WW
WATTS WATER TECHNOLOGIES INC (WTS)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Watts delivered a clean beat and raised guidance: Q3 revenue $0.612B (+13% y/y; +9% organic), adjusted EPS $2.50 (+23% y/y), and adjusted operating margin 18.5% (+140 bps), fueled by strong Americas pricing/volume and productivity, offsetting European weakness .
- Broad-based estimate beats: revenue, EPS, and EBITDA all exceeded consensus; Q3 adjusted EPS $2.50 vs $2.26 consensus; revenue $611.7M vs $576.3M; EBITDA $127.1M vs $116.7M; also beat in Q2 and modest beat in Q1*.
- FY25 outlook raised: reported sales growth to 7–8% (from 2–5%), organic to 4–5% (from flat–3%), operating margin to 18.1–18.2%, and adjusted operating margin to 19.1–19.2%; management cites tariff-related pricing, FX tailwind, data center strength, and Haws acquisition (10 bps margin dilution) .
- Capital allocation and M&A: quarterly dividend $0.52 declared; Haws ($~60M sales) acquired 11/4 to complement Bradley safety portfolio; integrations tracking ahead; FCF conversion expected ≥100% of net income for FY25 .
Note: *Values retrieved from S&P Global.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Americas momentum and price realization: Americas sales +16% reported (+13% organic) with ~$11M acquisition contribution and ~6% price contribution; segment margin +180 bps to 23.7% .
- Expanded FY25 outlook and execution: Adjusted operating margin +140 bps y/y in Q3; FY25 adjusted operating margin raised to 19.1–19.2%. CEO: “We are increasing our full year 2025 sales and margin outlook” .
- Data center demand strength and portfolio strategy: Management highlighted “strong sales in data centers” as a driver of raised outlook; Nexa platform adoption building with successful installations and consolidating connected products to one application .
What Went Wrong
- Europe softness persists: Q3 Europe organic sales −2% despite FX tailwind; drains decline and broader market weakness; volume deleverage remained a headwind though segment margin improved to 12.2% .
- Tariff uncertainty: Management flagged fluid tariff environment (estimated direct tariff cost ~$40M), potential Supreme Court outcomes, and pricing adjustments needed; sequential margin normalization from Q2’s one-time price-cost favorability .
- Sequential slowdown ahead: Q4 guide implies lower Americas growth (pull-forward unwinding) and seasonally lower margins; Q4 adjusted operating margin 17–17.5% vs Q3 18.5% .
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L and EPS (Quarterly)
Segment Net Sales and Margins (Quarterly)
KPIs and Capital Allocation (Progression)
Q3 Year-over-Year Comparison
Non-GAAP Adjustments Impact (EPS)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We achieved strong third quarter results that exceeded our expectations driven by strong execution in our Americas region…we are increasing our full year 2025 sales and margin outlook” — Robert J. Pagano Jr., CEO .
- “Adjusted operating margin of 18.5% was better than anticipated due to favorable price, volume leverage, productivity, and mix…we expect to generate seasonally strong free cash flow through year-end” — CEO prepared remarks .
- “We are also pleased to announce the acquisition of Haws Corporation…[it] complements our Bradley business” — CEO .
- “We now anticipate organic sales growth of 4–5%…reported sales growth 7–8%…adjusted operating margin expansion up 140–150 bps” — CFO .
- “Our quarter-end net debt-to-capitalization ratio was −15%, and our net leverage is −0.5x” — CFO (supported by tables ).
Q&A Highlights
- Pricing/tariffs: Americas price contribution ~6% in Q3; pricing likely slightly higher in Q4 to offset tariffs; pre-buy/pull-forward ~$11M in Q3 .
- Haws acquisition: ~$60M sales; ~20% hydration; primary rationale is safety portfolio complementarity with Bradley; expected margin dilution near term; aim to reach Watts margin over time .
- Europe margins: Run-rate improving post-restructuring; goal to restore prior levels over time, with 80/20 actions and cost structure realignment; caution given macro/Ukraine conflict .
- Data center exposure: North America to surpass APAC in 2025; high double-digit growth; offsets residential softness .
- Macro tone: Multifamily near a bottom; residential remains soft; government shutdown uncertainty could dampen residential activity temporarily .
Estimates Context
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Bolded takeaway: Q3 delivered across-the-board beats vs consensus on revenue, EPS, and EBITDA*.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Strong execution and pricing power: Broad beats and margin expansion despite tariffs, with Americas pricing/volume and productivity offsetting Europe weakness .
- Guidance raise is meaningful: FY25 reported growth lifted to 7–8% and adjusted operating margin to 19.1–19.2%, with data centers and FX supportive — a likely positive narrative driver .
- Sequential normalization: Expect Q4 margins to step down on seasonality, acquisition dilution, and unwind of pull-forward; watch near-term revisions and 1H26 pricing carryover commentary .
- Europe inflecting on margins: Restructuring nearing completion; improved margins but demand remains soft — monitor run-rate sustainability into 2026 .
- M&A expands safety portfolio: Haws enhances front-of-the-wall and safety offerings; near-term dilution (~10 bps) but medium-term synergy potential with Bradley .
- FCF and balance sheet optionality: YTD FCF up to $216M; net debt-to-cap further negative; supports continued dividends, buybacks, and strategic investments .
- Risk watch: Tariff policy volatility (incl. SCOTUS), residential/multifamily trajectory, Europe macro, and FX — all can sway margins and growth; pricing agility remains key .