypads. To withdraw your questions, you may press star and two. Please also note today's event is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the floor over to Mr. Keith Buettner, Vice President, Investor Relations and FP&A. Please go ahead.

Keith Buettner

Management

Thank you, operator. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Xylem's fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. With me today are Chief Executive Officer, Matthew Pine, and Chief Financial Officer, Bill Grogan. They will provide their perspective on Xylem's fourth quarter and full year 2025 results and discuss the first quarter and full year 2026 outlook. Following our prepared remarks, we will address questions related to the information covered on the call. I'll ask that you please keep to one question and a follow-up and then return to the queue. As a reminder, this call and our webcast are accompanied by a slide presentation available in the Investor section of our website. A replay of today's call will be available until midnight, February 24, and will be available for playback via the Investors section of our website under the heading Investor Events. Please turn to Slide two. We will make some forward-looking statements on today's call, including references to future events or developments that we anticipate will, or may occur in the future. These statements are subject to future risks and uncertainties, such as those factors described in Xylem's most recent annual report on Form 10-Ks and in subsequent reports filed with the SEC. Please note that the company undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements publicly to reflect subsequent events or circumstances. And actual events or results could differ materially from those anticipated. Please turn to slide three. We have provided you with a summary of our key performance metrics, including both GAAP and non-GAAP metrics. For the purposes of today's call, unless otherwise indicated, all references will be on an organic and/or adjusted basis. And non-GAAP financials have been reconciled for you and are included in the appendix section of the presentation. Now, please turn to slide four, and I will turn the call over to our CEO, Matthew Pine.

Matthew Pine

Management

Thank you, Keith. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. The team delivered an outstanding fourth quarter to close a record year for Xylem. We delivered strong Q4 performance across all major metrics. The team executed with discipline across the portfolio both in the quarter and full year. The record results demonstrate the impact of our operating model transformation, which represents phase one of our plan to deliver Xylem's long-term framework. That first phase has been about transforming Xylem's operating model, our high-impact culture, a simpler, scalable structure, and improvements in our business processes and cornerstone systems. We simplified Xylem, increasing speed and accountability. The numbers we posted this morning reflect the ground we've already taken. And there's more to come in 2026. In parallel, we're entering phase two, strengthening our growth engine by leveraging improvements in our operating model. Focusing on Salesforce effectiveness, product management, and innovation. Phase three will invest further in long-term competitiveness, building on our core franchises, expanding breakthrough innovation, and deepening exposure to the most attractive future water markets. We're tracking to the framework we laid out almost two years ago, and we have plenty of runway ahead. As we sharpen our customer focus and simplify our product offerings, 2026 will be the peak of purposeful walkaways from lower quality revenue. That creates a short-term top-line headwind, as we've communicated previously. But it drives higher quality earnings. Looking ahead to 2026, we see resilient demand in our largest end markets. Strong backlog conversion, and continued traction from our transformation efforts. I'll leave the detailed guidance to Bill, but at a high level, we will build on our commercial and operational momentum. Growing the top line and expanding margins again in 2026. With that, Bill will take you through the quarter and full year and also our 2026 outlook in more detail. Bill?

Bill Grogan

Management

Matthew. Please turn to slide five. We are very pleased with the strong finish to 2025. The team stayed focused and delivered consistently throughout the year. Delivering record revenue, EBITDA, and earnings per share for the fourth quarter and the full year. Demand remains positive. With our backlog finishing at $4.6 billion. Our book to bill was near one, both in the quarter and for the full year. Orders were healthy, up 7% in the quarter. Driven by over 20% growth in MCS. And for the year, orders were up 2%. Revenue grew 4% in the quarter, despite a challenging comparison of 7% growth in the same period last year. Full year revenue growth was solid at 5%. Full year EBITDA margin expanded 160 basis points to 22.2% driven by the same factors. The team's operational discipline delivered quarterly EBITDA margin of 23.2%. Up 220 basis points versus the prior year. The improvement was driven by productivity and price, more than offsetting inflation. Full year EBITDA margin expanded 160 basis points to 22.2% driven by the same factors. We also achieved a record quarterly EPS of $1.42, a 20% increase over the prior year. Our balance sheet remains in great shape. With net debt to adjusted EBITDA of 0.2 times. Year-to-date free cash flow decreased by 2% from the prior year, in line with expectations driven by outsourced water projects, system investments, and restructuring costs offset by higher net income. Let's turn to slide six. In measurement and control solutions, we can to convert the backlog with MCS' backlog finishing the year roughly $1.4 billion. Orders were up a robust 22% driven by smart metering demand across water and energy. However, this was below our expectations with several projects pushing out into 2026. Revenue was up 10%. Driven by energy…

Matthew Pine

Management

Thanks, Bill. Before we open for questions, let me close with a broader lens. Xylem participated in the World Economic Forum annual meeting at Davos for the first time this year. The headlines were all about AI and geopolitics. But water emerged as a significant underlying theme. More than a dozen sessions frame water is foundational to economic growth, energy systems, and geopolitical stability. That aligns directly with the research we released last month watering the new economy. Which makes a simple point. As AI accelerates growth in power generation, data centers, and microelectronics, water strategy becomes business strategy. These sectors are wrestling with availability, reliability, and efficiency. They need reuse at scale, dramatic reductions in network leaks, and adaptive infrastructure that automatically optimizes performance. And that's where Xylem is uniquely positioned, covering the full water value chain with practical solutions. That breadth differentiates us at a time when customers are looking for credible, scalable partners. As we pivot further into growth, we'll keep building capability where we have structural advantage. Mission-critical utility and industrial applications where reliability, compliance, and life cycle costs matter most. Digital platforms that help customers optimize network performance, and make resilience affordable. Advance treatment and reuse that support economic growth without increasing freshwater withdrawals or compromising communities. In services that turn our technology and installed base into dependable high-value outcomes for customers and durable revenues for Xylem. We're already doing this work at scale. Helping cities and industries recover water they already have reuse what they once discarded, and run their assets more efficiently. We're helping Los Angeles produce 508 million gallons of recycled water per day with plans to deliver 260 million gallons more. Smaller communities like Hot Springs, Arkansas are reducing water losses by 50% or more with far less digging costs. On the industrial side, Silphex, a man a microelectronics manufacturer, is reusing 80% of its processed water with a Xylem Ultrapure water system. One of our aerospace customers is now avoiding more than $30 million in wastewater disposal costs with zero liquid discharge technology. We're using more than 66 million gallons of water annually. All of these examples are responses to intensifying water trends. Driving sustained demand for the solutions we provide across the water value chain. We are confident in the strength of our team, and our platform to capitalize on that demand. And to deliver sustainable high-quality growth over the long term. With that, open the call for your questions.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, we'll now begin that If you are using a speakerphone, we do ask that you please pick up the handset prior to pressing the keys to ensure the best sound quality. Withdraw your questions, you may press star and 2. Again, that is star and then 1 to join the question queue. We'll pause momentarily to assemble the roster. And our first question today comes from Deane Dray from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead with your question.

Deane Dray

Analyst

Thank you. Good morning, everyone.

Matthew Pine

Management

Hey. Good morning, Dean.

Deane Dray

Analyst

Hey, Matthew. As we do the calendar flip and as you start the phase two, maybe you can give us a two-year progress report if you could Just kinda reflect on the initiatives regarding margin improvement, portfolio optimization and how you are also trying to keep your eye on growth opportunities too?

Matthew Pine

Management

Yeah. So first, we've got a lot of work to do in front of us, so I'll start there. But if we look back over the past few years, the results have really exceeded expectations from my perspective. Maybe just even start starting firstly with not long ago, we were talking about the integration of Evoqua and Xylem. And we built a great deal of muscle in terms of M&A and integration, and we really enhanced our combined culture along the way. And we delivered synergies eighteen months early. So I give the team a lot credit there starting with that integration. And, you know, at the same time, we've made significant progress in our operational model transformation, which is really about you know, really our culture, our high-impact culture, improving our processes and systems and our structure. And maybe I'll just maybe point to a few proof points on the progress that we've made. You know, the first in in significant amount of change that we've been going through the past couple of years, I looked at our engagement rating the other day. In an essence, an engagement rating in your in your employee survey is would you recommend Xylem as a great place to work? Almost 90% of our top one fifty leaders said they would, and overall company was 74. When you're going through a significant transformation, I think that's a really good outstanding result. And the industrial sector average is around 37%. And so if they could just speaks to the resilience of our team and the culture that we're creating. You know, another good measure that I talk about a lot is on-time performance in terms of how we're you know, really moving our operating model forward. We've gained 500 basis points of on-time performance…

Deane Dray

Analyst

That's really helpful. And then as a follow-up for Bill, maybe you can have expand on the point of increasing the $80.20 walk away revenues in the second year Maybe it's a surprise to me, I think, because I would have thought in the first year, there'd be more opportunities for less identifying less profitable businesses. Not having it accelerate into the second year. So maybe just kind of help Yes. Put that into context. Appreciate it.

Bill Grogan

Management

Yep. No. Sure. But let me let me step back first and just talk about you know, how 8020 is really taking hold in the organization two years into the transformation that Matthew highlighted. Each quarter, we take another step in simplifying Xylem. You know, shifting from just leveraging 8020 as a tool set being a critical piece of how we run the company. With a a real focus on resource allocation, putting our best people investments around our largest value-creating opportunities. We've got about 80% of the business in some phase of implementation right now with the capital and services piece of WSS. The only part of the company not fully launched, and and they'll start at the end of this year after they get through their ERP upgrade. And the team continues to make solid progress leveraging the tool set. Right? We started this year, with redesigning the organization and putting P&L leaders in charge of the divisions. They could have a good perspective and drive a lot of this change. They looked at the cost that they needed to support the business and optimize that overhead. To get our foundation as lean as possible. To make sure that we're focused on on simplifying this that organizational construct. You know, as for the 2% headwind, right, a lot of that comes with you know, an evaluation of the the product and customer portfolio. Really understanding, you know, the geographies where you might be underperforming, putting in a commercial filter, getting a sales and engineer engineering teams developed and and and leveraging that filter to make sure that we're not taking business that we shouldn't We're looking at parts of the business where we have significant pass-through revenue that doesn't have significant margin. And all of those decisions take take a little bit of time because wanna make sure you bleed the inventory so you don't have an excess issue. You wanna partner with your customers to make sure they're supported through the transition. So there's know, the cultural and adoption part of it that extends it. And then there's just the customer coordination, which really pushes it into into 2026. So excited about the teams taking, these actions and ultimately, I think it's going to free up our organizational and economical capacity to better, support and facilitate our longer-term growth trajectory.

Deane Dray

Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Scott Davis from Melius Research. Please go ahead with your question.

Scott Davis

Analyst · your question.

Hi. Good morning, guys. Matthew and Bill.

Matthew Pine

Management

Hey. Good morning, Scott.

Scott Davis

Analyst · your question.

Wanted to follow-up on that question because there's a there's a certain point where eighty-twenty goes from being a headwind to a tailwind, meaning that you're doing better with the customers that matter the most and perhaps gaining share and and such. But when is that point? You know, it it do you start to see some impacts? Like, 2027, 2028? Is it is it is it or is it just too hard to say at this point now that you're kind of in the middle of it?

Matthew Pine

Management

I would say that really 2026 is kind of inflection point Scott for us. You know, the operational transformation never ends, as you know. But we've taken enough ground where we started in the back half of 2025, and it will coming into '26 with a bit more momentum around, I would say, building the growth engine and focusing on eight customers what we call raving fans, and actually building out our enterprise selling organization. So all that is in flight. I think the big thing this year is about building Salesforce effectiveness and helping our sales organization get more oriented toward the customer majority of the time, meaning, you know, today, a lot of our sales teams are doing a lot of admin work, and they don't get in front the customer maybe 30, 40% of the time. And the goal over the first half of this year is to change that to, say, 75, 80%. So I think we're building momentum, and I'd say we exit 2026 with a lot of, again, momentum around building the growth engine and starting to move towards growth and leveraging this simplicity that we've created.

Scott Davis

Analyst · your question.

Okay. Yeah. That that makes sense. And guys, I I have to ask. Your balance sheet is starting to look a little bit too good. And, you know, it looks like your stock might open up a little bit light today. I mean, what are you guys thinking as far as this buyback and you know or or or do we wanna keep the dry powder for for for M and A?

Matthew Pine

Management

Yeah. Maybe just, you know, just to highlight that our priorities continue to be investing in our core business, followed by M and A, dividends and then lastly share buybacks. So I've said this on some other calls that our acquisition process that we put in place a couple of years ago is really maturing nicely. It's much more bottoms up. We've got a a very strong actionable funnel you know, as an outcome of this process. And we deployed about $250 million of capital last year towards M and A in the second half of the year, and we have much more than that that's already in process for the '26. So seeing good momentum there. And we'll continue to target around $1 billion a year of capital deployment towards M and A You know, we won't not entertain a transformational deal, but it's not something we're we're focused on right now. It's more medium small to medium bolt ons. You know, with regard to your your thoughts on share buybacks, you know, we'll continue to be opportunistic, but you know, again, we're gonna be more forward leaning towards investing in the core and M and A. However, you know, at low leverage levels, know, like we're seeing now, we're gonna be much more active in buying back shares.

Scott Davis

Analyst · your question.

Gotcha. Thank you, guys. Best of luck. I'll I'll pass it on.

Matthew Pine

Management

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Mike Halloran from Baird. Please go ahead with your question.

Mike Halloran

Analyst · your question.

Hey. Morning, everyone.

Matthew Pine

Management

Morning.

Mike Halloran

Analyst · your question.

So can you put the backlog exiting the year in context, what it means for this year? And and and and the phasing for the year. Is where the backlog exit rate was? Is that part of the 1Q softness? How do those sequentials work to the year? And then related, maybe just a little bit about the hesitancy on the project side. And and and compare that to what the customers are saying, the pipeline, you know, verbal orders, however you wanna put it.

Bill Grogan

Management

Yeah. May maybe I'll touch first just on on the the the backlog positioning. And Matt, you can comment on the project side. So first off, right, obviously, we've led backlog as we've progressed through this year and the lower backlog directly impacts the 2026 cadence and revenue guide. First on MCS, we talked about them working down their backlog throughout the year. Getting to a more normalized level. You know, we highlighted really strong orders in the fourth quarter, we actually had anticipated a few larger projects to book to book that pushed out in the first half. Which puts a little bit pressure on ending backlog and then pressure on kind of our first and second quarter revenue. And we've talked China has been really weak, especially in treatment, which is a bigger backlog business for us. That probably put us at a a lower backlog position. Then we talked about the the walk away, revenue. Obviously, that's impacted orders, you know, first before it impacts revenue. So we've seen just a lower backlog associated with some of those actions. You know, as as we progress to the back half of the last year. So I think we're we're in good shape to start the year. Know, we've talked about healthy commercial funnels for both MCS and and WSS our largest backlog businesses, You know, what we have line of sight to relative to commercial funnel, I think reasonable confidence in line of sight to the improve progression as we go through the year.

Mike Halloran

Analyst · your question.

And then maybe some thoughts on China. You know, I know you've done a lot of work already because of the environment. But what are the steps you're taking from here given the softness and and and how do you see that shaking out over the next couple years in terms of the commitment to the market, ability to manage that market given the local headwinds, both, you know, by local as well as softer end markets. And and kinda what changes are you making?

Bill Grogan

Management

Yeah. No. I so so I think consistent with the commentary provided for the last couple quarters, China remains a challenging market for us, both on the orders and revenue side. It did accelerate that decline as we progress through the back half. Q4 orders were down almost 70%. Sales declined almost 30%. Part of that's just the reflecting of the economic headwinds impacting utility and commercial building and industrial end markets and primarily impacting us within water infrastructure and applied water. My local competition continues to drive intense price competition. Due to the capacity that they've built. But our teams are applying an eighty twenty lens to focus on higher quality more profitable opportunities, which is creating some of the top line pressure. Right? I mean, we're we're calling that within the China bucket, but you could probably put a little bit of that in in the walk away just as we're deliberately exiting some of that low margin, negative margin, business within China. As we talked about last quarter, China restructured its operations. You know, we reduced our headcount by over 40%. Just to better align with that volume contraction. But, right, we're looking to reallocate the resources that are on the ground just around targeted opportunities where we think we have a technological advantage, and we could price some differentiation in certain applications where we can win and deliver stronger margin performance. Because of that differentiation. Ultimately, right, China is a very large economy. You know? We don't think there's be a material improvement here over the next year or two. But, longer term, it's a place that we think that that Xylem will be able to grow get back to growth at a at a much higher margin profile.

Mike Halloran

Analyst · your question.

Thanks. Appreciate it.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Andy Kaplowitz from Citigroup. Please go ahead with your question.

Andy Kaplowitz

Analyst · your question.

Good morning, everyone.

Matthew Pine

Management

Hey. Good morning, Andy.

Andy Kaplowitz

Analyst · your question.

Bill. So just maybe a little more color on going on in smart meters. You did have solid orders, but, Bill, you mentioned orders were still below what you expect, and I think peers have had even a harder time than you in water smart meters. So what are you seeing in the market between water and energy Is your mid-single-digit revenue growth forecast for '26 contingent on converting some of these delayed projects to backlog in the first half? And does availability of memory chips impact the outlook at all?

Matthew Pine

Management

Yes. Maybe I'll just maybe start at a high level, Andy, then I'll let Bill get into a little bit of color. But I just wanted to tell everyone on the call, we remain very confident in M MNCS to achieve high single digits long term. As segment. The near-term outlook really reflects project timing and some of the backlog normalization coming out COVID and walk away revenue. So it's not a change so much in underlying demand. The biggest area of walk away in this segment is in analytics. It's the one of the last divisions to go into the 8020 tool. And, they're in the process of of shedding you know, organic business right now. Although we do have a little bit of walk away in smart metering as well, in 2026, and we've exited mechanical meters. And we've made a decision to be a bit more selective when we do the meter installation A lot of times that comes at low margin or no margin pass through. And is a drag on on on earnings and margin. So we've been a bit you know, forward leaning into that. You know, bidding remains strong, and customers are still, you know, ordering and and our win rate's higher than it has been in the past. So I think in general, things are healthy, but you know, maybe one other comment I would make is, again, going back to this post COVID, the backlog helped to smooth and some of the unevenness that we typically get in this segment. And that can have. So I do I think, you know, we do expect a bit more variability in quarter to quarter going forward. So maybe they'll maybe one other point I would make is, you know, I would highlight that Xylem the Xylem View business which doubled in in 2025, we're expecting that digital business grow 30 plus in 2026. So we exit this year, that'll continue momentum. And help drive the top line of this segment as well.

Bill Grogan

Management

Yeah. And then, Andy, I I think your your question on on the memory piece, we don't see that as a material impact either from an availability or significant increase in inflation for us to have to pass on the customers.

Andy Kaplowitz

Analyst · your question.

Helpful, guys. And then, Bill, maybe a follow-up for you. You're you're to 70 to 110 basis points of margin improvement in twenty six. As you know, it basically takes you past your 23% and change adjusted EBITDA margin goal for 27% in 26%. So where do you go from here? Are you gonna have an investor day? Maybe just set new targets, and maybe the entitlement of the business from when you started here. Is it mid-twenties or higher? How do you think about that?

Matthew Pine

Management

Yeah. I'll I'll take it, Andy. I think from my perspective, we're already outlining an Investor Day for 2027. We'll update strategy and targets at that point. It's probably sometime in the spring of of next year. You know, we have some work ahead of us to deliver this year. And we don't wanna get too far out over our skis. But you know, as a reminder, we laid out, you know, the LR the long-range plan at our last Day in May '24. That we to to your point that we would move from 20%, which is the forecast of 2024 margins to 23 by the '27. So we're guiding you know, this year, just over 23% at the midpoint So we're tracking ahead and there's likely upside to our long-term targets as we exit '27. You know, we've we've made a lot of great progress and, you know, give the team a tremendous amount of credit. As I said, with Dean's question at the beginning, a lot of a lot of change, and we've been able to execute. So I think you know, Andy, about just over a year from now, we'll be in a better position to to update the framework and and talk about margins.

Andy Kaplowitz

Analyst · your question.

Appreciate that. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Nathan Jones from Stifel. Please go ahead with your question.

Nathan Jones

Analyst · your question.

Good morning, everyone.

Matthew Pine

Management

Hey. Good morning, Nathan.

Nathan Jones

Analyst · your question.

I'll I'll start with, a follow-up on the the MTS orders. And the smart smart native projects that are pushed out. Maybe a little bit more color on what the cause of those pushing out are, if you have any insights there. Degree of confidence that those things kind of come through in the first half in order to support the outlook for improved growth in the second half?

Bill Grogan

Management

Yeah. And I think there's there's several projects, and all of it they're have a little bit different reasons for pushing out. There's not a common thread around it. Some of them are just relative to where they're at with several other projects going on. So I wanna push out a couple months. Some of them have reshaped the scope of the project relative to just increased, inflation they've seen from tariffs and another inflation creeping up over time. So it's it's you know, for us, it's a handful of things that we're intimately involved with the customers. We understand kind of their project plans and some of the the hesitancy, and we're working with them to shape an implementation that works with them economically and then still you know, has an ability for us to, drive kind of incremental revenue this year. So I think we have reasonable visibility. You know, again, this isn't 50 different projects. It's you know, kind of five to 10 that we're working with the end customer. That we have confidence in based upon our our guide and our revenue progression for MCS through the year, that we'll be able to deliver on.

Nathan Jones

Analyst · your question.

Okay. Thanks for that. I guess, about next question on divestitures. You guys have talked you know, up to 10% of revenue being you know, a candidate potential candidate for divestiture. Anything we should you know, expect action on that in 2026? And if you could provide the EPS impact from the divestiture of, the automated business, that would be helpful as well. Thanks.

Bill Grogan

Management

Yep. Yeah. I think we talked about, Nate, we were evaluating about 10% of the pull portfolio Last year, we exited a business in the first quarter that was about 1%. You know, international metrology is about about another, percent. There's probably two or three assets that, you know, maybe another couple percent. So don't think we're gonna hit the the 10% number. You know, that that we we were looking at. But, obviously, portfolio evaluation, you know, something that we do on a recurring basis. You know, as businesses shift strategy or they wanna double down in certain parts, of the business, maybe an area becomes less important. So I think it's an ongoing activity with I don't think anything significant outside of metrology for this year And then the EPS impact for international metrology is is is fairly small. For for the year. We talked about, you know, it's a $250 million business that less than 10% EBITDA margin. We'll close it at the end of the third quarter. Or, excuse me, at the end of the first quarter, so you kinda get three quarters. So it's you know, $2.03 pennies.

Nathan Jones

Analyst · your question.

Thanks for that taking the questions.

Matthew Pine

Management

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Joseph Giordano from TD Cowen. Please go ahead with your question.

Michael Halloran

Analyst · your question.

Good morning, guys. This is Michael on for Joe.

Matthew Pine

Management

Hey, Michael.

Michael Halloran

Analyst · your question.

So yeah, on the last call, you mentioned there was a path to higher margins for the energy meter side. At MC and S. And since it's mixed negative versus water meters, can you just unpack that glide path higher And, you know, what's the status of the transformation? Thank you.

Bill Grogan

Management

And and your your question is specifically was around just the improvement on the energy meter margin?

Michael Halloran

Analyst · your question.

Yes. I believe on the last call, you mentioned there was a path higher for energy meters on the margin side. So we just love to better understand where we are in that cycle. Thank you.

Bill Grogan

Management

Oh, yes. I think there's a couple of things. One, there's some structural changes on the energy side from an engineering and a technology perspective that are gonna level up, you know, value add value engineering projects that will lift the margin profile. And we did highlight there's a couple projects that are legacy within energy that they're working through their backlog that you know, put pressure, on margins in in 2025. That'll continue into the 2026. So you'll see a margin progression with MCS, you know, down slightly overall in the in the first quarter and then sequentially build. It's a pretty robust margin as it exits the fourth quarter with water balance, the the water meter balance being back to more legacy rates and then some of the progress on the energy margin improvement taking hold.

Michael Halloran

Analyst · your question.

Great. Thanks for that color. And then orders for the year ended pretty strongly The organic kind of implies a ramp to the back half. Can you just unpack organic expectations mean, you kind of mentioned this a little bit in the beginning of the call, but by segment for Q1, just want to understand it came in a little bit lighter probably most were expecting. Yep. Would appreciate the color. Thank you.

Bill Grogan

Management

Yeah. I I I think the the biggest variable is probably MCS They'll be down kind of a point or two in the first quarter relative to probably the external expectations. WSS, we talked about just the lumpiness of that business. They'll be, kind of flattish, with water infrastructure and applied water a a little bit below their full full year guide. Just with some of the first half pressure that they have from China.

Michael Halloran

Analyst · your question.

Thanks, guys.

Matthew Pine

Management

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

And our next question comes from William Griffin from Barclays. Please go ahead with your question.

William Griffin

Analyst · your question.

Good morning. Thanks very much. Just the first one here, I did want to ask about the four operating margin step down across Applied Water, MCS and WSS. Is there seasonality inherent in this business? And then maybe how should we think about that, I guess, in relation to, you know, the ongoing tailwinds of of eighty twenty execution?

Bill Grogan

Management

Yes. And I would say, really, WSS, it's more of mix of business between quarters. So nothing structural there. Within applied water, obviously, Q4 was a bit of a blip relative to the performance that they experienced through the first half of the year. It really reflected just some negative project mix, a little bit of execution timing, and some onetime items. Yeah. These are our transitional factors, and we expect EBITDA margins to be back up in the 20% range in the first quarter and then sequentially improve. Throughout the year with volume increases and their their productivity initiatives. Ramping up. So yeah, that that it's more of a short term than anything structural. Applied water, I think. Gets back to some pretty robust margin expansion in 2026.

William Griffin

Analyst · your question.

Got it. And then wanted to ask also about the recent report you folks published in partnership with GWI on water demand management for data centers. I would just be curious to hear of your thoughts on what surprised you from that report and perhaps where you think the biggest opportunities for Xylem are to accelerate its growth might come from?

Matthew Pine

Management

Yes. Thanks for the question. When I was at Davos, '26 was deemed kind of the year of artificial intelligence. There were a lot of talk of pilot projects now scaling into productivity solutions and you know, that's why a lot of the AI, build out is racing ahead Actually, Gartner had a a recent prediction that 2026 hyperscalers would invest over $2 trillion in new data centers. But, you know, I think one big, thing from the report that point was pointed out that there's two big constraints to that $2 trillion of investment, and that's energy and water. Up until now, energy's gotten the the majority of the of the attention, and I think water's starting to finally be brought up in the discussion. So know, the reason we commissioned the report is we have a pretty good view of the whole value chain, and we were trying to figure it out ourselves. What is the impact of this new economy and the broader AI ecosystem on the water sector? So we couldn't really find any good data, so we partnered with Global Water Intelligence and commissioned a report, and we we kicked it off at Davos. But maybe the first eye-opening stat I would point to is the demand is soaring, and it's really not so much that that, this new economy is more water incentives just to say some of the first or second industrial revolutions around textiles or steel mills or pulp and paper. It's really more about where where the data centers and and chip fabs are located is the is the biggest issue. But the AI ecosystem, which is data centers, it it excludes mining, but data centers power and semiconductors. Will need about 30 trillion liters of water each year by 2050.…

William Griffin

Analyst · your question.

Appreciate it. Thanks very much.

Matthew Pine

Management

Thank you.

Operator

Operator

And ladies and gentlemen, with that, we'll be concluding today's question and answer session. I'd like to turn the floor back over to Matthew Pine for any closing remarks.

Matthew Pine

Management

Thanks for your questions. We'll wrap it up there. And thank everyone who joined today. And as always, we appreciate your interest in Xylem. All the very best.

Operator

Operator

And with that, we'll conclude today's conference call. We thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect your lines.