WI
Woodward, Inc. (WWD)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered record sales and EPS, both ahead of consensus: Revenue $915.4M vs $889.2M consensus and Diluted EPS $1.76 vs $1.645 consensus; Aerospace drove growth with 21.1% segment margin, while Industrial margin compressed on China on-highway weakness . EPS/Revenue consensus from S&P Global*.
- Full-year guidance raised: Sales to $3.45–$3.525B, Adjusted EPS to $6.50–$6.75, Aerospace margin to 21–21.5%, Industrial margin to ~14.5%; Adjusted ETR lowered to ~17%, but Free Cash Flow cut to $315–$350M due to higher working capital to support demand .
- Strategic updates: Completed acquisition of Safran’s North American electromechanical actuation business (A350 HSTA content), and won Airbus A350 spoiler actuation (12 of 14 spoilers); management signaled a “couple hundred million” multi-year capex for a new U.S. spoiler facility (FY26–FY27) .
- Near-term stock catalyst: Guidance raise and aero margin strength vs consensus beat; watch Q4 Aerospace incrementals and working-capital-driven FCF compression—management expects Q4 aero margins mid-22% exit and inventories to stabilize into 2026 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Aerospace strength: Record Aerospace sales ($596M, +15% YoY) and margin expansion to 21.1% (↑140 bps) on price realization and volume; defense OEM +56% YoY, commercial aftermarket +30% YoY .
- Commercial services momentum: LEAP/GTF aftermarket volumes are approaching legacy aftermarket levels, contributing meaningfully to aero services; crossover still expected ~2028 .
- Strategic wins and portfolio building: Airbus A350 spoiler actuation award (12 of 14 spoilers) and Safran electromechanical actuation acquisition strengthen airframe pedigree ahead of next single-aisle competition .
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What Went Wrong
- Industrial drag: Segment margin fell to 14.9% (−320 bps YoY) with sales −3.2% YoY; China on-highway transportation down sharply (−69% YoY in Q2 commentary; Q3 transportation −12% YoY), driving unfavorable mix .
- Free cash flow compression: Q3 FCF $99M (−27.8% YoY) and FY25 FCF guidance cut to $315–$350M on inventory build to support higher sales amid supply chain dynamics .
- Mix pressure within Aerospace: Strong defense OEM growth carries lower margins vs portfolio average, tempering incrementals vs H1; management still expects Q4 aero incrementals back to H1 ranges as pricing on smart defense lots flows .
Financial Results
Headline actuals across recent quarters
Actual vs Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) and deltas
Values retrieved from S&P Global*.
Segment trend (sales and margins)
Q3 2025 segment breakdown (YoY)
KPIs and cash returns
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We’re pleased to report strong third-quarter results that exceeded our sales and earnings expectations… Aerospace record sales, up 15%, and aero margins expanded 140 bps to 21.1%.”
- “Based on our strong year-to-date performance and solid fourth quarter outlook, we are raising our full-year sales and earnings guidance… lowering our full-year free cash flow guidance [to] support higher sales in a dynamic supply chain and production environment.”
- On strategic wins: “We’ve been selected to provide spoiler control actuators for the Airbus A350… our first actuation LRU win for a primary flight control surface on a commercial platform.”
- On LEAP/GTF aftermarket: “LEAP and GTF service activity continues to grow steeply… now approaching that of legacy products and delivering a meaningful impact to our aeroservices growth profile.”
- On capex and facility: “These types of facilities tend to run a couple hundred million dollars that can be spread across a couple, three years… targeting 2028 entry into service for our hardware.”
Q&A Highlights
- Aerospace margins and incrementals: Q3 incrementals moderated due to lower-margin defense OE mix; Q4 incrementals expected back to H1 ranges as smart defense pricing flows and aftermarket remains strong .
- Working capital and FCF: Increased inventory to meet demand and de-risk supply chain visibility; expect improvement by 2026 as processes stabilize .
- LEAP/GTF trajectory: Aftermarket volumes “in the same neighborhood” as legacy; crossover still ~2028; correlation more to hours/cycles than shop visits .
- JDAM visibility: Demand strong through H1 2026; higher price lots begin in Q4, supporting margin .
- Tax rate drivers: Lower FY25 ETR driven by stock option tax benefits amid record stock prices and higher net earnings .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 beats vs consensus: Revenue $915.4M vs $889.2M consensus (+$26.2M) and Diluted EPS $1.76 vs $1.645 (+$0.12); estimate counts (EPS and Revenue) were 10 each *.
- Across Q1–Q3, WWD beat EPS and revenue consensus each quarter; EBITDA beat in Q1/Q2 but missed in Q3 (company-reported EBITDA $165.9M vs $171.9M consensus; note differing non-GAAP methodologies) .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Quality beat and guidance raise: Strong Q3 execution with broad-based price realization; full-year sales/EPS/margins raised—supports positive estimate revisions and potential multiple support .
- Watch Q4 aero margins: Management implies mid-22% exit rate; pricing on smart defense lots should aid incrementals—monitor defense OE mix impact vs aftermarket strength .
- FCF compression near term: Inventory build to ensure delivery in dynamic supply chain cuts FY25 FCF; management expects normalization into 2026—near-term headwind for capital returns even as repurchases/dividends continue .
- Strategic positioning ahead of next single-aisle: Airbus A350 spoiler actuation win and Safran EMA acquisition expand airframe content; planned “couple hundred million” capex in FY26–27 is growth/productivity focused .
- Industrial thesis intact ex-China: Core Industrial margins ~15% with strength in power gen and marine; China on-highway remains volatile with limited visibility—focus on oil & gas/marine/data center exposure .
- Pricing tailwind: Company-level price realization trending closer to ~7% FY25 (vs prior ~5%)—sustained driver for margins if volumes hold .
- Tax rate benefit in FY25: Lower adjusted ETR (~17%) boosts EPS; benefit linked to stock options—assume reversion risk longer term .