AP
Allegion plc (ALLE)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered double‑digit reported revenue growth to $1.070B (+10.7%) and adjusted EPS of $2.30 (+6.5% YoY), driven by Americas non‑residential demand, price realization, and accretive M&A; adjusted operating margin was 24.1% (−10 bps YoY) as higher corporate costs offset segment margin expansion .
- Versus Wall Street consensus, Allegion modestly beat on revenue ($1.070B vs $1.050B*) and EPS ($2.30 vs $2.243*), while EBITDA was slightly below ($270.6M actual vs $276.5M*) [functions.GetEstimates].
- Full‑year 2025 guidance was raised: reported revenue growth 7.0–8.0% (from 6.5–7.5%), GAAP EPS $7.45–$7.55 (from $7.25–$7.40), adjusted EPS $8.10–$8.20 (from $8.00–$8.15), and ACF conversion 85–95% (from 85–90%) .
- Catalysts: continued electronics momentum (mid‑teens in Q3 commentary), strong spec activity underpinning non‑residential pipeline, tariff recovery via surcharges with price/productivity offset at OI/EPS, and ongoing portfolio upgrades/partnerships (e.g., Google Wallet resident key; Brivo integration) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Americas non‑residential and residential both grew mid‑single digits organically; Americas adjusted operating margin expanded 40 bps to 29.9% on volume/mix and pricing tailwinds .
- International reported revenue +22.5% (organic +3.6%) with adjusted margin +70 bps to 14.3%, aided by electronics growth, acquisitions, and FX tailwinds .
- Management raised FY25 adjusted EPS to $8.10–$8.20 and maintained tax rate assumption (17–18%); CEO: “we’re raising our outlook for reported full-year 2025 revenue and adjusted EPS” .
What Went Wrong
- Enterprise adjusted operating margin was flat-to-down (24.1% vs 24.2% YoY) due to higher corporate expenses despite segment margin expansion .
- EBITDA modestly trailed consensus in Q3 (actual $270.6M vs $276.5M*), reflecting corporate expense headwinds and the margin rate effect of tariff recovery priced to be dollar neutral [functions.GetEstimates].
- Residential demand remains soft; Q4 residential expected to track market (not repeat Q3 mid‑single digit growth from new e‑locks launch) .
Financial Results
Quarterly Trend – Revenue, EPS, Margins
Q3 2025 vs Prior Year and vs Estimates
Note: Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Performance
KPIs and Balance/Cash
Non‑GAAP reconciliation items in Q3: $19.0M amortization of acquired intangibles and $4.6M restructuring/integration; tax adjustments included an $8.5M legislative change benefit .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “double-digit revenue growth for the enterprise and continued segment margin expansion speak to the resiliency of our model…we’re raising our outlook for reported full-year 2025 revenue and adjusted EPS” .
- CFO: “Adjusted operating margin was 24.1%…both our segments had margin expansion, which was offset by higher corporate expenses…price and productivity, net of inflation and investment, was a tailwind of $2.2 million” .
- CEO on tariffs/pricing: “we expect to offset tariffs at the operating profit and EPS level…primarily through pricing actions” .
- CEO on spec writing: “spec activity has continued to grow in 2025…supports our outlook…we still see organic growth in non-res Americas” .
- CFO on balance sheet: “net debt to adjusted EBITDA is at a healthy ratio of 1.8 times” .
Q&A Highlights
- Non‑res verticals/spec pipeline: Management cited healthy channel backlogs and broad spec activity (education, multifamily, data centers), supporting continued non‑res growth .
- Tariffs, pricing fatigue: Team sees industry‑wide price realization; non‑res demand “humming along pretty well”; prepared to cover inflation with price/productivity without fatigue evidence .
- Residential outlook: Q4 residential expected to align with soft market; Q3 uplift was product‑driven (Arrive lock) rather than trend change .
- Margin cadence: Segment margins expanding; corporate expenses drove enterprise rate flat/down; long‑term incremental margins ~35% targeted with detail to come in February .
- M&A multiples/integration: Mechanical assets at high single‑digit EBITDA multiples; electronics/software higher; all assets integrating with revenue/cost synergies .
Estimates Context
Note: Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Implications: Street likely nudges FY25 revenue/EPS slightly higher given Q3 beats and raised guidance; EBITDA expectations may reconcile for corporate expense run‑rate and tariff dollar‑neutral margin effects .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Allegion’s Q3 was operationally strong with a clean beat on revenue and EPS; margin rate modestly constrained by corporate expense comps but segment margins improved, supporting quality of earnings .
- Non‑residential Americas remains the growth engine, underpinned by robust spec activity and aftermarket demand; this supports near‑term revenue visibility into Q4/early 2026 .
- Tariff/surcharge dynamics are being managed to dollar neutrality at OI/EPS; expect margin rate optics to reflect math (numerator/denominator) rather than underlying profitability deterioration .
- Electronics and connected solutions are key secular drivers (Google Wallet resident key; Brivo real‑time Wi‑Fi locks), enhancing mix and strategic positioning in multifamily and commercial .
- International mix improvement and accretive acquisitions (e.g., Elitech, UAP, Brisant) are lifting reported growth and margins, albeit slightly dilutive to enterprise rates near term .
- Cash generation is robust; ACF conversion raised to 85–95%; balance sheet healthy (net debt/Adj EBITDA 1.8x), enabling continued disciplined M&A and shareholder returns .
- Near‑term trading: Positive reaction bias on beat/raise and electronics narrative; watch Q4 residential cadence, corporate expense normalization, and any tariff policy changes as potential volatility drivers .