Skip to main content

AI assistant

Sign in to chat with this filing

The assistant answers questions, extracts KPIs, and summarises risk factors directly from the filing text.

NORDSON CORP Call Transcript 2026

May 21, 2026

Call Transcript

NORDSON CORP

Download source file

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us and welcome to Nordson Corporation's second quarter fiscal year 2026 conference call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. I will now hand the conference over to Lara Mahoney. Lara, please go ahead. Thank you. Good morning. This is Lara Mahoney, Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Communications. I'm here with Sundaram Nagarajan, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Daniel Hopgood, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. We welcome you to our conference call today, Thursday, May 21st, to report Nordson's fiscal 2026 second quarter results. You can find both our press release as well as our webcast slide presentation that we will refer to during today's call on our website at www.nordson.com/investors. This conference call is being broadcast live on our investor website and will be available there for 30 days. During this conference call, we will make references to non-GAAP financial metrics. We've provided a reconciliation of these metrics to the most comparable GAAP metric in the press release issued yesterday. Before we begin, please refer to slide two of our presentation, where we note that certain statements regarding our future performance that are made during this call may be forward-looking based upon Nordson's current expectations. These statements may involve a number of risks, uncertainties, and other factors as discussed in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission that could cause actual results to materially differ. Moving to today's agenda on slide three, Naga will discuss second quarter highlights. He will then turn the call over to Dan to review sales and earnings performance for the total company and the three business segments. Dan will also discuss the balance sheet and cash flow. Naga will then share a high-level commentary about our enterprise performance and provide an update on the fiscal 2026 third quarter and full-year guidance. We will then be happy to take your questions. With that, I'll turn to slide four and turn the call over to Naga. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining Nordson's fiscal 2026 second quarter conference call. I'm very pleased to report a strong second quarter where all three segments contributed to our organic growth performance, surpassing the midpoint expectations of last quarter's sales and earnings guidance. We built upon the momentum of the first quarter with record sales of $741 million. This is an 8% increase over the prior year, which is inclusive of 7% overall organic growth. Order entry momentum continued throughout the quarter with accelerated activity in the last couple of months, driving up backlog 18% organically compared to the prior year. Solid execution and volume leverage drove record profit performance for the quarter, delivering EBITDA of $235 million, which was a second quarter record and 32% of sales. Adjusted earnings per share of $2.86 were also a second quarter record. This was an increase of 18% compared to prior year. I would also like to highlight our free cash flow of $170 million. Our free cash flow conversion over 100% of net income continues to be a strength, enabling a healthy mix of shareholder returns and reinvestment in growth. We strategically deployed this cash to repurchase shares, return dividends to shareholders, and maintain our debt leverage while continuing to invest in the company. During the quarter, we acquired CapstanAG, a small but strategic precision agriculture company in North America. This bolt-on deal, which was valued at 9 times adjusted EBITDA, enables Nordson to grow our precision agricultural portfolio with mid-tier OEMs in the region. I'll talk more about the Capstan deal and enterprise performance in few moments, first, I'll turn the call over to Dan to provide a detailed perspective on our financial results for the quarter. Thank you, Naga, and good morning, everyone. On slide number five, you'll see second quarter fiscal 2026 sales were a second quarter record of $741 million, up 8% from the prior year second quarter sales of $683 million. The second quarter 2026 sales included an organic increase of 7%, driven by growth in all three of our segments, as well as a favorable currency translation impact of 3%. This result was slightly offset by the net impact of the medical contract manufacturing divestiture we completed in the fourth quarter of last year, and the contribution of the small Capstan acquisition that was completed during the quarter. Adjusted operating profit increased 11% year-over-year to $199 million, or 27% of sales, driven by increased SG&A leverage on the strong organic sales growth. EBITDA was up 8% year-over-year to $235 million, also a second quarter record. EBITDA margin as a percent of sales was 32% in line with the prior year. Incremental EBITDA contribution in the quarter was about 31%. While this is on the lower end of our typical sales conversion of mid to upper 30%, it's a 300 basis point improvement versus first quarter incrementals, and in line with our expectations to return to normal incremental performance as the year plays out. Looking at non-operating income and expenses, net interest expense during the quarter was $22 million, a decrease of $4 million versus the prior year, driven by lower year-over-year debt levels and a stable to declining rate environment. Other expenses on a GAAP basis increased $30 million year-over-year. There's a couple of drivers behind this that are important to understand and have been adjusted out of our non-GAAP earnings. The biggest driver was a one-time pension settlement transaction we completed during the quarter. We were able to annuitize approximately $113 million, or just under 1/3 of our remaining U.S. pension obligation, at a very competitive discount of 7.5%. There was zero cash outlay required for this settlement. However, the transaction resulted in a one-time $24 million pre-tax charge as part of the settlement. In addition to retiring the obligation, the settlement further improves our funded status for the remaining pension obligation and favorably impacts our ongoing pension cost. In addition to the settlement charge, other expense includes $10 million of non-cash mark-to-market charges for minority investments. You'll recall that in Q1, we actually marked these investments up by $22 million. The Q2 adjustment just reflects the non-cash fluctuation in value during the quarter. Excluding these non-cash charges, other expense was actually slightly favorable year-over-year. Our tax expense on a U.S. GAAP basis was $24 million, for an effective tax rate of 17%, inclusive of the impact of the non-cash losses I just mentioned, and acquisition-related amortization and costs. On an adjusted basis, our effective tax rate was 18%, in line with the prior quarter. We now expect our full-year tax rate to be in the range of 18%-19% on an adjusted basis, which is slightly better than our previous annual guidance range for fiscal 2026. I should also mention that this improved outlook for tax rate is very much sustainable and reflective of our ongoing rate expectations. GAAP net income in the quarter totaled $117 million, or $2.09 per share. Excluding acquisition-related amortization and costs and the non-cash losses, adjusted earnings per share totaled a second quarter record of $2.86 per share, $0.06 above the midpoint of our quarterly guidance, and an 18% increase from prior year adjusted earnings per share of $2.42. This improvement in year-over-year earnings reflects solid operating leverage from the organic sales growth, as well as improved capital leverage through strategic cash flow deployment. Now let's turn to slides six through eight to review the second quarter 2026 segment performance. Industrial Precision Solutions sales were a second quarter record of $350 million, an increase of 10% compared to the prior year second quarter. Organic sales increased 5% compared to the prior year, with a favorable currency impact of 4% and an acquisition impact of roughly 1%. Growth was driven by improving industrial coating and polymer processing systems demand, ongoing growth in our precision agricultural end markets, and stable demand in broader consumer and industrial end markets. As a result, EBITDA was $124 million in the quarter, or 35% of sales. This is up 9% over prior year, largely due to the higher sales volumes. Turning to slide seven, you'll see Medical and Fluid Solutions sales of $213 million, also a second quarter record, increased 5% compared to the prior year's second quarter. Organic sales increased 8% in the quarter, driven by contributions from both our engineered fluid solutions and our medical product lines. We're pleased to see solid growth in our medical product lines following a slower start to the year. Divested sales from the medical contract manufacturing business had a negative impact of approximately 4% compared to the prior year. EBITDA for Medical and Fluid Solutions was $79 million, or 37% of sales, which was an increase of 3% from the prior year EBITDA of $77 million. EBITDA margins during the quarter were slightly compressed versus the prior year due to the impact of a near-term product startup headwind in selected interventional medical product lines. This should become an opportunity as the year progresses. Turning to slide eight, you'll see Advanced Technology Solutions sales were an all-time quarterly record of $178 million, a 10% increase compared to the prior year's second quarter. The 8% organic sales increase in the quarter was most notable in our electronics dispense product lines and reflects ongoing strength in semiconductor end market demand, which we're also seeing in orders across all of our ATS product lines. Second quarter EBITDA was a record $48 million and also a record EBITDA margin of 27% of sales, representing an increase of 22% compared to the prior year second quarter EBITDA of $40 million or 25% of sales. The improvement in EBITDA margin compared to prior year reflects SG&A leverage on the high single-digit organic growth. Overall record margins reflect the sustainable operational and footprint changes we've made within the segment in prior years, guided by the NBS Next growth framework. Finally, turning to the balance sheet and cash flow on slide nine. At the end of the second quarter, we had cash on hand of $102 million, and net debt was approximately $1.8 billion. Our leverage ratio of 1.9 times continues to improve from last year and is now actually below the low end of our long-term target range. This, along with our strong cash flow generation, provides us with significant firepower to strategically deploy capital, including the acquisition of strategic assets. Our free cash flow generation was $170 million during the quarter, resulting in a 119% conversion rate on net income, excluding the non-cash losses I mentioned a moment ago. This represents the fourth consecutive quarter above 100% conversion, despite the accelerated revenue growth we've delivered. It's also worth noting here again that the pension annuitization we completed during the quarter, on quite favorable terms, retired about 30% of our U.S. obligation, further minimizing our long-term obligations and locking in the long-term funded status for the remaining plan obligation with no expected ongoing cash requirements. As noted on slide 10, our capital allocation continues to be both balanced and value-seeking. During the quarter, we invested $10 million in capital projects to support current and future organic growth, paid $46 million in dividends to our shareholders, repurchased $43 million in shares on the open market, and reduced net debt by $93 million. We also made a strategic investment in our growing precision agriculture business by acquiring CapstanAG. Naga will give more color on that in a moment. To summarize the quarter, and really the first half of the year, we've achieved strong organic sales growth with all of our segments contributing nicely while maintaining our strong EBITDA margin performance. All three of our segments achieved record second quarter sales, and our ATS segment achieved an all-time record quarterly performance. Our cash conversion remains strong, allowing us to strategically deploy capital to sustainably grow the franchise and return value to shareholders. Our teams once again delivered on their commitments for the quarter and worked to grow backlog to position us for success in the second half of the year. Our end market thesis and momentum supports our growth, and the Ascend strategy is positioning us well to deliver for our stakeholders. With that, let's turn to slide 11, and I'll turn the call back to Naga. Thanks, Dan. It's been a very strong first half for Nordson. We are delivering above-market organic growth through accelerating demand in key end markets, our differentiated technology, close to the customer business model, and the execution of the NBS Next growth framework. Before I talk about our end markets, I would like to share more color on the small acquisition I mentioned earlier. Nordson acquired CapstanAG, a precision agriculture technology leader in North America. Headquartered in Topeka, Kansas, Capstan has a strong reputation built upon its innovative pulse width modulation systems. These specialized nozzle-by-nozzle controls drastically increase efficiency and reduce waste for row crop orchard planters and aerial sprayers. Paying 9 times adjusted EBITDA, this strategic acquisition gives Nordson Precision Agriculture another leg for growth in North America focused on mid-tier OEM customers. Capstan's entrepreneurial culture and customer-centric business model align closely with the growth objectives of our precision agricultural division. Our existing precision agricultural business, which began with the ARAG acquisition, had a small presence in North America. We are already consolidating our facilities into Capstan's existing footprint in Topeka, Kansas, to be closer to the North American mid-tier customers and grow our expanded product offering in this end market. Acquisitions remain a critical component of our growth strategy. As Dan noted, we are active in the M&A market with a robust pipeline. We remain focused on opportunities that meet both our strategic and financial criteria. We have been very intentional in building a growth-biased portfolio of precision technologies, as you will see in slide 12. More than 50% of our portfolio is now in growth end markets, including semiconductor, electronics, and medical, with remaining exposures in more stable GDP plus end markets. This diversification gives me confidence in our expectations for the remainder of the year and beyond. Within electronics and semiconductor applications, our dispense and surface treatment product lines continue to drive growth, while our test and inspection systems that ensure the quality of semiconductor packaging are also inflecting. We also see this growth reflected in our engineered fluid solutions product lines, where growth is being driven by electronics applications. Growth in general and automotive electronics remains somewhat muted, but there are signs of growing capacity needs in these applications. After a modest first quarter, medical end markets are steadily returning to normalized growth. The long-term growth drivers remain unchanged, including aging population, chronic illnesses, and technology investments in minimally invasive procedures, biopharma, and the increasing use of diagnostics. Within consumer non-durable, investments in packaging and product assembly are sustaining. Industrial end markets also remain stable, particularly automotive and polymer processing applications are improving as the year progresses. We are well-positioned to meet the demands of our customers in these end markets. Turning now to our outlook, starting on slide 13. We enter the third quarter with strong order entry and increased backlog, which is up 18% over the prior year. Order entry momentum was broad-based in the quarter, with all segments contributing. At current exchange rates, foreign exchange, which has been a contributor to the growth in the first half, will be essentially neutral in the second half year-over-year. These trends position the company to deliver third quarter fiscal 2026 sales in the range of $760 million-$790 million. Third quarter adjusted earnings are forecasted to be in the range of $2.95-$3.15 per diluted share. Turning to slide 14. Based on the momentum in our end markets, as evidenced by our backlog and order entry, we are increasing our full-year guidance. Sales are now expected to be in the range of $2.93 billion-$3.01 billion, and adjusted earnings to be in the range of $11.30-$11.80 per diluted share. Our updated guidance balances the strong demand momentum with the appropriate prudence needed, given the potential for a range of macroeconomic outcomes. We have a high level of confidence in the midpoint of our range, and it would take a meaningful slowdown in order activity driven by macro conditions to move us towards the low end. At the same time, if we sustain the current demand trends, particularly in electronics end markets, we believe we are well-positioned to deliver the upper end of our guidance. We delivered a very strong first half of fiscal 2026, highlighted by record performance and ongoing momentum across our end markets. Our NBS Next growth framework, close to the customer business model and differentiated precision technologies, positions us well to continue compounding profitable growth. As always, I want to thank our customers and shareholders for your continued support. In particular, I want to thank Nordson employees who are passionate about meeting the needs of our customers. Our focus on innovation and operational excellence continue to position us well to serve our customers. With that, we will pause and take your questions. Your first question comes from the line of Matt Summerville with D.A. Davidson. Matt, your line is open. Please go ahead. Thanks. Morning, just a couple of quick ones here. On the medical side of things, should we assume that growth going forward is now sustainably on track to consistently deliver the algorithm as you guys had historically advertised? Could you give a little bit more detail on the interventional product headwind that you referenced there, Dan? Yeah. Good morning, Matt. Thanks for the question. 8% growth in the quarter, we were quite happy with. I would say, if you pull that apart, our medical product lines are continuing to track towards normalized growth. We saw strength in our engineered fluid dispense products, which are also part of that segment as well during the quarter. That's part of what's driving the growth. I would say that's the area that we saw a little bit of upside. I would say medical is on track and still returning to normal growth rates of what we would call 6%-8% as a target. Everything's on track. The 8% overall, I would say is a pretty good precursor, but the mix within is still a little bit different than I'd say long-term expectations. Then your second question on the conversion. This is really a near-term issue that we're working through with the material change in one of our medical product lines. It's actually a regulatorily required material change, which drove some operational inefficiencies in the quarter. It's a short-term changeover issue that we see clear line of sight towards working through, which is why I said that really becomes an opportunity as the year plays out. A one-time kind of changeover requirement based on some regulatory requirements with the customers. Just to add to that, Matt, what I would tell you is the medical business order entry and backlog buildup allows us to have this confidence that we are returning to normalized growth in this segment. Understood, thank you for the color. Then maybe over to the semiconductor-facing business. Can you just kind of review how you're thinking about Nordson's positioning therein, views on cycle durability, and maybe a little bit more granularity or quantification to the extent you can on how this cycle is reading through into orders and backlog? Thank you. Yeah. The ATS segment, if you look at our 18% backlog growth, is one of the strongest because of robust backlog growth in ATS. If you remember and recall some of the conversation we had a number of years ago, during the downturn, one of the best things our teams did was to reposition the business in a couple of different areas. One, we diversified away from just our dispense businesses. Now we have test and inspection businesses that are delivering growth. In addition, we also had a real nice work that was done around diversification of customers going away from reliance on one or two large customers. Third, we were able to optimally reposition our footprint so that we are in regions where our customers need us to be. Three things of work that we've done in this period of time that has allowed us to position the business. On top of this, what you have is our close to the customer business model, allowing us to innovate on technologies that are needed for our customers as the new AI applications occur, as AI infrastructure happens, and semiconductors become more complex, more difficult to manufacture. All these three things, diversifying customers, operationally being where our customers need us to be, innovating on technologies and application they need us to be, sort of has allowed us to be in this place that we are benefiting from this robust market growth. Where are we at on the cycle? I would tell you we're in the early stages. It is, as always, we know this is a difficult business to predict, but based on what you can see in the marketplace, based on what you can see with our customers, I would definitely tell you we're in the early stages. In terms of number of applications, if you think about this business, over 50% of this business is in semiconductor now. There are numerous applications that we are part of. Lots of new technologies, I think we have talked about with you around where we are headed in this cycle. There is more technology and innovation that is happening in this business that will allow our customers to really get after the AI compute needs that they have. A couple of things that you would probably be reading about is panel-level packaging. It's very early stage, but we are participating in developing these technologies. If you think about optical fibers and increased content of optical fibers in AI infrastructure, that's another big area. number of applications benefiting us because of our ability to co-develop technology with our customers. Right? Lastly, what I will tell you is predominantly, we are seeing the growth today in our electronics dispense business and our test and inspection businesses are beginning to inflect, and that is more to come there. Thanks, Nag. Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. Jeff, your line is open. Please go ahead. Yeah. Hi, good morning. Good morning. Good morning, Jeff. Thanks for the explanation on the medical kind of material issue impacting margins. Can you just talk about industrial specifically, kind of decent growth, kind of flat to down margins? Anything in there, price cost or mix, and then how you see that playing out into the second half as I think last year your margins ticked up nicely for that business? Yeah. The IPS business, we are really glad to see that we have returned to normalized growth. We delivered 4% organic growth in this segment in the first half. That is a really strong performance for this business. Where we are focused on is to simply take this view that our margins are best in class for the company as well as for this segment. What is really important is for us to continue to focus on the market and be able to deliver growth, and that's what we're doing in this business. If you look at the pieces and parts of this business, I would tell you the packaging product application, adhesive dispensing is doing really well, sustaining growth, where we expect delivering above-market growth. If you think about our plastics and our industrial coating businesses, they are certainly improving. Our precision ag business is also growing nicely. In terms of margins, Dan, you want to comment about that? Yeah. I think Naga mentioned it. I'll say this, Jeff, I mean, clearly, and this doesn't just apply to IPS. I would say clearly, we are operating in a bit of an inflationary environment right now. When I say that, I would include tariffs in that. Tariffs in itself are not material, but I would say it's part of the broader inflationary impact we're seeing as we look at the price of components and resins and other inputs. All of our businesses are managing through that. We're managing through that with selective pricing where we need to, with offsetting cost actions where we need to. I think that's why you're seeing a little bit on the lower side of incrementals and IPS. That's a short-term issue. It's something that we'll work through, and I think to Naga's point, what we're really focused on in this environment is how do we maximize growth while maintaining our margin performance, which is essentially what we did in Q2. Okay, great. Just can you talk through the moving pieces to the guidance? I guess it sounds like lower tax. Maybe you can give us a revenue assumption or how much is included from this acquisition? It seems maybe the backlog is more shippable in 4Q relative to maybe previous expectations, but maybe flush that out. Yeah, I'll give you maybe a couple of pieces of flavor on that. I'll start on the sales front. FX has been a tailwind for us in the first half of the year. At current rates, that becomes a neutral item in the second half of the year because the rate changes that we've seen kind of started in the second half of last year. Year-over-year, think of FX as neutral. The net impact of M&A, that's both the divestiture and the new acquisition, which is a small acquisition, is a slight negative of roughly 1% in the back half of the year. The rest of the guidance is really around growth. I think in the opening comments, I think Naga said it quite well. We have high confidence in our midpoint outlook. We have seen, I would say, accelerated demand really accelerating the last couple of months of the quarter, I would say even carrying into the first weeks of the new quarter. If that continues, I think that's where we see the upper end playing out. It would take a meaningful pullback in order activity for us to be in the lower end of our guidance range. Again, just trying to give you a little bit of the flavor and the thinking in this fairly dynamic environment. We think it's the right way to think about the second half, high confidence in the midpoint of our sales outlook with opportunity if things continue to inflect. Yeah. I think additionally, what I would tell you, if you look at our backlog and where these components are coming from, all segments are contributing. That is, for us, probably the most exciting part is that all of our businesses are contributing. The momentum across the company is strong, and that's why you see us increasing guidance. Yeah. I think on the conversion side, Jeff, again, in the environment that we're in, if I think of last year, we had incrementals in the 50% range. In an inflationary environment, that's not realistic, right? I think this is going to be a year where it's really about maintaining margins as we grow, as opposed to expanding margins in an inflationary environment. I think that's the other flavor I would give you as you think about the second half. Okay, appreciate it. Your next question comes from the line of Mike Halloran with Baird. Mike, your line is open. Please go ahead. Okay, thank you. Morning, everyone. Good morning. Morning. Just some clarifications then on what you just mentioned. One, is the assumption sequential normalcy from the trend you are seeing right now? In other words, are you just assuming trends stay normal? It feels like there is maybe a little flattening from 3Q to 4Q in the guide. Obviously, I get the confidence you guys are exhibiting here. I just want to make sure I understand that. Also related to the last answer, just the backlog conversion, is that a pretty normal conversion timeline as we sit here? Any signs of backlog building farther out for capacity purposes, particularly on the ATS side? Just any nuance on that? Yeah. On the backlog piece, I appreciate the question, Mike. On the backlog piece, I would say no fundamental change. Our backlog in general, the majority, I would say, turns certainly within six months. In some cases, certainly within the quarter. We do have some portion of our backlog that's starting to bleed into 2027, but I would say that's the minority in it. No real fundamental change in overall backlog timing. Yeah, I think that's the simple answer to your question. I think as far as the expectation, look, I think we have good visibility, certainly, to the third quarter. 60% of our business is consumables and single use kind of turnover. Near term, I think we have high confidence in that. I think we're still being prudent, right? There's some dynamic things happening in the world right now. If you ask me, what do we worry about? Look, if some of the things going on in the macro environment start to create, let's say, raw material shortages or issues for our customers, that's what we worry about, right? If some of these things have more broader implications on the industries we're serving, and there's some limited pullback, I would say that's what we're just being prudent about if I think about the fourth quarter. The reason you hear the confidence in what we're suggesting is that we're not seeing any of that, correct, in our demand patterns right now. Yeah. No, that makes a lot of sense. Then the coatings and plastic side, starting to see some better trends. Maybe talk about what you think is driving that, beyond just comparisons, as well as the durability of that dynamic? Appreciate it. Yeah. I would say, actually what we're seeing there, really not a surprise. Going back to last year, we said that certainly there was a big pullback in those markets, but we were confident that that had hit the trough in the fourth quarter. I would say we're seeing normal gradual recovery in both of those markets through the first half, in line with what we expected. Certainly not what I would call a rebound, but nice normal recovery. Thank you, appreciate it. Yep. Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Buscaglia with BNP Paribas. Andrew, your line is open. Please go ahead. Hey, good morning, everyone. Morning. Morning. Yeah, I just wanted to check your Industrial Precision is. You guys sound confident, and things are improving at end market-wise and trend-wise. What about within that segment, or maybe just talking broadly, the mix of that aftermarket sales versus systems? Are your customers signaling more confidence in moving forward with some bigger CapEx decision making, and is that already underway? That's being reflected in backlog. I would say improved order entry, both in systems and parts, signaling what our customers feel in terms of a broader recovery. If you look at all the different businesses, there is a momentum in the industrial businesses that has allowed us to post a 4% organic growth. This is at the high end of what these businesses have done. If you look at our backlog building, we are seeing confidence in system orders. Yeah, I think just to add one other piece of flavor to that, there's really been no, I'd say, fundamental change in our mix of systems versus parts for IPS. It's been pretty close around that 60/40. If I look at Q2, actually parts are slightly higher as a percent, but again, not meaningful, a couple of percent. No big system inflection, I think is maybe the message there. Yeah, okay. Yeah, I wanted to check the cash flow has been solid. I'm wondering, you did a small deal, you say in the slides you got about $900 million in capacity still left. I know you got some debt pay down, I wonder what the M&A environment looks like into year-end for you, in that other companies seem to be signaling valuations are maybe ever so slightly normalizing. If you could give us some insight into what you're seeing there, that'd be great. Yeah, our M&A activity continues to be robust. We have a pipeline that's pretty active. We continue to work it. We're going to stay disciplined, right? We're going to stay disciplined against our strategic criteria, as well as our financial returns criteria. What we don't talk about are things that we've been part of and didn't bring to fruition for many different reasons. The activities are pretty strong. Our focus is the same. We're continuing to be focused around our medical business growth, test and inspection, and any technology adds, bolt-on adds to our strong existing portfolio of businesses, right? Our industrial businesses, our ATS businesses. Wherever there is an opportunity to bolt on technology, we will do that. Big strategic acquisitions are focused on medical. Got it. Thanks, Naga. Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. Your next question comes from the line of Walter Liptak with Seaport Research. Walter, your line is open. Please go ahead. Hi, thanks. Good morning. Morning. Morning. I want to ask one about the ATS order strength. I wonder if there's a way you could quantify it for us a little bit more. Is it up single digits, double digits? I wonder if you could talk a little bit more about the broadening, I think, of the technology from electronics dispense to more T&I. Why is there sort of a lag from dispense to T&I? Maybe I'll take the first part of that, and then I'll hand it off to Naga, and appreciate the question, Walt. Yeah, look, we don't give backlog and order level details at a segment level, but I think I'll maybe reiterate some of the earlier comments. With backlog up 18%, that was broad-based with all segments contributing to that, and I would actually say, and I think Naga mentioned this, I would say particular strength in our ATS segment contributing to that 18%. I think you can easily draw a double-digit increase to ATS from those statements. If anything, I would say in line with or better than that 18% overall. Let's talk about some of the applications. There is not really a lag between these different businesses. Right now, the strength is in our dispense businesses. You could correlate that there are more dispense businesses versus test and inspection, right? If you look at a single line, you're going to have more dispense units versus T&I units. In terms of lag, those are just business dynamics, and I wouldn't read any much more than that. We are seeing similar levels of growth in terms of demand from both these dispense as well as test and inspection. My comments were more around if you compare to before, ATS today is a much broader set of applications, broader set of technologies. That's probably what I was trying to say. Yes, I did mention around that being a lag, but that's not related to any dynamics in the marketplace, rather than it just happens to be such that. There were cases last year, we were growing our test and inspection faster than we were growing our dispense business. This year, the last three quarters, our dispense business is far more robust than our test and inspection business. When we look at our demand, look at our customer projects, look at all the things that we're working on, there is no difference really. Okay, great. Then as sort of a follow-up to an earlier question about the backlogs and the cycle times. I think some of those six months cycle times from backlog to shipment is probably longer in industrial but shorter in medical and advanced tech. So I wonder if you could talk specifically about those differences, and then the AT in the Advanced Tech segment. Are they significantly shorter in Advanced Tech? Yeah, I hate to say this, it really depends to some extent. It really depends on the mix of the orders coming in. The longer cycle times tend to be tied to our larger, more complex systems. Again, if you look at the mix, even in medical, while it's all consumable products, there's a lot of times that we have customers that will place three-month POs, right? It's one PO that goes into the backlog that gets issued or released over three months. It's really, I hate to say it depends. What I would say generally is, consumables, smaller kind of, let's just call it our high volume smaller systems tend to get delivered much quicker, even within the quarter. It's really our larger systems that tend to be more the three to six or even beyond, somewhat dependent not just on the system, but also because it tends to be tied into a larger product or project that our customers are working on, and it's really about their timing. Yeah. Based on what Dan is telling you, right? It's exactly what you're talking about. Well, our largest system businesses are more in IPS, less in ATS, right? You are right. Our largest system backlog converting into shipments in that six-month period, it's more around that large system businesses, which are predominantly in IPS. If you think about ATS, you still have systems that ship within the quarter, right? Why Dan says it depends is our customers will give us the order in this quarter, but would tell us, "Hey, I want this in the fourth quarter," right? That we don't control, even though our lead times are pretty good. We have significantly improved our lead times from what used to be 16, 18 weeks to now less than seven, eight weeks, and we could even push things into four weeks if somebody wants it. It's not really an issue of the company as much as what the customer wants as well, right? MFS predominantly is consumables. Yes, the orders you get, you can ship them within the quarter, within the week, within the month. It depends on what order you got. If you got these long-dated blanket orders, then they don't, right? We're sorry to give you an answer that is broad-based, but it is the circumstances. In general, what you want to take away from this conversation, order momentum strong across all segments, all segments contributing, backlog up 18%, gives us a high level of confidence at the midpoint of our sales guide. No fundamental change in the delivery requests. We're not taking one-year-out orders and things of that nature. Yes. It's pretty much in line with what we would typically see. Okay, got it. All right, thank you for that explanation. Your next question comes from the line of Robert Jamieson with Vertical Research Partners. Robert, your line is open. Please go ahead. Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. Good morning. Good morning. Morning. Just a quick one on IPS, just kind of higher level. When I think about the precise nature of your dispensing offer in IPS and inflationary input environment, your offering really positions you as a cost savings partner in a way. Do you think if we see persistently high input costs, could this act as like a medium-term driver for consumables refresh demand for IPS customers that could coincide with the improvements that you're seeing in systems level demand? Yes. Is this kind of the right way to think about that? How might this be or turn into like a medium term kind of demand driver for you all? Absolutely. You are absolutely right in that what we offer is material savings across the entire product line. Material savings, of course, accuracy, precision, speed, things that matter. This drive for efficiency, not only because of waste of materials, but it is also because it's not available. Hence, you are looking at somebody that goes along across the entire portfolio, right? It's not only the adhesives, it goes across the coatings businesses, it goes across our precision ag business as well, because we do believe this is a really strong value proposition that our teams are marketing out there with our customers because there is a real need for it. When you suddenly apply more or you're changing materials, that's another one. When you run out of certain materials, you're trying to change materials. Technical help, application help, things that the company is really good at, I think will help us. That's really helpful, thank you for that. Just two quick ones, just on CapstanAG. Should we think about the incremental revenue addition? I saw there was $2 million or so, and you owned it for maybe a month. Should we think about that as a $5 million-$6 million incremental revenue as we put that into our models? For the second half? Yeah, that would be a good estimation. It's roughly a $13 million business, is the approximate size. Okay, perfect. Annual. Annual? Okay, perfect. Then just last on, where do you think we are in the demand cycle for ATS? Obviously, looking at capital spending environment and semiconductor and where you play. Would you still categorize that we're in the early innings or early stages of the demand cycle at this point? Yes. Perfect. Thank you. Okay. There are no further questions at this time. I will now hand the call over to Naga for closing remarks. Thank you for your time and attention on today's call. Nordson is well-positioned as a diversified precision technology company. Our close-to-the-customer model, proprietary and niche technology, diversified geographic and end-market exposures, high level of recurring revenue, and strong balance sheet are among the many attributes that makes us a quality growth compounder. Have a great day. This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.

Speaker 7: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us and welcome to Nordson Corporation's second quarter fiscal year 2026 conference call. After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star one again. I will now hand the conference over to Lara Mahoney. Lara, please go ahead. Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us and welcome to Nordson Corporation's second quarter fiscal year 2026 conference call. ladies and gentlemen thank you for joining us and welcome to nordson corporation's second quarter fiscal year 2026 conference call After today's prepared remarks, we will host a question-and-answer session. after today's prepared remarks we will host a question-and-answer session If you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. if you would like to ask a question please press star one to raise your hand To withdraw your question, press star one again. to withdraw your question press star one again I will now hand the conference over to Lara Mahoney. i will now hand the conference over to lara mahoney Lara, please go ahead. lara please go ahead

Speaker 4: Thank you. Good morning. This is Lara Mahoney, Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Communications. I'm here with Sundaram Nagarajan, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Daniel Hopgood, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. We welcome you to our conference call today, Thursday, May 21st, to report Nordson's fiscal 2026 second quarter results. You can find both our press release as well as our webcast slide presentation that we will refer to during today's call on our website at www.nordson.com/investors. This conference call is being broadcast live on our investor website and will be available there for 30 days. During this conference call, we will make references to non-GAAP financial metrics. We've provided a reconciliation of these metrics to the most comparable GAAP metric in the press release issued yesterday. Thank you. thank you Good morning. good morning This is Lara Mahoney, Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Communications. this is lara mahoney vice president of investor relations and corporate communications I'm here with Sundaram Nagarajan, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Daniel Hopgood, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. i'm here with sundaram nagarajan our president and chief executive officer and daniel hopgood executive vice president and chief financial officer We welcome you to our conference call today, Thursday, May 21st, to report Nordson's fiscal 2026 second quarter results. we welcome you to our conference call today thursday may 21st to report nordson's fiscal 2026 second quarter results You can find both our press release as well as our webcast slide presentation that we will refer to during today's call on our website at www.nordson.com/investors. you can find both our press release as well as our webcast slide presentation that we will refer to during today's call on our website at www.nordson.com/investors This conference call is being broadcast live on our investor website and will be available there for 30 days. this conference call is being broadcast live on our investor website and will be available there for 30 days During this conference call, we will make references to non-GAAP financial metrics. during this conference call we will make references to non-gaap financial metrics We've provided a reconciliation of these metrics to the most comparable GAAP metric in the press release issued yesterday. we've provided a reconciliation of these metrics to the most comparable gaap metric in the press release issued yesterday Before we begin, please refer to slide two of our presentation, where we note that certain statements regarding our future performance that are made during this call may be forward-looking based upon Nordson's current expectations. These statements may involve a number of risks, uncertainties, and other factors as discussed in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission that could cause actual results to materially differ. Moving to today's agenda on slide three, Naga will discuss second quarter highlights. Before we begin, please refer to slide two of our presentation, where we note that certain statements regarding our future performance that are made during this call may be forward-looking based upon Nordson's current expectations. before we begin please refer to slide two of our presentation where we note that certain statements regarding our future performance that are made during this call may be forward-looking based upon nordson's current expectations These statements may involve a number of risks, uncertainties, and other factors as discussed in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission that could cause actual results to materially differ. these statements may involve a number of risks uncertainties and other factors as discussed in the company's filings with the securities and exchange commission that could cause actual results to materially differ Moving to today's agenda on slide three, Naga will discuss second quarter highlights. moving to today's agenda on slide three naga will discuss second quarter highlights He will then turn the call over to Dan to review sales and earnings performance for the total company and the three business segments. Dan will also discuss the balance sheet and cash flow. Naga will then share a high-level commentary about our enterprise performance and provide an update on the fiscal 2026 third quarter and full-year guidance. We will then be happy to take your questions. With that, I'll turn to slide four and turn the call over to Naga. He will then turn the call over to Dan to review sales and earnings performance for the total company and the three business segments. he will then turn the call over to dan to review sales and earnings performance for the total company and the three business segments Dan will also discuss the balance sheet and cash flow. dan will also discuss the balance sheet and cash flow Naga will then share a high-level commentary about our enterprise performance and provide an update on the fiscal 2026 third quarter and full-year guidance. naga will then share a high-level commentary about our enterprise performance and provide an update on the fiscal 2026 third quarter and full-year guidance We will then be happy to take your questions. we will then be happy to take your questions With that, I'll turn to slide four and turn the call over to Naga. with that i'll turn to slide four and turn the call over to naga

Speaker 9: Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining Nordson's fiscal 2026 second quarter conference call. I'm very pleased to report a strong second quarter where all three segments contributed to our organic growth performance, surpassing the midpoint expectations of last quarter's sales and earnings guidance. We built upon the momentum of the first quarter with record sales of $741 million. This is an 8% increase over the prior year, which is inclusive of 7% overall organic growth. Order entry momentum continued throughout the quarter with accelerated activity in the last couple of months, driving up backlog 18% organically compared to the prior year. Solid execution and volume leverage drove record profit performance for the quarter, delivering EBITDA of $235 million, which was a second quarter record and 32% of sales. Adjusted earnings per share of $2.86 were also a second quarter record. Good morning, everyone. good morning everyone Thank you for joining Nordson's fiscal 2026 second quarter conference call. thank you for joining nordson's fiscal 2026 second quarter conference call I'm very pleased to report a strong second quarter where all three segments contributed to our organic growth performance, surpassing the midpoint expectations of last quarter's sales and earnings guidance. i'm very pleased to report a strong second quarter where all three segments contributed to our organic growth performance surpassing the midpoint expectations of last quarter's sales and earnings guidance We built upon the momentum of the first quarter with record sales of $741 million. we built upon the momentum of the first quarter with record sales of $741 million This is an 8% increase over the prior year, which is inclusive of 7% overall organic growth. this is an 8% increase over the prior year which is inclusive of 7% overall organic growth Order entry momentum continued throughout the quarter with accelerated activity in the last couple of months, driving up backlog 18% organically compared to the prior year. order entry momentum continued throughout the quarter with accelerated activity in the last couple of months driving up backlog 18% organically compared to the prior year Solid execution and volume leverage drove record profit performance for the quarter, delivering EBITDA of $235 million, which was a second quarter record and 32% of sales. solid execution and volume leverage drove record profit performance for the quarter delivering ebitda of $235 million which was a second quarter record and 32% of sales Adjusted earnings per share of $2.86 were also a second quarter record. adjusted earnings per share of $2.86 were also a second quarter record This was an increase of 18% compared to prior year. I would also like to highlight our free cash flow of $170 million. Our free cash flow conversion over 100% of net income continues to be a strength, enabling a healthy mix of shareholder returns and reinvestment in growth. We strategically deployed this cash to repurchase shares, return dividends to shareholders, and maintain our debt leverage while continuing to invest in the company. During the quarter, we acquired CapstanAG, a small but strategic precision agriculture company in North America. This bolt-on deal, which was valued at 9 times adjusted EBITDA, enables Nordson to grow our precision agricultural portfolio with mid-tier OEMs in the region. I'll talk more about the Capstan deal and enterprise performance in few moments, first, I'll turn the call over to Dan to provide a detailed perspective on our financial results for the quarter. This was an increase of 18% compared to prior year. this was an increase of 18% compared to prior year I would also like to highlight our free cash flow of $170 million. i would also like to highlight our free cash flow of $170 million Our free cash flow conversion over 100% of net income continues to be a strength, enabling a healthy mix of shareholder returns and reinvestment in growth. our free cash flow conversion over 100% of net income continues to be a strength enabling a healthy mix of shareholder returns and reinvestment in growth We strategically deployed this cash to repurchase shares, return dividends to shareholders, and maintain our debt leverage while continuing to invest in the company. we strategically deployed this cash to repurchase shares return dividends to shareholders and maintain our debt leverage while continuing to invest in the company During the quarter, we acquired Capstan AG, a small but strategic precision agriculture company in North America. during the quarter we acquired capstan ag a small but strategic precision agriculture company in north america This bolt-on deal, which was valued at 9 times adjusted EBITDA, enables Nordson to grow our precision agricultural portfolio with mid-tier OEMs in the region. this bolt-on deal which was valued at 9 times adjusted ebitda enables nordson to grow our precision agricultural portfolio with mid-tier oems in the region I'll talk more about the Capstan deal and enterprise performance in few moments, first, I'll turn the call over to Dan to provide a detailed perspective on our financial results for the quarter. i'll talk more about the capstan deal and enterprise performance in few moments first i'll turn the call over to dan to provide a detailed perspective on our financial results for the quarter

Speaker 2: Thank you, Naga, and good morning, everyone. On slide number five, you'll see second quarter fiscal 2026 sales were a second quarter record of $741 million, up 8% from the prior year second quarter sales of $683 million. The second quarter 2026 sales included an organic increase of 7%, driven by growth in all three of our segments, as well as a favorable currency translation impact of 3%. This result was slightly offset by the net impact of the medical contract manufacturing divestiture we completed in the fourth quarter of last year, and the contribution of the small Capstan acquisition that was completed during the quarter. Adjusted operating profit increased 11% year-over-year to $199 million, or 27% of sales, driven by increased SG&A leverage on the strong organic sales growth. EBITDA was up 8% year-over-year to $235 million, also a second quarter record. Thank you, Naga, and good morning, everyone. thank you naga and good morning everyone On slide number five, you'll see second quarter fiscal 2026 sales were a second quarter record of $741 million, up 8% from the prior year second quarter sales of $683 million. The second quarter 2026 sales included an organic increase of 7%, driven by growth in all three of our segments, as well as a favorable currency translation impact of 3%. on slide number five you'll see second quarter fiscal 2026 sales were a second quarter record of $741 million up 8% from the prior year second quarter sales of $683 million. the second quarter 2026 sales included an organic increase of 7% driven by growth in all three of our segments as well as a favorable currency translation impact of 3% This result was slightly offset by the net impact of the medical contract manufacturing divestiture we completed in the fourth quarter of last year, and the contribution of the small Capstan acquisition that was completed during the quarter. this result was slightly offset by the net impact of the medical contract manufacturing divestiture we completed in the fourth quarter of last year and the contribution of the small capstan acquisition that was completed during the quarter Adjusted operating profit increased 11% year-over-year to $199 million, or 27% of sales, driven by increased SG&A leverage on the strong organic sales growth. adjusted operating profit increased 11% year-over-year to $199 million or 27% of sales driven by increased sg&a leverage on the strong organic sales growth EBITDA was up 8% year-over-year to $235 million, also a second quarter record. ebitda was up 8% year-over-year to $235 million also a second quarter record EBITDA margin as a percent of sales was 32% in line with the prior year. Incremental EBITDA contribution in the quarter was about 31%. While this is on the lower end of our typical sales conversion of mid to upper 30%, it's a 300 basis point improvement versus first quarter incrementals, and in line with our expectations to return to normal incremental performance as the year plays out. Looking at non-operating income and expenses, net interest expense during the quarter was $22 million, a decrease of $4 million versus the prior year, driven by lower year-over-year debt levels and a stable to declining rate environment. Other expenses on a GAAP basis increased $30 million year-over-year. There's a couple of drivers behind this that are important to understand and have been adjusted out of our non-GAAP earnings. EBITDA margin as a percent of sales was 32% in line with the prior year. ebitda margin as a percent of sales was 32% in line with the prior year Incremental EBITDA contribution in the quarter was about 31%. incremental ebitda contribution in the quarter was about 31% While this is on the lower end of our typical sales conversion of mid to upper 30%, it's a 300 basis point improvement versus first quarter incrementals, and in line with our expectations to return to normal incremental performance as the year plays out. while this is on the lower end of our typical sales conversion of mid to upper 30% it's a 300 basis point improvement versus first quarter incrementals and in line with our expectations to return to normal incremental performance as the year plays out Looking at non-operating income and expenses, net interest expense during the quarter was $22 million, a decrease of $4 million versus the prior year, driven by lower year-over-year debt levels and a stable to declining rate environment. looking at non-operating income and expenses net interest expense during the quarter was $22 million a decrease of $4 million versus the prior year driven by lower year-over-year debt levels and a stable to declining rate environment Other expenses on a GAAP basis increased $30 million year-over-year. other expenses on a gaap basis increased $30 million year-over-year There's a couple of drivers behind this that are important to understand and have been adjusted out of our non-GAAP earnings. there's a couple of drivers behind this that are important to understand and have been adjusted out of our non-gaap earnings The biggest driver was a one-time pension settlement transaction we completed during the quarter. We were able to annuitize approximately $113 million, or just under 1/3 of our remaining U.S. pension obligation, at a very competitive discount of 7.5%. There was zero cash outlay required for this settlement. However, the transaction resulted in a one-time $24 million pre-tax charge as part of the settlement. In addition to retiring the obligation, the settlement further improves our funded status for the remaining pension obligation and favorably impacts our ongoing pension cost. In addition to the settlement charge, other expense includes $10 million of non-cash mark-to-market charges for minority investments. You'll recall that in Q1, we actually marked these investments up by $22 million. The Q2 adjustment just reflects the non-cash fluctuation in value during the quarter. Excluding these non-cash charges, other expense was actually slightly favorable year-over-year. The biggest driver was a one-time pension settlement transaction we completed during the quarter. the biggest driver was a one-time pension settlement transaction we completed during the quarter We were able to annuitize approximately $113 million, or just under 1/3 of our remaining U.S. pension obligation, at a very competitive discount of 7.5%. we were able to annuitize approximately $113 million or just under 1/3 of our remaining u.s pension obligation at a very competitive discount of 7.5% There was zero cash outlay required for this settlement. there was zero cash outlay required for this settlement However, the transaction resulted in a one-time $24 million pre-tax charge as part of the settlement. however the transaction resulted in a one-time $24 million pre-tax charge as part of the settlement In addition to retiring the obligation, the settlement further improves our funded status for the remaining pension obligation and favorably impacts our ongoing pension cost. in addition to retiring the obligation the settlement further improves our funded status for the remaining pension obligation and favorably impacts our ongoing pension cost In addition to the settlement charge, other expense includes $10 million of non-cash mark-to-market charges for minority investments. in addition to the settlement charge other expense includes $10 million of non-cash mark-to-market charges for minority investments You'll recall that in Q1, we actually marked these investments up by $22 million. you'll recall that in q1 we actually marked these investments up by $22 million The Q2 adjustment just reflects the non-cash fluctuation in value during the quarter. the q2 adjustment just reflects the non-cash fluctuation in value during the quarter Excluding these non-cash charges, other expense was actually slightly favorable year-over-year. excluding these non-cash charges other expense was actually slightly favorable year-over-year Our tax expense on a U.S. GAAP basis was $24 million, for an effective tax rate of 17%, inclusive of the impact of the non-cash losses I just mentioned, and acquisition-related amortization and costs. On an adjusted basis, our effective tax rate was 18%, in line with the prior quarter. We now expect our full-year tax rate to be in the range of 18%-19% on an adjusted basis, which is slightly better than our previous annual guidance range for fiscal 2026. I should also mention that this improved outlook for tax rate is very much sustainable and reflective of our ongoing rate expectations. GAAP net income in the quarter totaled $117 million, or $2.09 per share. Our tax expense on a U.S. our tax expense on a u.s GAAP basis was $24 million, for an effective tax rate of 17%, inclusive of the impact of the non-cash losses I just mentioned, and acquisition-related amortization and costs. gaap basis was $24 million for an effective tax rate of 17% inclusive of the impact of the non-cash losses i just mentioned and acquisition-related amortization and costs On an adjusted basis, our effective tax rate was 18%, in line with the prior quarter. on an adjusted basis our effective tax rate was 18% in line with the prior quarter We now expect our full-year tax rate to be in the range of 18%-19% on an adjusted basis, which is slightly better than our previous annual guidance range for fiscal 2026. we now expect our full-year tax rate to be in the range of 18%-19% on an adjusted basis which is slightly better than our previous annual guidance range for fiscal 2026 I should also mention that this improved outlook for tax rate is very much sustainable and reflective of our ongoing rate expectations. i should also mention that this improved outlook for tax rate is very much sustainable and reflective of our ongoing rate expectations GAAP net income in the quarter totaled $117 million, or $2.09 per share. gaap net income in the quarter totaled $117 million or $2.09 per share Excluding acquisition-related amortization and costs and the non-cash losses, adjusted earnings per share totaled a second quarter record of $2.86 per share, $0.06 above the midpoint of our quarterly guidance, and an 18% increase from prior year adjusted earnings per share of $2.42. This improvement in year-over-year earnings reflects solid operating leverage from the organic sales growth, as well as improved capital leverage through strategic cash flow deployment. Now let's turn to slides six through eight to review the second quarter 2026 segment performance. Industrial Precision Solutions sales were a second quarter record of $350 million, an increase of 10% compared to the prior year second quarter. Organic sales increased 5% compared to the prior year, with a favorable currency impact of 4% and an acquisition impact of roughly 1%. Excluding acquisition-related amortization and costs and the non-cash losses, adjusted earnings per share totaled a second quarter record of $2.86 per share, $0.06 above the midpoint of our quarterly guidance, and an 18% increase from prior year adjusted earnings per share of $2.42. excluding acquisition-related amortization and costs and the non-cash losses adjusted earnings per share totaled a second quarter record of $2.86 per share $0.06 above the midpoint of our quarterly guidance and an 18% increase from prior year adjusted earnings per share of $2.42 This improvement in year-over-year earnings reflects solid operating leverage from the organic sales growth, as well as improved capital leverage through strategic cash flow deployment. this improvement in year-over-year earnings reflects solid operating leverage from the organic sales growth as well as improved capital leverage through strategic cash flow deployment Now let's turn to slides six through eight to review the second quarter 2026 segment performance. now let's turn to slides six through eight to review the second quarter 2026 segment performance Industrial Precision Solutions sales were a second quarter record of $350 million, an increase of 10% compared to the prior year second quarter. industrial precision solutions sales were a second quarter record of $350 million an increase of 10% compared to the prior year second quarter Organic sales increased 5% compared to the prior year, with a favorable currency impact of 4% and an acquisition impact of roughly 1%. organic sales increased 5% compared to the prior year with a favorable currency impact of 4% and an acquisition impact of roughly 1% Growth was driven by improving industrial coating and polymer processing systems demand, ongoing growth in our precision agricultural end markets, and stable demand in broader consumer and industrial end markets. As a result, EBITDA was $124 million in the quarter, or 35% of sales. This is up 9% over prior year, largely due to the higher sales volumes. Turning to slide seven, you'll see Medical and Fluid Solutions sales of $213 million, also a second quarter record, increased 5% compared to the prior year's second quarter. Organic sales increased 8% in the quarter, driven by contributions from both our engineered fluid solutions and our medical product lines. We're pleased to see solid growth in our medical product lines following a slower start to the year. Growth was driven by improving industrial coating and polymer processing systems demand, ongoing growth in our precision agricultural end markets, and stable demand in broader consumer and industrial end markets. growth was driven by improving industrial coating and polymer processing systems demand ongoing growth in our precision agricultural end markets and stable demand in broader consumer and industrial end markets As a result, EBITDA was $124 million in the quarter, or 35% of sales. as a result ebitda was $124 million in the quarter or 35% of sales This is up 9% over prior year, largely due to the higher sales volumes. this is up 9% over prior year largely due to the higher sales volumes Turning to slide seven, you'll see Medical and Fluid Solutions sales of $213 million, also a second quarter record, increased 5% compared to the prior year's second quarter. turning to slide seven you'll see medical and fluid solutions sales of $213 million also a second quarter record increased 5% compared to the prior year's second quarter Organic sales increased 8% in the quarter, driven by contributions from both our engineered fluid solutions and our medical product lines. organic sales increased 8% in the quarter driven by contributions from both our engineered fluid solutions and our medical product lines We're pleased to see solid growth in our medical product lines following a slower start to the year. we're pleased to see solid growth in our medical product lines following a slower start to the year Divested sales from the medical contract manufacturing business had a negative impact of approximately 4% compared to the prior year. EBITDA for Medical and Fluid Solutions was $79 million, or 37% of sales, which was an increase of 3% from the prior year EBITDA of $77 million. EBITDA margins during the quarter were slightly compressed versus the prior year due to the impact of a near-term product startup headwind in selected interventional medical product lines. This should become an opportunity as the year progresses. Divested sales from the medical contract manufacturing business had a negative impact of approximately 4% compared to the prior year. EBITDA for Medical and Fluid Solutions was $79 million, or 37% of sales, which was an increase of 3% from the prior year EBITDA of $77 million. divested sales from the medical contract manufacturing business had a negative impact of approximately 4% compared to the prior year. ebitda for medical and fluid solutions was $79 million or 37% of sales which was an increase of 3% from the prior year ebitda of $77 million EBITDA margins during the quarter were slightly compressed versus the prior year due to the impact of a near-term product startup headwind in selected interventional medical product lines. ebitda margins during the quarter were slightly compressed versus the prior year due to the impact of a near-term product startup headwind in selected interventional medical product lines This should become an opportunity as the year progresses. this should become an opportunity as the year progresses Turning to slide eight, you'll see Advanced Technology Solutions sales were an all-time quarterly record of $178 million, a 10% increase compared to the prior year's second quarter. The 8% organic sales increase in the quarter was most notable in our electronics dispense product lines and reflects ongoing strength in semiconductor end market demand, which we're also seeing in orders across all of our ATS product lines. Turning to slide eight, you'll see Advanced Technology Solutions sales were an all-time quarterly record of $178 million, a 10% increase compared to the prior year's second quarter. turning to slide eight you'll see advanced technology solutions sales were an all-time quarterly record of $178 million a 10% increase compared to the prior year's second quarter The 8% organic sales increase in the quarter was most notable in our electronics dispense product lines and reflects ongoing strength in semiconductor end market demand, which we're also seeing in orders across all of our ATS product lines. the 8% organic sales increase in the quarter was most notable in our electronics dispense product lines and reflects ongoing strength in semiconductor end market demand which we're also seeing in orders across all of our ats product lines Second quarter EBITDA was a record $48 million and also a record EBITDA margin of 27% of sales, representing an increase of 22% compared to the prior year second quarter EBITDA of $40 million or 25% of sales. The improvement in EBITDA margin compared to prior year reflects SG&A leverage on the high single-digit organic growth. Overall record margins reflect the sustainable operational and footprint changes we've made within the segment in prior years, guided by the NBS Next growth framework. Finally, turning to the balance sheet and cash flow on slide nine. At the end of the second quarter, we had cash on hand of $102 million, and net debt was approximately $1.8 billion. Our leverage ratio of 1.9 times continues to improve from last year and is now actually below the low end of our long-term target range. Second quarter EBITDA was a record $48 million and also a record EBITDA margin of 27% of sales, representing an increase of 22% compared to the prior year second quarter EBITDA of $40 million or 25% of sales. second quarter ebitda was a record $48 million and also a record ebitda margin of 27% of sales representing an increase of 22% compared to the prior year second quarter ebitda of $40 million or 25% of sales The improvement in EBITDA margin compared to prior year reflects SG&A leverage on the high single-digit organic growth. the improvement in ebitda margin compared to prior year reflects sg&a leverage on the high single-digit organic growth Overall record margins reflect the sustainable operational and footprint changes we've made within the segment in prior years, guided by the NBS Next growth framework. overall record margins reflect the sustainable operational and footprint changes we've made within the segment in prior years guided by the nbs next growth framework Finally, turning to the balance sheet and cash flow on slide nine. finally turning to the balance sheet and cash flow on slide nine At the end of the second quarter, we had cash on hand of $102 million, and net debt was approximately $1.8 billion. at the end of the second quarter we had cash on hand of $102 million and net debt was approximately $1.8 billion Our leverage ratio of 1.9 times continues to improve from last year and is now actually below the low end of our long-term target range. our leverage ratio of 1.9 times continues to improve from last year and is now actually below the low end of our long-term target range This, along with our strong cash flow generation, provides us with significant firepower to strategically deploy capital, including the acquisition of strategic assets. Our free cash flow generation was $170 million during the quarter, resulting in a 119% conversion rate on net income, excluding the non-cash losses I mentioned a moment ago. This represents the fourth consecutive quarter above 100% conversion, despite the accelerated revenue growth we've delivered. It's also worth noting here again that the pension annuitization we completed during the quarter, on quite favorable terms, retired about 30% of our U.S. obligation, further minimizing our long-term obligations and locking in the long-term funded status for the remaining plan obligation with no expected ongoing cash requirements. As noted on slide 10, our capital allocation continues to be both balanced and value-seeking. This, along with our strong cash flow generation, provides us with significant firepower to strategically deploy capital, including the acquisition of strategic assets. this along with our strong cash flow generation provides us with significant firepower to strategically deploy capital including the acquisition of strategic assets Our free cash flow generation was $170 million during the quarter, resulting in a 119% conversion rate on net income, excluding the non-cash losses I mentioned a moment ago. our free cash flow generation was $170 million during the quarter resulting in a 119% conversion rate on net income excluding the non-cash losses i mentioned a moment ago This represents the fourth consecutive quarter above 100% conversion, despite the accelerated revenue growth we've delivered. this represents the fourth consecutive quarter above 100% conversion despite the accelerated revenue growth we've delivered It's also worth noting here again that the pension annuitization we completed during the quarter, on quite favorable terms, retired about 30% of our U.S. obligation, further minimizing our long-term obligations and locking in the long-term funded status for the remaining plan obligation with no expected ongoing cash requirements. it's also worth noting here again that the pension annuitization we completed during the quarter on quite favorable terms retired about 30% of our u.s obligation further minimizing our long-term obligations and locking in the long-term funded status for the remaining plan obligation with no expected ongoing cash requirements As noted on slide 10, our capital allocation continues to be both balanced and value-seeking. as noted on slide 10 our capital allocation continues to be both balanced and value-seeking During the quarter, we invested $10 million in capital projects to support current and future organic growth, paid $46 million in dividends to our shareholders, repurchased $43 million in shares on the open market, and reduced net debt by $93 million. We also made a strategic investment in our growing precision agriculture business by acquiring CapstanAG. Naga will give more color on that in a moment. To summarize the quarter, and really the first half of the year, we've achieved strong organic sales growth with all of our segments contributing nicely while maintaining our strong EBITDA margin performance. All three of our segments achieved record second quarter sales, and our ATS segment achieved an all-time record quarterly performance. Our cash conversion remains strong, allowing us to strategically deploy capital to sustainably grow the franchise and return value to shareholders. During the quarter, we invested $10 million in capital projects to support current and future organic growth, paid $46 million in dividends to our shareholders, repurchased $43 million in shares on the open market, and reduced net debt by $93 million. during the quarter we invested $10 million in capital projects to support current and future organic growth paid $46 million in dividends to our shareholders repurchased $43 million in shares on the open market and reduced net debt by $93 million We also made a strategic investment in our growing precision agriculture business by acquiring Capstan AG. we also made a strategic investment in our growing precision agriculture business by acquiring capstan ag Naga will give more color on that in a moment. naga will give more color on that in a moment To summarize the quarter, and really the first half of the year, we've achieved strong organic sales growth with all of our segments contributing nicely while maintaining our strong EBITDA margin performance. to summarize the quarter and really the first half of the year we've achieved strong organic sales growth with all of our segments contributing nicely while maintaining our strong ebitda margin performance All three of our segments achieved record second quarter sales, and our ATS segment achieved an all-time record quarterly performance. all three of our segments achieved record second quarter sales and our ats segment achieved an all-time record quarterly performance Our cash conversion remains strong, allowing us to strategically deploy capital to sustainably grow the franchise and return value to shareholders. our cash conversion remains strong allowing us to strategically deploy capital to sustainably grow the franchise and return value to shareholders Our teams once again delivered on their commitments for the quarter and worked to grow backlog to position us for success in the second half of the year. Our end market thesis and momentum supports our growth, and the Ascend strategy is positioning us well to deliver for our stakeholders. With that, let's turn to slide 11, and I'll turn the call back to Naga. Our teams once again delivered on their commitments for the quarter and worked to grow backlog to position us for success in the second half of the year. our teams once again delivered on their commitments for the quarter and worked to grow backlog to position us for success in the second half of the year Our end market thesis and momentum supports our growth, and the Ascend strategy is positioning us well to deliver for our stakeholders. our end market thesis and momentum supports our growth and the ascend strategy is positioning us well to deliver for our stakeholders With that, let's turn to slide 11, and I'll turn the call back to Naga. with that let's turn to slide 11 and i'll turn the call back to naga

Speaker 9: Thanks, Dan. It's been a very strong first half for Nordson. We are delivering above-market organic growth through accelerating demand in key end markets, our differentiated technology, close to the customer business model, and the execution of the NBS Next growth framework. Before I talk about our end markets, I would like to share more color on the small acquisition I mentioned earlier. Nordson acquired CapstanAG, a precision agriculture technology leader in North America. Headquartered in Topeka, Kansas, Capstan has a strong reputation built upon its innovative pulse width modulation systems. These specialized nozzle-by-nozzle controls drastically increase efficiency and reduce waste for row crop orchard planters and aerial sprayers. Paying 9 times adjusted EBITDA, this strategic acquisition gives Nordson Precision Agriculture another leg for growth in North America focused on mid-tier OEM customers. Thanks, Dan. thanks dan It's been a very strong first half for Nordson. it's been a very strong first half for nordson We are delivering above-market organic growth through accelerating demand in key end markets, our differentiated technology, close to the customer business model, and the execution of the NBS Next growth framework. we are delivering above-market organic growth through accelerating demand in key end markets our differentiated technology close to the customer business model and the execution of the nbs next growth framework Before I talk about our end markets, I would like to share more color on the small acquisition I mentioned earlier. before i talk about our end markets i would like to share more color on the small acquisition i mentioned earlier Nordson acquired Capstan AG, a precision agriculture technology leader in North America. nordson acquired capstan ag a precision agriculture technology leader in north america Headquartered in Topeka, Kansas, Capstan has a strong reputation built upon its innovative pulse width modulation systems. headquartered in topeka kansas capstan has a strong reputation built upon its innovative pulse width modulation systems These specialized nozzle-by-nozzle controls drastically increase efficiency and reduce waste for row crop orchard planters and aerial sprayers. these specialized nozzle-by-nozzle controls drastically increase efficiency and reduce waste for row crop orchard planters and aerial sprayers Paying 9 times adjusted EBITDA, this strategic acquisition gives Nordson Precision Agriculture another leg for growth in North America focused on mid-tier OEM customers. paying 9 times adjusted ebitda this strategic acquisition gives nordson precision agriculture another leg for growth in north america focused on mid-tier oem customers Capstan's entrepreneurial culture and customer-centric business model align closely with the growth objectives of our precision agricultural division. Our existing precision agricultural business, which began with the ARAG acquisition, had a small presence in North America. We are already consolidating our facilities into Capstan's existing footprint in Topeka, Kansas, to be closer to the North American mid-tier customers and grow our expanded product offering in this end market. Acquisitions remain a critical component of our growth strategy. As Dan noted, we are active in the M&A market with a robust pipeline. We remain focused on opportunities that meet both our strategic and financial criteria. We have been very intentional in building a growth-biased portfolio of precision technologies, as you will see in slide 12. Capstan's entrepreneurial culture and customer-centric business model align closely with the growth objectives of our precision agricultural division. capstan's entrepreneurial culture and customer-centric business model align closely with the growth objectives of our precision agricultural division Our existing precision agricultural business, which began with the ARAG acquisition, had a small presence in North America. our existing precision agricultural business which began with the arag acquisition had a small presence in north america We are already consolidating our facilities into Capstan's existing footprint in Topeka, Kansas, to be closer to the North American mid-tier customers and grow our expanded product offering in this end market. we are already consolidating our facilities into capstan's existing footprint in topeka kansas to be closer to the north american mid-tier customers and grow our expanded product offering in this end market Acquisitions remain a critical component of our growth strategy. acquisitions remain a critical component of our growth strategy As Dan noted, we are active in the M&A market with a robust pipeline. as dan noted we are active in the m&a market with a robust pipeline We remain focused on opportunities that meet both our strategic and financial criteria. we remain focused on opportunities that meet both our strategic and financial criteria We have been very intentional in building a growth-biased portfolio of precision technologies, as you will see in slide 12. we have been very intentional in building a growth-biased portfolio of precision technologies as you will see in slide 12 More than 50% of our portfolio is now in growth end markets, including semiconductor, electronics, and medical, with remaining exposures in more stable GDP plus end markets. This diversification gives me confidence in our expectations for the remainder of the year and beyond. Within electronics and semiconductor applications, our dispense and surface treatment product lines continue to drive growth, while our test and inspection systems that ensure the quality of semiconductor packaging are also inflecting. We also see this growth reflected in our engineered fluid solutions product lines, where growth is being driven by electronics applications. Growth in general and automotive electronics remains somewhat muted, but there are signs of growing capacity needs in these applications. After a modest first quarter, medical end markets are steadily returning to normalized growth. More than 50% of our portfolio is now in growth end markets, including semiconductor, electronics, and medical, with remaining exposures in more stable GDP plus end markets. more than 50% of our portfolio is now in growth end markets including semiconductor electronics and medical with remaining exposures in more stable gdp plus end markets This diversification gives me confidence in our expectations for the remainder of the year and beyond. this diversification gives me confidence in our expectations for the remainder of the year and beyond Within electronics and semiconductor applications, our dispense and surface treatment product lines continue to drive growth, while our test and inspection systems that ensure the quality of semiconductor packaging are also inflecting. within electronics and semiconductor applications our dispense and surface treatment product lines continue to drive growth while our test and inspection systems that ensure the quality of semiconductor packaging are also inflecting We also see this growth reflected in our engineered fluid solutions product lines, where growth is being driven by electronics applications. we also see this growth reflected in our engineered fluid solutions product lines where growth is being driven by electronics applications Growth in general and automotive electronics remains somewhat muted, but there are signs of growing capacity needs in these applications. growth in general and automotive electronics remains somewhat muted but there are signs of growing capacity needs in these applications After a modest first quarter, medical end markets are steadily returning to normalized growth. after a modest first quarter medical end markets are steadily returning to normalized growth The long-term growth drivers remain unchanged, including aging population, chronic illnesses, and technology investments in minimally invasive procedures, biopharma, and the increasing use of diagnostics. Within consumer non-durable, investments in packaging and product assembly are sustaining. Industrial end markets also remain stable, particularly automotive and polymer processing applications are improving as the year progresses. We are well-positioned to meet the demands of our customers in these end markets. Turning now to our outlook, starting on slide 13. We enter the third quarter with strong order entry and increased backlog, which is up 18% over the prior year. Order entry momentum was broad-based in the quarter, with all segments contributing. At current exchange rates, foreign exchange, which has been a contributor to the growth in the first half, will be essentially neutral in the second half year-over-year. The long-term growth drivers remain unchanged, including aging population, chronic illnesses, and technology investments in minimally invasive procedures, biopharma, and the increasing use of diagnostics. the long-term growth drivers remain unchanged including aging population chronic illnesses and technology investments in minimally invasive procedures biopharma and the increasing use of diagnostics Within consumer non-durable, investments in packaging and product assembly are sustaining. within consumer non-durable investments in packaging and product assembly are sustaining Industrial end markets also remain stable, particularly automotive and polymer processing applications are improving as the year progresses. industrial end markets also remain stable particularly automotive and polymer processing applications are improving as the year progresses We are well-positioned to meet the demands of our customers in these end markets. we are well-positioned to meet the demands of our customers in these end markets Turning now to our outlook, starting on slide 13. turning now to our outlook starting on slide 13 We enter the third quarter with strong order entry and increased backlog, which is up 18% over the prior year. we enter the third quarter with strong order entry and increased backlog which is up 18% over the prior year Order entry momentum was broad-based in the quarter, with all segments contributing. order entry momentum was broad-based in the quarter with all segments contributing At current exchange rates, foreign exchange, which has been a contributor to the growth in the first half, will be essentially neutral in the second half year-over-year. at current exchange rates foreign exchange which has been a contributor to the growth in the first half will be essentially neutral in the second half year-over-year These trends position the company to deliver third quarter fiscal 2026 sales in the range of $760 million-$790 million. Third quarter adjusted earnings are forecasted to be in the range of $2.95-$3.15 per diluted share. Turning to slide 14. Based on the momentum in our end markets, as evidenced by our backlog and order entry, we are increasing our full-year guidance. Sales are now expected to be in the range of $2.93 billion-$3.01 billion, and adjusted earnings to be in the range of $11.30-$11.80 per diluted share. Our updated guidance balances the strong demand momentum with the appropriate prudence needed, given the potential for a range of macroeconomic outcomes. We have a high level of confidence in the midpoint of our range, and it would take a meaningful slowdown in order activity driven by macro conditions to move us towards the low end. These trends position the company to deliver third quarter fiscal 2026 sales in the range of $760 million-$790 million. these trends position the company to deliver third quarter fiscal 2026 sales in the range of $760 million-$790 million Third quarter adjusted earnings are forecasted to be in the range of $2.95-$3.15 per diluted share. third quarter adjusted earnings are forecasted to be in the range of $2.95-$3.15 per diluted share Turning to slide 14. turning to slide 14 Based on the momentum in our end markets, as evidenced by our backlog and order entry, we are increasing our full-year guidance. based on the momentum in our end markets as evidenced by our backlog and order entry we are increasing our full-year guidance Sales are now expected to be in the range of $2.93 billion-$3.01 billion, and adjusted earnings to be in the range of $11.30-$11.80 per diluted share. sales are now expected to be in the range of $2.93 billion-$3.01 billion and adjusted earnings to be in the range of $11.30-$11.80 per diluted share Our updated guidance balances the strong demand momentum with the appropriate prudence needed, given the potential for a range of macroeconomic outcomes. our updated guidance balances the strong demand momentum with the appropriate prudence needed given the potential for a range of macroeconomic outcomes We have a high level of confidence in the midpoint of our range, and it would take a meaningful slowdown in order activity driven by macro conditions to move us towards the low end. we have a high level of confidence in the midpoint of our range and it would take a meaningful slowdown in order activity driven by macro conditions to move us towards the low end At the same time, if we sustain the current demand trends, particularly in electronics end markets, we believe we are well-positioned to deliver the upper end of our guidance. We delivered a very strong first half of fiscal 2026, highlighted by record performance and ongoing momentum across our end markets. Our NBS Next growth framework, close to the customer business model and differentiated precision technologies, positions us well to continue compounding profitable growth. As always, I want to thank our customers and shareholders for your continued support. In particular, I want to thank Nordson employees who are passionate about meeting the needs of our customers. Our focus on innovation and operational excellence continue to position us well to serve our customers. With that, we will pause and take your questions. At the same time, if we sustain the current demand trends, particularly in electronics end markets, we believe we are well-positioned to deliver the upper end of our guidance. We delivered a very strong first half of fiscal 2026, highlighted by record performance and ongoing momentum across our end markets. at the same time if we sustain the current demand trends particularly in electronics end markets we believe we are well-positioned to deliver the upper end of our guidance. we delivered a very strong first half of fiscal 2026 highlighted by record performance and ongoing momentum across our end markets Our NBS Next growth framework, close to the customer business model and differentiated precision technologies, positions us well to continue compounding profitable growth. our nbs next growth framework close to the customer business model and differentiated precision technologies positions us well to continue compounding profitable growth As always, I want to thank our customers and shareholders for your continued support. as always i want to thank our customers and shareholders for your continued support In particular, I want to thank Nordson employees who are passionate about meeting the needs of our customers. in particular i want to thank nordson employees who are passionate about meeting the needs of our customers Our focus on innovation and operational excellence continue to position us well to serve our customers. our focus on innovation and operational excellence continue to position us well to serve our customers With that, we will pause and take your questions. with that we will pause and take your questions

Speaker 7: Your first question comes from the line of Matt Summerville with D.A. Davidson. Matt, your line is open. Please go ahead. Your first question comes from the line of Matt Summerville with D.A. your first question comes from the line of matt summerville with d.a Davidson. davidson Matt, your line is open. matt your line is open Please go ahead. please go ahead

Speaker 5: Thanks. Morning, just a couple of quick ones here. On the medical side of things, should we assume that growth going forward is now sustainably on track to consistently deliver the algorithm as you guys had historically advertised? Could you give a little bit more detail on the interventional product headwind that you referenced there, Dan? Thanks. thanks Morning, just a couple of quick ones here. morning just a couple of quick ones here On the medical side of things, should we assume that growth going forward is now sustainably on track to consistently deliver the algorithm as you guys had historically advertised? on the medical side of things should we assume that growth going forward is now sustainably on track to consistently deliver the algorithm as you guys had historically advertised Could you give a little bit more detail on the interventional product headwind that you referenced there, Dan? could you give a little bit more detail on the interventional product headwind that you referenced there dan

Speaker 2: Yeah. Good morning, Matt. Thanks for the question. 8% growth in the quarter, we were quite happy with. I would say, if you pull that apart, our medical product lines are continuing to track towards normalized growth. We saw strength in our engineered fluid dispense products, which are also part of that segment as well during the quarter. That's part of what's driving the growth. I would say that's the area that we saw a little bit of upside. I would say medical is on track and still returning to normal growth rates of what we would call 6%-8% as a target. Everything's on track. The 8% overall, I would say is a pretty good precursor, but the mix within is still a little bit different than I'd say long-term expectations. Yeah. yeah Good morning, Matt. good morning matt Thanks for the question. 8% growth in the quarter, we were quite happy with. thanks for the question 8% growth in the quarter we were quite happy with I would say, if you pull that apart, our medical product lines are continuing to track towards normalized growth. i would say if you pull that apart our medical product lines are continuing to track towards normalized growth We saw strength in our engineered fluid dispense products, which are also part of that segment as well during the quarter. we saw strength in our engineered fluid dispense products which are also part of that segment as well during the quarter That's part of what's driving the growth. that's part of what's driving the growth I would say that's the area that we saw a little bit of upside. i would say that's the area that we saw a little bit of upside I would say medical is on track and still returning to normal growth rates of what we would call 6%-8% as a target. i would say medical is on track and still returning to normal growth rates of what we would call 6%-8% as a target Everything's on track. everything's on track The 8% overall, I would say is a pretty good precursor, but the mix within is still a little bit different than I'd say long-term expectations. the 8% overall i would say is a pretty good precursor but the mix within is still a little bit different than i'd say long-term expectations Then your second question on the conversion. This is really a near-term issue that we're working through with the material change in one of our medical product lines. It's actually a regulatorily required material change, which drove some operational inefficiencies in the quarter. It's a short-term changeover issue that we see clear line of sight towards working through, which is why I said that really becomes an opportunity as the year plays out. A one-time kind of changeover requirement based on some regulatory requirements with the customers. Then your second question on the conversion. then your second question on the conversion This is really a near-term issue that we're working through with the material change in one of our medical product lines. this is really a near-term issue that we're working through with the material change in one of our medical product lines It's actually a regulatorily required material change, which drove some operational inefficiencies in the quarter. it's actually a regulatorily required material change which drove some operational inefficiencies in the quarter It's a short-term changeover issue that we see clear line of sight towards working through, which is why I said that really becomes an opportunity as the year plays out. it's a short-term changeover issue that we see clear line of sight towards working through which is why i said that really becomes an opportunity as the year plays out A one-time kind of changeover requirement based on some regulatory requirements with the customers. a one-time kind of changeover requirement based on some regulatory requirements with the customers

Speaker 9: Just to add to that, Matt, what I would tell you is the medical business order entry and backlog buildup allows us to have this confidence that we are returning to normalized growth in this segment. Just to add to that, Matt, what I would tell you is the medical business order entry and backlog buildup allows us to have this confidence that we are returning to normalized growth in this segment. just to add to that matt what i would tell you is the medical business order entry and backlog buildup allows us to have this confidence that we are returning to normalized growth in this segment

Speaker 5: Understood, thank you for the color. Then maybe over to the semiconductor-facing business. Can you just kind of review how you're thinking about Nordson's positioning therein, views on cycle durability, and maybe a little bit more granularity or quantification to the extent you can on how this cycle is reading through into orders and backlog? Thank you. Understood, thank you for the color. understood thank you for the color Then maybe over to the semiconductor-facing business. then maybe over to the semiconductor-facing business Can you just kind of review how you're thinking about Nordson's positioning therein, views on cycle durability, and maybe a little bit more granularity or quantification to the extent you can on how this cycle is reading through into orders and backlog? can you just kind of review how you're thinking about nordson's positioning therein views on cycle durability and maybe a little bit more granularity or quantification to the extent you can on how this cycle is reading through into orders and backlog Thank you. thank you

Speaker 9: Yeah. The ATS segment, if you look at our 18% backlog growth, is one of the strongest because of robust backlog growth in ATS. If you remember and recall some of the conversation we had a number of years ago, during the downturn, one of the best things our teams did was to reposition the business in a couple of different areas. One, we diversified away from just our dispense businesses. Now we have test and inspection businesses that are delivering growth. In addition, we also had a real nice work that was done around diversification of customers going away from reliance on one or two large customers. Third, we were able to optimally reposition our footprint so that we are in regions where our customers need us to be. Yeah. yeah The ATS segment, if you look at our 18% backlog growth, is one of the strongest because of robust backlog growth in ATS. the ats segment if you look at our 18% backlog growth is one of the strongest because of robust backlog growth in ats If you remember and recall some of the conversation we had a number of years ago, during the downturn, one of the best things our teams did was to reposition the business in a couple of different areas. if you remember and recall some of the conversation we had a number of years ago during the downturn one of the best things our teams did was to reposition the business in a couple of different areas One, we diversified away from just our dispense businesses. one we diversified away from just our dispense businesses Now we have test and inspection businesses that are delivering growth. now we have test and inspection businesses that are delivering growth In addition, we also had a real nice work that was done around diversification of customers going away from reliance on one or two large customers. in addition we also had a real nice work that was done around diversification of customers going away from reliance on one or two large customers Third, we were able to optimally reposition our footprint so that we are in regions where our customers need us to be. third we were able to optimally reposition our footprint so that we are in regions where our customers need us to be Three things of work that we've done in this period of time that has allowed us to position the business. On top of this, what you have is our close to the customer business model, allowing us to innovate on technologies that are needed for our customers as the new AI applications occur, as AI infrastructure happens, and semiconductors become more complex, more difficult to manufacture. All these three things, diversifying customers, operationally being where our customers need us to be, innovating on technologies and application they need us to be, sort of has allowed us to be in this place that we are benefiting from this robust market growth. Where are we at on the cycle? I would tell you we're in the early stages. Three things of work that we've done in this period of time that has allowed us to position the business. three things of work that we've done in this period of time that has allowed us to position the business On top of this, what you have is our close to the customer business model, allowing us to innovate on technologies that are needed for our customers as the new AI applications occur, as AI infrastructure happens, and semiconductors become more complex, more difficult to manufacture. on top of this what you have is our close to the customer business model allowing us to innovate on technologies that are needed for our customers as the new ai applications occur as ai infrastructure happens and semiconductors become more complex more difficult to manufacture All these three things, diversifying customers, operationally being where our customers need us to be, innovating on technologies and application they need us to be, sort of has allowed us to be in this place that we are benefiting from this robust market growth. all these three things diversifying customers, operationally being where our customers need us to be innovating on technologies and application they need us to be sort of has allowed us to be in this place that we are benefiting from this robust market growth Where are we at on the cycle? where are we at on the cycle I would tell you we're in the early stages. i would tell you we're in the early stages It is, as always, we know this is a difficult business to predict, but based on what you can see in the marketplace, based on what you can see with our customers, I would definitely tell you we're in the early stages. In terms of number of applications, if you think about this business, over 50% of this business is in semiconductor now. There are numerous applications that we are part of. Lots of new technologies, I think we have talked about with you around where we are headed in this cycle. There is more technology and innovation that is happening in this business that will allow our customers to really get after the AI compute needs that they have. A couple of things that you would probably be reading about is panel-level packaging. It's very early stage, but we are participating in developing these technologies. It is, as always, we know this is a difficult business to predict, but based on what you can see in the marketplace, based on what you can see with our customers, I would definitely tell you we're in the early stages. it is as always we know this is a difficult business to predict but based on what you can see in the marketplace based on what you can see with our customers i would definitely tell you we're in the early stages In terms of number of applications, if you think about this business, over 50% of this business is in semiconductor now. in terms of number of applications if you think about this business over 50% of this business is in semiconductor now There are numerous applications that we are part of. there are numerous applications that we are part of Lots of new technologies, I think we have talked about with you around where we are headed in this cycle. lots of new technologies i think we have talked about with you around where we are headed in this cycle There is more technology and innovation that is happening in this business that will allow our customers to really get after the AI compute needs that they have. there is more technology and innovation that is happening in this business that will allow our customers to really get after the ai compute needs that they have A couple of things that you would probably be reading about is panel-level packaging. a couple of things that you would probably be reading about is panel-level packaging It's very early stage, but we are participating in developing these technologies. it's very early stage but we are participating in developing these technologies If you think about optical fibers and increased content of optical fibers in AI infrastructure, that's another big area. number of applications benefiting us because of our ability to co-develop technology with our customers. Right? Lastly, what I will tell you is predominantly, we are seeing the growth today in our electronics dispense business and our test and inspection businesses are beginning to inflect, and that is more to come there. If you think about optical fibers and increased content of optical fibers in AI infrastructure, that's another big area. number of applications benefiting us because of our ability to co-develop technology with our customers. if you think about optical fibers and increased content of optical fibers in ai infrastructure that's another big area number of applications benefiting us because of our ability to co-develop technology with our customers Right? right Lastly, what I will tell you is predominantly, we are seeing the growth today in our electronics dispense business and our test and inspection businesses are beginning to inflect, and that is more to come there. lastly what i will tell you is predominantly we are seeing the growth today in our electronics dispense business and our test and inspection businesses are beginning to inflect and that is more to come there

Speaker 5: Thanks, Nag. Thanks, Nag. thanks nag

Speaker 7: Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. Jeff, your line is open. Please go ahead. Your next question comes from the line of Jeff Hammond with KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. Jeff, your line is open. your next question comes from the line of jeff hammond with keybanc capital markets inc jeff your line is open Please go ahead. please go ahead

Speaker 3: Yeah. Hi, good morning. Yeah. yeah Hi, good morning. hi good morning

Speaker 9: Good morning. Good morning. good morning

Speaker 2: Good morning, Jeff. Good morning, Jeff. good morning jeff

Speaker 3: Thanks for the explanation on the medical kind of material issue impacting margins. Can you just talk about industrial specifically, kind of decent growth, kind of flat to down margins? Anything in there, price cost or mix, and then how you see that playing out into the second half as I think last year your margins ticked up nicely for that business? Thanks for the explanation on the medical kind of material issue impacting margins. thanks for the explanation on the medical kind of material issue impacting margins Can you just talk about industrial specifically, kind of decent growth, kind of flat to down margins? can you just talk about industrial specifically kind of decent growth kind of flat to down margins Anything in there, price cost or mix, and then how you see that playing out into the second half as I think last year your margins ticked up nicely for that business? anything in there price cost or mix and then how you see that playing out into the second half as i think last year your margins ticked up nicely for that business

Speaker 9: Yeah. The IPS business, we are really glad to see that we have returned to normalized growth. We delivered 4% organic growth in this segment in the first half. That is a really strong performance for this business. Where we are focused on is to simply take this view that our margins are best in class for the company as well as for this segment. What is really important is for us to continue to focus on the market and be able to deliver growth, and that's what we're doing in this business. Yeah. yeah The IPS business, we are really glad to see that we have returned to normalized growth. the ips business we are really glad to see that we have returned to normalized growth We delivered 4% organic growth in this segment in the first half. we delivered 4% organic growth in this segment in the first half That is a really strong performance for this business. that is a really strong performance for this business Where we are focused on is to simply take this view that our margins are best in class for the company as well as for this segment. where we are focused on is to simply take this view that our margins are best in class for the company as well as for this segment What is really important is for us to continue to focus on the market and be able to deliver growth, and that's what we're doing in this business. what is really important is for us to continue to focus on the market and be able to deliver growth and that's what we're doing in this business If you look at the pieces and parts of this business, I would tell you the packaging product application, adhesive dispensing is doing really well, sustaining growth, where we expect delivering above-market growth. If you think about our plastics and our industrial coating businesses, they are certainly improving. Our precision ag business is also growing nicely. In terms of margins, Dan, you want to comment about that? If you look at the pieces and parts of this business, I would tell you the packaging product application, adhesive dispensing is doing really well, sustaining growth, where we expect delivering above-market growth. if you look at the pieces and parts of this business i would tell you the packaging product application adhesive dispensing is doing really well sustaining growth where we expect delivering above-market growth If you think about our plastics and our industrial coating businesses, they are certainly improving. if you think about our plastics and our industrial coating businesses they are certainly improving Our precision ag business is also growing nicely. our precision ag business is also growing nicely In terms of margins, Dan, you want to comment about that? in terms of margins dan you want to comment about that

Speaker 2: Yeah. I think Naga mentioned it. I'll say this, Jeff, I mean, clearly, and this doesn't just apply to IPS. I would say clearly, we are operating in a bit of an inflationary environment right now. When I say that, I would include tariffs in that. Tariffs in itself are not material, but I would say it's part of the broader inflationary impact we're seeing as we look at the price of components and resins and other inputs. All of our businesses are managing through that. Yeah. yeah I think Naga mentioned it. i think naga mentioned it I'll say this, Jeff, I mean, clearly, and this doesn't just apply to IPS. i'll say this jeff i mean clearly and this doesn't just apply to ips I would say clearly, we are operating in a bit of an inflationary environment right now. i would say clearly we are operating in a bit of an inflationary environment right now When I say that, I would include tariffs in that. when i say that i would include tariffs in that Tariffs in itself are not material, but I would say it's part of the broader inflationary impact we're seeing as we look at the price of components and resins and other inputs. tariffs in itself are not material but i would say it's part of the broader inflationary impact we're seeing as we look at the price of components and resins and other inputs All of our businesses are managing through that. all of our businesses are managing through that We're managing through that with selective pricing where we need to, with offsetting cost actions where we need to. I think that's why you're seeing a little bit on the lower side of incrementals and IPS. That's a short-term issue. It's something that we'll work through, and I think to Naga's point, what we're really focused on in this environment is how do we maximize growth while maintaining our margin performance, which is essentially what we did in Q2. We're managing through that with selective pricing where we need to, with offsetting cost actions where we need to. we're managing through that with selective pricing where we need to with offsetting cost actions where we need to I think that's why you're seeing a little bit on the lower side of incrementals and IPS. i think that's why you're seeing a little bit on the lower side of incrementals and ips That's a short-term issue. that's a short-term issue It's something that we'll work through, and I think to Naga's point, what we're really focused on in this environment is how do we maximize growth while maintaining our margin performance, which is essentially what we did in Q2. it's something that we'll work through and i think to naga's point what we're really focused on in this environment is how do we maximize growth while maintaining our margin performance which is essentially what we did in q2

Speaker 3: Okay, great. Just can you talk through the moving pieces to the guidance? I guess it sounds like lower tax. Maybe you can give us a revenue assumption or how much is included from this acquisition? It seems maybe the backlog is more shippable in 4Q relative to maybe previous expectations, but maybe flush that out. Okay, great. okay great Just can you talk through the moving pieces to the guidance? just can you talk through the moving pieces to the guidance I guess it sounds like lower tax. i guess it sounds like lower tax Maybe you can give us a revenue assumption or how much is included from this acquisition? maybe you can give us a revenue assumption or how much is included from this acquisition It seems maybe the backlog is more shippable in 4Q relative to maybe previous expectations, but maybe flush that out. it seems maybe the backlog is more shippable in 4q relative to maybe previous expectations but maybe flush that out

Speaker 2: Yeah, I'll give you maybe a couple of pieces of flavor on that. I'll start on the sales front. FX has been a tailwind for us in the first half of the year. At current rates, that becomes a neutral item in the second half of the year because the rate changes that we've seen kind of started in the second half of last year. Year-over-year, think of FX as neutral. The net impact of M&A, that's both the divestiture and the new acquisition, which is a small acquisition, is a slight negative of roughly 1% in the back half of the year. The rest of the guidance is really around growth. I think in the opening comments, I think Naga said it quite well. We have high confidence in our midpoint outlook. Yeah, I'll give you maybe a couple of pieces of flavor on that. yeah i'll give you maybe a couple of pieces of flavor on that I'll start on the sales front. i'll start on the sales front FX has been a tailwind for us in the first half of the year. fx has been a tailwind for us in the first half of the year At current rates, that becomes a neutral item in the second half of the year because the rate changes that we've seen kind of started in the second half of last year. at current rates that becomes a neutral item in the second half of the year because the rate changes that we've seen kind of started in the second half of last year Year-over-year, think of FX as neutral. year-over-year think of fx as neutral The net impact of M&A, that's both the divestiture and the new acquisition, which is a small acquisition, is a slight negative of roughly 1% in the back half of the year. the net impact of m&a that's both the divestiture and the new acquisition which is a small acquisition is a slight negative of roughly 1% in the back half of the year The rest of the guidance is really around growth. the rest of the guidance is really around growth I think in the opening comments, I think Naga said it quite well. i think in the opening comments i think naga said it quite well We have high confidence in our midpoint outlook. we have high confidence in our midpoint outlook We have seen, I would say, accelerated demand really accelerating the last couple of months of the quarter, I would say even carrying into the first weeks of the new quarter. If that continues, I think that's where we see the upper end playing out. It would take a meaningful pullback in order activity for us to be in the lower end of our guidance range. Again, just trying to give you a little bit of the flavor and the thinking in this fairly dynamic environment. We think it's the right way to think about the second half, high confidence in the midpoint of our sales outlook with opportunity if things continue to inflect. We have seen, I would say, accelerated demand really accelerating the last couple of months of the quarter, I would say even carrying into the first weeks of the new quarter. we have seen i would say accelerated demand really accelerating the last couple of months of the quarter i would say even carrying into the first weeks of the new quarter If that continues, I think that's where we see the upper end playing out. if that continues i think that's where we see the upper end playing out It would take a meaningful pullback in order activity for us to be in the lower end of our guidance range. it would take a meaningful pullback in order activity for us to be in the lower end of our guidance range Again, just trying to give you a little bit of the flavor and the thinking in this fairly dynamic environment. again just trying to give you a little bit of the flavor and the thinking in this fairly dynamic environment We think it's the right way to think about the second half, high confidence in the midpoint of our sales outlook with opportunity if things continue to inflect. we think it's the right way to think about the second half high confidence in the midpoint of our sales outlook with opportunity if things continue to inflect

Speaker 9: Yeah. I think additionally, what I would tell you, if you look at our backlog and where these components are coming from, all segments are contributing. That is, for us, probably the most exciting part is that all of our businesses are contributing. The momentum across the company is strong, and that's why you see us increasing guidance. Yeah. yeah I think additionally, what I would tell you, if you look at our backlog and where these components are coming from, all segments are contributing. i think additionally what i would tell you if you look at our backlog and where these components are coming from all segments are contributing That is, for us, probably the most exciting part is that all of our businesses are contributing. that is for us probably the most exciting part is that all of our businesses are contributing The momentum across the company is strong, and that's why you see us increasing guidance. the momentum across the company is strong and that's why you see us increasing guidance

Speaker 2: Yeah. I think on the conversion side, Jeff, again, in the environment that we're in, if I think of last year, we had incrementals in the 50% range. In an inflationary environment, that's not realistic, right? I think this is going to be a year where it's really about maintaining margins as we grow, as opposed to expanding margins in an inflationary environment. I think that's the other flavor I would give you as you think about the second half. Yeah. yeah I think on the conversion side, Jeff, again, in the environment that we're in, if I think of last year, we had incrementals in the 50% range. i think on the conversion side jeff again in the environment that we're in if i think of last year we had incrementals in the 50% range In an inflationary environment, that's not realistic, right? in an inflationary environment that's not realistic right I think this is going to be a year where it's really about maintaining margins as we grow, as opposed to expanding margins in an inflationary environment. i think this is going to be a year where it's really about maintaining margins as we grow as opposed to expanding margins in an inflationary environment I think that's the other flavor I would give you as you think about the second half. i think that's the other flavor i would give you as you think about the second half

Speaker 3: Okay, appreciate it. Okay, appreciate it. okay appreciate it

Speaker 7: Your next question comes from the line of Mike Halloran with Baird. Mike, your line is open. Please go ahead. Your next question comes from the line of Mike Halloran with Baird. your next question comes from the line of mike halloran with baird Mike, your line is open. mike your line is open Please go ahead. please go ahead

Speaker 6: Okay, thank you. Morning, everyone. Okay, thank you. okay thank you Morning, everyone. morning everyone

Speaker 9: Good morning. Good morning. good morning

Speaker 2: Morning. Morning. morning

Speaker 6: Just some clarifications then on what you just mentioned. One, is the assumption sequential normalcy from the trend you are seeing right now? In other words, are you just assuming trends stay normal? It feels like there is maybe a little flattening from 3Q to 4Q in the guide. Obviously, I get the confidence you guys are exhibiting here. I just want to make sure I understand that. Also related to the last answer, just the backlog conversion, is that a pretty normal conversion timeline as we sit here? Any signs of backlog building farther out for capacity purposes, particularly on the ATS side? Just any nuance on that? Just some clarifications then on what you just mentioned. just some clarifications then on what you just mentioned One, is the assumption sequential normalcy from the trend you are seeing right now? one is the assumption sequential normalcy from the trend you are seeing right now In other words, are you just assuming trends stay normal? in other words are you just assuming trends stay normal It feels like there is maybe a little flattening from 3Q to 4Q in the guide. it feels like there is maybe a little flattening from 3q to 4q in the guide Obviously, I get the confidence you guys are exhibiting here. I just want to make sure I understand that. obviously i get the confidence you guys are exhibiting here. i just want to make sure i understand that Also related to the last answer, just the backlog conversion, is that a pretty normal conversion timeline as we sit here? also related to the last answer just the backlog conversion is that a pretty normal conversion timeline as we sit here Any signs of backlog building farther out for capacity purposes, particularly on the ATS side? any signs of backlog building farther out for capacity purposes particularly on the ats side Just any nuance on that? just any nuance on that

Speaker 2: Yeah. On the backlog piece, I appreciate the question, Mike. On the backlog piece, I would say no fundamental change. Our backlog in general, the majority, I would say, turns certainly within six months. In some cases, certainly within the quarter. We do have some portion of our backlog that's starting to bleed into 2027, but I would say that's the minority in it. No real fundamental change in overall backlog timing. Yeah, I think that's the simple answer to your question. I think as far as the expectation, look, I think we have good visibility, certainly, to the third quarter. 60% of our business is consumables and single use kind of turnover. Yeah. yeah On the backlog piece, I appreciate the question, Mike. on the backlog piece i appreciate the question mike On the backlog piece, I would say no fundamental change. on the backlog piece i would say no fundamental change Our backlog in general, the majority, I would say, turns certainly within six months. our backlog in general the majority i would say turns certainly within six months In some cases, certainly within the quarter. in some cases certainly within the quarter We do have some portion of our backlog that's starting to bleed into 2027, but I would say that's the minority in it. we do have some portion of our backlog that's starting to bleed into 2027 but i would say that's the minority in it No real fundamental change in overall backlog timing. no real fundamental change in overall backlog timing Yeah, I think that's the simple answer to your question. yeah i think that's the simple answer to your question I think as far as the expectation, look, I think we have good visibility, certainly, to the third quarter. 60% of our business is consumables and single use kind of turnover. i think as far as the expectation look i think we have good visibility certainly to the third quarter 60% of our business is consumables and single use kind of turnover Near term, I think we have high confidence in that. I think we're still being prudent, right? There's some dynamic things happening in the world right now. If you ask me, what do we worry about? Look, if some of the things going on in the macro environment start to create, let's say, raw material shortages or issues for our customers, that's what we worry about, right? If some of these things have more broader implications on the industries we're serving, and there's some limited pullback, I would say that's what we're just being prudent about if I think about the fourth quarter. Near term, I think we have high confidence in that. near term i think we have high confidence in that I think we're still being prudent, right? i think we're still being prudent right There's some dynamic things happening in the world right now. there's some dynamic things happening in the world right now If you ask me, what do we worry about? if you ask me what do we worry about Look, if some of the things going on in the macro environment start to create, let's say, raw material shortages or issues for our customers, that's what we worry about, right? look if some of the things going on in the macro environment start to create let's say raw material shortages or issues for our customers that's what we worry about right If some of these things have more broader implications on the industries we're serving, and there's some limited pullback, I would say that's what we're just being prudent about if I think about the fourth quarter. if some of these things have more broader implications on the industries we're serving and there's some limited pullback i would say that's what we're just being prudent about if i think about the fourth quarter

Speaker 9: The reason you hear the confidence in what we're suggesting is that we're not seeing any of that, correct, in our demand patterns right now. The reason you hear the confidence in what we're suggesting is that we're not seeing any of that, correct, in our demand patterns right now. the reason you hear the confidence in what we're suggesting is that we're not seeing any of that correct in our demand patterns right now

Speaker 6: Yeah. No, that makes a lot of sense. Then the coatings and plastic side, starting to see some better trends. Maybe talk about what you think is driving that, beyond just comparisons, as well as the durability of that dynamic? Appreciate it. Yeah. yeah No, that makes a lot of sense. no that makes a lot of sense Then the coatings and plastic side, starting to see some better trends. then the coatings and plastic side starting to see some better trends Maybe talk about what you think is driving that, beyond just comparisons, as well as the durability of that dynamic? maybe talk about what you think is driving that beyond just comparisons as well as the durability of that dynamic Appreciate it. appreciate it

Speaker 2: Yeah. I would say, actually what we're seeing there, really not a surprise. Going back to last year, we said that certainly there was a big pullback in those markets, but we were confident that that had hit the trough in the fourth quarter. I would say we're seeing normal gradual recovery in both of those markets through the first half, in line with what we expected. Certainly not what I would call a rebound, but nice normal recovery. Yeah. yeah I would say, actually what we're seeing there, really not a surprise. i would say actually what we're seeing there really not a surprise Going back to last year, we said that certainly there was a big pullback in those markets, but we were confident that that had hit the trough in the fourth quarter. going back to last year we said that certainly there was a big pullback in those markets but we were confident that that had hit the trough in the fourth quarter I would say we're seeing normal gradual recovery in both of those markets through the first half, in line with what we expected. i would say we're seeing normal gradual recovery in both of those markets through the first half in line with what we expected Certainly not what I would call a rebound, but nice normal recovery. certainly not what i would call a rebound but nice normal recovery

Speaker 6: Thank you, appreciate it. Thank you, appreciate it. thank you appreciate it

Speaker 2: Yep. Yep. yep

Speaker 7: Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Buscaglia with BNP Paribas. Andrew, your line is open. Please go ahead. Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Buscaglia with BNP Paribas. your next question comes from the line of andrew buscaglia with bnp paribas Andrew, your line is open. andrew your line is open Please go ahead. please go ahead

Speaker 1: Hey, good morning, everyone. Hey, good morning, everyone. hey good morning everyone

Speaker 2: Morning. Morning. morning

Speaker 9: Morning. Morning. morning

Speaker 1: Yeah, I just wanted to check your Industrial Precision is. You guys sound confident, and things are improving at end market-wise and trend-wise. What about within that segment, or maybe just talking broadly, the mix of that aftermarket sales versus systems? Are your customers signaling more confidence in moving forward with some bigger CapEx decision making, and is that already underway? That's being reflected in backlog. Yeah, I just wanted to check your Industrial Precision is. yeah i just wanted to check your industrial precision is You guys sound confident, and things are improving at end market-wise and trend-wise. you guys sound confident and things are improving at end market-wise and trend-wise What about within that segment, or maybe just talking broadly, the mix of that aftermarket sales versus systems? what about within that segment or maybe just talking broadly the mix of that aftermarket sales versus systems Are your customers signaling more confidence in moving forward with some bigger CapEx decision making, and is that already underway? are your customers signaling more confidence in moving forward with some bigger capex decision making and is that already underway That's being reflected in backlog. that's being reflected in backlog

Speaker 9: I would say improved order entry, both in systems and parts, signaling what our customers feel in terms of a broader recovery. If you look at all the different businesses, there is a momentum in the industrial businesses that has allowed us to post a 4% organic growth. This is at the high end of what these businesses have done. If you look at our backlog building, we are seeing confidence in system orders. I would say improved order entry, both in systems and parts, signaling what our customers feel in terms of a broader recovery. i would say improved order entry both in systems and parts signaling what our customers feel in terms of a broader recovery If you look at all the different businesses, there is a momentum in the industrial businesses that has allowed us to post a 4% organic growth. if you look at all the different businesses there is a momentum in the industrial businesses that has allowed us to post a 4% organic growth This is at the high end of what these businesses have done. this is at the high end of what these businesses have done If you look at our backlog building, we are seeing confidence in system orders. if you look at our backlog building we are seeing confidence in system orders

Speaker 2: Yeah, I think just to add one other piece of flavor to that, there's really been no, I'd say, fundamental change in our mix of systems versus parts for IPS. It's been pretty close around that 60/40. If I look at Q2, actually parts are slightly higher as a percent, but again, not meaningful, a couple of percent. No big system inflection, I think is maybe the message there. Yeah, I think just to add one other piece of flavor to that, there's really been no, I'd say, fundamental change in our mix of systems versus parts for IPS. yeah i think just to add one other piece of flavor to that there's really been no i'd say fundamental change in our mix of systems versus parts for ips It's been pretty close around that 60/40. it's been pretty close around that 60/40 If I look at Q2, actually parts are slightly higher as a percent, but again, not meaningful, a couple of percent. if i look at q2 actually parts are slightly higher as a percent but again not meaningful a couple of percent No big system inflection, I think is maybe the message there. no big system inflection i think is maybe the message there

Speaker 1: Yeah, okay. Yeah, I wanted to check the cash flow has been solid. I'm wondering, you did a small deal, you say in the slides you got about $900 million in capacity still left. I know you got some debt pay down, I wonder what the M&A environment looks like into year-end for you, in that other companies seem to be signaling valuations are maybe ever so slightly normalizing. If you could give us some insight into what you're seeing there, that'd be great. Yeah, okay. yeah okay Yeah, I wanted to check the cash flow has been solid. yeah i wanted to check the cash flow has been solid I'm wondering, you did a small deal, you say in the slides you got about $900 million in capacity still left. i'm wondering you did a small deal you say in the slides you got about $900 million in capacity still left I know you got some debt pay down, I wonder what the M&A environment looks like into year-end for you, in that other companies seem to be signaling valuations are maybe ever so slightly normalizing. i know you got some debt pay down i wonder what the m&a environment looks like into year-end for you in that other companies seem to be signaling valuations are maybe ever so slightly normalizing If you could give us some insight into what you're seeing there, that'd be great. if you could give us some insight into what you're seeing there that'd be great

Speaker 9: Yeah, our M&A activity continues to be robust. We have a pipeline that's pretty active. We continue to work it. We're going to stay disciplined, right? We're going to stay disciplined against our strategic criteria, as well as our financial returns criteria. What we don't talk about are things that we've been part of and didn't bring to fruition for many different reasons. The activities are pretty strong. Our focus is the same. We're continuing to be focused around our medical business growth, test and inspection, and any technology adds, bolt-on adds to our strong existing portfolio of businesses, right? Our industrial businesses, our ATS businesses. Wherever there is an opportunity to bolt on technology, we will do that. Big strategic acquisitions are focused on medical. Yeah, our M&A activity continues to be robust. yeah our m&a activity continues to be robust We have a pipeline that's pretty active. we have a pipeline that's pretty active We continue to work it. we continue to work it We're going to stay disciplined, right? we're going to stay disciplined right We're going to stay disciplined against our strategic criteria, as well as our financial returns criteria. we're going to stay disciplined against our strategic criteria as well as our financial returns criteria What we don't talk about are things that we've been part of and didn't bring to fruition for many different reasons. what we don't talk about are things that we've been part of and didn't bring to fruition for many different reasons The activities are pretty strong. the activities are pretty strong Our focus is the same. our focus is the same We're continuing to be focused around our medical business growth, test and inspection, and any technology adds, bolt-on adds to our strong existing portfolio of businesses, right? we're continuing to be focused around our medical business growth test and inspection and any technology adds bolt-on adds to our strong existing portfolio of businesses right Our industrial businesses, our ATS businesses. our industrial businesses our ats businesses Wherever there is an opportunity to bolt on technology, we will do that. wherever there is an opportunity to bolt on technology we will do that Big strategic acquisitions are focused on medical. big strategic acquisitions are focused on medical

Speaker 1: Got it. Thanks, Naga. Got it. got it Thanks, Naga. thanks naga

Speaker 9: Thank you. Thank you. thank you

Speaker 7: If you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. Your next question comes from the line of Walter Liptak with Seaport Research. Walter, your line is open. Please go ahead. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one to raise your hand. if you would like to ask a question please press star one to raise your hand Your next question comes from the line of Walter Liptak with Seaport Research. your next question comes from the line of walter liptak with seaport research Walter, your line is open. walter your line is open Please go ahead. please go ahead

Speaker 10: Hi, thanks. Good morning. Hi, thanks. hi thanks Good morning. good morning

Speaker 9: Morning. Morning. morning

Speaker 2: Morning. Morning. morning

Speaker 10: I want to ask one about the ATS order strength. I wonder if there's a way you could quantify it for us a little bit more. Is it up single digits, double digits? I wonder if you could talk a little bit more about the broadening, I think, of the technology from electronics dispense to more T&I. Why is there sort of a lag from dispense to T&I? I want to ask one about the ATS order strength. i want to ask one about the ats order strength I wonder if there's a way you could quantify it for us a little bit more. i wonder if there's a way you could quantify it for us a little bit more Is it up single digits, double digits? is it up single digits double digits I wonder if you could talk a little bit more about the broadening, I think, of the technology from electronics dispense to more T&I. i wonder if you could talk a little bit more about the broadening i think of the technology from electronics dispense to more t&i Why is there sort of a lag from dispense to T&I? why is there sort of a lag from dispense to t&i

Speaker 2: Maybe I'll take the first part of that, and then I'll hand it off to Naga, and appreciate the question, Walt. Yeah, look, we don't give backlog and order level details at a segment level, but I think I'll maybe reiterate some of the earlier comments. With backlog up 18%, that was broad-based with all segments contributing to that, and I would actually say, and I think Naga mentioned this, I would say particular strength in our ATS segment contributing to that 18%. I think you can easily draw a double-digit increase to ATS from those statements. If anything, I would say in line with or better than that 18% overall. Maybe I'll take the first part of that, and then I'll hand it off to Naga, and appreciate the question, Walt. maybe i'll take the first part of that and then i'll hand it off to naga and appreciate the question walt Yeah, look, we don't give backlog and order level details at a segment level, but I think I'll maybe reiterate some of the earlier comments. yeah look we don't give backlog and order level details at a segment level but i think i'll maybe reiterate some of the earlier comments With backlog up 18%, that was broad-based with all segments contributing to that, and I would actually say, and I think Naga mentioned this, I would say particular strength in our ATS segment contributing to that 18%. with backlog up 18% that was broad-based with all segments contributing to that and i would actually say and i think naga mentioned this i would say particular strength in our ats segment contributing to that 18% I think you can easily draw a double-digit increase to ATS from those statements. i think you can easily draw a double-digit increase to ats from those statements If anything, I would say in line with or better than that 18% overall. if anything i would say in line with or better than that 18% overall

Speaker 9: Let's talk about some of the applications. There is not really a lag between these different businesses. Right now, the strength is in our dispense businesses. You could correlate that there are more dispense businesses versus test and inspection, right? If you look at a single line, you're going to have more dispense units versus T&I units. In terms of lag, those are just business dynamics, and I wouldn't read any much more than that. We are seeing similar levels of growth in terms of demand from both these dispense as well as test and inspection. My comments were more around if you compare to before, ATS today is a much broader set of applications, broader set of technologies. That's probably what I was trying to say. Let's talk about some of the applications. let's talk about some of the applications There is not really a lag between these different businesses. there is not really a lag between these different businesses Right now, the strength is in our dispense businesses. right now the strength is in our dispense businesses You could correlate that there are more dispense businesses versus test and inspection, right? you could correlate that there are more dispense businesses versus test and inspection right If you look at a single line, you're going to have more dispense units versus T&I units. if you look at a single line you're going to have more dispense units versus t&i units In terms of lag, those are just business dynamics, and I wouldn't read any much more than that. in terms of lag those are just business dynamics and i wouldn't read any much more than that We are seeing similar levels of growth in terms of demand from both these dispense as well as test and inspection. we are seeing similar levels of growth in terms of demand from both these dispense as well as test and inspection My comments were more around if you compare to before, ATS today is a much broader set of applications, broader set of technologies. my comments were more around if you compare to before ats today is a much broader set of applications broader set of technologies That's probably what I was trying to say. that's probably what i was trying to say Yes, I did mention around that being a lag, but that's not related to any dynamics in the marketplace, rather than it just happens to be such that. There were cases last year, we were growing our test and inspection faster than we were growing our dispense business. This year, the last three quarters, our dispense business is far more robust than our test and inspection business. When we look at our demand, look at our customer projects, look at all the things that we're working on, there is no difference really. Yes, I did mention around that being a lag, but that's not related to any dynamics in the marketplace, rather than it just happens to be such that. yes i did mention around that being a lag but that's not related to any dynamics in the marketplace rather than it just happens to be such that There were cases last year, we were growing our test and inspection faster than we were growing our dispense business. there were cases last year we were growing our test and inspection faster than we were growing our dispense business This year, the last three quarters, our dispense business is far more robust than our test and inspection business. this year, the last three quarters our dispense business is far more robust than our test and inspection business When we look at our demand, look at our customer projects, look at all the things that we're working on, there is no difference really. when we look at our demand look at our customer projects look at all the things that we're working on there is no difference really

Speaker 10: Okay, great. Then as sort of a follow-up to an earlier question about the backlogs and the cycle times. I think some of those six months cycle times from backlog to shipment is probably longer in industrial but shorter in medical and advanced tech. So I wonder if you could talk specifically about those differences, and then the AT in the Advanced Tech segment. Are they significantly shorter in Advanced Tech? Okay, great. okay great Then as sort of a follow-up to an earlier question about the backlogs and the cycle times. then as sort of a follow-up to an earlier question about the backlogs and the cycle times I think some of those six months cycle times from backlog to shipment is probably longer in industrial but shorter in medical and advanced tech. i think some of those six months cycle times from backlog to shipment is probably longer in industrial but shorter in medical and advanced tech So I wonder if you could talk specifically about those differences, and then the AT in the Advanced Tech segment. so i wonder if you could talk specifically about those differences and then the at in the advanced tech segment Are they significantly shorter in Advanced Tech? are they significantly shorter in advanced tech

Speaker 2: Yeah, I hate to say this, it really depends to some extent. It really depends on the mix of the orders coming in. The longer cycle times tend to be tied to our larger, more complex systems. Again, if you look at the mix, even in medical, while it's all consumable products, there's a lot of times that we have customers that will place three-month POs, right? It's one PO that goes into the backlog that gets issued or released over three months. It's really, I hate to say it depends. What I would say generally is, consumables, smaller kind of, let's just call it our high volume smaller systems tend to get delivered much quicker, even within the quarter. Yeah, I hate to say this, it really depends to some extent. yeah i hate to say this it really depends to some extent It really depends on the mix of the orders coming in. it really depends on the mix of the orders coming in The longer cycle times tend to be tied to our larger, more complex systems. the longer cycle times tend to be tied to our larger more complex systems Again, if you look at the mix, even in medical, while it's all consumable products, there's a lot of times that we have customers that will place three-month POs, right? again if you look at the mix even in medical while it's all consumable products there's a lot of times that we have customers that will place three-month pos right It's one PO that goes into the backlog that gets issued or released over three months. it's one po that goes into the backlog that gets issued or released over three months It's really, I hate to say it depends. it's really i hate to say it depends What I would say generally is, consumables, smaller kind of, let's just call it our high volume smaller systems tend to get delivered much quicker, even within the quarter. what i would say generally is consumables smaller kind of let's just call it our high volume smaller systems tend to get delivered much quicker even within the quarter It's really our larger systems that tend to be more the three to six or even beyond, somewhat dependent not just on the system, but also because it tends to be tied into a larger product or project that our customers are working on, and it's really about their timing. It's really our larger systems that tend to be more the three to six or even beyond, somewhat dependent not just on the system, but also because it tends to be tied into a larger product or project that our customers are working on, and it's really about their timing. it's really our larger systems that tend to be more the three to six or even beyond somewhat dependent not just on the system but also because it tends to be tied into a larger product or project that our customers are working on and it's really about their timing

Speaker 9: Yeah. Based on what Dan is telling you, right? It's exactly what you're talking about. Well, our largest system businesses are more in IPS, less in ATS, right? You are right. Our largest system backlog converting into shipments in that six-month period, it's more around that large system businesses, which are predominantly in IPS. If you think about ATS, you still have systems that ship within the quarter, right? Why Dan says it depends is our customers will give us the order in this quarter, but would tell us, "Hey, I want this in the fourth quarter," right? That we don't control, even though our lead times are pretty good. We have significantly improved our lead times from what used to be 16, 18 weeks to now less than seven, eight weeks, and we could even push things into four weeks if somebody wants it. Yeah. yeah Based on what Dan is telling you, right? based on what dan is telling you right It's exactly what you're talking about. it's exactly what you're talking about Well, our largest system businesses are more in IPS, less in ATS, right? well our largest system businesses are more in ips less in ats right You are right. you are right Our largest system backlog converting into shipments in that six-month period, it's more around that large system businesses, which are predominantly in IPS. our largest system backlog converting into shipments in that six-month period it's more around that large system businesses which are predominantly in ips If you think about ATS, you still have systems that ship within the quarter, right? if you think about ats you still have systems that ship within the quarter right Why Dan says it depends is our customers will give us the order in this quarter, but would tell us, "Hey, I want this in the fourth quarter," right? why dan says it depends is our customers will give us the order in this quarter but would tell us "hey i want this in the fourth quarter," right That we don't control, even though our lead times are pretty good. that we don't control even though our lead times are pretty good We have significantly improved our lead times from what used to be 16, 18 weeks to now less than seven, eight weeks, and we could even push things into four weeks if somebody wants it. we have significantly improved our lead times from what used to be 16 18 weeks to now less than seven eight weeks and we could even push things into four weeks if somebody wants it It's not really an issue of the company as much as what the customer wants as well, right? MFS predominantly is consumables. Yes, the orders you get, you can ship them within the quarter, within the week, within the month. It depends on what order you got. If you got these long-dated blanket orders, then they don't, right? We're sorry to give you an answer that is broad-based, but it is the circumstances. In general, what you want to take away from this conversation, order momentum strong across all segments, all segments contributing, backlog up 18%, gives us a high level of confidence at the midpoint of our sales guide. It's not really an issue of the company as much as what the customer wants as well, right? it's not really an issue of the company as much as what the customer wants as well right MFS predominantly is consumables. mfs predominantly is consumables Yes, the orders you get, you can ship them within the quarter, within the week, within the month. yes the orders you get you can ship them within the quarter within the week within the month It depends on what order you got. it depends on what order you got If you got these long-dated blanket orders, then they don't, right? if you got these long-dated blanket orders then they don't right We're sorry to give you an answer that is broad-based, but it is the circumstances. we're sorry to give you an answer that is broad-based but it is the circumstances In general, what you want to take away from this conversation, order momentum strong across all segments, all segments contributing, backlog up 18%, gives us a high level of confidence at the midpoint of our sales guide. in general what you want to take away from this conversation order momentum strong across all segments all segments contributing backlog up 18% gives us a high level of confidence at the midpoint of our sales guide

Speaker 2: No fundamental change in the delivery requests. We're not taking one-year-out orders and things of that nature. No fundamental change in the delivery requests. no fundamental change in the delivery requests We're not taking one-year-out orders and things of that nature. we're not taking one-year-out orders and things of that nature

Speaker 9: Yes. Yes. yes

Speaker 2: It's pretty much in line with what we would typically see. It's pretty much in line with what we would typically see. it's pretty much in line with what we would typically see

Speaker 10: Okay, got it. All right, thank you for that explanation. Okay, got it. okay got it All right, thank you for that explanation. all right thank you for that explanation

Speaker 7: Your next question comes from the line of Robert Jamieson with Vertical Research Partners. Robert, your line is open. Please go ahead. Your next question comes from the line of Robert Jamieson with Vertical Research Partners. your next question comes from the line of robert jamieson with vertical research partners Robert, your line is open. robert your line is open Please go ahead. please go ahead

Speaker 8: Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. Hey, good morning. hey good morning Thank you for taking my questions. thank you for taking my questions

Speaker 9: Good morning. Good morning. good morning

Speaker 2: Good morning. Good morning. good morning

Speaker 8: Morning. Just a quick one on IPS, just kind of higher level. When I think about the precise nature of your dispensing offer in IPS and inflationary input environment, your offering really positions you as a cost savings partner in a way. Do you think if we see persistently high input costs, could this act as like a medium-term driver for consumables refresh demand for IPS customers that could coincide with the improvements that you're seeing in systems level demand? Morning. morning Just a quick one on IPS, just kind of higher level. just a quick one on ips just kind of higher level When I think about the precise nature of your dispensing offer in IPS and inflationary input environment, your offering really positions you as a cost savings partner in a way. when i think about the precise nature of your dispensing offer in ips and inflationary input environment your offering really positions you as a cost savings partner in a way Do you think if we see persistently high input costs, could this act as like a medium-term driver for consumables refresh demand for IPS customers that could coincide with the improvements that you're seeing in systems level demand? do you think if we see persistently high input costs could this act as like a medium-term driver for consumables refresh demand for ips customers that could coincide with the improvements that you're seeing in systems level demand

Speaker 9: Yes. Yes. yes

Speaker 8: Is this kind of the right way to think about that? How might this be or turn into like a medium term kind of demand driver for you all? Is this kind of the right way to think about that? is this kind of the right way to think about that How might this be or turn into like a medium term kind of demand driver for you all? how might this be or turn into like a medium term kind of demand driver for you all

Speaker 9: Absolutely. You are absolutely right in that what we offer is material savings across the entire product line. Material savings, of course, accuracy, precision, speed, things that matter. This drive for efficiency, not only because of waste of materials, but it is also because it's not available. Hence, you are looking at somebody that goes along across the entire portfolio, right? It's not only the adhesives, it goes across the coatings businesses, it goes across our precision ag business as well, because we do believe this is a really strong value proposition that our teams are marketing out there with our customers because there is a real need for it. Absolutely. absolutely You are absolutely right in that what we offer is material savings across the entire product line. you are absolutely right in that what we offer is material savings across the entire product line Material savings, of course, accuracy, precision, speed, things that matter. material savings of course accuracy precision speed things that matter This drive for efficiency, not only because of waste of materials, but it is also because it's not available. this drive for efficiency not only because of waste of materials but it is also because it's not available Hence, you are looking at somebody that goes along across the entire portfolio, right? hence you are looking at somebody that goes along across the entire portfolio right It's not only the adhesives, it goes across the coatings businesses, it goes across our precision ag business as well, because we do believe this is a really strong value proposition that our teams are marketing out there with our customers because there is a real need for it. it's not only the adhesives it goes across the coatings businesses it goes across our precision ag business as well because we do believe this is a really strong value proposition that our teams are marketing out there with our customers because there is a real need for it When you suddenly apply more or you're changing materials, that's another one. When you run out of certain materials, you're trying to change materials. Technical help, application help, things that the company is really good at, I think will help us. When you suddenly apply more or you're changing materials, that's another one. when you suddenly apply more or you're changing materials that's another one When you run out of certain materials, you're trying to change materials. when you run out of certain materials you're trying to change materials Technical help, application help, things that the company is really good at, I think will help us. technical help application help things that the company is really good at i think will help us

Speaker 8: That's really helpful, thank you for that. Just two quick ones, just on CapstanAG. Should we think about the incremental revenue addition? I saw there was $2 million or so, and you owned it for maybe a month. Should we think about that as a $5 million-$6 million incremental revenue as we put that into our models? That's really helpful, thank you for that. that's really helpful thank you for that Just two quick ones, just on CapstanA G. just two quick ones just on capstana g Should we think about the incremental revenue addition? should we think about the incremental revenue addition I saw there was $2 million or so, and you owned it for maybe a month. i saw there was $2 million or so and you owned it for maybe a month Should we think about that as a $5 million-$6 million incremental revenue as we put that into our models? should we think about that as a $5 million-$6 million incremental revenue as we put that into our models

Speaker 2: For the second half? Yeah, that would be a good estimation. It's roughly a $13 million business, is the approximate size. For the second half? for the second half Yeah, that would be a good estimation. yeah that would be a good estimation It's roughly a $13 million business, is the approximate size. it's roughly a $13 million business is the approximate size

Speaker 8: Okay, perfect. Okay, perfect. okay perfect

Speaker 2: Annual. Annual. annual

Speaker 8: Annual? Okay, perfect. Then just last on, where do you think we are in the demand cycle for ATS? Obviously, looking at capital spending environment and semiconductor and where you play. Would you still categorize that we're in the early innings or early stages of the demand cycle at this point? Annual? annual Okay, perfect. okay perfect Then just last on, where do you think we are in the demand cycle for ATS? then just last on where do you think we are in the demand cycle for ats Obviously, looking at capital spending environment and semiconductor and where you play. obviously looking at capital spending environment and semiconductor and where you play Would you still categorize that we're in the early innings or early stages of the demand cycle at this point? would you still categorize that we're in the early innings or early stages of the demand cycle at this point

Speaker 2: Yes. Yes. yes

Speaker 8: Perfect. Thank you. Perfect. perfect Thank you. thank you

Speaker 2: Okay. Okay. okay

Speaker 7: There are no further questions at this time. I will now hand the call over to Naga for closing remarks. There are no further questions at this time. there are no further questions at this time I will now hand the call over to Naga for closing remarks. i will now hand the call over to naga for closing remarks

Speaker 9: Thank you for your time and attention on today's call. Nordson is well-positioned as a diversified precision technology company. Our close-to-the-customer model, proprietary and niche technology, diversified geographic and end-market exposures, high level of recurring revenue, and strong balance sheet are among the many attributes that makes us a quality growth compounder. Have a great day. Thank you for your time and attention on today's call. thank you for your time and attention on today's call Nordson is well-positioned as a diversified precision technology company. nordson is well-positioned as a diversified precision technology company Our close-to-the-customer model, proprietary and niche technology, diversified geographic and end-market exposures, high level of recurring revenue, and strong balance sheet are among the many attributes that makes us a quality growth compounder. our close-to-the-customer model proprietary and niche technology diversified geographic and end-market exposures high level of recurring revenue and strong balance sheet are among the many attributes that makes us a quality growth compounder Have a great day. have a great day

Speaker 7: This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect. This concludes today's call. this concludes today's call Thank you for attending. thank you for attending You may now disconnect. you may now disconnect