Stocks/ESE

ESE

ESCO Technologies Inc.
Technology·Hardware, Equipment & Parts
$291.90
$7.6B market cap
Claude Rating
4/10UNDERWEIGHT
Revenue
$1.2B
Free Cash Flow
$211.3M
Rev Growth
+16.5%
FCF Margin
16.9%
P/FCF
35.8x
EV/FCF
36.4x
Fwd EV/EBITDA
20.5x
Fair Value
$210.00
Upside
-28.1%

ESCO Technologies Inc. produces and supplies engineered products and systems for industrial and commercial markets worldwide. It operates through Aerospace & Defense, Utility Solutions Group, and RF Shielding and Test segments. The Aerospace & Defense segment designs and manufactures filtration products, including hydraulic filter elements and fluid control devices used in commercial aerospace applications; filter mechanisms used in micro-propulsion devices for satellites; and custom designed fi

2-Year Price History

$295.62+171.9%
$150$200$250$300volMay 24Sep 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q2590.0126.9--44.3--59.0-16.5545.2----------
Est2028-Q1560.0117.6--39.2--44.8-15.7486.2----------
Est2027-Q4620.0136.4--49.6--99.2-18.6441.4----------
Est2027-Q3575.0117.9--37.4--57.5-17.3342.2----------
Est2027-Q2560.0112.0--33.6--44.8-16.8284.7----------
Est2027-Q1530.0103.4--29.2--26.5-17.0239.9----------
Est2026-Q4370.090.7--48.1--81.4-13.0213.4----------
Est2026-Q3318.070.0--36.6--39.8-9.5132.0----------
Act2026-Q2309.348.148.134.76.4-0.8-7.292.3212.725.915.2%20.0x27.9x
Act2026-Q1289.764.938.428.768.960.8-8.1103.8189.025.913.2%22.5x20.3x
Act2025-Q4352.791.365.5218.7109.995.0-14.9101.4230.425.920.5%17.8x20.1x
Act2025-Q3296.361.643.226.173.756.4-16.478.7568.625.912.4%7.8x20.5x
Act2025-Q2265.557.543.131.024.111.0-13.157.4124.025.821.1%26.2x16.2x
Act2025-Q1214.641.027.423.534.226.4-7.771.3148.425.814.0%18.2x16.7x
Act2024-Q4298.564.151.534.372.157.3-14.866.0156.825.925.9%10.7x13.8x
Act2024-Q3233.650.739.029.236.224.9-5.963.0208.225.819.0%15.2x14.9x
Act2024-Q2249.146.633.123.210.5-0.9-11.459.4226.425.916.5%14.4x16.6x
Act2024-Q1218.335.622.315.28.8-2.0-10.851.4207.725.911.4%13.3x15.7x
Act2023-Q4272.756.40.032.047.739.2-8.541.9138.625.90.0%24.0x15.5x
Act2023-Q3248.850.80.027.934.724.6-10.056.1184.825.80.0%20.4x14.6x
Act2023-Q2229.138.225.917.93.6-5.1-8.648.2198.725.914.4%16.8x14.2x
Act2023-Q1205.532.921.014.7-9.0-16.6-7.651.9170.425.912.7%19.9x12.7x
Act2022-Q4256.554.342.631.093.683.8-9.897.7177.926.025.3%30.7x11.5x
Act2022-Q3219.142.830.723.218.78.9-9.861.0226.226.017.4%32.1x--
Act2022-Q2204.934.822.116.621.111.7-9.454.3222.326.112.3%34.1x--
Act2022-Q1177.027.715.611.52.0-14.1-16.155.7224.726.18.9%37.9x--

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude4/10UNDERWEIGHTFV: $210.00

ESCO Technologies is a well-managed industrial conglomerate with strong secular tailwinds in defense (Navy programs, AUKUS), grid modernization, and EMC testing/data center power. The business has demonstrated excellent operational execution through its ESCO Operating System, with margins expanding and record backlogs providing revenue visibility. However, the stock is egregiously overvalued at ~69x trailing P/E and ~37x EV/FCF, pricing in perfection for a company about to undergo a massively dilutive transformation. The Megger acquisition will roughly double the share count via $1.4B in equity issuance, spike leverage to ~2.5x, and introduce significant integration risk. While the deal is strategically sound (expanding utility solutions exposure), the near-term financial impact is clearly dilutive and the market has barely discounted the share count expansion. At ~$300/share pre-deal, investors are paying peak multiples for a company about to experience significant per-share metric compression. The underlying business quality is high (rating would be 6-7 at a reasonable valuation), but the risk/reward is unfavorable at current prices.

Catalyst Megger acquisition closing (Q1 FY2027) will force the market to re-price on a fully diluted basis; any integration hiccups or revenue miss post-close could trigger meaningful multiple compression from currently elevated levels.
Risk The $2.35B Megger acquisition introduces massive execution risk — $1.4B equity dilution (~doubling shares), $900M new debt, and integration of a large international business. If synergies are delayed or the utility spending cycle turns, the combined entity's per-share economics could disappoint significantly versus the premium currently embedded in the stock.
Trend
STABLE
Mgmt
8/10
Quarter
6/10
Exp. Move
-5.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

ESCO Technologies delivered a standout second quarter for fiscal 2026, marked by a 63% increase in adjusted EPS to $1.91 and a record-breaking backlog. Total revenue grew by 33.5%, supported by 13% organic growth and significant contributions from the ESCO Maritime acquisition. The Aerospace and Defense segment benefited from strong Navy and commercial aerospace demand, while the Test business saw 27% sales growth. In the Utility Solutions Group, Doble’s strong performance in grid modernization diagnostics helped offset temporary weakness in the NRG renewables business caused by shifts in tax credit timing. The company provided an optimistic update on its pending acquisition of Megger Group Limited, which is slated to close in Q1 2027. Management expects the deal to be significantly accretive by its second year, with integration planning already underway. ESCO’s balance sheet remains strong, with low EBITDA leverage of 0.4x and robust cash flow. Driven by broad-based operational strength and pricing power that continues to outpace inflation, management raised its full-year 2026 EPS guidance to $8.00–$8.25. Overall, the call depicted a company successfully pivoting toward high-growth utility and defense markets while maintaining disciplined operational execution.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$291.90
Market Cap$7.6B
Enterprise Value$7.7B
P/S Ratio6.1x
P/FCF35.8x
EV/FCF36.4x
FCF Margin (TTM)16.9%
FCF Yield2.8%
Dividend Yield (TTM)--
Annual Dilution0.3%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$1.2B
Net Income$308.1M
Free Cash Flow$211.3M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+16.5%
EBITDA Margin21.3%
Net Margin24.7%
FCF Margin16.9%
CapEx % of Revenue3.7%
SBC % of Revenue0.7%
ROIC15.3%
WC Change % Rev0.2%
Interest Coverage14.5x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$241.58
-17.2% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$6.4B
− Net Debt$120M
= Fair Equity$6.3B
Revenue Growth30.0% → 4.0%
FCF Margin16.9% → 14.0%
Discount Rate14.0%
Terminal EV/FCF18.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float2.2%
Short Shares0.6M
Days to Cover1.4
Change (vs Prior)+30.4%
Short % Float History
2.20%+0.90pp
1.0%1.2%1.4%1.6%1.8%2.0%2.2%2.4%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)32%
Put IV (ATM)33%
ATM Spread1.6%
Call $OI (near money)$1.1M
Put $OI (near money)$181K
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$300.0
Major Expirations3
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$260.00$38.50/$43.200$1.20/$6.000
$270.00$30.50/$35.400$3.20/$8.000
$280.00$23.00/$27.800$6.00/$10.800
$290.00$17.00/$21.800$9.60/$14.400
$300.00$11.50/$16.301$14.00/$18.800
$310.00$7.50/$12.300$20.00/$24.800
$320.00$4.10/$8.90120$26.90/$31.500
$330.00$1.65/$6.500$34.50/$39.300
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+42.5%
Forward FCF Margin10.8%
Forward EBITDA Margin21.1%
Forward P/FCF39.3x
Forward EV/FCF39.9x
Forward Int. Coverage8.9x
Model Risk Score6/10
Bankruptcy Odds2%
Est. Borrow Rate5.5%
Terminal EV/FCF18.0x
LT Growth4.0%
LT FCF Margin14.0%

Employees

Headcount3,242
Revenue / Employee$384,953
Gross Profit / Employee$161,217
2022: 2,922 → 2023: 3,195 → 2024: 3,281 → 2025: 3,425 (5% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET BUYING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net buyers — bought 8.3% of float, sold 6.9%. 1 filer moved >1% of shares (1 buying, 0 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
+1.4% of float (net)
Bought 8.3% · Sold 6.9%
433 filers reported (last quarter: 391)

Ownership composition

Active
55.9%(+25.0% YoY)
406 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
24.3%(+3.3% YoY)
6 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.6%(+0.4% YoY)
7 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
1.8%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$1.12B$132.80+$20.5M+$9.5M-0.2%$5.69T
Invesco Ltd.$354M$206.18+$58.1M+$309M-0.2%$652.04B
STATE STREET CORPPassive$292M$121.06+$8.9M−$9.0M-0.2%$2.89T
Capital World Investors$211M$203.00−$43.0M+$211M+0.3%$732.46B
DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive$179M$77.43−$16.5M−$141M-0.4%$480.92B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$178M$115.79−$169K+$5.5M+2.3%$1.61T
GENEVA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC$176M$129.80−$45.5M−$58.3M-0.9%$4.71B
Neuberger Berman Group LLC$176M$109.39−$21.9M−$119M+0.1%$131.37B
Conestoga Capital Advisors, LLC$152M$105.47−$65.8M−$141M-2.8%$4.90B
MORGAN STANLEY$131M$119.38−$16.9M−$71.7M-0.3%$1.65T
SILVERCREST ASSET MANAGEMENT GROUP LLC$114M$81.31−$18.5M−$38.7M-0.3%$13.84B
NOMURA ASSET MANAGEMENT INTERNATIONAL INC.$112M$195.31−$14.3M+$112M+1.3%$58.02B
Nuveen, LLC$102M$158.85−$2.4M−$57.2M+0.0%$368.63B
ROYCE & ASSOCIATES LP$96.2M$98.38−$5.8M−$17.2M-0.9%$10.09B
T. Rowe Price Investment Management, Inc.$92.3M$72.74−$6.3M−$95.2M-1.4%$145.22B
Hood River Capital Management LLC$85.6M$172.94+$1.1M+$32.2M-1.1%$9.97B
LOOMIS SAYLES & CO L P$84.6M$106.80−$7.1M−$32.8M-0.2%$73.82B
CHARLES SCHWAB INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT INC$84.1M$118.28−$538K−$4.7M+1.0%$645.81B
GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC$82.1M$129.97+$286K−$12.1M-0.2%$760.93B
WASATCH ADVISORS INC$81.1M$281.29+$81.1M+$81.1M-2.9%$14.87B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)NEUTRAL
Holders
-0.26%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-0.29%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-0.35%
205 buyers · $1.33B in
Sellers (this Q)
-0.15%
160 sellers · $-0.50B out
alpha coverage: 100% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
+5.8%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
-2.9%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-14.3%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+0.6%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
-1.8%
Sellers shed AUM broadly — partly forced.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-4.3%
Holder mid (any stock)
-2.8%
Holder rally (any stock)
-3.6%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

01.8M3.7M5.5M7.4M$68$121$174$228$2812021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
Invesco Ltd.1.3MPRICE T ROWE ASSOCIATES INC /MD/229KT. Rowe Price Investment Management, Inc.328KCapital World Investors750KNeuberger Berman Group LLC626KConestoga Capital Advisors, LLC542KGENEVA CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC626KChamplain Investment Partners, LLCMORGAN STANLEY466KCapital International Investors200K

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Investors who own this also own

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TickerNameCo-holdersScore
BCPCBalchem Corporation4317.60×
MRCYMercury Systems, Inc.3190.56×
MODModine Manufacturing Company348.86×

Analyst Coverage

Analyst Coverage
Price Targets
Last Quarter (1 analysts)$400.003700.0%
Last Year (3 analysts)$325.001130.0%
Current Price$291.90

Corporate

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$8.06M
7 txns · 5 insiders · 36,478 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2025-11-26SELLKHILNANI VINOD Mdirector3,000$217.99$654K$4.46M
2025-11-26SELLSayler Bryan Hdirector, officer: CEO & PRESIDENT802$220.00$176K$4.46M
2025-11-25SELLKHILNANI VINOD Mdirector216$224.04$48K$5.26M
2025-11-25SELLPHILLIPPY ROBERT Jdirector3,700$222.53$823K$1.45M
2025-11-25SELLSayler Bryan Hdirector, officer: CEO & PRESIDENT18,764$220.00$4.13M$4.54M
2025-11-25SELLSchatz David Mofficer: Sr. VP, Sec'y & Gen. Counsel4,996$225.65$1.13M$5.04M
2025-11-25SELLTucker Christopher Lofficer: Sr. Vice President & CFO5,000$220.15$1.10M$4.43M

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

14.1%retail-2.9pp
30.7%dark+8.0pp
week of 2026-04-13
5%10%15%20%25%30%35%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Product (2026-Q2)
Aerospace And Defense$150.3M+22%
Utility Solutions$93.5M+3%
R F Shielding And Test$65.5M+28%
By Geography (2026-Q2)
United States$199.1M+7%
Non-US$110.3M+38%

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

ESCO Technologies Inc.: Routine Administrative Header Lacks Substantive Forensic Red Flags

Overall Risk
2/10
Fraud
1/10
Dilution
1/10
Insolvency
1/10
Earnings Overstated
1/10
Hidden Liabilities
1/10
Legal
1/10
Audit Warnings
1/10
Hidden Upside
1/10
Contextually Acceptable
10/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

ESCO Technologies recently reported mixed Q2 2026 results (May 7, 2026); while EPS of $1.91 beat estimates, revenue of $309.3M missed analyst forecasts, causing the stock to slide approximately 8%. A major 'red flag' for short-sellers is the April 2026 announcement of a $2.35 billion acquisition of Megger Group. While strategically significant, the deal is heavily dilutive, involving $1.4 billion in new equity and $900 million in debt, which investors reacted to negatively due to immediate shareholder dilution and increased financial leverage.

🐻 Bear Case

The primary bear case rests on extreme valuation and margin erosion. ESE currently trades at a trailing P/E of roughly 69.1x, which many analysts consider significantly overvalued relative to its historical median and peer group. Furthermore, net profit margins have compressed to 10.7% from 11.8% a year prior. Skeptics argue that the company is priced for perfection, and the expected revenue growth of ~9.5% is insufficient to justify such a high premium, leaving significant room for multiple compression if integration of the Megger acquisition faces any headwinds.

🚩 Red Flags

Significant insider selling occurred in late 2025, with the CEO (Bryan Sayler) and CFO (Christopher Tucker) offloading over $3 million in shares combined in November 2025. Additionally, the net leverage ratio is projected to spike from near-zero (0.12) to approximately 2.5 following the Megger acquisition. Seeking Alpha downgraded the stock to a 'soft Sell' in April 2026, citing the 41% year-to-date run-up and the high cost of recent acquisitions as primary risks.

⚔️ Competitive Threats

The acquisition of Megger shifts ESCO’s revenue mix heavily toward the Utility Solutions Group (increasing from 30% to 52% of sales). This concentration increases the company's sensitivity to utility infrastructure spending cycles and competitive pressures in the electrical testing market, where it faces entrenched global players. The divestiture of VACCO also removes ESCO's exposure to the high-growth space market, narrowing its focus to more mature or capital-intensive sectors like naval and utility testing.

💬 Customer Sentiment

While official customer sentiment remains stable through a record $1.47B backlog, the recent revenue miss suggests execution challenges or timing delays in fulfilling that backlog. Investor sentiment has turned cautious, as evidenced by the 8% post-earnings drop in May 2026, with the market signaling concern that 'strong demand' is already fully priced in while actual top-line conversion is lagging.

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q2 • 2026-05-08

Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to ESCO Technologies Q2 2026 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. On the call today, we have Bryan Sayler, President and CEO; and Chris Tucker, Senior Vice President and CFO. I'd now like to turn the conference over to your first speaker today, Kate Lowrey, Vice President of Investor Relations. Kate, you now have the floor.
Kate Lowrey: Thank you. Statements made during this call, which are not strictly historical are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the federal securities laws. These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions, and actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements due to risks and uncertainties that exist in the company's operations and business environment, including, but not limited to, the risk factors referenced in the company's press release issued today, which will be included as an exhibit to the company's Form 8-K to be filed. We undertake no duty to update or revise any forward-looking statements, except as may be required by applicable laws and regulations. In addition, during this call, the company may discuss some non-GAAP financial measures in describing the company's operating results. A reconciliation of these measures to the most comparable GAAP measures can be found in the press release issued today and found on the company's website at www.escotechnologies.com under the link Investor Relations. Now I'll turn the call over to Bryan.
Bryan Sayler: Thanks, Kate, and thanks, everyone, for joining today's call. We are pleased to be with you this afternoon to discuss our second quarter results. I'd like to start the call by sincerely thanking all of our employees around the world. Your dedication, collaboration and commitment continue to make the difference, and they were central to delivering another outstanding quarter. In Q2, we continue to see positive momentum across our business platforms as the pace of progress across our end markets continues to build. We had another strong quarter for orders across all 3 segments, and that sustained demand drove backlog to a record level, clear evidence of healthy end markets and the strength of our competitive position. From an operational perspective, Q2 delivered another strong performance, translating into exceptional results on both the top and bottom line. Revenue strength was broad-based across most of our served markets. We see this quarter as further proof of the power of our strategy and our ability to execute with consistency, delivering sustainable value over time. As we announced in mid-April, we have reached an agreement to acquire Megger Group Limited. This acquisition represents a significant step in our portfolio transition, and I wanted to give you a quick update on what's been transpiring since the announcement. We have begun the regulatory filings process in the required countries. And while the timing of this process can be uncertain, our current expectation is that it should be completed in a time frame that results in closing the deal in the first quarter of fiscal 2027. In addition, I want to let you know that we have already established internal teams with Megger, Doble and ESCO staff working together to better understand key aspects of the integration process. We expect that this early preparation and planning will be beneficial in setting out steps for a smooth and orderly integration of Doble and Megger with a focus on realizing identified synergies once the transaction is complete. Adding Megger to the ESCO portfolio creates a scaled utility solutions platform and strengthens our position as a trusted partner to utilities worldwide. This acquisition marks another meaningful step in enhancing our portfolio, and we remain confident in the long-term outlook for our target markets. With durable demand drivers firmly in place, we are excited about the opportunities ahead. Chris will run you through all of the financial details for the second quarter. But before that, I want to give you a few comments on each segment. We recently completed our annual strategic planning process with our subsidiary businesses. As part of these meetings, we assess each of our end markets and our strategies to deliver above-market growth. My comments will focus on the current order strength that we are seeing as well as some of the longer-term dynamics across our served markets. Starting with Aerospace and Defense. In Q2, we continue to see order strength on U.S. and U.K. Navy programs, both from the maritime business and organically at Globe, where we entered $24 million of Virginia Class orders in the quarter for Block V.2 and Block VI content. In addition, we are seeing broad order strength on commercial aerospace programs. As we have mentioned previously, commercial aerospace orders were a little soft last year as the OEMs work through some internal issues. So it is nice to see the rebound in order strength here. We continue to see a positive long-term outlook across our A&D end markets, supported by strong demand visibility and multiyear program backlogs. In commercial aerospace, demand continues to outpace production, sustaining historically high OEM backlogs. Annual deliveries are expected to increase from approximately 1,400 aircraft in 2025 to more than 2,000 per year by 2028 and beyond. While we view industry forecasts with an appropriate conservatism, we believe that the OEMs are on a recovery path, and we are already seeing order momentum tied to early progress in raising building rates. In defense aero, elevated geopolitical uncertainty is supporting higher budgets and new program starts. The F-47 NGAD program represents a meaningful long-cycle growth opportunity, and we have achieved strong early wins to secure attractive shipset content. In naval markets, both the U.S. and U.K. remain committed to submarine modernization and fleet expansion with increasing build rates and new platform development continuing to be key priorities. Turning to the Utility Solutions Group. We delivered another strong quarter of orders led by services, off-line test equipment and condition monitoring that supported double-digit revenue growth. These results were partially offset by lower renewables demand as developers continue to prioritize project completions ahead of tax credit sunsets later this summer. Looking ahead, we are encouraged by the outlook for utility solutions. Approximately 85% of segment activity is tied to utility capital spending, which we expect to remain elevated as electric utilities invest to meet rising electricity demand. This demand is placing increasing strain on an aging infrastructure, accelerating the need to maintain, expand and modernize the electric grid. Our diagnostic measurement, testing and monitoring solutions help utilities improve reliability and performance across both new and legacy assets. Our condition monitoring equipment and high-voltage test solutions are becoming increasingly important for utilities and OEMs that manufacture transformers and switchgear as they navigate the challenges of maintaining and expanding the grid. Overall, we remain bullish on the longer-term opportunity in the utility end market. Finally, I'll touch on the Test business, which carried its great start to the year into the second quarter. Orders were strong in the quarter, driven by EMC test and measurement in the U.S. and Europe. Filter orders for government-funded data centers and multiple industrial shielding projects. Over the longer term, we are seeing broad-based strength across most of test end markets and expect mid-single-digit organic revenue growth over our planning horizon. Demand is being supported by a favorable regulatory and standards environment, rising requirements for electromagnetic compatibility and shielding performance across mission-critical applications. Compliance testing and evolving standards continue to drive increased test frequency and expanded certification requirements. We see sustained demand across EMC and microwave applications, health care, industrial shielding and EMP filters serving utilities and secure data centers. We are optimistic about Test's continued opportunities to drive growth and margin expansion over time. With that, I'll turn it over to Chris, who will run you through the financial details for the quarter.
Christopher Tucker: Thanks, Bryan. Everyone can follow along on the chart presentation. We will start on Page 3, which shows the financial highlights for the second quarter. The bar charts across the top of this page clearly show that the second quarter was another great set of results for ESCO. The key theme with ESCO's financial results right now is that the core company performance on an organic basis is quite strong, and the ESCO Maritime acquisition is adding significantly to that strong base company performance. It's been a powerful combination driving our results since the closing of the Maritime deal in April of 2025. Getting to the numbers, we start with orders, which increased 42% Organic order growth was double digit for all 3 business platforms with overall organic order growth of 22%. Maritime added $53 million of orders or 20 points of additional growth. On the sales side, reported growth was 33.5%, which was comprised of 13% organic growth and $48 million of sales from Maritime. On the profitability side, we saw adjusted EBIT margins improved by 370 basis points to 21.7% and adjusted earnings per share increased by 63% to $1.91 per share. Next, we will go through the segment highlights, starting with Aerospace and Defense on Page 4. A great quarter across all metrics, starting with orders, which came in at nearly $184 million compared to $96.5 million in the prior year quarter. Organic orders increased by 35% with strong growth from the commercial aerospace and Navy businesses. As stated previously, Maritime added $53 million of orders in the quarter, which brought reported order growth to just over 90%. Sales in the quarter were $150 million with organic growth of 14%. The strong organic growth was driven by strength from commercial and defense aerospace as well as the Navy business. So really nice performance from all parts of the core Aerospace and Defense platform. On the profitability side, we had good improvement to 28.6% adjusted EBIT margins, an increase of 160 basis points. Adjusted EBIT and adjusted EBITDA dollars increased by 78% and 72%, respectively. Margin increases were due to positive impacts from leveraging sales growth and increased prices. Next, we go to Chart 5 and the Utility Solutions Group. Orders here were up 10% in the second quarter, and that was driven by strong performance at Doble, where orders grew by 20%. We did see weak orders performance at NRG, where the renewables markets continue to be very soft. Sales in the quarter were up a modest 3%. Doble sales growth of 11% was somewhat offset by declines in NRG. Doble continues to see good end market activity across a number of product lines serving the regulated utility customer base. Adjusted EBIT dollars in the quarter were up nearly 11% with volume, price and mix benefits at Doble more than offsetting margin drops at NRG. Next, we have the Test business on Page 6. This business had another terrific quarter with orders up 21% and sales up more than 27%. This business is seeing robust market activity centered around U.S. test and measurement and power filter demand. Adjusted EBIT margins improved nicely, increasing to 15.4%, which represents an increase of 300 basis points from last year's second quarter as the business continues to nicely leverage sales growth. Next is Chart 7, where we have year-to-date highlights. The first 6 months have been very strong for ESCO as we make progress towards another record year. Order strength has been significant with 30% organic growth year-to-date. All 3 businesses have delivered double-digit organic growth with aerospace and defense leading the way. Sales have also been strong with 12% year-to-date organic growth, led by Test at 27% and Aerospace and Defense at 14%. Adjusted EBIT margins were up 370 basis points year-to-date as all 3 businesses have delivered improved margins. Going to Chart 8, we have cash flow highlights for the first 6 months. Operating cash flow is up significantly at nearly $135 million compared to $46 million in the prior year. A key driver has been increased advanced payments on large Navy contracts. Capital spending is down slightly compared to last year, and there's a $10 million use of cash on the acquisition line related to working capital and tax settlements for the Maritime deal. EBITDA leverage is low at 0.4x, and we are positioned well for the debt requirements that will come with the Megger deal, which is currently expected to close in the first quarter of fiscal 2027. Our last chart is # 9, where we have updated 2026 guidance. With another strong quarter, we are increasing full year 2026 guidance. We now expect full year adjusted earnings per share of $8 to $8.25 per share. This represents an increase of 33% to 37% compared to fiscal 2025. This is a substantial increase from our original November guide, and you can see from the bar graphs at the bottom of the page, we expect 2026 to be another record year and a nice continuation of the growth trend ESCO has delivered since fiscal 2021. That completes the financial summary, and now I'll turn it back over to Bryan.
Bryan Sayler: Thanks, Chris. So as you've heard from our commentary, Q2 was another solid quarter, and we're looking at another year of strong revenue and earnings growth. And with record backlog, we continue to feel great about the long-term prospects for ESCO. That concludes our opening remarks, and we'll now turn it over for the Q&A.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Tommy Moll of Stephens.
Thomas Moll: Bryan, on Test, you talked about mid-single-digit sales growth over the planning horizon. I don't think that's different from what you've said previously, but you gave a lot of detail on some of the drivers for that today. And so I'm curious, just given some of the recovery there, is it fair to say you've got increasing conviction and visibility in that outlook? And then just moving to the bottom line there, any change post your planning conference on what the margin aspiration would be for that segment?
Bryan Sayler: Well, thanks, Tommy. Yes, listen, I do think it's a little bit of a change. As you know, we're having a very strong year this year at the business. And we have adjusted -- I think historically, we would have said 3% to 5%. We're probably saying more like 4% to 6% now. And this year, we're going to be well ahead of that. But yes, I would say our outlook for the Test business broadly is improving. And I think what I've said to you all before is that we're driving towards 20% EBITDA margins in that business. And I think after what we've seen this year and what we saw in the 5-year kind of review that we just went through, we think we're going to get there a little quicker than we might have thought before.
Thomas Moll: And as a follow-up, I wanted to ask on Megger. At the time of the announcement, you framed the accretion as -- I forget the exact word you used, Bryan, but accretive in the first year and significantly accretive in the other years. Two-part question for you today. Are the fair bogeys to assume there something like low single digits on -- just on a percentage basis in the first year going to potentially even low double digits by the third year? And then second part of the question, how would you frame whatever return parameters you use to underwrite the deal, potentially on the ROIC side or some other framework that you used here?
Bryan Sayler: Yes. Thanks for the question. Yes, I think what we said and what we still believe is that on an earnings basis and EPS basis, it's going to be accretive in the first full year, and then it's going to be significantly accretive in the year beyond that. I'm kind of doing math in my head, but it's approximately double-digit accretive in that second year. I'm sorry, the second question was?
Thomas Moll: Whatever return related underwriting you used on the deal?
Bryan Sayler: Yes. So we -- so our kind of our guiding star there is really making sure that our internal rate of return on the deal is going to be better than our weighted average cost of capital. And so we are going to -- we do see a better than double-digit return on an IRR basis, and we do have a pretty good spread over our weighted average cost of capital.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Scott Deuschle of Durchell of Deutsche Bank.
Scott Deuschle: Bryan, can you characterize the demand that Doble is just seeing in its condition monitoring business and also characterize the pricing power you have in condition monitoring?
Bryan Sayler: Yes. I would say that overall condition monitoring continues to accelerate. I think I've said to you before that one of the characteristics we're seeing is that increasingly public utilities commissions around North America are allowing the condition monitoring tools to be built into the rate base. And that has served to really accelerate the overall demand there. We are seeing really good demand characteristics. And it would be at the high end of what we are seeing in terms of our product lines in terms of growth. So it's in the double-digit growth category.
Scott Deuschle: Okay. Are orders for condition monitoring systems growing faster than the 20% headline number you put up for Doble's orders this quarter?
Bryan Sayler: No, I don't think so. I would say that that's a year-over-year comparison number. I think we're seeing broad-based growth over our entire product line. And Scott, I think one of the things that we -- one of our thesis here was that the amount of spending was going to be the same, whether it went to renewables or went to regulated utility piece. And so I think a little bit of what you're seeing is the softness that we're seeing over on the renewable side is really coming through as increased spending on the grid sustainment and grid modernization side.
Scott Deuschle: Okay. And last question just on this topic. Like do condition monitoring systems help operators reduce their long-term hiring needs for electricians? And if so, has that become a key part of the value proposition given the shortage of electricians that are out there today?
Bryan Sayler: Well, the answer to the first piece is yes, that the way that condition monitoring operates is it allows you to only send a truck roll when you know there's an issue or something that needs to be responded to. So yes, it does reduce the number of truck rolls. But in the grand scheme of things, I do not believe that, that is the most important financial reason why a utility would want to do this. What the condition monitoring allows them to do is get better real-time data from the grid edge so that as they're operating their system, they're able to -- those peak load conditions, they're able to operate the system more efficiently and they're able to push things a little bit harder than they might if they don't have those grid edge feedback. So I think the bigger value in condition monitoring is they get more life out of existing assets, meaning that they can defer capital investments and expensive replacements, and that allows them to put their investments more into needed areas and into grid expansion.
Scott Deuschle: That's clear and really helpful. Last question, the declines in energy accelerated this quarter by a pretty meaningful amount in both sales and I think orders actually declined by even more. Is there any hard evidence you can point to that this business is actually at a bottom? And is a business that can see a 30% sales decline a business that you want to be in long term?
Bryan Sayler: Yes. Listen, I think that the challenge with renewables is they are pretty volatile, and they're very responsive to a lot of the policy changes that we see in Washington. And I think that's what we're experiencing right now is that the removal or the imminent removal of the tax credits is changing behavior amongst developers. And so I'd like to be -- I'd like to believe that this is a bottom, but I've been around long enough to never call bottoms until I start seeing the trajectory in the other direction. So it's possible it could be a little deeper. And I also think it's possible that this could last a little bit longer. But listen, long term, renewables are absolutely a piece of the overall grid solution. And we do believe that this is a business that can be profitable and even at a lower level. And so the answer is yes, I think this is a business that we want to be in. It's a business we continue to believe in. And it's a business that we do think is going to return to growth in the second half of '26 or beginning of '27.
Scott Deuschle: Okay. Is the business profitable at this level of sales?
Bryan Sayler: It is. It is profitable. I think the challenge is that on a year-over-year comparison basis, it was very profitable a year ago, and it's not as profitable now, but it's still profitable.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from the line of Jonathan Tanwanteng.
Jonathan Tanwanteng: Nice job on the quarter and the increased outlook. I was wondering if you could first talk about the commercial airline demand, particularly in consumables. I know you've seen a pretty strong trailing demand. But as we look forward, you see flights getting canceled, even entire airlines getting canceled in the case of Spirit. I'm just wondering if you see any pressure from that on the consumable bit of your business as you look into the future?
Bryan Sayler: Well, it's pretty early to see any impact from something like an airline going out of business. We -- there has been a fair amount of impact to widebodies coming in and out of the Middle East in terms of overall air traffic. But we have not seen that manifest in a meaningful way in our order patterns. In fact, our orders this quarter were outstanding and really implied significant growth, both on the aftermarket and on the OEM side. We pointed in our prepared remarks to some of the increases we're seeing on the OEM side. We're pretty excited about what we're seeing from Boeing and others. We do think that they're back on track, and we're prepared to support them at even higher build rates. And I would say we seem to regularly have this discussion about how conservative I am about taking their forecast to heart. I would say that our belief in what's happening there is improving, and we're optimistic about what that means for our business.
Jonathan Tanwanteng: Got it. That's helpful. And then just on the revenue guidance, it looks like you didn't change it. And I was wondering what are the moving parts in there, just given the Test has outperformed your expectations by so much? Are you just tracking towards the higher end of the range? Or are there some puts and takes that we should be thinking about in the other segments?
Christopher Tucker: I would say there's a few puts and takes. I mean I think that you noticed the Maritime is slightly under $100 million year-to-date. And kind of the full year guide we had given there before was like $230 million to $245 million. So they're going to be probably at the lower end of that range based on kind of how the first half has gone. Mean, overall, the business is still doing great. Profits are good. Cash is good. Orders are good. They're just seeing a little bit of some delays and slowdowns on some of the U.S. surface ship type programs. So again, I think that kind of brings it back to the lower end. We're probably a little bit better in Doble than what we had thought a quarter ago. NRG is offsetting that. So we're a little bit worse there. And then we've got a few places in aerospace and defense, mostly on the commercial aircraft side and defense aircraft side where we're a little better. So all these are kind of plus and minus. And yes, we kind of end up in the same place.
Jonathan Tanwanteng: Got it. And then last one, if I could sneak one in. Any thoughts on where inflation is going and your ability to push pricing through to your customers? What's built into your forecast today? And what could be the risk there as we go forward?
Bryan Sayler: Yes. We certainly believe that we're able -- I think we've got a demonstrated history of being able to drive price faster than inflation. We certainly keep an eye on that. It's a little bit early right now to call anything on oil prices or anything like that, but we are starting to see some signals there that may require us to kind of go back to customers with some price changes. But you can count on us to be pretty aggressive about the price side.
Operator: I'm showing no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn it back to Bryan Sayler for closing remarks.
Bryan Sayler: Well, listen, thanks, everyone, for taking our call. I mean I think as you saw, we feel really good about our quarter. We feel really good about our year. And we're looking forward to talking to you again about another great quarter 3 months from now. Take care.
Operator: Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.