CNM March 24, 2026

Core & Main Q4 and Full Year 2025 Earnings Call - Gaining Share and Margins with Meters, Treatment and Private Label as Residential Stalls

Summary

Core & Main closed fiscal 2025 with durable cash flow and share gains even as end markets were uneven. Net sales were $7.65 billion, Adjusted EBITDA $931 million, adjusted diluted EPS $2.97, and operating cash flow $650 million. Management leaned into municipal work, smart metering, treatment plant projects and private label to offset a weak residential lot development market and flat overall volumes.
The tone of the guide is cautious. Management expects 2026 net sales of $7.8 billion to $7.9 billion and Adjusted EBITDA of $950 million to $980 million, while driving margin expansion through private label, sourcing and recently announced cost actions. Risks they flagged include PVC/resin price volatility, geopolitical-driven energy and diesel costs, and continued residential softness, but the company is backing growth with greenfields, targeted hires and a deep M&A pipeline.

Key Takeaways

  • Core & Main reported FY2025 net sales of $7.65 billion, Adjusted EBITDA of $931 million, adjusted diluted EPS of $2.97, and operating cash flow of $650 million.
  • The company delivered its 16th consecutive year of sales growth and estimates roughly 20% U.S. market share in a ~$44 billion addressable market (U.S. and Canada).
  • End-market mix: municipal 44% of sales, non-residential ~38%, residential lot development ~18%. Municipal volumes were up low- to mid-single digits, non-residential roughly flat, and residential down low double digits in FY2025.
  • Management says FY2025 end markets were roughly flat overall, but the company drove about 3 points of organic above-market growth and 2 points of growth from acquisitions.
  • Q4 net sales were $1.58 billion, down 7% year-over-year, though the quarter included one fewer selling week and weather disruptions in the final week (management estimates a $15M-$20M impact).
  • Gross margin expanded 30 basis points in FY2025 to 26.9%; Q4 gross margin was 27.1%, up 50 basis points driven by higher private label penetration and disciplined purchasing and pricing.
  • Private label reached roughly 5% of sales in FY2025, up 100 basis points year-over-year, and management sees a path to at least 10% of sales over time as a core margin lever.
  • Total SG&A for FY2025 rose 7% to $1.15 billion, pressured by inflation, acquisitions, volume-related growth and strategic investments; Q4 SG&A fell 5% to $264 million driven by one fewer selling week and cost actions.
  • Company implemented $30 million of annualized cost actions during FY2025, recognizing roughly $6 million of benefit in-year ($1M in Q3, $5M in Q4), with the remainder expected to flow through in FY2026.
  • Balance sheet: net debt about $1.95 billion, net leverage ~2.1x; liquidity $1.45 billion including $220 million of cash. Operating cash flow conversion was ~70% of Adjusted EBITDA for FY2025.
  • Capital return and buybacks: $155 million repurchased in FY2025 plus $39 million subsequent, reducing shares by ~4.0 million combined. Over $600 million remains on the repurchase authorization.
  • FY2026 guidance: net sales $7.8B–$7.9B, Adjusted EBITDA $950M–$980M, and operating cash conversion 60%–70%. Management expects municipal growth low single digits, non-residential flattish, and residential down mid-single digits for FY2026.
  • Investments to drive above-market growth: record 7–10 greenfield openings planned for FY2026; acquired Canada Waterworks and Pioneer Supply during FY2025; pipeline evaluates 50+ M&A opportunities annually.
  • High-growth initiatives: smart metering (average annual ~14% growth over 5 years, meter sales up 12% in the quarter), treatment plant solutions (nearly 25% average annual growth), fusible HDPE and geosynthetics (double-digit gains in average daily net sales).
  • Pricing dynamics are mixed: overall pricing roughly flat in FY2025, but PVC pricing was a ~15% headwind for the year. Management is watching resin-driven input costs and diesel surcharges related to geopolitical tensions as potential lift or headwinds to pricing.
  • Management flagged near-term macro risks including the Middle East conflict, tariffs, and interest rate uncertainty, and is therefore guiding conservatively while positioning to capture upside if pricing or volumes improve.
  • Inventory and margin playbook: management highlighted active inventory positioning to capture margin when supplier-driven price moves occur, a recurring element of their margin expansion strategy.

Full Transcript

Alex, Call Coordinator: Hello, and welcome to the Core & Main Q4 and full year 2025 earnings call. My name is Alex. I’ll be coordinating today’s call. If you’d like to ask a question at the end of the presentation, you may press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. I’ll now hand it over to Glenn Floyd, Director of Investor Relations, to begin. Please go ahead.

Glenn Floyd, Director of Investor Relations, Core & Main: Good morning, and thank you for joining us. I’m Glenn Floyd, Director of Investor Relations at Core & Main. We appreciate you taking the time to be with us today for our fiscal 2025 fourth quarter and full year earnings call. Joining me this morning are Mark Witkowski, our Chief Executive Officer, Robyn Bradbury, our Chief Financial Officer, and Brad Cowles, our President. Mark will start with a business update and review of our fiscal 2025 performance. Brad will then discuss the investments we are making to drive market share gains and margin expansion over the long term. Robyn will follow with a review of our financial results and outlook for fiscal 2026. We will then open the line for questions, and Mark will wrap up with closing remarks. Our press release, presentation materials, and the statements made during today’s call may include forward-looking statements.

These are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. For more information, please refer to the cautionary statements included in our earnings release and in our filings with the SEC. We will also reference certain non-GAAP financial measures during today’s discussion. We believe these metrics provide useful insight into the underlying performance of our business. Reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measure are available in both our press release and in the appendix of today’s investor presentation. Thank you again for your interest in Core & Main. I will now turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Mark Witkowski.

Mark Witkowski, Chief Executive Officer, Core & Main: Thanks, Glenn, and good morning, everyone. I’ll begin on page 5 with a brief overview of Core & Main and its market position. Core & Main is a leading specialty distributor of water infrastructure products and services in North America, supporting the repair, upgrade, and expansion of critical water systems. Having a portfolio of more than 225,000 products, many of which are exclusive to our industry with limited distribution rights, we combine local expertise with national capabilities to provide water infrastructure solutions to municipalities, private water companies, and professional contractors across municipal, non-residential, and residential end markets. Our footprint consists of more than 370 branches across the U.S. and Canada, which serves as a crucial link between 5,000 suppliers and a diverse base of more than 60,000 customers. Our end markets are balanced and stable, providing resilience through varying demand environments.

Municipal projects represent 44% of our sales, generating steady demand from reliable funding sources. Our non-residential end market, which represents roughly 38% of sales, benefits from a diverse project mix across commercial, industrial, and infrastructure applications. Residential lot development represents approximately 18% of our sales. While near-term dynamics in this end market remain challenged, we continue to view the long-term outlook as attractive, supported by population growth and a structural undersupply of housing. This diversification, combined with emerging growth drivers like AI-related infrastructure needs and treatment plant modernization, provides a strong foundation for our business. Our competitive advantages, including local market expertise backed by our highly trained sales force, national capabilities, and industry-specific technology, position us to lead an attractive $44 billion addressable market across the U.S. and Canada, up roughly $5 billion from last year with the addition of Canada.

We estimate our U.S. market share at approximately 20% today, with a small but growing share in Canada. This combination gives us significant runway to grow and capture additional share over time. Our ability to win in the market starts with the value we create for both our customers and our suppliers, which we’ve highlighted on slide 6. It begins with our people-first culture, which empowers our associates to operate with an entrepreneurial mindset and build strong relationships in their local markets. For our customers, we provide a broad portfolio of highly specified products, deep technical expertise, and a consultative sales approach that helps them navigate complex infrastructure projects. Our local teams understand the specifications, regulations, and project requirements unique to each municipality and job site, allowing us to support customers through early project planning through delivery and installation.

At the same time, we differentiate ourselves through our delivery capabilities and proprietary technology tools, which help simplify estimating, procurement, and job site logistics. Combined with our national distribution network, this enables us to deliver materials reliably and efficiently, helping customers keep projects on schedule and within budget. For our suppliers, Core & Main serves as a critical channel to reach a highly fragmented customer base. Our expanded sales force and geographic footprint provide access to tens of thousands of contractors, municipalities, and utilities across the country. We also help drive the adoption of new products and technologies by leveraging our local relationships, technical expertise, and market insights. Underlying all this is our operating model, which combines local expertise with national capabilities and resources. Our local teams lead customer relationships and project execution, while our scale provides advantages in sourcing, distribution, technology, and product availability.

This combination allows us to deliver a high level of service to customers while also creating meaningful value for our supplier partners. Together, these capabilities form a differentiated value proposition that positions Core & Main to consistently gain market share and deliver strong, reliable execution. Turning to our recent accomplishments on page seven. Fiscal 2025 was a year of disciplined execution for Core & Main. We delivered our sixteenth consecutive year of sales growth, a result that reflects the resilience of our business, the long-term strength of our end markets, and the consistent performance by our teams across the country. We generated net sales of $7.65 billion, Adjusted EBITDA of $931 million, adjusted diluted EPS of $2.97, and operating cash flow of $650 million.

As we talk through the year, I want to frame our performance against the annual value creation targets we use to measure the business, which include end market growth, organic above market growth, acquisitions, margin expansion, and cash flow. First is our end market growth. Our annual target assumes 2%-4% market volume growth, and in fiscal 2025, our end markets were roughly flat overall. Municipal volumes were up low- to mid-single-digit % and continued to be a source of strength, supported by steady repair and replacement activity and a healthy funding environment. While municipal demand remained resilient, it was not enough to fully offset softness in other areas of our end markets. Non-residential volumes were relatively muted throughout the year. Growth from data centers, street and highway projects, and multifamily developments provided support, but that strength was offset by softness in more traditional commercial lot development activity.

Residential lot development declined low double digits as housing affordability and higher mortgage rates continued to weigh on demand. We expect residential will eventually return to growth to satisfy the significant undersupply of housing in the U.S. While end market trends are outside of our control, we have been proactive in repositioning the business to perform in this environment by strengthening our municipal business while remaining fully committed to the private construction markets. We’ve had a couple years of softer than normal end markets, and despite near-term softness, we expect growth to resume in the medium term. Second is our organic above market growth. Our annual target calls for 2%-4%, and in fiscal 2025, we delivered squarely within that range. A big driver of that performance was our sales initiatives, which delivered robust results as we broaden our portfolio of solutions to address aging water infrastructure.

Collectively, average daily net sales grew double digits in fusible HDPE, treatment plant solutions, and geosynthetics. Average daily net sales for meter products grew 12% in the quarter and grew mid-single digits for the year on top of a strong prior year growth comparison of 32%. We also expanded our footprint during and subsequent to the year to make our products more accessible nationwide, opening 10 new branches in attractive markets. We have a pipeline of additional greenfield locations and expect to open additional locations as we progress throughout the year. Collectively, these sales and geographic expansion initiatives drove 3 points of organic above-market growth in fiscal 2025, reflecting continued share gains across our markets. We are confident in our ability to continue driving above-market growth through these sales, geographic, and key talent initiatives in fiscal 2026 and beyond. Third is our growth from acquisitions.

Our annual target is 2%-4% growth from acquisitions, and in fiscal 2025, we delivered 2%. That includes contributions from acquisitions completed in fiscal 2024, along with 2 complementary acquisitions we completed in fiscal 2025, Canada Waterworks and Pioneer Supply. Together, these acquisitions added 5 branches to our footprint during the year. Canada Waterworks builds on the platform we established in Canada last year with the HM Pipe acquisition. With these additions, we now operate 7 branches in Ontario, including 2 greenfields opened earlier this year as we continue expanding our presence. Pioneer Supply expands our presence in Texas and Oklahoma, further extending our reach in attractive growth markets. Both businesses bring a strong reputation for quality and service that align with Core & Main’s mission. Together, we’re extending our reach and creating even greater opportunities for growth and value creation.

More broadly, acquisitions and greenfields are complementary tools we use to expand our footprint and unlock new growth opportunities. In some markets, we establish a presence through greenfields, while in others, like Canada, acquisitions provide an initial platform that we can then expand through additional investments over time. We are well-positioned to continue driving growth through M&A. Fourth is margin expansion. In fiscal 2025, we delivered strong gross margin performance, expanding 30 basis points year-over-year, driven by higher private label penetration and disciplined purchasing and pricing execution. Our gross margin performance for the year reflects great execution by our local teams in challenging market conditions, coupled with the benefits of our national scale and initiatives. Flat end market volumes and flat pricing, coupled with higher than normal inflation on our operating costs, limited our ability to achieve SG&A leverage this year.

Historically, we’ve offset these impacts with productivity and price increases, and expect we will do that going forward. Our last value creation lever is cash generation. Every year, we target converting 60%-70% of Adjusted EBITDA into operating cash flow. We delivered $650 million of operating cash flow in fiscal 2025, which represents conversion at the high end of the range. Strong cash generation continues to be a differentiator for Core & Main, and it gives us flexibility to invest in the business, pursue strategic M&A, and return capital to shareholders. As we look ahead, our focus is straightforward. Extend the advantages we’ve built, compound market share gains, and continue expanding the structural earnings power of the business. Beginning on page 8, we’ll cover the fundamentals of our end markets and why they remain attractive over the long term.

Brad will then walk through why we have confidence in our ability to grow and improve profitability. We benefit from a large base of aging municipal water infrastructure that drives consistent repair and replacement activity, and that backdrop is complemented by strong local funding and incremental federal and state funding that expands the addressable opportunity. We also continue to see an increasing need for modernization projects, including treatment plant upgrades and metering conversions, which reinforce the multi-year nature of municipal demand. Our non-residential end market is supported by a balanced mix between new development and repair and replacement activity, ranging from commercial and industrial construction to less cyclical infrastructure projects like road and bridge rehabilitation activity.

As I mentioned earlier, we’re seeing mixed demand across project types in the near term, but the long-term themes like onshoring and broader infrastructure investment are expected to support a steady pipeline of work as large projects move from planning to execution. Lastly is residential. While near-term housing activity can move with interest rates and affordability, the long-term demand drivers are structural. The U.S. has built fewer homes than household formations over the past two decades, which has created an undersupply and a long runway for future lot development. Importantly, residential growth can also provide incremental support to our other two end markets. As communities expand into suburban and rural areas, commercial development follows. All of that residential and non-residential growth places a greater strain on local water systems, which drives municipal expansion, upgrades, and repairs.

We believe a release of pent-up residential activity supports residential, non-residential, and municipal growth. Next, I would like to welcome Brad Cowles, our President, who will walk through the investments we are making in our products, capabilities, footprint, and people, and how those initiatives are driving market share gains and supporting margin expansion. Go ahead, Brad.

Brad Cowles, President, Core & Main: Thanks, Mark, and good morning, everyone. It’s great to be here with you today. Turning to page 9, I want to share some insights on the sales initiatives and capabilities that are driving consistent above-market growth and market share gains. Building on the foundation of our core business and extensive branch presence, we’re bringing additional value to our customers in two primary ways: with a broader product offering to cover all of their project needs and by bringing complete solutions to their more complex challenges. Our key initiatives, meters, treatment plant, fusible HDPE, and geosynthetics, have combined to grow at an average annual rate of approximately 14% over the past 5 years, significantly outpacing underlying market demand. Two of these initiatives are focused on expanding our product offering, fusible HDPE and geosynthetics.

These product initiatives require new supplier partnerships, specialized equipment and technicians, as well as unique storage and logistics solutions. As we expand these capabilities across our branch network, we can bring these products to our current customers and also pursue new customers who specialize in the installation of these unique products. Fusible HDPE, for example, is used in water and sewer systems by our current municipal and contractor customers. The same products, fusion equipment and technicians, are also used in agriculture, energy, mining, landfill, and other applications, often in the very same geography. Smart meters and treatment plant are sales initiatives focused on solving more complex problems and offering more comprehensive solutions to our customers. We do this by investing in national teams with very specific expertise who complement the efforts of our local branches.

We help our customers understand the possible solutions, and in doing so, we often create additional demand. Smart metering is a great example of how our turnkey solutions are winning with the customers while bringing them solutions they had never imagined. We were recently awarded what we believe is the largest metering contract in U.S. history, reflecting our leading position in the market. We deliver solutions that help utilities improve billing accuracy, reduce water loss, and enhance system visibility. These solutions combine metering and other sensor hardware, software, installation, project management, and everyday maintenance for metering projects of any size. We are enjoying a high rate of success on large, complex projects, and we take that as a sign that we’re taking a larger share of the market as municipal customers look for a single partner to deliver end-to-end solutions.

As a result, our Smart metering business has grown at an average annual rate of approximately 14% over the last five years. Our National Critical Infrastructure Group specializes in complex water treatment and delivery projects consisting of pipes, valves, fittings, and fabricated assemblies. Large capital investments are being made in treatment plants and water transmission lines across the country as demand increases from onshoring data center construction and population shifts. We are seeing above-market growth across these project types. That momentum, coupled with our differentiated product and service offering, has helped drive this initiative to grow at an average annual rate of nearly 25% over the past five years. We also see opportunities to continue expanding our capabilities and product lines within water treatment, both organically and inorganically.

As the projects get larger, the customer partnerships become more important and the demands for timely and high-quality execution get stronger. Our focus on strategic customer accounts positions us to win business as these leading general contractors move across the country, performing work on the most significant capital projects. Geographic expansion is another important lever in our above-market sales growth. Our market mapping process helps us identify under-penetrated areas with attractive growth characteristics, where our brand, product breadth, and service model can differentiate us. Greenfields yield strong returns and provide a complementary path when acquisition targets are not available to us in a market we wish to enter. We completed 6 greenfield openings in fiscal 2025, and we expect to open a record 7-10 locations in the coming year.

Even in markets where we already operate, we often have the opportunity to add and develop sales talent to strengthen our sales coverage. That includes building the right mix of outside sales, inside sales, and product expertise, so we can support larger and more complex projects, increase share of wallet with existing customers, and capture more opportunities in the markets we already serve. With that as context, page ten highlights how disciplined M&A complements these organic growth levers. Our highly fragmented market creates a long runway for disciplined acquisitions. Over time, we’ve built a reputation as the acquirer of choice in our industry, grounded by our entrepreneurial culture and the resources we bring to help acquired businesses grow. Since 2017, we’ve completed more than 40 acquisitions, adding nearly 150 branches and over $1.8 billion of annual sales. Our pipeline is deep and actionable.

We evaluate on average more than 50 opportunities each year, with roughly a dozen opportunities in active evaluation at any time. When companies join Core & Main, they gain broader product breadth, industry-specific technology, and national capabilities and resources that help them serve customers more effectively. They also gain shared administrative support, which reduces the burden on local teams and allows them to spend more time with customers. We invest in people through best-in-class training and career development opportunities that help retain and grow talent. As we evaluate opportunities, we prioritize businesses that expand our presence in new or underrepresented markets, help us add products and service capabilities, and bring in key industry talent. Looking ahead, we see a clear path for M&A to contribute 2-4 points of annual sales growth over time.

Turning to page 11, one of the things we are most excited about is the runway we have to expand margins, and this slide summarizes the levers that support that opportunity. Private label is a powerful driver of gross margin expansion. It includes direct sourcing of comparable products and also building differentiated brands. We’ve developed a meaningful private label capability that is supported by an internal master distribution network, and our private label brands are respected because we invest in quality and enhanced features while ensuring we meet required specifications. We also stay close to the field by soliciting feedback on quality, pricing, and packaging, and by prioritizing service levels and availability as we service our own branches. We’ve been investing in the infrastructure to scale private label adoption. Since the end of last year, we’ve added distribution capacity and expanded the assortment by more than 6,000 SKUs.

Private label represented about 5% of sales in fiscal 2025, and we see a clear path to at least 10% over time. Sourcing and pricing optimization are another structural advantage. Our scale and buying expertise help us secure access to the most preferred products with favorable terms and improve net product costs. We foster strong partnerships with key suppliers to drive shared growth. At the same time, we leverage centralized resources and transaction data to help guide optimal price points while empowering our local teams with final pricing authority. Together, these capabilities allow us to capture the full value of our purchasing scale while maintaining the local responsiveness that our customers expect. Technology and innovation tie all these levers together, creating a meaningful opportunity to drive sales, margins, and efficiency.

We are broadening our agenda to ensure that Core & Main remains the industry’s technology leader with continuous investment in step change productivity and a better customer experience with AI-enabled solutions that reduce administrative burden and free our teams to focus on customers. We believe this creates a durable, long-term advantage and supports Core & Main’s differentiated value proposition. To wrap up, these product and solution initiatives are reinforcing each other and strengthening our ability to gain share, expand margins, and scale the business with discipline. They help us accelerate greenfield contributions, and they maximize the synergies we can get from acquisitions. We are investing where we see the greatest opportunity, and we are confident in the path ahead. With that, I will turn it over to Robin to walk through our fourth quarter and full year financial results. Go ahead, Robin.

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: Thanks, Brad. Good morning, everyone. I’ll start on page 13 with some highlights from our fourth quarter results. Net sales in the fourth quarter decreased 7% to $1.58 billion. As a reminder, we had one fewer selling week in the fourth quarter of this year compared to last year. On an average daily net sales basis, sales increased about 1%, driven by roughly one point of organic volumes. Pricing remained positive across nearly every product category with the exception of PVC pipe, resulting in roughly flat pricing overall. Sales in the final week of the quarter were also affected by severe winter weather that temporarily limited construction activity in several regions. Gross margin in the fourth quarter was 27.1%, an increase of 50 basis points year-over-year. The improvement reflects higher private label penetration and disciplined purchasing and pricing execution.

Total SG&A for the quarter decreased 5% to $264 million. The year-over-year decline was driven primarily by lower variable costs from one less selling week, along with benefits from our previously announced cost actions. Sequentially, SG&A was $31 million lower than the third quarter, reflecting approximately $5 million of realized savings, with the remainder due to reductions in variable costs. Over the course of fiscal 2025, we implemented approximately $30 million of annualized cost actions, with roughly $6 million recognized this year and the remainder expected to flow through our results during fiscal 2026. Our approach continues to be measured. We are improving our cost structure without compromising customer service or long-term growth. At the same time, we continue to invest in targeted roles to support product line and geographic expansion.

We are highly focused on regaining operating leverage by offsetting SG&A investments with productivity gains while maintaining the service levels and capabilities that support our growth strategy. Adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter was $167 million, down 7% versus last year, primarily reflecting one fewer selling week. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 10 basis points higher than last year at 10.6%. Turning to our full-year performance on page 14. For fiscal 2025, net sales grew approximately 3% to $7.65 billion. Sales growth was 5% when adjusted for one less selling week. We delivered roughly 3 points of organic market share gains while our end markets were roughly flat overall, with municipal up low to mid-single digits, non-residential relatively flat, and residential down low double digits.

Our market outperformance was driven by our sales and geographic expansion initiatives, including metering, treatment plants, fusible HDPE and geosynthetics, and investments to expand our coverage in priority markets. We also achieved 2 points of sales growth from acquisitions and prices were overall flat. Gross margin for the year was 26.9%, up 30 basis points from fiscal 2024, reflecting higher private label penetration and disciplined purchasing and pricing execution. Private label increased 100 basis points in fiscal 2025 to roughly 5% of sales. That mix shift was a meaningful driver of the year-over-year improvement. Total SG&A for the year increased 7% to $1.15 billion. The increase in SG&A was driven by inflation, acquisitions, volume-related growth, and strategic investments to support sales growth, margin expansion, and future productivity.

While these factors pressured SG&A leverage in the near term, we remain focused on driving both growth and profitability and are confident the actions we have taken position us to return to EBITDA margin expansion over time. Adjusted EBITDA was $931 million, slightly ahead of the prior year, while adjusted EBITDA margin declined 30 basis points to 12.2%. The year-over-year margin decline reflects higher SG&A as a percentage of net sales, partially offset by 30 basis points of gross margin expansion. Adjusted diluted EPS increased 7% to $2.97. Growth was driven by higher adjusted net income from lower interest expense and the benefit of a lower share count from share repurchases. We exclude intangible amortization from adjusted diluted EPS because a significant portion relates to the formation of Core & Main following our 2017 leveraged buyout.

Turning to the balance sheet, cash flow, and capital allocation. We ended the year with net debt of nearly $1.95 billion and net debt leverage of 2.1 times, well within our target range of 1.5-3 times. Liquidity was $1.45 billion, including $220 million of cash, with the remainder available under our ABL facility. We generated $650 million of operating cash flow during the year, reflecting approximately 70% conversion from adjusted EBITDA. Our free cash flow yield was 5.8%, a level that is nearly three times higher than our specialty distribution peers. We returned $155 million to shareholders through share repurchases during the year, reducing our share count by roughly 3.2 million.

Subsequent to the fiscal year, we deployed an additional $39 million to repurchase 800,000 shares. Since our 2021 IPO, we have repurchased over 20% of our original shares outstanding, reflecting our commitment to return capital while continuing to invest in growth. Next, I will cover our outlook on page 16. For fiscal 2026, we expect net sales of $7.8 billion-$7.9 billion, Adjusted EBITDA of $950 million-$980 million, and operating cash flow conversion of 60%-70% of Adjusted EBITDA. We are confident in the strength of the municipal market due to the stability of funding sources and the non-discretionary nature of demand.

We remain cautious on the private construction market given the heightened geopolitical volatility, including the developing Middle East conflict and ongoing tariff uncertainties, along with continued uncertainty around the interest rate environment and overall builder confidence. Despite this, we still expect our overall end markets to be roughly flat for the year. We do expect to drive above-market volume growth from our sales and geographic expansion initiatives. Drivers include continued strong performance across meters and treatment plant and opening a record 7-10 greenfields in attractive markets. Despite softer end market conditions and a neutral pricing environment, we expect to grow Adjusted EBITDA margins as we continue to execute our gross margin initiatives and realize the benefits of our previously announced cost actions. We expect another year of strong operating cash flow, and our capital allocation priorities are unchanged.

We will continue investing in the growth of the business, both organically and through strategic M&A, while returning capital to shareholders through share repurchases. We remain confident in the strength of our business and our ability to execute. We have delivered consistent results through varying market environments, maintained disciplined pricing, expanded gross margins, generated strong cash flow that enabled us to reinvest in the business and return capital to shareholders, and have continued to gain share across our markets. Our operating model is resilient, and our strategic priorities are clear. In the near term, our municipal end market provides stability. Over the medium term, we expect momentum to return in the residential and non-residential markets, along with a return to a more typical pricing environment. As these dynamics improve, the structural earnings power we’ve built positions Core & Main to unlock meaningful long-term profitable growth and value creation.

In the meantime, we will continue to drive volume through strong execution and above-market growth. With that, let’s open up the call for questions.

Alex, Call Coordinator: Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, you may press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you’d like to remove your question, that’s star followed by two. Our first question for today comes from David Manthey of Baird. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

David Manthey, Analyst, Baird: Yeah. Thank you. Good morning, everyone. My first question is the one that I get from investors most frequently, which is the growth disconnect of Core & Main versus the corresponding segment at your largest competitors. I know we’ve talked about this offline. I just was hoping you could maybe just address some of the differences in vertical end market influence and geographic and product mix, and why you think there’s a slight disconnect between your growth and your biggest competitor.

Mark Witkowski, Chief Executive Officer, Core & Main: Yeah. Thanks, David. Appreciate the question, and good morning. You know, David, I would tell you from an end market, you know, perspective, you know, we feel really good about our presence and reach, you know, certainly across the municipal end market, non-residential and the residential end markets. You know, we clearly are, you know, I would say, in every market that our other national competitor is in. You know, we’ve got, you know, obviously we both compete against a large volume of local distributors and regional competitors.

I think, you know, both us and our other national distributor are doing a really good job of taking share across the industry with, you know, certainly us driving a lot of good share growth with our smart meter business. Treatment plant is an area I would say that we’ve grown pretty significantly. I would say that’s an area that they’ve been, I would say, a little ahead of us over the years, but we’re rapidly, I would say, gaining ground in that area.

Then I think, you know, certainly as part of the data center construction that we’ve seen pop up, I would say they’ve been in a little better position in some of those markets, particularly ones that are kind of in their backyard and kind of Northern Virginia area, and Texas, in particular are areas that, you know, we’re investing in, I’d say, rapidly to kind of catch that. But what I would tell you is that what I like, you know, in terms of our position there is we’re seeing more and more of these data centers pop up across the U.S.

Given our geographic reach and our strong relationships we have in these local markets, we’ve seen a lot of good gains here over the last couple of years on those data centers as we’ve seen those expand much more broadly across the U.S. I think our exposure there is going to continue to be helpful as we pick up that business. We view it as a positive. I think you know, our large national competitors having good results. We’re seeing good share gains and good results on our side and feel that that’s a good thing overall for the industry.

David Manthey, Analyst, Baird: Thank you. I appreciate that, Caller. The second question is on costs. As we think about the cost out program and the $30 million run rate, I think you said $5 million of the benefit hit in the fourth quarter. That would imply that, I guess, we don’t lap that fully until we get to the first half of 2027. Can you just correct me on that if I’m wrong, that you’ll continue to see year-on-year benefits from that cost out program diminishing through the year, but still positive through 2026. Is that correct?

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: Yeah. Thanks, Dave. That’s what we’re expecting. We completed all of the $30 million of cost out during FY 2025. We got about $1 million of that benefit in the third quarter. We got $5 million of that benefit in the fourth quarter. That remainder of that $30 million, we’ll see all of that really hit in the first, second, and third quarter of next year before we annualize those cost out efforts.

David Manthey, Analyst, Baird: Got it. If you’re at $5 million in the fourth quarter, that implies a $20 million run rate, so there should still be positive.

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: Right.

David Manthey, Analyst, Baird: I should say, you know, lower costs in the beginning of 2027 as well. Okay, perfect. Thank you.

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: That’s right. Yep. Thanks, Dave.

Alex, Call Coordinator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Bouley of Barclays. Your line’s now open. Please go ahead.

Matthew Bouley, Analyst, Barclays: Hey. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions and all the detail on the call. Maybe just to address kind of the current market conditions around, you know, energy and commodity inflation, you know, following the Middle East conflict here. Maybe just kind of near term, you know, diesel surcharges, et cetera. How are you expecting to deal with that? How should we think about modeling all that? Over these past few weeks, kind of what are you hearing from suppliers around, you know, price increases, and how does that play into your guide for flat pricing for the year? Thank you.

Mark Witkowski, Chief Executive Officer, Core & Main: Yeah. Thanks, Matt. I’ll go ahead and take that one. You know, I would tell you we’re obviously watching things very closely as they develop in the Middle East. You know, we definitely have a direct impact, you know, as we see some of the increases in fuel, you know, with our delivery operating expenses and that sort of thing. But it’s still, you know, relatively small, and we’ve got a lot of that embedded in the guide that we’ve laid out. I would say more indirectly, you know, we’re watching closely the effects on you know, the oil and gas market.

We have seen that start to, I would say, impact the global resin prices that are out there so that there is some indications that we’re gonna start seeing some increases coming through on certain product categories related to that. Frankly, you know, just all the operating, you know, if the fuel and those prices continue to increase, I think, you know, we’ll see some of that increase flow through some other product categories more broadly. But specifically, as those resin prices increase globally, we’re starting to hear signs that, you know, we’ll start seeing some increases related to products like PVC, HDPE pipe, could definitely be impacted by that and, you know, definitely things that we’re starting to hear about right now.

Those are, you know, things that we’ll watch closely as this continues to develop, but I view those as, you know, kind of positive signs for us as we look to see some stability with pricing in some of those product lines. Overall, I’d say we kind of view it as neutral to positive, you know, if this kind of disruption continues in the market from that standpoint.

Obviously, any kind of uncertainty, the rising fuel prices within the global economy, you know, we’re definitely concerned that could create a little bit of uncertainty in the macro just demand environment, you know, which is part of why, you know, I think you saw, you know, the nature of the guidance that we put out there was just given a lot of that overall uncertainty that we could experience.

Matthew Bouley, Analyst, Barclays: Got it. Okay. No, that’s great color. Thanks for that, Mark. Secondly, kind of stepping back around some of the growth investments. I heard you saying you’re, you know, you’re focusing investments in areas like data center, maybe treatment plants as well, if I heard you correctly, sort of looking to close that gap versus your competition. I guess number one, just any way to kind of quantify the investments you’re putting in there?

Just obviously we’re trying to dial in the SG&A outlook, but again, kind of stepping back, you know, what are some of the specifics you’re looking to do here, whether it’s from, you know, in terms of your sales force, et cetera, you know, what kind of needs to be done, and what would the kind of resulting impact be on, you know, again, these large projects out there? Thank you.

Brad Cowles, President, Core & Main: Yeah, Matt. Hey, this is Brad Cowles. I’ll take that. You know, the initiatives that I highlighted, kind of the biggest movers for us with the most attractive kind of growth dynamics. I’d put Smart Utility in there, but also the Treatment Plant. The resources that we invest in to do Treatment Plant work.

adapt very well to all of the, what I would just generally call higher capacity, more complex water delivery projects, which are on data centers or large plants, water transmission lines, and actual water treatment plants themselves. That structure that we put in place, one of those national complementary team structures that we use to kind of enhance the capabilities of the local branch, we’re gonna be investing upwards of another 30 people in that initiative this year, just to give you a sense of the scale, and those are resources that are kind of positioned both regionally and nationally. They’re a little bit more mobile and cover a little bit more geography than a branch which is serving generally a kind of a fairly tight radius. They go where the work is.

They follow these strategic national accounts, and you know, they bring that level of expertise that really builds confidence and trust in us and accelerates the ability to win on those bigger projects.

Matthew Bouley, Analyst, Barclays: Great. Thanks, Brad. Good luck, everyone.

Brad Cowles, President, Core & Main: Thanks.

Alex, Call Coordinator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Joe Ritchie of Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Joe Ritchie, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Thank you. Good morning, everybody. First question may be for Mark. You take a look at the guidance of, you know, kinda $950-$980 EBITDA guidance for the year implies 2%-5% EBITDA growth. I guess, how are you thinking about the kinda range of options here between the low end and the high end? If we can maybe dig in a little bit on some of the main components, whether it’s SG&A, you know, gross margins, the investments that you’re making, that would be helpful.

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: Hey, Joe, it’s Robin. I’ll take that one. Thinking about the guide and what we laid out here, obviously it’s an unusual time with a lot of uncertainty with what’s going on in the macro environment, so you know, we felt like we needed to be prudent with what’s going on externally. With the guide, we’ve got the market kinda flattish. We’ll always deliver on that above-market growth, and we do have a little bit of M&A in there that we completed last year. What we’ve got embedded in the guide is expecting pricing to be about flattish for the year. It might look similar to what we saw in FY 2025.

Now, obviously, with what Mark just mentioned on the price of resin increasing, we could see a little bit of lift there, and that’s an opportunity for us. So if you think about the guide and what we’ve laid out and the opportunities that we have to perform on the high end of that or even outside of that, it’s things like, you know, if we get a little bit of price, that’s gonna be incredibly helpful for us on the top line. That will help us get more SG&A leverage. You know, we’re expecting the residential market to continue to be, you know, at the levels that it’s been performing lately, so that’ll be a headwind in the first half of the year for us, given where that activity is sitting today.

If some of the uncertainty, you know, settles out, and we do see a little bit improvement in the markets, then that could obviously help us as well. Any extra lift we get on the sales side will help us hit those SG&A targets and help us get better leverage there. We have a lot of confidence in gross margin. Our private label initiative has been performing really well. We expect that to continue and expect to continue to deliver on gross margin initiatives. I think you asked also on the low end of the guide, obviously, you know, if there’s higher inflation than what we’re expecting. We did see a lot of inflation in FY 2025 that was in the mid-single digits range.

We typically expect to see that in the low single digits range, which is what we’re expecting. If any of that inflation comes in higher or if any of the markets are a little bit weaker, that would bring us in at the lower end of that guidance.

Joe Ritchie, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Super helpful, Robin. Then maybe my follow-on question, you know, either for Brad or for Mark, just on the M&A discussion. So you guys have had just an incredible track record of compounding via M&A over the last several years. We can even go back to the HD Supply days. Like, when I look at this year, this year was a little bit lighter or the most completed year was a little bit lighter. How are you guys thinking about getting back to maybe that cadence of, you know, maybe 2-4 points a year? Is that a opportunity likely to occur this year?

Like, just help us walk us through, like, kind of the 2027 expectations for M&A and your ability to maybe kinda get back to what the more normalized cadence was for the company?

Brad Cowles, President, Core & Main: Yeah. Thanks, Joe. I’ll take that. You know, in terms of the M&A, I’d tell you I’m extremely confident in our capabilities there and the pipeline that we have. You know, even though 2025 for us was a lighter year, we still delivered on the low end of the M&A growth target that we put out from 2%-4%. You know, there just has not been a lot trading in our industry, and we are incredibly well-positioned with the relationships that we have with the opportunities that are out there. It tends to be choppy. We’ve had some lighter years, you know, in our recent history as well. You know, we’ve had some years where it’s come well beyond that range.

You know, I do expect that it will be choppier. I do think, yeah, we’ve got a really good pipeline of opportunities right now that we’re looking at, so expect 2026 will be a year for us where we’re kind of right in that range with, you know, plenty of opportunities that we’re keeping a close eye on that could extend us, you know, beyond that. I feel really good about, you know, the M&A that we’ve got. Then, you know, as you’ve seen in a lighter year, we’re also opening up a record number of greenfields as well. We’ve got both levers. We’re well-positioned to capture that share one way or the other and feel confident in our team’s ability to go do that.

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: Okay, great. Thank you.

Alex, Call Coordinator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Matthew Bouley of Barclays. Your line’s now open, please go ahead.

Matthew Bouley, Analyst, Barclays: Hey, good morning, guys. Appreciate the time here. I guess first off, if we could just talk about the meters business a little bit. I think you guys have sounded pretty excited about this business for some time now. I guess, could you guys just give a little more detail on what level of growth you’re expecting for this segment in 2026? And also how much of a contribution you guys are expecting from the contracts that you guys talked about this past quarter, and just any kind of more color you could give on the magnitude and the timing of that contract would be great.

Brad Cowles, President, Core & Main: Yeah. Thanks, Matt. This is Brad. I’ll take that. This initiative is, you know, it’s been an exciting area for us. We’ve just consistently delivered, you know, at least a low double-digit growth year after year. We continue to invest, and I think we keep getting better. Those large projects that we win can represent in a given year between maybe a third or a little more than a third of kind of our volume. Keep in mind we have a massive underlying base of municipal sales that drive kind of your more everyday repair and replace and upgrade meter projects. Those large ones have been quite interesting and more substantial as we’ve become kind of the preferred prime contractor, if you will, for that scale and complexity of project.

In 2025, we had another incredible year. We were comping, I think 32% growth from the prior year, so it was a bit of a stretch. I think we’re back on our stride. You heard Mark say we pushed a 12% growth in the quarter on the meter initiative. I’d say early innings in 2026, we feel like we’re back on stride even having swallowed that pretty large step change in 2024 to 2025. I’m pretty excited about it. We’re investing additional resources there, much like we are in treatment plant, to keep our coverage strong.

Got a good pipeline of additional large projects and expect to have that same kind of balance going forward in 2026 where we still have a massive base of underlying municipal meter sales and then a nice third to slightly higher coming from those big projects.

Matthew Bouley, Analyst, Barclays: That’s great. Appreciate that. If we could just, like I asked to get a little more detail on what you guys are expecting for the residential end market this year. I think Robin said expecting down in the first half, before leveling off in the second half. I guess any kind of color you can give on what level of declines you guys exited the year at and then how you’re kind of expecting that to shape up through the year would be great.

Brad Cowles, President, Core & Main: Yeah. I would tell you know, as we exited 2025, you know, we felt that it was sequentially, you know, pretty stable but at low levels. So we kind of work our way here into early 2026. We’re definitely in a different position than we were last year at this time. You go back to the early part of 2025, and there was some optimism out there in the, you know, the builder and development world. There were projects that, you know, we saw a lot of good bidding activity on, and we saw some good volume in the early part of 2025, which then, you know, definitely tapered off, you know, as we got into the second quarter and then into the back half.

I’d say sequentially, you know, it’s been stable, but we’re definitely in a different position than we were last year at this time, which is kind of what’s leading us to believe, you know, resi will be relatively soft year-over-year to start the year and should ease in terms of the comparisons as we get into the, you know, second half of 2026.

Alex, Call Coordinator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Mike Dahl of RBC. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Mike Dahl, Analyst, RBC: Morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Can we just stick with the end market conversation? Mark, let’s just put a finer point on things. Resi was down low double digits for the year in 2025 and clearly worse in the second half. Is this commentary to suggest that given the tough comps, resi is likely down something like mid-teens or worse in the first half of the year and still winds up down high single digits, 10%? I think people are just trying to bridge to the, like, more specifically, you know, yes, the resi, but then also if we step back within the flat blended end markets, the quantitative build of what is resi, what is non-resi, what is muni.

If you could help dial that in and maybe also just as part of that quarter-to-date trends, if you could enlighten us a little on how that’s shaped up. Obviously, a lot of weather dynamics, et cetera.

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: Yeah. Hey, Mike. I’ll take that. Starting with resi, the way that we’re thinking about that is that we had a decent residential end market in the first quarter of last year, like Mark mentioned, there was some optimism for the second half of the year, and the home builders were still developing some lots during that time. We saw some good activity in the first quarter. We’re gonna be anniversarying that tougher comp in the first quarter. Expecting the first part of the year to be down in the low double digits to mid-teens range for residential and then sequentially improving throughout the year. The second quarter could look something like down high single digits, and then maybe it’s flattish in the back half of the year. Really not expecting at this point that residential gets much better.

There’s nothing pointing to that yet. Obviously, there’s some optimism there, and there’s some pent-up demand at some point, but the timing of that is uncertain. A tougher comp in the first half of the year for resi, and then that starts to improve, and maybe we get to about flattish by the end of the year because those comps get easier. On residential, we’re expecting that all works out to be about down mid-single digits for resi for FY 2026. Then on the non-residential side, we’re expecting it to perform somewhat similar to FY 2025, which is in the flattish range.

There’s a lot of project types within our non-residential, and there’s some of those project types that are performing well, some of the data centers, some of the street and highway projects, multi-family, and then there’s a lot of that lighter commercial type of work that’s been softer this year, retail, office space, some of those areas. We’re not expecting a lot of change in what we’ve seen there, so expecting the non-residential market to be flattish. On the municipal side, this is an area that’s very steady, stable, strong for us. We had a really good year in FY 2025, expecting that to continue to perform well. In the guide, we’ve got embedded low single digits growth there on the municipal side.

This is an area that’s got ample funding at the state level, at the federal level, at the local level. We feel like this is a really key and important market for us that we think is going to be strong and stable over the short, medium, and long term.

Mike Dahl, Analyst, RBC: That’s helpful. Thanks. Makes a lot of sense. Just as a follow-up, just in light of the recent uncertainty and some of the early signals that you’re seeing where certain categories could have to potentially take price, how are you thinking about inventory management? Because a lot of these categories probably have some slack where if you wanted to lean in, maybe you could buy ahead of some of this. Just curious to get your thoughts on how you’re thinking about that.

Mark Witkowski, Chief Executive Officer, Core & Main: Yeah. I would tell you know, that’s something that, you know, we do really well here at Core & Main is managing kind of the ins and outs of those inventory investments, especially when there’s some indications of price volatility. That’s always been a, I’d say, a really good driver of gross margin expansion for us and that ability to identify where and when we see those price increases and where and when to make those investments from an inventory standpoint. I think our teams do an extraordinary job of, you know, getting a lot of that product ahead of those increases and then working to get that, you know, into the market at the appropriate time.

I’d say that’s been a, you know, a standard part of our execution playbook and something that, you know, we generally do pretty well.

Mike Dahl, Analyst, RBC: Okay. Thank you.

Mark Witkowski, Chief Executive Officer, Core & Main: Yep.

Alex, Call Coordinator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Nigel Coe with Wolfe Research. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

Nigel Coe, Analyst, Wolfe Research: Oh, thanks. Good morning. Well, we’ve got a lot of ground here, but just wondering if maybe you could comment on what you’re seeing through the first quarter. Just given the comments from Robin on the residential market, it looks like we might be below that 2%-3% in the first quarter. Just wanna make sure that’s the case. Then, you know, when it comes to the end market outlook, I think it’s obviously keeping a conservative stance here makes a lot of sense given the backdrop. I think a lot of investors are surprised that pricing is flat given the acceleration we’ve seen in inflation before this Iran shock. Just wondering, is it simply the PVC headwinds here, or are there any other competitive, you know, kind of, impediments to getting price here?

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: Yeah, Nigel, I’ll touch on what we’re seeing so far in the first quarter and then hit on the pricing part. In the first quarter, you know, we’ve got a January 31 year-end, so we’ve been through February and not quite all the way through March yet. I would say what we’re seeing is pretty well in line with our guide. We are expecting the first quarter to be our toughest comp quarter. We are expecting, you know, sales and EBITDA might be down a little bit slightly year-over-year and then improving as we go each quarter. That’s in line with what we were expecting.

We did see about a $15 million-$20 million weather impact the last week of our fiscal year when there was a, you know, deep freeze and a lot of winter severe weather. We’re getting a lot of that back in the first quarter, so we think all of that will just come back in the first quarter. Gross margins are performing strong. SG&A, we’re seeing some of the cost out impact favorability there. Feeling good about the first quarter, obviously on soft markets and, you know, probably be down slightly year-over-year on the quarter. It’s coming in really in line with guide and expect it to improve as we get throughout the year. Then on the pricing side, all of our product categories were basically up in FY 2025 except for PVC.

PVC was down about 15% in the year. You know, there’s a variety of different outcomes that we could see in FY 2026, but we’re not counting on a full recovery of PVC. Some of the oil, increased prices could help either stabilize that or increase it. What we’re seeing today is, you know, PVC will have a, you know, as it’s gone down all throughout the year, we’re gonna have a headwind at least in the first half to three quarters of the year on PVC, even if it stabilizes where it’s at today. That would be the puts and takes.

Nigel Coe, Analyst, Wolfe Research: Okay.

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: We would expect price increases in all of our other product categories.

Nigel Coe, Analyst, Wolfe Research: Thanks, Robin. That’s really helpful. Just quick one on buybacks. I think from the K, it looks like you bought back about 7,000 shares in February, March. That’s a decent chunk of shares compared to what you did in 2025. Just wondering if there’s the intention to keep stepping up buybacks, you know, at these current share prices.

Robyn Bradbury, Chief Financial Officer, Core & Main: Yeah. Yeah, Nigel, we did about $155 million last year, almost $40 million in the first quarter. You know, given where the stock price is at, we’ve got ample cash flow. We’ve got, you know, tons of cash to be able to reinvest in the business M&A and do buybacks. You can expect us to see continued buybacks. We’ve got about over $600 million still remaining on our authorization, that’ll be a big part of our capital allocation going forward.

Nigel Coe, Analyst, Wolfe Research: That’s great. Thank you.

Alex, Call Coordinator: Thank you. I’ll now hand it back to Mark Witkowski for any further remarks.

Mark Witkowski, Chief Executive Officer, Core & Main: All right. Thanks for joining us today. As we wrap up, I wanna leave you with a few key points. Fiscal 2025 was another year of disciplined execution. We delivered our 16th consecutive year of sales growth, drove 3 points of above-market growth through share gains, and structurally expanded gross margins, all while generating strong cash flow. At the same time, we continued to invest in the product categories, footprint, and capabilities that position us to compound these gains over time. Looking ahead, we see a clear path to growth and improved operating leverage. Our initiatives are working, our actions to address cost pressures are in place, and our end markets remain attractive over the long term. Over the last 12 months, I’ve spent meaningful time with customers, suppliers, and associates across the country.

Those conversations reinforced what differentiates this company, our people, our culture, and our consistent focus on execution. I’m grateful for our teams and confident in the opportunity in front of us. Thank you for your continued interest in Core & Main. Operator, that concludes our call.

Alex, Call Coordinator: Thank you all for joining today’s call. You may now disconnect your lines.