Armstrong World Industries Q4 2025 Earnings Call - AUV, acquisitions and innovations keep margins rising despite softer volumes
Summary
Armstrong closed 2025 with record profitability even as volumes lagged. Full-year net sales rose 12% and adjusted EBITDA grew 14%, producing 70 basis points of margin expansion. Management credits disciplined like-for-like pricing, product mix and productivity gains for driving a standout mineral fiber AUV of about 6% and a record mineral fiber EBITDA margin (43.5% full year, 42.1% Q4), while architectural specialties delivered double-digit sales growth but faced quarter-end project timing that compressed margins.
The call also signaled continuity not disruption, with a planned CEO transition on April 1 and a steady strategy: scale architectural specialties through tuck-ins, commercialize new innovations (TEMPLOK, DATAZONE, DYNAMAX LT, SKYLO), and accelerate digital initiatives such as ProjectWorks and Kanopi. Guidance for 2026 assumes flat to +1% mineral fiber volumes, AUV near 6%, total company sales up 8% to 10% and adjusted EBITDA growth of 8% to 12%, with seasonally muted first half and backend-weighted volumes.
Key Takeaways
- Record 2025 financials: net sales +12% YoY, adjusted EBITDA +14%, adjusted EBITDA margin +70 bps for the year.
- CEO succession confirmed: Vic Grizzle moves to Executive Chairman April 1, Mark Hershey becomes President and CEO, management emphasizes strategic continuity.
- Mineral Fiber strength: Q4 AUV up ~6% driven by like-for-like pricing and mix, Q4 segment EBITDA +15% and record Q4 margin of 42.1%; full-year Mineral Fiber adjusted EBITDA margin 43.5%.
- Volumes remain challenged: 2026 mineral fiber volumes guided flat to +1%; company still ~14% below 2019 volume levels, so margin gains have largely come from pricing and productivity.
- Architectural Specialties (AS): Q4 sales +11% (helped by 2024 acquisitions), full-year organic AS sales +9%; Q4 AS EBITDA down 3% due to project timing and near-term capacity investments.
- AS margin target intact: organic AS margin ~19% for the year, company reiterates target to reach and sustain ~20% as integrations and operating leverage progress.
- Growth initiatives contributing: digital platforms ProjectWorks and Kanopi, plus new product families (TEMPLOK for energy savings, DATAZONE and DYNAMAX LT for data centers, SKYLO for high-performance environments) are expected to add to AUV and volume.
- Management quantified initiative impact: growth initiatives added roughly 1.0 percentage point to growth in 2025 and are expected to contribute an incremental ~0.5 percentage point in 2026, with positive AUV mix effects.
- Acquisitions and M&A: 2024 buys (3form, Zahner) scaled through 2025; 2025 additions include Parallel and the recent Eventscape acquisition (Eventscape revenue ~ $30m in 2025); Geometrik results will be incremental for first 8 months of 2026.
- Cash flow and capital allocation: adjusted free cash flow +16% for 2025; Q4 dividends $15m; $50m of buybacks in Q4 and $533m remaining repurchase authority through end of 2026.
- CapEx step-up: capital spending increased by $26m in 2025 to fund productivity, TEMPLOK capability, and IT/digital initiatives, supporting future margin expansion.
- Input cost outlook for 2026: overall inputs expected mid-single-digit inflation; freight roughly flat, raws low-single-digit inflation, energy up ~10%-12%, labor and other items included.
- 2026 guidance: total company net sales growth 8%-10%, adjusted EBITDA growth 8%-12%, AUV growth ~6% expected to more than offset input inflation, and adjusted EPS and free cash flow to track EBITDA.
- Near-term headwinds called out: government shutdown depressed MRO and federal building maintenance activity (notable impact in Washington, D.C.), home center destocking in Q4, and several sizable AS projects delayed in December causing short-term cost imbalance.
- Seasonality and cadence: management warned of a muted start to 2026 due to seasonal and winter-weather effects, expecting a stronger back half; guidance is backend-weighted for volumes.
Full Transcript
Regina, Conference Operator: Hello, and thank you for standing by. My name is Regina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Armstrong World Industries fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you’d like to ask a question during this time, simply press Star, then the number 1 on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, press Star 1 again. I would now like to turn the conference over to Theresa Womble, Vice President, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications. Please go ahead.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG2: Thank you, Regina, and welcome everyone to our call this morning. Today, we have Vic Grizzle, our CEO, Chris Calzaretta, our CFO, along with Mark Hershey, our Chief Operating Officer, who will discuss Armstrong World Industries’ fourth quarter 2020 results and our outlook for 2026. We have provided a presentation to accompany these comments that is available on the Investor Relations section of the Armstrong World Industries website. Our discussion of operating and financial performance will include non-GAAP financial measures within the meaning of SEC Regulation G. A reconciliation of these measures with the most directly comparable GAAP measures is included in the earnings press release and in the appendix of the presentation issued this morning, both available on our Investor Relations website.
During this call, we will be making forward-looking statements that represent the view we have of our financial and operational performance as of today’s date, February 24th, 2026. These statements involve risks and uncertainties that may differ materially from those expected or implied. We provided detailed discussion of the risks and uncertainties in our SEC filings, including our 10-K, filed earlier this morning. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statement beyond what is required by applicable securities law. With that, I will now turn the call to Vic.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you, Theresa. Good morning, and thank you for joining our call today. As many of you know, this will be my last Armstrong’s earnings call as CEO, as I’ll be moving into the Executive Chairman position on April 1st. As previously announced, Mark Hershey, currently our Chief Operating Officer, will be taking the helm as President and CEO, effective at that time. It has been both a privilege and an honor to have led this great company for the past 10 years. Throughout my 15 years here at Armstrong, Mark has served alongside me in various key leadership roles. His extensive experience and track record of delivering results, combined with his strong dedication to our values and our culture of operational excellence, make him both well-equipped and ready to lead this organization.
We will hear from Mark later in the call today to discuss our recent acquisition of Eventscape and some advancements in our new product innovations. Let me begin with our record-setting 2025 results. 2025 represented another year of strong execution and a full demonstration of our resilient business model that delivered profitable growth despite persistently challenging market conditions. It was our team’s continued execution at the highest level across the enterprise that enabled us to deliver another record-setting, double-digit growth year across all key metrics. Again, even as market conditions remained unfavorable. At the total company level for the full year, our net sales increased 12% from the prior year, and our adjusted EBITDA grew 14%, with our adjusted EBITDA margin expanding 70 basis points.
As noted in our press release that we issued earlier, 2025 was our second consecutive year of double-digit growth, where the core values of Armstrong were on full display, such as strong mineral fiber, average unit value growth, robust productivity across our operations, and double-digit top-line growth in our architectural specialty segment. Our 2025 results also mark the fifth consecutive year of net sales and earnings growth. Also notable, this is the third consecutive year we have reported year-over-year adjusted EBITDA margin expansion. These strong and consistent results reflect our team’s ability to steadily execute across the enterprise in all parts of the cycle. Before getting to our quarterly results, I wanna take a moment and recognize and express my gratitude to our team of nearly 4,000 employees.
Their commitment and their passion for what we do and dedication to serving our customers are not only impressive, but they’re unique and a key driver of our continued success. Thank you to the entire Armstrong team. Now, turning to our fourth quarter results. In the quarter, we finished with softer results than expected, even though we had solid AUV growth in mineral fiber with favorable like-for-like pricing, strong productivity, more than offsetting inflation, and continued double-digit top-line growth in architectural specialties. Softer results on the top line in mineral fiber mainly came from the impact of the extended government shutdown that disrupted maintenance and repair activity for government buildings across the U.S.
We did not see the normal bounce back after reopening, which impacted mineral fiber volumes in notable areas like our Washington, D.C. territory, and with our MRO customers serving the repair and maintenance activity in government buildings. Softer-than-expected results in the quarter also occurred in the architectural specialty segment, primarily driven by key project delays. This created a cost imbalance in the quarter, temporarily compressing margins in the AS segment. These drivers formed an air pocket of sorts for the total company results that we expect to work through in the coming quarters. As I mentioned in the quarter, average unit value, or AUV, in our Mineral Fiber segment increased 6% on strong like-for-like price performance and positive impact, positive product mix driven by our innovative products.
Despite short-term pressures created by these temporary market events, Mineral Fiber EBITDA increased 15% to a record fourth quarter result and a record fourth quarter EBITDA margin of 42.1%. Architectural Specialties delivered 11% top-line growth, with solid inorganic and organic contributions despite the project delays. Importantly, order intake growth continued to be strong at double-digit levels year-over-year in the fourth quarter, sustaining a momentum heading into 2026. We continue to see strength in the transportation vertical for a broad portfolio of AS products, and we continue to win large airport projects with recent wins at L.A.X. and Salt Lake City International Airport. We continue to expect the transportation vertical to provide a tailwind for several years to come.
Both the Mineral Fiber and Architectural Specialty segments contributed to our record results in 2025, with our strong focus on operational execution being a key contributor to our sustained leadership position and our growth initiatives providing above-market growth rates. Operational excellence, enabled now by technology, is critical, both in terms of profitability as well as from the eyes of our customer in terms of quality and service. This was an outstanding year in both areas, with our teams delivering a record-high result for our perfect order measure. This measure I’ve described before tracks our performance across multiple metrics that are critical for maintaining our best-in-class customer service levels. Things like on-time delivery, product defects, billing accuracy. Executing at high levels across these areas not only drives customer satisfaction, but it also supports our pricing performance in competitive markets and reinforces the strength of our market position.
After a few years of foundational investment in our growth initiatives, they’ve continued to scale and are contributing to our business model and are creating value as a competitive differentiator for the company. On the digital front, the use of ProjectWorks, our automated design platform, continues to grow and generate higher win rates on projects when the service was used, reinforcing its value again as a competitive differentiator. Kanopi also continued to perform well and contribute nicely to our growth in 2025, providing an easy way for otherwise underserved customers to access a broad range of products through a simple online selling platform. We are pleased to see record revenue and EBITDA results for Kanopi in 2025, with each quarter providing a positive EBITDA contribution.
In addition to these successful digital growth initiatives, with growing opportunities in data centers and energy-saving ceilings, total contributions from our growth initiatives are positioned to further accelerate in 2026 and beyond. Mark’s gonna cover these two key growth opportunities here in a moment. All in all, these results, together with our growth initiatives, were another demonstration of how our business model and our strategy can deliver growth above the market and do so profitably through our pricing discipline, operational excellence, and strong operating leverage. I’ll turn the call over to Chris for more details on our financial results. Chris?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Thanks, Vic. Good morning to everyone on the call. As a reminder, throughout my remarks, I’ll be referring to the slides available on our website, and please note that slide 3 details our basis of presentation. On slide 8, we begin with our Mineral Fiber segment results for the fourth quarter. Mineral Fiber sales grew 3% in the quarter, driven by AUV growth of 6%, partially offset by lower sales volumes. The increase in AUV was primarily driven by favorable like-for-like pricing, along with a positive contribution from mix. Volumes in the quarter were softer than we expected, primarily due to short-term headwinds from the indirect impacts of the federal government shutdown, as well as softer home center demand.
Mineral Fiber segment adjusted EBITDA grew by 15% in the quarter, with adjusted EBITDA margin expanding 460 basis points to 42.1%, despite lower volumes. As Vic mentioned, Mineral Fiber’s adjusted EBITDA margin of 42.1% in the quarter marked the best Q4 margin performance in the segment since 2016. Adjusted EBITDA margin expansion was primarily driven by the fall-through of AUV, which benefited from strong like-for-like price benefit and a favorable claims adjustment in the quarter, higher equity earnings from our Wave joint venture, favorable SG&A expenses, and lower input costs. From a full year perspective, Mineral Fiber adjusted EBITDA margin finished at a record-setting 43.5%, surpassing the high watermark of 2019.
This level of financial performance underscores our Mineral Fiber value creation drivers, including consistent AUV growth, annual productivity gains, and positive contributions from our Wave joint venture, along with our disciplined focus on cost control. On slide 9, we discuss our Architectural Specialties, or AS, segment results. Double-digit sales growth of 11% in the quarter was driven primarily by contributions from our 2024 acquisitions of 3form and Zahner, as well as organic growth. As a reminder, the fourth quarter compares to a very strong prior year period that delivered 15% sales growth, largely driven by several large transportation projects in the fourth quarter of 2024. Importantly, full-year organic AS sales grew 9%, which was consistent with our expectations of high single-digit growth.
AS segment adjusted EBITDA decreased 3% in the quarter, with adjusted EBITDA margin negatively impacted by softer organic top-line performance, resulting in less favorable operating leverage due to the timing of custom projects. Higher manufacturing costs were driven primarily by the recent acquisitions and our organic business, which increased in part due to capacity investments in support of future growth, while higher SG&A expenses were primarily due to recent acquisitions. Partially offsetting these increases in costs was a benefit from higher sales volumes. For the full year 2025, adjusted EBITDA margin for the AS segment was approximately 18%, representing 50 basis points of margin expansion, but below our 19% margin guidance due to fourth quarter headwinds from project timing.
Overall, we are pleased that on an organic basis, AS adjusted EBITDA margin was approximately 19%, and that in 2025, we delivered 2 quarters of AS organic adjusted EBITDA margin of 20% or greater. This performance demonstrates that the underlying AS business fundamentals are strong and that we have the right building blocks in place to deliver at or above our 20% target level as project timing normalizes. We expect continued progress on profitability and margin improvement as we integrate our recent acquisitions, drive operational efficiencies, and scale these businesses on the Armstrong platform. We remain committed to delivering our targeted 20% adjusted EBITDA margin for the AS segment. On Slide 10, we highlight our fourth quarter consolidated company metrics. We delivered solid sales growth with double-digit adjusted EBITDA growth, and total company adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 160 basis points.
Excluding recent acquisitions, total company adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 230 basis points. adjusted EBITDA growth in the quarter was primarily driven by the fall-through impact of strong AUV, positive WAVE equity earnings, lower input costs, and benefits from manufacturing productivity. These impacts were partially offset by increased manufacturing costs within the AS segment. Turning to page 11, full year sales increased 12% and full year adjusted EBITDA increased 14%, resulting in 70 basis points of margin expansion. We also saw double-digit growth in adjusted diluted net earnings per share, up 17%, and adjusted free cash flow, up 16%. These robust results reflect the power of our financial performance drivers: incremental growth from AS acquisitions, market penetration in the AS segment, and the benefits from our growth initiatives, consistent strong AUV performance, manufacturing productivity gains across our plant network, and healthy WAVE equity earnings.
These benefits more than offset increases in SG&A and manufacturing costs driven by our recent acquisitions, as well as a modest increase in manufacturing costs in our organic AS business. Slide 12 shows our full year adjusted free cash flow performance versus the prior year. The 16% increase was primarily driven by higher cash earnings and an increase in dividends from our WAVE joint venture, partially offset by higher CapEx. The $26 million step-up in CapEx reflects our continued strategic priority of reinvesting back into the business. During the year, we deployed capital to further enhance manufacturing productivity across our plant network, expanded capabilities at one of our mineral fiber facilities to support the growth of our TEMPLOK energy-saving ceiling offering, and advanced several key IT and digital initiatives.
Targeted investments like these reinforce our commitment to advancing our growth strategy while maintaining a disciplined capital allocation approach. The strong adjusted free cash flow profile of our business allows us to execute on all of our capital allocation priorities. As a reminder, our first priority is to reinvest back into the business where we see the highest returns, such as the investments I just outlined. Our second capital allocation priority is to execute strategic acquisitions and partnerships to create shareholder value. In the fourth quarter of 2025, we acquired the issued and outstanding shares of Parallel Architectural Products, and just last week, we announced the acquisition of Eventscape. In 2025, Eventscape generated approximately $30 million in revenue, and we expect that this acquisition will be a positive contributor in 2026. Mark will be covering this in more detail in a moment.
Our third capital allocation priority is returning cash to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. In the fourth quarter, we paid $15 million of dividends to our shareholders, and we repurchased $50 million of shares, representing a meaningful step up from the pace of repurchases in the prior 3 quarters. As of December 31, 2025, we have $533 million remaining under the existing share repurchase authorization, which runs through the end of 2026. We enter 2026 with a strong balance sheet and ample available liquidity. We remain committed to delivering on all of our capital allocation priorities. Slide 13 presents our guidance for 2026. With slightly improving market conditions, we expect mineral fiber volume flat to up 1% for the full year, including contributions from our growth initiatives.
We also expect mineral fiber AUV growth above our historical average at approximately 6%. Additionally, we expect high single-digit AS organic growth, reflecting continued traction as we penetrate a highly fragmented market. Inorganic contributions from Geometrik will be incremental through the first 8 months of the year, and results from both Parallel and Eventscape acquisitions will be incremental throughout the full year. We expect these acquisitions together to drive approximately half of the total AS segment sales growth. This results in total company net sales growth of 8%-10%. Moving to adjusted EBITDA, we expect adjusted EBITDA growth of 8%-12%, with adjusted EBITDA margin expansion in both segments for the full year. We expect mineral fiber AUV growth to be more than offset to more than offset input cost inflation.
In addition, growth in the AS segment, the benefits from WAVE, and our continued focus on execution throughout the organization will contribute to earnings growth. While we expect SG&A to increase modestly as we continue to strategically invest in the business, we also expect SG&A’s percentage of net sales to improve as compared to 2025. For the full year, we expect adjusted diluted net earnings per share and adjusted free cash flow to grow at rates largely similar to adjusted EBITDA. Please note that additional assumptions are available in the appendix of this presentation. It’s also worth noting that our first quarter is typically a seasonally impacted quarter, with Q2 and Q3 representing our stronger sales quarters in mineral fiber due to favorable weather conditions and the typical timing of renovation and new construction activity.
While we don’t guide to individual quarters, we expect a more muted start to 2026, reflecting both seasonality and the choppiness we’ve seen in the broader market, coupled with significant winter weather events across multiple regions in the U.S. Accordingly, we anticipate mineral fiber volume in the first half of the year to be slightly softer than the back half as a result of these dynamics. In closing, despite challenging market conditions, we delivered record mineral fiber profitability, strong AS growth with continued progress on margins, and robust adjusted free cash flow growth that enables us to continue to execute on all of our capital allocation priorities. As we enter 2026, our disciplined strategy for growth and proven value creation model position us well to deliver another year of profitable growth. Now I’ll turn it over to Mark for further commentary. Mark?
Mark Hershey, Chief Operating Officer / President and CEO (Effective April 1, 2026), Armstrong World Industries: Thank you, Chris, and good morning, everyone. First, I’d like to start by expressing how honored and proud I am to have the opportunity to serve as the next CEO of Armstrong World Industries, particularly at this exciting time in our history. Armstrong has a rich legacy of innovation in ceilings and specialty walls, and that legacy remains fully intact today, and it provides an exceptional platform for continued success. I look forward with confidence to working alongside our executive leadership team, our dedicated employees, and our trusted partners as we together write the company’s next chapter. Vic, you are leaving the business stronger and more resilient than it’s ever been, and perhaps most importantly, well-positioned for continued growth. On behalf of the entire organization, thank you for your dedicated and outstanding service to our company and the strong foundation you will leave behind.
As Vic and Chris have noted, 2025 represented another record year and a multiyear period of profitable growth. Those results were driven by our resilient business model and our consistent focus on AUV growth, productivity, innovation, and expansion of our architectural specialties business. Over the last decade, through innovation and acquisitions, we’ve successfully expanded the company’s reach beyond traditional mineral fiber ceilings to a broader set of solutions, including specialty ceilings and walls, with a growing platform for design-centric solutions for more and more spaces within the built environment. Now we are expanding our solutions for energy-efficient buildings and for data centers, two of the most durable and accelerating growth markets in construction today. Throughout 2025, we continued to pursue and prioritize innovation aligned with both of those powerful macro trends. First, the increasing need to reduce energy consumption as power demand accelerates and power costs rise.
Second, the rapid global build-out of data centers driven by cloud computing and AI. These are long-term structural shifts, and they are reshaping how buildings are designed and operated. The fourth quarter of 2025 marked an important step in our commercialization of innovation in these two key areas. On the energy efficiency front, we introduced an upgraded TEMPLOK energy-saving ceiling solution within our Sustain portfolio. This new solution enhances passive heating and cooling performance, improves fire rating and thermal comfort, and gives architects more design flexibility. As customers, from owners to contractors to architects, better understand TEMPLOK’s multiple value propositions and economic benefits, supported by tax credit incentives and real-world validation through case studies, we are seeing interest and adoption grow. For example, we are currently shipping TEMPLOK for office renovation projects with two major financial services firms in New York City.
We were recently awarded TEMPLOK specifications for higher education projects on both the East and West Coast. We expect much more to come on this exciting opportunity as we develop the market for this multidimensional new ceiling solution. In data centers, the fastest-growing vertical in commercial construction, our opportunity extends beyond ceilings to engineered infrastructure. In Q4, we launched DATAZONE panels and DYNAMAX LT structural grid, solutions designed for mission-critical environments that require higher load capacity, better airflow management, and faster installation. We also expanded into other high-performance environments with the launch of SKYLO, our integrated walkable ceiling system for clean rooms, advanced manufacturing, and cold storage. Taken together, these innovations, supported by our digital growth initiatives, will enable us to drive volume growth ahead of the market and support our ability to continue to deliver AUV growth.
In 2025, our growth initiatives contributed roughly one point of growth in a down market. In 2026, with contributions from data centers and energy savings, we expect our growth initiatives to contribute up to an additional half point of growth. In addition to innovation, our strategy also involves the expansion of our AS business through greater portfolio breadth and capabilities, where we have demonstrated success over the last decade through acquisitions that offer innovative capabilities and materials expertise. By adding these differentiated businesses to our sales and service platforms, we are driving accelerated growth and improving margin performance over time. Eventscape is another exciting example of this strategy and of how we are boosting our ability to partner with architects, designers, and even building owners at the earliest stages of projects when design intent and technical feasibility remain uncertain and still under development.
Eventscape is unique within our architectural specialties acquisition because of their remarkable ability to design and fabricate with any material substrate, which is what we mean by material agnostic. While their focus includes ceilings, walls, and facades, it also includes distinctive and often iconic architectural features that differentiate the occupant experience in or around the space. Some great examples of this include special features in the new JPMorgan Chase headquarters and in the recently completed Pittsburgh International Airport. Notably, these are projects where both Armstrong and Eventscape participated on different and complementary aspects of the overall work. In summary, we are extremely excited about the potential of our recent innovation activity and our recent acquisitions to strengthen our company for consistent growth. Armstrong is now more uniquely positioned than ever to offer solutions for a wider array of applications in commercial buildings.
I look forward to sharing more of our progress in these areas in the future. With that, I’ll turn the call back to Vic.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you, Mark. As you can hear from Mark’s comments, we have a lot to be excited about here at Armstrong in 2026 and beyond. The recent acquisitions like Parallel and Eventscape, expand our sales opportunities within commercial buildings and further strengthen our relationships with architects and designers. The innovation we’ve highlighted enables our competitiveness in two new growth areas of the market: data centers and energy savings, both of which contribute to consistent mineral fiber AUV growth, incremental volume growth ahead of the market. These are key building blocks for continued, consistent, profitable growth. Looking ahead to our market outlook, we are encouraged with some improvement in visibility. However, high levels of uncertainty around policy, around interest rates, potential geopolitical events still exist. In 2026, we expect underlying market conditions to be steady and slightly improved versus what we experienced in 2025.
Within this outlook, we expect transportation to remain an area of growth, along with data centers and the gradual healing of the office vertical. As we experienced in 2025, we also expect to have near-term opportunities from new construction starts in the healthcare and education verticals from projects that were initiated in the past 24 to 30 months. While the office vertical does appear to have bottomed and we see green shoots of opportunity emerging, we haven’t yet seen a significant return of broad tenant improvement work at this point. It is worth noting that even as a full recovery in office has yet to materialize, we are seeing in the bid data that project bids are at meaningfully higher values, meaning that building owners who are doing tenant improvements are investing more into office spaces to enhance their aesthetics, their functionality, and their amenities.
Now, this is encouraging and represent a prime opportunity for Armstrong to leverage our broad portfolio of products, playing to our strengths at the high end of the market. In closing, I want to thank our employees again for their dedication and solid execution that enabled us to deliver another year of record results in 2025, and really set us up for continued success in 2026. We have executed well on our strategy and enhanced our value-creating building blocks. With our growth initiatives that we’ve invested in through the pandemic, we are now delivering above-market performance, and we have made several strategic acquisitions that have expanded our capabilities and our addressable market. Over the 10-year journey we’ve had at Armstrong, we have purposely built a highly focused America ceilings and architectural specialty company that delivers consistent, profitable growth.
By separating from the flooring business and divesting of our international operations, we have reduced complexity and focused our investments in North American market, which have strengthened our market position, made our business more resilient, and improved our returns to shareholders. Our cash generation has nearly tripled. We have returned over a billion and a half dollars to shareholders, and through the execution of our strategy, we have significantly increased the value of the company. Today, I am more confident than ever that we are poised to continue on this path in years to come. With that, we’ll be happy to take your questions.
Regina, Conference Operator: We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, press star, then 1 on your telephone keypad. We kindly ask that you please limit your questions to 1 and 1 follow-up. Our first question comes from the line of Tomohiko Sano with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG3: Hi. Good morning, everyone.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Good morning.
Mark Hershey, Chief Operating Officer / President and CEO (Effective April 1, 2026), Armstrong World Industries: Good morning.
Regina, Conference Operator: Good morning.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG3: Thank you for your leadership, congrats on your transition to chairman. We look forward to continued execution under Mark’s leadership. My question is for the 6% AEV growth in 2026, what is the price and mix split? How sustainable is the pricing power in the current competitive environment? What the customer is saying about the price versus value delivered, please?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Our AEV performance was above historical levels, as you’ve noted, at 6%. Normally, and if you look at this over a long period of time, like the past 10 years, it ranges about 50/50, or averages about 50/50. In 2025, we had a little bit more price than we did mix contribution, based on inflationary pressures and that we were pricing into. The mix was a little bit more biased toward like-for-like pricing than mix. Going forward, as Chris can outline, we’re anticipating some additional inflation in 2026, and our expectations is, with our normal cadence on pricing, we’re gonna continue to price ahead of that inflation and likely to end up with a more positive bias toward like-for-like pricing than mix in the year.
That’s kinda how we’re thinking about it, sitting here today.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG3: Thank you. My follow-up is that under Mark’s leadership, how should we think about the strategic continuity and top priority over the next 12 months and any key KPIs, please?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: I’ll let Mark take that.
Mark Hershey, Chief Operating Officer / President and CEO (Effective April 1, 2026), Armstrong World Industries: Yeah, happy to take that. Thank you for the question. Obviously, Vic and I and the leadership team have worked very closely together over the last seven years or more in my different roles on strategy, you should not expect a pivot in our strategic direction. I’ll be focused on and continue to be focused on innovation, for sure, will be a priority. Our growth initiatives, the initiatives we’ve had in digital, initiatives I talked about today, energy savings and data centers and some of the hallmarks of the business, productivity, as well as inorganic growth, whether M&A or partnerships as well. The same consistent areas of emphasis, the same consistent overall strategic objective, consistent profitable growth.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG3: Thank you very much.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you.
Mark Hershey, Chief Operating Officer / President and CEO (Effective April 1, 2026), Armstrong World Industries: Thank you.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Susan Maklari with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG1: Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Let me add my congratulations to both Mark and Vic. Looking forward to working-.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG1: with Mark and Vic. Enjoy your new time.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you. Thank you very much.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG1: My question is, you know, talking a bit about the operating environment, you did mention in your remarks, that you are seeing bids for office that are at least meaningfully higher in value. Can you talk about?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Mm-hmm.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG1: how these products and the platforms that you’ve launched in the last couple of years are gaining momentum and how they’re perhaps coming through, even with some of the headwinds that it sounds like you’re facing?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, you know, let me start just with the actual starts of work in the marketplace is fairly flattish, and it kind of, I think, represents what we’re feeling in the market overall. When you look at the office vertical in particular, yeah, the values stand out, and it’s well above inflationary numbers, right? You might look at value bidding numbers and say, "Yeah, well, there’s a lot of inflation in there." There are inflation in these numbers, but they’re well above inflationary levels.
Of course, this also is consistent with what we’re seeing in the marketplace and the specifications that we’re working on, where they’re using a lot more architectural specialty-type products in certain areas of the building to create these different feels and amenities to entice employees back to work and to keep them in the office. We were anticipating this coming as more and more constraints are on availability of Class A office space, and Class B spaces had to be upgraded to compete. We were anticipating this, but I’m calling this out because it’s really notable in the bid data to see how the values are meaningfully higher than you would normally expect in, from inflationary pressures there. Of course, Susan, I’ll just add to that.
I’ll just add that, you know, this is where having the breadth of product portfolio that we have, that includes mineral fiber, where they need to use that, but now a whole host of a palette of materials that we can allow architects to design with. It’s really a one-stop shop advantage that we can bring for all different types of designs and all different types of spaces within these buildings. Now, it happens to be, you know, more prevalent in office spaces, which is, again, a really good opportunity for us.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG1: Yes. Okay, that kind of leads to my follow-up question, Vic, which is: Can you talk about the integration of the deals that you have done in the last couple of years, where we are in that process? In your remarks, you also mentioned investments in capacity to support future growth. How should we think of, you know, the integration and these investments that you’re making and the potential for upside over time?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, I think the way I think about the integration of these businesses is it’s a continuum of work, and we take them step by step. The objective here is to get them to take advantage of the large platform Armstrong has to offer them. Mostly on the revenue-generating side, right? Some of the biggest synergies we have with these acquisitions is we scale them in their first couple of years on the platform. They’re in hundreds of more architects’ offices and through our distribution network. We, we try to do some of those steps initially, as then we bring on more and more productivity and more and more of the operational side of the business, and eventually, you know, footprint optimization work. We kinda think about this as a continuing, ongoing work. Again, when you look at...
I would just point you to the revenue generation in the architectural specialty business. With these companies that we’re buying, they’re certainly not growing at high single-digit levels. It really comes down to we’re scaling these through our integration work on the Armstrong platform very successfully. I’m really pleased with those early stages of integration. I would just say, as we go, we’re gonna continue to integrate these businesses on the operational side to drive more operating leverage from the revenue growth, but also more productivity in the plants. That’s how we get to the 20% goal that we put out there, and how we’re gonna sustain that over time.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG1: Yeah. Okay. All right. That’s great color. Thank you, and good luck with the quarter.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Keith Hughes with Truist. Please go ahead.
Keith Hughes, Analyst, Truist: Thank you. Just a couple of detailed questions on 2026. What kind of inflation expectation, input inflation expectation do you have, for mineral fiber for the year?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Yep. Hey, Keith, it’s Chris. For 2026, overall inputs at the mid-single-digit inflation range versus prior year on a % basis. Just a reminder, you know, our detail of that is, you know, about 35% of our COGS is raws, about 10% freight, 10% energy, and 10% labor. If I break that mid-single-digit inflation down, freight is about flat year-over-year, and we’re seeing low single-digit % inflation in raws. That’s really on some of our fiberglass paper and perlite inputs. Then, energy inflation in that, call it, you know, low double digit, 10%-12% range, and that’s really a split between you know, electricity and nat gas. A little bit of nat gas pressure here for 2026.
All up, all in, mid-single inputs, for 26.
Keith Hughes, Analyst, Truist: Okay, as you pointed out in the prepared comments, the AUV expectation is a little bit higher than you get. Although, you could actually, if we look at it the last several years, it’s been close to 6% many years, last couple of years. Can you just talk about what’s going on in the business that, you’re just getting a higher number than we have historically?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Yeah, I’d say in, you know, as Vic mentioned earlier about the like-for-like pricing and positive contributions for mix in that AUV, you know, it really goes back to our innovation and our service and our quality dimensions of the business. We continue to get and can see that, you know, more price than mixed dynamic here, certainly with that inflationary backdrop that I mentioned, but also coupled with our investments back into the business to really drive that innovation part of the equation. Again, we feel good about that 6% for 2026.
If I look at it on a first half, back half kind of split dynamic, it’s relatively even, you know, first half to be about the same as the back half. Again, as we think about the investments back into the business, that’s a really, big core, value creation driver for us, and one that we’re very excited about, in 2026 and beyond.
Keith Hughes, Analyst, Truist: Okay, finally, my congratulations to you as well, Vic. It’s been a tremendous run since you took over the company, so job well done. Thank you.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you. Thank you, Keith. Appreciate that.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Adam Baumgarten with Vertical Research Partners. Please go ahead.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG1: Hey, good morning, everyone. Just starting on the mineral fiber, EBITDA guide for 2026. I know it’s fairly open-ended, you know, above $35 and a half or $43 and a half, I should say, but that’s despite 6%-7% revenue growth. Is there anything, you know, offsetting that from a cost perspective? I know you talked about AUV covering inflation, maybe getting some SG&A leverage. Is it just conservatism just because it’s a pretty solid top line and it seems like price costs will be favorable?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Yeah, no, Adam, that’s a good question. No, I mean, I’d say I’d point really back to the value creation drivers that we’ve been talking about, solid AUV growth. What we haven’t talked about is the manufacturing productivity that we get year in and year out. I mentioned in my prepared remarks kind of the overall investments back into the business on CapEx, and a lot of what we see manifest themselves in that productivity is really investing back into that pipeline to continue to get those productivity gains. No, I mean, overall, you hit on SG&A, and I talked about SG&A in terms of how we’re thinking about getting that leverage, but we will be investing in SG&A for our growth initiatives in 2026.
Are pleased with the fact that we’re outlooking another year of overall EBITDA margin expansion, given those solid value creation drivers that I mentioned.
Speaker 0: Okay. Got it. Thanks. Just on the government channel that was weak, given the shutdown, and it seems a bit slower to come back, are you seeing any positive signs there? Is any kind of recovery from that weakness late last year built into the outlook in 2026?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, this is Vic. Yes, we did see a bounce back in January. We certainly would have expected this in November and December, but with the holidays around that, it did not bounce back as robustly as we thought it would be. We did see it in January, and we would expect a lot of this to be filtering back in over the next several months.
Speaker 0: Okay, great.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: The second part of your question is, we’ve already kind of factored this into our outlook for the year.
Speaker 0: Okay, perfect. Thanks.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you for that question. Yeah.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Rafe Jadrosich with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Sean Kelleher, Analyst, Bank of America: Hi, guys. This is actually Sean Kelleher on for Rafe Jadrosich. First, the architectural specialties organic growth has slowed over the last 2 quarters, but you’re expecting it to return to high single-digit growth in 2026. What are you seeing in the pipeline that gives you the confidence that that growth picks up? Did you see any delays in projects in the second half that are gonna benefit 2026?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, I’ll take that. In the architectural specialist segment, we had a really strong back half of 2024, a little bit of that deceleration you’re referencing is more of a base year comparison versus the actual run rate of the business. We’ve actually been generating a backlog growth with our order intake in double-digit levels. It’s this kind of where we are currently with our backlog and the way it’s been growing throughout 2025, for 2026 and actually beyond into 2027 already, that gives us really, I think, the confidence that we need for returning to high single digit levels of growth. Remember, you know, there’s some large projects in here, and they can ebb and flow quarter to quarter.
Certainly, as we saw at the end of the year, they can actually move out of the year and impact on a quarterly basis. As the year goes, I think we’ll benefit from those, and those are factored into, again, factored into our guidance for 2026. Feel really good about where we are with our order rates and how we’re winning in the marketplace with our breadth of portfolio in this space.
Sean Kelleher, Analyst, Bank of America: Okay, great. It sounded like you’re expecting mineral fiber volumes down in the first half, but up in the second half. Can you talk about what gives you the confidence that you’ll see growth in the second half, and if there’s any specific verticals that you expect to outperform versus underperform?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: I’ll take the first part of that question. Yeah. We expect growth for the year flat to up 1% with a stronger back half than front half of the year on the, you know, the weather dynamics and the seasonality that I mentioned in my prepared remarks. Positive for the year, but a little bit stronger in the back half than the front half, with, as you can imagine, you know, given the weather, winter weather impacts we’ve seen here in the first quarter, a more muted start in Q1. Vic, did you wanna talk about the vertical component of that?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Vertical?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Yeah.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Of office?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Yes.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah.
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Mm-hmm.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah. Yeah, the, I think as we’ve talked about with the office vertical, we’re not expecting an inflection where it just turns on, and then here we go. I think it’s a very gradual, and it’s going to be an uneven recovery across the U.S. I think it’s gonna build if we have some, you know, some of this uncertainty continue to clear up as we go into the year, it could build into the second half. I think the other thing, you know, as Mark talked about the excitement around data centers and energy savings, these are two new, early-stage growth initiatives. Each quarter as we go, we should be continuing to build, contributions from those initiatives that are additive to our base growth initiatives in digital.
A lot of those things kind of adding up that gives us, you know, the outlook of a stronger back half.
Sean Kelleher, Analyst, Bank of America: Great. Thank you.
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: You’re welcome.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question comes from the line of John Lovallo with UBS. Please go ahead.
John Lovallo, Analyst, UBS: Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions as well. The first one on architectural specialty, organic EBITDA margins, 18.7 for the year. That was, you know, you talked about was slightly below that 20% outlook. I’m curious if you could help us kinda bucket the drivers between the lower organic revenue, some of the project timing, and maybe any other factors have played in there?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, John, if you’re asking about the project delays that impacted that cost imbalance, I can give a little more color there. Let me finish there, but start with, you know, we continue to make good progress on our stated goal of getting this architectural segment to 20%. Again, this is the fourth year in a row of margin expansion in that business on our way to 20. I feel like we have the right levers. We know what the right building blocks are for us to deliver that. In fact, we had 2 quarters in 25 where we were north of 20%. Again, I think we know what to do, we know how to get there.
We really didn’t have the operating leverage in the fourth quarter based on these project pushouts. We had the cost in place. There was five good-sized projects. In fact, they were all delayed in December. Normally, you know, we experience project delays all the time in this architectural specialty segments. We talked about this. Normally, they’re picked up in the same reporting period. In this case, they not only fell out of the quarter, they fell out of the year because they were in December. They were primarily education and healthcare projects. Because they were sizable, that just created this imbalance of costs and therefore, the margin compression. This will work its way out.
I think, again, we know what the right levers, the right building blocks are to deliver a 20% EBITDA segment in architectural specialties. Did that get to your question, John?
John Lovallo, Analyst, UBS: Yeah. Yeah. That’s helpful. I guess just on the mineral fiber growth piece, the 0%-1% this year. I mean, I know the longer-term outlook is sort of 2%-4%. You know, help us kind of think about, you know, the path towards that 2%-4%. What do we need to see in terms of the market and just, you know, internal execution, and what, if any, timing, you know, guidelines do you guys have around that?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, it’s a good question. I mean, we’re moving that direction, right? When you look at, It’s been a while since we’ve outlooked positive mineral fiber volume growth, right, in the year. We’re moving in that direction. Remember that the 2-4 had two components to it. It was a market recovery of 1-2 points of growth from the market recovery, off of the getting us back to 2019 levels. There was 1-2 points of contribution from our growth initiatives. As Mark outlined, we’re moving in that direction of the 1-2 on our growth initiatives, which is what we can control, and with a little bit of the healing going on that we’re expecting in 2026, and we’ll see if that continues into 2027 and 2028.
That’s how you get to that 2-4 range. Still believe that that’s a good midterm type outlook for mineral fiber volume growth.
John Lovallo, Analyst, UBS: Okay. Thank you, guys.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: You bet.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Garik Shmois with Loop Capital. Please go ahead.
Garik Shmois, Analyst, Loop Capital: Oh, hi, thanks. On the data centers and energy saving projects, wondering if you could speak to just how large your overall portfolio do these projects represent, just in the context of the half point of growth, you’re expecting them to contribute this year? Also, maybe can you speak to any mix impact these projects have on margins?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Mark, I’ll take this, and if you want to add any color. Let me just start with on the, on the AUV side, both of these initiatives are accretive to our AUV. We really like selling more of these products in terms of that financial metric of growing our AUV. They’re really consistent with the innovation that we’re bringing to market as supportive of that continuation of that AUV growth. You know, on the margin side and contribution of that, I think the data center, tile in particular, is further down the road in terms of scaling, in terms of getting the operating leverage and the margins up.
Energy savings is still in the early stages of getting really good operating leverage on the $10 million investment that we made down to one of our plants that we talked about in 2025. We do expect both of these to be consistent with our 60% incremental contribution to EBITDA as they grow over time. Again, I think these are really two high-value applications for us to continue to innovate and build our portfolio on. I’m not sure I got all of your question, but Mark, you want to add anything to that?
Mark Hershey, Chief Operating Officer / President and CEO (Effective April 1, 2026), Armstrong World Industries: Obviously, I mentioned this in my remarks, the data center category is growing, we’ve got an opportunity to penetrate that category further. Energy savings plays across all of our verticals, frankly. Early days, we’ve seen a high level of interest in office and education that plays really well across all our verticals. Both of these initiatives are supported by macro trends. We are on trend with our value propositions in both of these spaces, a lot of energy behind both of them.
Garik Shmois, Analyst, Loop Capital: No, that’s helpful. Thank you. Follow-up question is just on the home center softness you saw in Q4. Was that destocking by chance or just the general sluggishness in that channel?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, it’s kind of more of the same of what we’ve seen, quarter to quarter, them moving some of their inventory levels around. Primarily destocking again in the fourth quarter. Again, this is a dynamic they can sell down from their inventories and then build back up very unevenly. Fourth quarter is more of the same.
Garik Shmois, Analyst, Loop Capital: Okay.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: To a lesser degree, of course, than some of the other things we’ve mentioned, though. Mm-hmm.
Mark Hershey, Chief Operating Officer / President and CEO (Effective April 1, 2026), Armstrong World Industries: Yeah. Great. Thanks, best of luck, Vic, in the future, and Mark, we’re looking forward to working with you in more detail.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you. Thank you, Eric.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Brian Biros with TRG. Please go ahead.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG: Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. Vic and Mark, congratulations on the new roles.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you, Brian.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG: Yeah. On the mineral fiber volumes, can you maybe just compare today’s level to, like, pre-COVID? Because while volumes have been down, you’ve been able to perform very well.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Mm-hmm.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG: I think it’s kind of important to understand what you’ve been able to do at this lower volume level to kind of how we keep that in mind for when and if volumes do return.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah. Yeah, that’s a good question. You know, 2019 levels. We’re still about 14%, as we finish 2025, we’re still 14% below 2019 volume levels. Yes, I mean, getting back to one of the earlier questions on market contribution to that 2%-4% volume range, we have quite a bit of ways to go to get back to 2019 levels. We believe that as long as the market verticals heal back to where they were, and there’s nothing structurally in their way to doing that, we should be able to get back to 2019 levels. That really is a flywheel opportunity when you look at the margins that we’re back to now. We’re back to 2019 margin levels without 14% of the volume.
yes, very good opportunity for the company in the future.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG: Yes, it’s a good story at the, at the margin level. Maybe follow up on visibility last year, kind of always was this choppiness around repair and remodel side, maybe like six months plus out. And that kinda seemed to come in slightly better than expected at the beginning of the year, last year. How do you view visibility now for 2026 in that lens? I think you touched on it a little bit in the prepared marks, but just compare and contrast the visibility today versus a year ago. Thank you.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, I mean, we’re pretty good at modeling what’s going on. There’s not a lot of visibility on the renovation, especially some of the lower-level renovation work that doesn’t involve, say, an architect. We’ve talked about this in the past. We have the least amount of visibility in that part of the mineral fiber business. Kinda just shows up through distribution. We have to model that based on what drives that by vertical. You know, what drives it in the office vertical is very different than drives it in the education. How we do that is we do a lot of modeling and triangulation, and of course, our ear to the ground with our customers and the marketplace. Again, we’re pretty good at it.
We don’t get it, you know, perfectly every quarter, but on a year-to-year basis, our models are pretty good. That’s kind of how we do it. I think going into 2026 and beyond, we’ll continue to use the technology, the AI modeling capabilities that we have now to just get better and better at that.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Stephen Kim with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG0: Yeah, thanks very much, guys. Vic, congratulations. Really a job well done. Mark, looking forward to working with you. Mark, I wanted to clarify a couple of things you said. There was a lot talked about with respect to innovation, which is obviously a good thing. You know, you have ProjectWorks, Kanopi, Healthy Spaces, Penblock, DynaMax, Skyfloor. You talked about, you know, the data centers initiative and the energy savings initiative. What I wanted to first do is just make sure I understood your terms, because you said that some component of these added 1% of growth in 2025, and you expect an additional 0.5 point in 2026.
What exactly was the 1%, and what exactly is gonna be this half point that you’re talking about? What I guess, generally, why would there be a deceleration? I would actually, given the momentum, that there would be maybe an acceleration in the contribution. If you could just clarify that for me, it would be great.
Mark Hershey, Chief Operating Officer / President and CEO (Effective April 1, 2026), Armstrong World Industries: Yeah, very fair. Happy to clarify. There is an acceleration. That is the point I’m trying to make. I was trying to highlight the addition and the emphasis on data centers and energy savings as an accelerant to the other pool of initiatives that you mentioned there. Our initiatives in general, we’ve talked about historically, are driving that first point, and with the addition and the ramping of energy savings and data center focus, there’s an incremental half point on that initiative progress.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG0: Okay. Does that mean that in 2026 relative to 25, that the contribution would be 50 basis points, or are you saying it’s 150 basis points? I’m just trying to make sure I’m understanding what you’re trying to communicate.
Mark Hershey, Chief Operating Officer / President and CEO (Effective April 1, 2026), Armstrong World Industries: Yep, incremental year on year, $150.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG0: Gotcha. Okay. That clarifies it. Appreciate that. All right, great. I guess secondarily, you’ve talked in the past about ProjectWorks and Kanopi as being a real differentiator for your business. I’m curious if you see AI, the emergence of, you know, artificial intelligence as a positive or a negative for some of your initiatives, particularly, I guess, with Kanopi. In the sense that I would think that AI might enhance their functionality, but I could also theoretically see it leveling the playing field a bit for your competitors. Wondering if you could talk a little bit about what you see in terms of the impact of AI as a positive or a negative factor for those initiatives?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: May I take that?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG0: Yeah.
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Yeah, happy to take that. I think on the whole, it’s a positive. In fact, some of our initiatives, broadly speaking, are embedding, AI, and it’s one of the most prominent places we’ve got AI utilization in the organization, is to enable, further enable our existing initiatives. You know, we feel good about that focus, in particular with specification excellence. We’ve talked about in the past as really an amplifier to that initiative. Just as we will across the organization, I could see all of our initiatives benefiting from the use. Early days, for some of the initiatives, but in particular, spec excellence is the one that I think, really is accelerated by AI.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG0: Okay, great.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Stephen, you know that, you know, winning the specification is really, really an important part of our strategy, right? As you’ve, over the years.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG0: Mm-hmm
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: come to know, that’s a key part to our pricing model and, of course, our renovation. The fact that we’re using AI there to even strengthen that core strength of ours, is pretty exciting.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG0: Yeah. Gotcha. Great. Thanks so much, guys.
Regina, Conference Operator: Our final question will come from the line of Philip Ng with Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Philip Ng, Analyst, Jefferies: Hey, guys. Vic, congrats, and thanks for the partnership, and Mark, looking forward to working with you.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Thank you.
Philip Ng, Analyst, Jefferies: I guess to kind of kick things off, Vic, you sound a little more upbeat on the outlook for mineral fiber, right? I mean, calling for a flat to up, which is encouraging, but you also, I think Chris highlighted it’s gonna be a softer first half. I don’t know if he was trying to signal volume’s gonna be down the first half. You sound more upbeat, but slower start to the year. Can you kinda help square that up, and perhaps, where’s that optimism coming from? Are you hearing from your customers that they’re seeing a more robust backlog? What’s driving some of that?
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, there’s still a lot of cautious, I would say, optimism around that. When you think about the last several years, you’ve called this out a couple of this, right? We’ve been outlooking a potential recession in the back half, we’ve had several years of downturns expected in the back half. I think the improved visibility in 2026 is. Nobody’s talking about that. In fact, I think they’re talking about the economy actually strengthening and getting better, and that’s always good for renovation work. When the overall economy is doing well, that, and the uncertainty gets, you know, less and less, we see a lot more renovation work. That’s part of the encouragement that we see, is that there is more, there is more visibility. Nobody’s calling for a recession.
Actually, I think people are outlooking more positive economic activity, and that gives us, again, some market out. I would say, Phil, the biggest driver to a little bit more upbeat here is the traction we’re seeing in our growth initiatives. This is what we can control. This is what we have really good visibility on. We have our target list. We know our customer engagement on that. You know, as Mark highlighted, getting some acceleration in the contribution from our growth initiatives is also really what we’re encouraged by, and it’s generating a little bit more confidence to get to a positive volume growth. Again, as I said earlier, the first time in a long time.
You know, what Chris is outlining is, you know, I think, very typical in terms of a seasonal impact in the first half, but now we’ve had some weather events, and we’ve had time to digest some of that impact and include that in our guide, and how we’re sequencing at the guide, too. That’s really, I think, what both Chris and I have batted back and forth to make sure that that’s helpful and clear for everybody.
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Maybe just to add a little more context to the volume in the first half, Philip, positive, but a slower start to the year volume-wise in Q1.
Philip Ng, Analyst, Jefferies: Got it. Okay, that’s helpful color. I guess a follow-up on the, you know, WAVE earnings outlook. You’re calling for mid-single-digit growth. Pretty healthy growth considering you’re lapping a pretty tough comp in 2025, and it kinda implies that the earnings leverage in WAVE is perhaps even more robust than the overall Mineral Fiber segment. What are some of the building blocks for that momentum in WAVE?
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Yeah. As you mentioned, WAVE equity earnings growth for the years in that, you know, mid-single digit range. If I just take a step back, one of WAVE’s value creation drivers is that price cost algorithm to continue to drive, you know, that growth through innovation, quality, service, it’s really to drive that growth through disciplined pricing, there’s no change there to your question. That rate that we’re talking about here in 2026 is reflective of some short-term operating leverage headwinds on some of the initiatives there in that business. As those kind of scale, that’ll improve kind of in the short term, we’ll get more traction.
I think overall from a, you know, longer term, mid to longer term perspective, we don’t see any change in the equity earnings growth trajectory to get back to that high single digit range, in terms of equity earnings for the WAVE venture.
Philip Ng, Analyst, Jefferies: Okay. Appreciate the color, guys. Thank you.
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Yeah, thank you.
Regina, Conference Operator: That concludes our question and answer session. I will now hand the call back over to Vic for any closing remarks.
Brian Biros, Analyst, TRG4: Yeah, thank you, and I appreciate the comments on the call. I really do appreciate that. Really thank you all for the coverage and the support of AWI over the last 10 years. And I really, again, want to thank our 4,000 employees for just an outstanding job in transforming the company over the last 10 years. It really truly has been an honor for me and a privilege to serve as the CEO of Armstrong. As I step aside, I, like I said earlier, I’m more confident than ever that the future is bright here at Armstrong. Again, thank you all, and good luck to Mark.
Chris Calzaretta, Chief Financial Officer, Armstrong World Industries: Thanks, Vic.
Regina, Conference Operator: This will conclude our call today. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.