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Remax’s mortgage biz shows $1.3M non-GAAP 3Q25 loss



In the time since Vic Lombardo became president of mortgage services at Remax Holdings over two months ago, the company has “taken a new view of the mortgage opportunity,” Eric Carlson, CEO, said in the third quarter earnings call.

Among the units under Lombardo’s purview are Motto Mortgage, which offers mortgage broker franchises, and Wemlo, which handles loan processing. He took the job following the retirement of Ward Morrison.

“In Vic’s first 2 months, he’s rolled [up] the sleeves, dug into the operations, surfacing a number of innovative ideas to drive growth and add additional revenue streams and increase the operational efficiency,” Carlson said. “We’re already putting foundational pieces in place.”

He promised to share more details on Remax’s mortgage strategy in February.

“There’s opportunities there to do a little bit about what we’ve done in real estate, quite honestly, and change the model to be a little bit less fixed and more variable,” Carlson said later in the call. “We’ve got to be in a position to help our network and our LOs really find business and capitalize on business, which not only helps the profitability of their business, but the value of owning a Motto franchise and our value proposition, quite frankly.”

Adjusted EBITDA for the mortgage segment, a non-GAAP measurement, was a loss of $1.3 million, compared with a $1.52 million loss in the second quarter and a loss of $1.12 million one year previous.

The total number of open Motto offices fell to 210 from 219 at the end of the second quarter.

Revenue at the parent company (minus marketing fees) fell by 5.5%, to $165.2 million.

Remax’s year-over-year change in organic revenue included lower mortgage segment revenue and franchise sales.

Total mortgage revenue of $3.39 million included continuing franchise fees of $2.47 million and franchise sales and other revenue of $914,000. This compared with $3.74 million for the third quarter of 2024, with $2.67 million of continuing franchise fees and $1.07 million from franchise sales and other revenue.

For the quarter, Remax Holdings had net income attributable to the company of just under $4 million, compared with $4.7 million in the second quarter and approximately $1 million for the third quarter of 2024.



Deloitte: Banks need overarching vision for AI adoption


Banks in the United States are continuing their investment in AI, which will have both short- and long-term effects on their efficiency ratios.  Publicly held banks are expected to experience a slight increase in their average efficiency ratio — from 56.3% in 2025 to 56.9% in 2026 and 57.1% in 2027, according to Deloitte’s 2026 […]



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Cattle faces a growing threat from a protected vulture spreading north amid climate change



Allan Bryant scans the sky as he watches over a minutes-old calf huddled under a tree line with its mother. After a few failed tries, the calf stands on wobbly legs for the first time, looking to nurse.

Above, a pair of birds circle in the distance. Bryant, hoping they’re not black vultures, is relieved to see they’re only turkey vultures — red-headed and not aggressive.

“Honestly, the black vulture is one of the ugliest things I’ve ever seen,” he said. “They’re easy to hate.”

Black vultures, scavengers that sometimes attack and kill sick or newborn animals, didn’t used to be a problem here. But now Bryant frequently sees the birds following a birth. He hasn’t lost a calf in several years, but they’ve killed his animals before. So now he takes measures to stop them.

In some of his fields, he erects a scarecrow of sorts — a dead black vulture — aimed at scaring off the birds. It’s a requirement of his depredation permit through the Kentucky Farm Bureau, which allows him to shoot a few birds a year. The dead bird keeps the live birds away for about a week, but they eventually come back, he said.

It’s a problem that may grow worse for cattle farmers as the scavenging birds’ range expands northward, in part due to climate change. Lobbying groups have been pushing for legislation that would allow landowners to kill more of these birds, which are protected but not endangered. But experts say more research is needed to better understand how the birds impact livestock and how their removal could affect ecosystems.

Warmer winters and changing habitats expanding birds’ range

Black vultures used to mainly live in the southeastern U.S. and farther south in Latin and South America, but over the past century they’ve started to rapidly stretch northward and also west into the desert Southwest, said Andrew Farnsworth, a visiting scientist at Cornell Lab of Ornithology who studies bird migration.

Warmer winters on average, fueled by climate change, are making it easier for the birds to stay in places that used to be too cold for them. What’s more, the human footprint in suburban and rural areas is enriching their habitat: development means cars, and cars mean roadkill. Cattle farms can also offer a buffet of vulnerable animals for vultures that learn the seasonal calving schedule.

“If there’s one thing we’ve learned from a lot of different studies of birds, it’s that they are very good at taking advantage of food resources and remembering where those things are,” Farnsworth said.

Although black vultures are protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, they aren’t really a migratory species, he said. Instead, they breed, and some disperse to new areas and settle there.

How farmers have been dealing with it

After losing a calf to a black vulture a decade ago, Tom Karr, who raises cattle near Pomeroy, Ohio, tried to move his fall calving season later in the year in hopes the vultures would be gone by then. But that didn’t help — the birds stay all year, he said.

Until newborn calves are a few days old, “we try to keep them up closer to the barns,” said Joanie Grimes, the owner of a 350-head calf-cow operation in Hillsboro, Ohio. She said they’ve been dealing with the birds for 15 years, but keeping them out of remote fields has helped improve matters.

Annette Ericksen has noticed the black vultures for several years on her property, Twin Maples Farm in Milton, West Virginia, but they haven’t yet lost any animals to them. When they expect calves and lambs, they move the livestock into a barn, and they also use dogs — Great Pyrenees — trained to patrol the fields and the barnyard for raptors that might hurt the animals.

The size of their operation makes it easier to account for every animal, but “any loss would be severely detrimental to our small business,” she wrote in an email.

Local cattlemen’s associations and state farm bureaus often work together to help producers get depredation permits, which allow them to shoot a few birds each year, as long as they keep track of it on paper.

“The difficulty with that is, if the birds show up, by the time you can get your permit, get all that taken care of, the damage is done,” said Brian Shuter, executive vice president of the Indiana Beef Cattle Association. Farmers said calves can be worth hundreds of dollars or upward of $1,000 or $2,000, depending on the breed.

A new bill would let farmers shoot the protected birds with less paperwork

In March, lawmakers in Congress introduced a bill that would let farmers capture or kill any black vulture “in order to prevent death, injury, or destruction to livestock.” Many farmers and others in the cattle industry have supported the move, and the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association in July commended the House Natural Resources Committee for advancing the bill.

Farnsworth, of the Cornell lab, said it’s not necessarily a good thing to make it easier to kill black vultures, which he said fill “a super important role” in cleaning up “dead stuff.”

Simply killing the birds, Farnsworth said, may make room for more bothersome predators or scavengers. He said though black vultures can leave behind gory damage, current research doesn’t show that they account for an outsize proportion of livestock deaths.

But many farmers are unwilling to do nothing.

“They just basically eat them alive,” Karr said. “It is so disgusting.”

Cooper-Standard (CPS) Q3 2025 Earnings Transcript


Note: This is an earnings call transcript. Content may contain errors.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

DATE

Oct. 31, 2025

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chairman & Chief Executive Officer — Jeffrey S. Edwards
  • Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer — Jonathan P. Banas
  • Director, Investor Relations — Roger S. Hendriksen

Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email [email protected]

RISKS

  • The company lowered its full-year 2025 guidance for sales and adjusted EBITDA, according to management, due to “various temporary reductions in customer production volume, including on some of our most important platforms.”
  • “A much more significant impact unfortunately, in the fourth quarter, due to the aluminum supply chain disruption that’s hit our largest customer,” according to Jeffrey S. Edwards, is expected, with the precise impact to be seen in Q4 results.

TAKEAWAYS

  • Revenue — $695.5 million in sales for Q3 2025, up 1.5%, driven by favorable foreign exchange and volume/mix, partially offset by customer price adjustments.
  • Gross Margin — 12.5% gross margin in Q3 2025, an improvement of 140 basis points
  • Adjusted EBITDA — $53.3 million, up more than 15.6% from the third quarter of last year, with margin expanded by 100 basis points in Q3 2025 despite modest revenue growth.
  • GAAP Net Loss — $7.6 million net loss in the third quarter, improved from $11.1 million in the same period last year.
  • Adjusted Net Loss — Adjusted net loss was $4.4 million, or $0.24 per share, in Q3 2025, compared to $12 million, or $0.68 per share, in Q3 2024.
  • Cost Savings — $18 million in savings delivered in Q3 2025 from lean and cost-saving initiatives, with $5 million in incremental savings from prior-period actions during Q3 2025.
  • SG&A Expense — Increased by $6 million in Q3 2025, mainly due to stock appreciation on equity-based awards; The share price rose about 72% during Q3 2025.
  • Free Cash Flow — $27 million in net free cash flow for Q3 2025, over $11 million higher year over year, with operating cash flow at $39 million in Q3 2025 and capital spending of $11.2 million (1.6% of sales) in Q3 2025.
  • Liquidity — $314 million in total liquidity as of Q3 2025, comprising a $148 million cash balance and $166 million undrawn ABL facility.
  • Net New Business Awards — $96 million in the quarter and $229 million for the first nine months; 87% linked to innovation and 83% to battery electric or hybrid vehicle platforms in the first nine months of 2025.
  • Safety Performance — Total incident rate of 0.28 per 200,000 hours worked in Q3 2025 (below the world-class benchmark of 0.47); 36 plants (60%) had zero incidents in the first nine months of 2025.
  • Production Disruptions — Short-term customer disruptions (cyberattacks, weather events, labor) had a modest negative impact in Q3 2025, primarily reflected in lower volume/mix.
  • Guidance — Management expects to deliver higher adjusted EBITDA and positive free cash flow for the full year on flat to slightly lower sales, despite anticipated fourth-quarter production headwinds.
  • Capital Structure — The company intends to refinance its first and third lien notes in the coming months, monitoring credit market conditions.

SUMMARY

Cooper-Standard (CPS 15.52%) reported growth in revenue, margin, and adjusted EBITDA in Q3 2025 compared to the third quarter of last year, with disciplined cost efficiencies driving profitability despite flat sales and higher SG&A expense tied to share price appreciation. Management revised full-year 2025 guidance downward due to significant fourth-quarter 2025 volume losses from major customer disruptions, notably from an aluminum supply chain issue at its largest customer, which management views as temporary with future catch-up in production. The company achieved net new business awards primarily in electric and hybrid platforms and maintains confidence in achieving long-term financial targets, including deleveraging, through operational execution and margin expansion.

  • Chief Executive Officer Edwards stated, “We ended the third quarter with 99% of our customer scorecards for quality and service being green,” highlighting strong operational execution.
  • Chief Financial Officer Banas confirmed the need to “generate about $30 million plus of free cash flow in Q4” to offset a $55 million coupon payment, indicating expectations for positive year-end cash flow from working capital improvements.
  • Management emphasized that “any reduction in production volumes related to this latest supply disruption to be temporary” and will not impact long-term margin targets.
  • 87% of net new business awards in the first nine months of 2025 are innovation-driven, and 83% are for battery electric or hybrid vehicle platforms, aligning with evolving automotive demand trends.
  • Chief Executive Officer Edwards noted “further improvements in margins,” expected from 2026 to 2030, based on booked business and faster-to-market Chinese launches.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Net New Business Awards: The total value of newly won contracts for future supply of components, net of any losses of expiring business.
  • Adjusted EBITDA: Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, adjusted for items such as restructuring, one-time charges, and unusual gains or losses.
  • SG&A: Selling, General, and Administrative Expenses; non-manufacturing operating costs, excluding R&D and cost of goods sold.
  • ABL Facility: Asset-based lending credit facility, a revolving line of credit secured by company assets, typically accounts receivable and inventory.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Jeffrey S. Edwards: Thanks, Roger, and good morning, everyone. We certainly appreciate the opportunity to review our third quarter results and provide an update on our business and the outlook going forward. So to begin on Slide five, I’ll highlight some of the key third quarter data points that we believe are reflective of our continuing outstanding operational performance and our ongoing commitment to our core company values. In terms of operations and customer service, we’re on track to have possibly one of the best years in our company’s sixty-five-year history. We ended the third quarter with 99% of our customer scorecards for quality and service being green.

For new program launches, we also continue to deliver strong performance, with 97% of those scorecards green. Our plant managers and our plant employees continue to deliver outstanding performance and value for our customers through their dedication and commitment to excellence. Extremely proud of that. Also, in our plant operations, safety performance continues to be excellent. In fact, during the third quarter, we had a total incident rate of just 0.28 recordable incidents per two hundred thousand hours worked. That’s well below the world-class benchmark of 0.47. Importantly, 36 of our plants have maintained a perfect safety record, a total incident rate of zero for the first March of the year.

That’s 60% of all of our production facilities achieving a perfect safety score and demonstrating that our ultimate goal of zero safety incidents is achievable. We’re proud of our entire global team for their focus and achievement in this most important operating measure. In terms of cost optimization, we had another solid quarter, with our manufacturing and purchasing teams delivering $18 million of savings through lean initiatives and other cost-saving programs. These cost reductions and operating efficiencies combined with revenue growth in the quarter allowed us to achieve a solid 140 basis point improvement in gross margin versus the third quarter of last year.

So despite some of the market headwinds that we’ve been seeing, we continue to drive profitable growth and margin expansion through the execution of our plans and strategies. Finally, we’re continuing to leverage world-class service, technical capabilities, and our award-winning innovations to win new business. During 2025, we received $96 million in net new business awards, which are expected to drive profitable growth as they launch over the next few years. That brings our total net new business awards for the first nine months to nearly $229 million. I will provide some additional detail on this in a few minutes, but first, let me turn the call over to Jonathan P. Banas to discuss the financial details of the quarter.

Jonathan P. Banas: Thanks, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. In the next few slides, I’ll provide some details on our financial results for the quarter and discuss our cash flows, liquidity, and aspects of our balance sheet and capital structure. On slide seven, we show a summary of our results for the third quarter of 2025, with comparisons to the same periods last year. Third quarter 2025 sales were $695.5 million, an increase of 1.5% compared to 2024. The slight increase was driven primarily by positive foreign exchange and favorable volume and mix, partially offset by certain customer price adjustments. As Jeff mentioned, our third quarter 2025 gross margin improved 140 basis points compared to the prior year, to 12.5% of sales.

Adjusted EBITDA in the quarter was $53.3 million, an increase of more than 15.6% when compared to the $46 million we reported in the third quarter of last year. Importantly, we were able to drive further margin expansion of 100 basis points versus the same period a year ago, despite the modest revenue growth and market headwinds. On a U.S. GAAP basis, we reported a net loss of $7.6 million in the third quarter, compared to a net loss of $11.1 million in 2024.

Adjusting for restructuring and other items from both periods, as well as the related tax impacts, adjusted net loss for 2025 was $4.4 million or $0.24 per share compared to an adjusted net loss of $12 million or $0.68 per share in 2024. Our capital expenditures in 2025 totaled $11.2 million or 1.6% of sales, similar to the prior year period. We continue to exercise discipline around capital investments, which are primarily focused on program launch readiness, in order to maximize our returns on invested capital. Moving on to the nine months. For the first nine months of 2025, our sales were essentially flat compared to the first nine months of 2024.

But significantly, and despite flat revenue over the first three quarters, our gross profit margin increased by 170 basis points and our adjusted EBITDA margin improved by 230 basis points compared to the first nine months of last year. Moving to slide eight. The charts on slide eight provide additional insights and quantification of the key factors impacting our results for the third quarter. For sales, favorable volume and mix net of customer price adjustments increased sales by approximately $2 million compared to 2024. The impact of favorable foreign exchange was approximately $8 million. For adjusted EBITDA, lean initiatives in purchasing and manufacturing positively contributed $18 million year over year.

In addition, we continue to realize benefits from our initiatives implemented in prior periods, amounting to $5 million in incremental savings in the third quarter compared to last year. Favorable foreign exchange was a tailwind of approximately $4 million in the quarter. Partially offsetting these improvements were $5 million of unfavorable volume and mix, including customer price adjustments, and the impact of certain short-term production disruptions, $6 million in increased costs in wages and general inflation, and $6 million in higher SG&A expense. The increase in SG&A expense was primarily related to stock price appreciation adjustments for certain equity-based incentive awards, as our share price increased by approximately 72% during the third quarter.

With most of the price gain occurring later in the quarter, this increase and the related incremental expense were not contemplated in early August when we last reported earnings and updated our guidance. Moving to Slide nine. On slide nine, we present the same type of year-over-year bridge analysis for the first nine months of the year. As mentioned, sales were essentially flat for the first nine months, with slight positive volume and mix being offset by unfavorable foreign exchange. Adjusted EBITDA in the first nine months increased by more than $48 million or more than 38% compared to the first nine months of 2024.

The improvement was driven primarily by $63 million of manufacturing and purchasing efficiencies, $17 million of restructuring savings, and $9 million of favorable foreign exchange. These positive drivers were partially offset by $21 million of unfavorable volume mix and price adjustments, approximately $19 million of high wages and general inflation, and $5 million in higher SG&A expense. Again, mainly due to the stock price appreciation discussed earlier. Overall, our SG&A continues to benefit from previous restructuring and cost reduction initiatives and a disciplined management focus on controlling costs. We are pleased with our improving results in 2025.

As our focus on controlling costs, delivering exceptional operational performance, and the launch of new, more profitable programs are having the positive impacts we had planned despite some of the market headwinds we began to see late in the third quarter. Moving to Slide 10. Looking at cash flow and liquidity, net cash provided by operating activities was approximately $39 million in 2025, compared to $28 million in 2024. Capital spending, as mentioned earlier, was approximately $11 million in 2025, resulting in net free cash flow of approximately $27 million for the quarter. More than $11 million higher than the same period last year. We ended the third quarter with a cash balance of approximately $148 million.

Coupled with $166 million of availability on our ABL facility, which remained undrawn, we had solid total liquidity of approximately $314 million as of September 30. We believe that is more than sufficient to support the continuing execution of our business plans and profitable growth objectives in today’s environment. Following the solid results of the first three quarters, and even considering our revised outlook for production volume headwinds in the fourth quarter, we believe we remain on track to achieve positive free cash flow for the full year this year. With respect to our capital structure, we are continuing to evaluate various options to strengthen our balance sheet and further improve our cash flow.

And are carefully monitoring market conditions and developments in the credit markets. We are optimistic that as we continue to deliver improving results, we will be able to favorably refinance our first and third lien notes in the next several months.

With that, let me turn it back over to Jeff.

Jeffrey S. Edwards: Okay. Thanks, John. And in this last portion of our call, I’d like to again comment on our high-level strategic imperatives and how these are positioning us for continuing profitable growth over the next several years. Then I’ll wrap up with a few comments on our near-term outlook and our revised guidance for 2025. So please turn to Slide 12. Our strategies and operating plans are built around the four key strategic imperatives that you see outlined on slide 12. By aligning the company around these common objectives, we’ve been able to drive significant improvements in virtually every aspect of our business.

And by the continuing execution of our plans and strategies, we’re positioning the company to deliver continued profitable growth, further improvements in margins, and significantly improved returns on invested capital as we discussed in last quarter’s call. Moving to Slide 13 or as I name it, my favorite slide in today’s presentation. One of the key improvements in our business has been the increase in our profit margins and overall financial strength of the business. Through our successful strategic execution, we’ve been able to increase our gross profit margins by more than 100 basis points each year over the past three years. And that’s despite reduced or flat production volumes in our two largest operating regions.

Because of our focus on sustainable efficiency and fixed cost reductions, we will continue this trend of expanding margins into the future even if production volumes remain flat. And we would obviously expect to leverage any increase in production volume to drive further profitability and returns. In addition to our cost optimizations, we’re benefiting from continuing launches of new programs and products with enhanced variable contribution margins. As the new programs ramp up, they’ll be replacing the older programs that have lower margins on average. Our book business launch cadence, and the timing of run-out business give us a high degree of confidence in our expanding margin outlook. Turning to slide 14.

Our strategic execution is also enabling business wins that we believe drive further profitable growth in coming years. I mentioned at the beginning of the call that in the first nine months of the year, we’ve received nearly $229 million in net new business awards. Of the total awards, 87% were related to the value-add innovations in product and technology that we’ve introduced into the market. We continue to believe that our strategy and capabilities around technology and innovation are a clear source of competitive advantage for us.

Similarly, 83% of the new awards were related to battery electric or hybrid vehicle platforms, which is an indication of how closely our product offerings and innovations are strategically aligned with the fastest-growing segments of the market. Finally, as we shared last quarter, our growth strategy includes expanding our relationships with the fast-growing Chinese OEMs that are beginning to expand their business globally. This opens up significant opportunity for us to expand both in terms of our customer base as well as geographically where we believe the greatest growth will be occurring over the next several years.

We are proud to be the supplier that our customers turn to for quality components, consistency of delivery, and collaboration on critical design and development of new technologies. And now we’re also the supplier they’re returning to support their global expansion needs. With these awards in hand, and a bright outlook for new business wins ahead, we are increasingly confident that we will be able to execute our plans and achieve our longer-term strategic financial targets for growth, margins, and return on capital. Turning to Slide 15. To conclude our prepared remarks this morning, let me focus on the nearer term and our outlook for the rest of 2025.

Following a somewhat choppy third quarter in which certain of our customers around the world experienced short-term production disruptions from things like cyber attacks, lightning strikes, labor disruptions, just to name a few, we’re now expecting a much more significant impact unfortunately, in the fourth quarter, due to the aluminum supply chain disruption that’s hit our largest customer. While we’re encouraged by public commentary about plans to make up the lost production in future periods, there is no way we can mitigate the impact this will have on our fourth quarter. From a more positive perspective, the statements about making up lost production early next year support our view that the underlying demand for new light vehicles remains strong.

It’s consistent with our plans for strong profitable growth over time as markets normalize. We expect any reduction in production volumes related to this latest supply disruption to be temporary and will not have any lasting impact on our opportunities to achieve our longer-term strategic targets. As a company, we’re maintaining our relentless focus on the aspects of our business that we can control. Operational excellence, delivering world-class quality, service, and innovation to our customers, and continued near-flawless launches of new programs with enhanced contribution margins. As we do this, we’re confident that we will position the company to achieve our strategic financial targets going forward as production volumes normalize.

Turning to slide 16, in the first March of the year, which exceeded our original plans, we are reducing our full-year guidance ranges for sales and adjusted EBITDA to reflect the expected impact of various temporary reductions in customer production volume, including on some of our most important platforms. The waterfall chart on the right breaks out the various drivers of our revised outlook for 2025 full-year adjusted EBITDA, versus 2024 actuals. Our success in delivering manufacturing efficiencies and other cost savings are still the biggest drivers to the positive. But unfavorable volume and mix is now a significantly greater factor to the downside.

Importantly, even with a challenging overall outlook in the fourth quarter, we still expect to deliver significantly higher adjusted EBITDA and positive free cash flow for the full year on sales that are flat to slightly lower than they were in 2024. We want to thank our customers, our suppliers, and all of our stakeholders for your continued confidence and support. We remain committed to working together and finishing the year as strongly as possible. This concludes our prepared remarks. So let’s move into Q and A.

Operator: Thank you. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up the handset before entering your request. To withdraw from the queue, press two. One moment please as we assemble the queue for questions. Your first question comes from Michael Patrick Ward of Citigroup. Please go ahead.

Michael Patrick Ward: Good morning. Jeff, if we look out in 4Q, you know, it’s unfortunate the Ford thing happened, but it sounds like they’re trying to get it accelerated as fast as they can. And then it sounds like they’re gonna try to make it up pretty early in the first half. And it also sounds like they’re gonna add a third shift to Dearborn in line speed. So when you kind of balance it out, it’s really just postponing it into first half 26. Is that how you’re looking at it? And so can we look at first half of 26 where some of the things actually start to accelerate for you?

Is that the way you’re thinking about it?

Jeffrey S. Edwards: That’s exactly how I’m thinking about it. I think while the end of ’25 isn’t quite what we had forecasted because of the event, we’re preparing our business plans for ’26, ’27, and ’28, and certainly, there’s an impact positively to what’s going on in ’26. So yeah, it’s a short-term issue, as I said in my prepared remarks. I have no doubt that the ’26 will reflect improved results beyond what we originally had planned.

Michael Patrick Ward: When we look across the different vehicles you supply components to, if you had to pick one more, they’re increasing the line rate. Would the F-150 be the one? Is it your highest content vehicle?

Jeffrey S. Edwards: Yeah. My short answer would be yes.

Michael Patrick Ward: John, I wonder if you can walk through the gives and takes on the cash flow because that’s a pretty strong cash flow statement you made for 4Q. You have to pay the interest. Right? That was accrued in March. So you have the six-month interest payment. Is that correct?

Jonathan P. Banas: That’s correct. Mid-December is the next coupon due on the first internally notes.

Michael Patrick Ward: And that’s about $30 million. And

Jonathan P. Banas: Actually, closer to $55 million. $55 million combined.

Michael Patrick Ward: Okay. Okay. And then you have working cap so it sounds like working capital should be a strong positive.

Jonathan P. Banas: If you Yeah. It needs to be Mike,

Michael Patrick Ward: Yeah.

Jonathan P. Banas: Right. Yeah. The to get the positive, we need to generate about $30 million plus of free cash flow in Q4. So you’re right, the big benefit that we see as we do every Q4 is improvements in working capital, unwinding that from accounts receivable perspective. And reducing inventory levels as production winds down towards the end of the year. Both of those obviously have a positive cash benefit. And we’re spending less, obviously, in the months of November and into December as well. So that preserves some cash in the balance sheet as well. All that combined will benefit and more than outweigh the $55 million in coupon payment that’s due mid-December. Super. And the F-150 delays disrupt the working capital that much? I guess, because you have to be at four. You know, the timing will matter about the when the production comes out. Because if you think about the timing of average days receivable, things that don’t get produced in October would impact the total quarterly cash flows. But if it’s later in November, December that it that’s not being produced, then that impacts the subsequent quarters cash flow timing.

Michael Patrick Ward: Okay. Well, that’s great news. Thanks, John.

Jonathan P. Banas: You’re welcome.

Operator: Your next question comes from Nathan Jones of Stifel. Please go ahead.

Nathan Jones: Good morning, everyone.

Jeffrey S. Edwards: Morning, Nathan.

Nathan Jones: I guess I’ll start with some of the net new business wins and probably as it I guess, the year-to-date ones more than just focusing on the 3Q ones, and how that impacts, the path to the 2030 targets that you laid out last quarter. What I’m looking for is some more commentary on the linearity of the path from 2025 to 2030. Should we expect the growth and margin expansion to be fairly linear between 2025 and 2030? Is it more back-loaded? I mean, I think some of these Chinese OEM Just any commentary you can give us on the linearity you’re looking at for that, please.

Jeffrey S. Edwards: Yeah, Nathan. This is Jeff. I will tell you that we’ve been at this booking new business at these higher margins now for a couple years plus probably. So, yeah, if you’re gonna take the line from today to 2030, I think it’s pretty linear. Certainly, you’re also correct that the Chinese launches are coming to market faster than most. But even with that, taken into consideration, I would tell you we’re we’re very happy with, what we’re seeing in margin growth. We showed you a little bit of that today, the historical trend line there, and even a glimpse into to what we already know with 2026.

So if you drew the line from ’26 to ’30, you’d keep going on a similar trajectory.

Nathan Jones: I guess to follow-up to that, obviously, they platforms don’t ramp up start ramping up out in 2030. So there are net new business wins that you need to get over the next couple years. At least to get to those 2030 targets. What kind of net new business wins should we be looking for, say, in 2627 and ’28? To check that the company is still on target to get to those 2030 goals.

Jeffrey S. Edwards: I think similar to what we track this year. It’s kinda how we have to do it. Right? You gotta replace what, what’s building out, and you gotta win the new stuff that’s coming. And then if there’s new programs or conquest opportunities on top of that. So historically, it’s been in that same range that you see happening this year. We’ve had some years that were a little better, some years maybe a little bit under it, but I think that’s a pretty good number. Going forward as well.

Nathan Jones: And then maybe a follow-up on the balance sheet. We still had about 4.2, a little over four terms of leverage. Today. I think you guys have targeted getting that down closer to two times in by the 2027. Think you’re still on target to get to there? Does, you know, any of this disruption change that at all, or I still think that you’re on target to get to that kind of leverage by then? Thanks.

Jeffrey S. Edwards: Yeah. This is Jeff. We’re still on target to get there. As we just talked, I think ’26 is actually gonna be better than we originally had planned, not only because of what we what we discussed a few minutes ago with the volumes being made up from some of the fourth quarter disruption. But I also tend to believe that we’re gonna see increases in overall volumes in some of our key regions.

So we don’t have that yet in our forecast, but based on the leading indicators and certainly based on the amount of new models that are being invested in and coming through the system, related to hybrid electric vehicles were pretty excited about the businesses that we’ve been winning and the overall impact we think that’ll have on the next several years. Related to volume.

Nathan Jones: Great. Thanks very much for taking my questions.

Jeffrey S. Edwards: You’re welcome. Thanks, Nathan.

Operator: Your next question comes from Kirk Ludtke of Imperial Capital. Please go ahead.

Kirk Ludtke: Hello, Jeff. John, Roger. Appreciate the call.

Jeffrey S. Edwards: Good morning. Hey, Chris.

Kirk Ludtke: On slide 15, did any of these items impact the third quarter?

Jonathan P. Banas: Hey, Kirk, it’s John. When think about some of the non-aluminum issues, the answer would be yes. Obviously, you’re thinking about the cybersecurity incident at one of our customers, as well as some of the natural disaster weather-induced things. They did impact, you know, September and did put a little bit of a drain otherwise on Q3.

Kirk Ludtke: Okay. Is there was it meaningful? Can you quantify it? Or kinda good?

Jonathan P. Banas: You see it impacted in the lower volume and mix that we would have had otherwise. Certainly not anywhere near as significant as the Q4 impact of the $25 million that you see on the bridge slide. So we were able to essentially manage through that. But when you think of the lost revenue, you know, it’s a big portion of the lower contribution at $53 million of EBITDA. Otherwise, we would have been a couple of million higher than that. Got it.

Kirk Ludtke: Is the are the I know we’ve talked about number one, but are number two and three, do you expect the production lost from number two and number three to be recovered in the ’26?

Jonathan P. Banas: Haven’t heard directly on that from those number one and number sorry, number two and number three customers. But if it’s any indication, I think that they’ll be competing for share and should do well as far as their production ramps.

Kirk Ludtke: Okay. Thank you. And then on slide 14, the new business net new business slide, that’s you know, very helpful to break that out. And can you apportion that 83% between just battery and hybrid?

Jonathan P. Banas: We do have that breakdown, Kirk. I’m gonna have to get back to you on what that current business wins are broken out by hybrid and the true battery electric. But as we’ve as we indicated, the majority of the total is in fact electric electrified, of those platforms or another compared to the ice. Platforms. But we’ll get you that in short order.

Kirk Ludtke: Got it. I appreciate it. Thank you very much.

Operator: As a reminder, if you wish to ask a question, please press one. It appears there are no more questions. I would now like to turn the call back over to Roger S. Hendriksen.

Roger S. Hendriksen: Okay, everybody. Thanks for your engagement this morning. We’ve appreciated your questions. If you do have additional questions that were not addressed on the call this morning, please feel free to reach out to me and if necessary, we can arrange for future discussions with the management team. Thanks again for joining the call. This will conclude today’s session. Thank you.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

Cloudflare shares rise to record after beating sales outlook


Cloudflare Inc. shares surged to a record after posting better-than-expected sales figures that topped quarterly and annual estimates, following a reorganization and the addition of more large enterprise customers. The cybersecurity firm projected sales of $589 million in the fourth quarter, exceeding analysts’ estimates of $580.9 million on average. Cloudflare’s revenue totaled $562 million last […]



Why mortgage rates could keep falling, even if Fed pauses in December


“I would say that if the news continues to show that the employment sector remains weak, and that if we see that tariff pressures are eased, like what’s going on with China, I think the mortgage rates will settle back down,” Cohn told Mortgage Professional America. “The markets always tend to be very reactionary. And I think without any concrete data to support a move one way or the other, that the moves can be exaggerated.”

She said the reaction was seen in the 10-year Treasury, which is often most closely associated with mortgage rates. For the second straight Fed meeting, the 10-year jumped after the rate cut announcement. She believes there was no reason for that and that it was an overreaction of the market.

“It’s sort of like trading in the stock market the day after a holiday or a half day, where it’s all the junior traders that are in there, and market moves can be exaggerated because of lighter volume,” Cohn said. “Hopefully, the government will find a way to reopen at some point in the near future. Other than the remarks and disappointing the markets, there was no data that supported bond yields surging 10 basis points.

“It is all on Powell’s comments, and then another Fed member could come out and speak next week and say something very different, and the markets could turn around again. That’s all the markets have to trade on right now.”

Powell’s hawkish comments

Cohn said the rate cut announced Wednesday was expected, but a larger cut really wasn’t in play due to the lack of data the central bank had at its disposal.

Ukraine says its troops still holding out in Pokrovsk as Moscow says pincer closing




Ukraine says its troops still holding out in Pokrovsk as Moscow says pincer closing