FTI February 19, 2026

TechnipFMC Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Call - iEPCI/Subsea 2.0 Push Backlog, Margins and $10B Subsea Inbound

Summary

TechnipFMC closed 2025 on a clear beat and a crisp narrative, Subsea-led. Full-year revenue rose 9% to $9.9 billion, Adjusted EBITDA climbed 33% to $1.8 billion, free cash flow roughly $1.4 billion, and backlog ended at $16.6 billion. Management credits broad commercial adoption of iEPCI and the Subsea 2.0 configure-to-order architecture for higher-quality inbound, shorter cycle times and stronger margin conversion.
The company is raising its sights for 2026, targeting $10 billion of Subsea inbound, Subsea revenue guidance of $9.4 billion with a midpoint Adjusted EBITDA margin of 21.5%, and total-company Adjusted EBITDA above $2.1 billion. The call emphasized repeatability, portfolio-based client behavior, and disciplined capital return, while flagging restructuring and vessel-seasonality impacts in Q4 and the multi-year nature of industrializing the SURF stack.

Key Takeaways

  • Full-year 2025 results: revenue $9.9 billion, Adjusted EBITDA $1.8 billion (up 33%), and free cash flow approximately $1.4–1.45 billion; shareholder distributions doubled to $1 billion.
  • Inbound and backlog: total company inbound $11.2 billion for 2025, backlog $16.6 billion at year-end; Subsea inbound $10.1 billion for the year, Subsea backlog $15.9 billion.
  • Commercial shift: iEPCI, Subsea 2.0 configure-to-order, direct awards and Subsea services accounted for more than 80% of Subsea inbound in 2025, signaling customers prefer integrated portfolio approaches over single-project tenders.
  • 2026 Subsea guidance upgraded: Subsea revenue guidance set at $9.4 billion with Adjusted EBITDA margin guidance midpoint of 21.5%, implying ~16% Subsea Adjusted EBITDA growth versus 2025.
  • Company-level 2026 outlook: total-company Adjusted EBITDA expected to exceed $2.1 billion at midpoint, about 15% growth versus 2025 excluding foreign exchange; free cash flow guidance $1.3–1.45 billion, ~65% conversion at midpoint.
  • Subsea margin momentum: Q4 Subsea revenue $2.2 billion (-5% sequential), Q4 Subsea Adjusted EBITDA $416 million (-18% sequential) and Q4 margin 18.9%; full-year Subsea margin improved to 20.1%, up 340 basis points year-over-year.
  • Surface Technologies: Q4 revenue $323 million, Adjusted EBITDA $58 million, margin 18% in Q4 and full-year margin improved to 16.7% (up 170 bps); Surface revenue guide just over $1.2 billion with margin midpoint ~17.25%.
  • Capital and cash: cash and equivalents $1.0 billion, net cash position $602 million; planned CapEx ~ $340 million (~3% of revenue) and return at least 70% of free cash flow to shareholders via dividends and buybacks.
  • Q4 cash actions: repurchased $168 million of stock and paid $20 million of dividends in the quarter, total Q4 shareholder distributions $188 million.
  • Subsea services: management expects subsea services to be roughly a $2 billion business and an important differentiation leveraging the largest installed base.
  • Opportunity list and greenfield pipeline: 24-month Subsea opportunities midpoint at roughly $29 billion, sixth consecutive quarterly increase; management sees more greenfield and exploration activity globally, including Brazil equatorial margin and Colombia.
  • Portfolio approach benefits: running multiple projects in parallel, as with bp’s Tiber and Kaskida, drives repeatability, supply chain continuity, faster time to first hydrocarbon and better project returns for both operator and TechnipFMC.
  • Industrialization push and restructuring: Q4 included restructuring and other charges (about $52 million excluded from adjusted EBITDA) tied to simplification and industrialization; management says these actions will drive sustainable margin gains in 2026 and beyond.
  • SURF industrialization and scalability: TechnipFMC is expanding Subsea 2.0 beyond seabed equipment into the water column and SURF, management views the opportunity as substantial but multi-year and not trivial to replicate.
  • Competitive moat and replication risk: management argues iEPCI/Subsea 2.0 is hard to copy, requiring years of engineering, commercial change and integration; TechnipFMC positions itself as the only architect-and-builder at scale.
  • Seasonality and near-term cadence: Q1 2026 Subsea revenue expected to increase low single digits sequentially, with margin up ~50 basis points from Q4; Q1 Surface revenue expected down ~10% sequentially with margin near 16.5%.

Full Transcript

Regina, Conference Operator: Hello, and thank you for standing by. My name is Regina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the TechnipFMC Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press Star followed by the number 1 on your telephone keypad. If you’d like to withdraw your question, press Star 1 again. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. I would now like to turn the conference over to Matt Seinsheimer, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Development. Please go ahead.

Matt Seinsheimer, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Development, TechnipFMC: Thank you, Regina. Good afternoon, and good morning, and welcome to TechnipFMC’s Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. Our news release and financial statements issued earlier today can be found on our website. I’d like to caution you with respect to any forward-looking statements made during the call. Although these forward-looking statements are based on our current expectations, beliefs, and assumptions regarding future developments and business conditions, they are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in or implied by these statements. Known material factors that could cause our actual results to differ from our projected results are described in our most recent 10-K, most recent 10-Q, and other periodic filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

We wish to caution you not to place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements which speak only as of the date hereof. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any of our forward-looking statements after the date they are made, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. I would like to turn the call over to Doug Pferdehirt, TechnipFMC’s Chair and Chief Executive Officer.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Thank you, Matt. Good afternoon and good morning to all. Thank you for participating in our fourth quarter earnings call. I am very proud to report our strong quarterly and full-year results as we closed out 2025 with solid operational momentum. Total company inbound for the year was $11.2 billion. Backlog ended the year at $16.6 billion. Total company revenue for the year grew 9% to $9.9 billion, with Adjusted EBITDA improving to $1.8 billion, an increase of 33% when compared to the prior year. Full-year free cash flow increased to $1.4 billion, and shareholder distributions grew to $1 billion, both more than double the levels achieved in the prior year.

Turning to Subsea, orders in the quarter were $2.3 billion, resulting in $10.1 billion of inbound for the full year, with iEPCI projects being the largest contributor of inbound in 2025. There was also continued momentum for new opportunities within existing basins, with bp Tiber being our most recent iEPCI contract in the Paleogene. Notably, TechnipFMC has been awarded 5 of the 6 20K projects sanctioned thus far. The widespread adoption of our differentiate, differentiated offering has clearly been a catalyst for our commercial success. Over the last 3 years, we delivered on our goal to inbound more than $30 billion of Subsea orders. This has driven Subsea backlog to $15.9 billion, with legacy projects now representing less than 10% of backlog.

Given our expectation for $10 billion of Subsea inbound in the current year, we anticipate further growth in backlog. Direct awards, iEPCI, and Subsea services represent an increasing share of our inbound. In fact, this combination accounted for more than 80% of our total Subsea inbound in 2025. We continue to be selective in the work that we pursue. We prioritize projects that utilize our iEPCI and Subsea 2.0 configure-to-order offerings, and our services business has been a clear source of differentiation, leveraging the industry’s largest installed base. Most importantly, this high-quality inbound de-risks project execution, enabling accelerated project timelines and increased schedule certainty. The inbound secured in 2025 also speaks to a change in customer behavior, with more clients adopting a portfolio approach to offshore development.

Instead of focusing on the next project exclusively, operators are taking a broader portfolio view of their opportunities, executing a vision for their entire asset base. An example of this mindset is simultaneous development of greenfield assets, where operators execute multiple projects in parallel, industrializing the entire field…. bp’s approach to the Paleogene is an excellent example, where TechnipFMC is executing the Tiber and Kaskida projects at the same time, utilizing a consistent project methodology focused on our 20K equipment and integrated delivery. To be clear, this is not business as usual. Historically, operators would wait for the completion of the first project to incorporate learnings into subsequent phases. Today, those benefits are seen as incremental to the more substantive improvements gained from a portfolio approach.

By executing as a single unit, operators benefit from integration and standardization that enable them to reach target production more quickly and economically than would be possible as standalone projects. This shift in customer focus from a single project to a more comprehensive portfolio view, clearly benefits from our differentiation. With TechnipFMC’s iEPCI model and Subsea solutions serving as key enablers of this change in behavior. The increased collaboration that comes with a portfolio approach also provides us with greater visibility into the project pipeline. Importantly, this early engagement provides us the greatest opportunity to help our customers more efficiently design and develop their entire program. Today, our clients are much more confident that they can build cost and schedule certainty into their expectations, and that is creating additional opportunities for our company. This change in customer behavior also has a positive impact on the outlook for Subsea.

We expect a greater share of capital spending to move offshore, where reservoirs are prolific, high quality, and accessible to many operators, with attractive project economics that continue to improve. We are seeing the impact of this change on our Subsea opportunities list, with the latest update reflecting the sixth consecutive quarterly increase in value. The list now highlights approximately $29 billion of opportunities for future development when using the midpoint of project values. This is the highest level ever recorded, and it was achieved even with a significant level of projects awarded in the period. Keep in mind, this only reflects a 24-month view and is not indicative of the full opportunity set for our company. There are multiple new frontiers under consideration for greenfield development, more than at any time I can remember. Greenfields are unique in that they provide a blank slate.

They have no pre-existing field infrastructure, where legacy, architecture, and technologies can limit flexibility in future enhancements. This makes a portfolio approach very effective for accelerating development in new frontiers, reinforcing our confidence in continued strength in offshore activity through the end of the decade and beyond. I now want to close on a few key messages. First, 2025 was another year of exceptional performance for TechnipFMC, and I want to acknowledge the efforts of the 22,000 women and men across the globe. They take great pride in the company and are passionate about what they do. This is evident in our full year results, where continued strength in order inbound drove growth in high-quality backlog, and continued strength in execution elevated the expansion in both EBITDA and free cash flow. This team has a strong desire to win and is unwavering in its commitment to deliver.

The second point I want to convey is that 2025 was another major milestone for TechnipFMC, but we are far from achieving optimal performance. We had great commercial, operational, and financial success in the year, but the groundwork for these results was set in motion many years ago with our introduction of new commercial models and configure-to-order product architecture, and our internal focus on the principles of simplification, standardization, and industrialization. While the impact of these changes is real and sustainable, we are confident that considerable upside remains, and much like our current success, it won’t be dependent upon any one driver. We are confident that we will deliver further advancements in integrated execution. We will benefit from an expansion in configure-to-order offerings as we adopt them across more product platforms, and we will deliver greater operating leverage than what has historically been achieved in our industry.

Finally, I want to reiterate our commitment to the relentless pursuit of the reduction of cycle time. The actions we have taken, which are ultimately focused on driving project returns higher, clearly demonstrate our ability to create sustainable value for our customers, a real differentiation for our company. We know that our work is not complete. We know that more value can be created, and with a culture focused on continuous improvement in everything we do, we also know that we have the right strategic mindset in place to make offshore investment an even bigger and more sustainable opportunity. I will now turn the call over to Alf to discuss our financial results.

Alf, CFO, TechnipFMC: Thanks, Doug. Revenue in the quarter was $2.5 billion. Adjusted EBITDA was $440 million, when excluding $52 million of restructuring, impairment, and other charges, and a foreign exchange gain of $1 million. Turning to segment results. In Subsea, revenue of $2.2 billion decreased 5% versus the third quarter. The sequential decline was primarily due to lower activity in the North Sea and Latin America, offset in part by higher activity in Asia Pacific. Adjusted EBITDA was $416 million, down 18% sequentially, primarily driven by seasonally lower vessel-based activity and reduced fleet availability due to higher scheduled maintenance in the period. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 18.9%. For the full year, Subsea revenue grew 11% versus the prior period, with Subsea adjusted EBITDA margin up 340 basis points to 20.1%.

In Surface Technologies, revenue was $323 million, a decrease of 2% from the third quarter. The sequential decrease was driven by lower activity in North America and timing of project-related activity in the Middle East, partially offset by higher activity in Asia Pacific. Adjusted EBITDA was $58 million, an increase of 8% sequentially due to higher services activity in the Middle East and operational efficiencies related to business transformation initiatives. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 18%, up 160 basis points from the third quarter. For the full year, adjusted EBITDA margin improved 170 basis points to 16.7%, even with revenue essentially flat when compared to the prior period. Turning to corporate and other items, corporate expense was $35 million, net interest expense was $5 million, and tax expense was $33 million.

Cash flow from operating activities was $454 million, with capital expenditures totaling $94 million in the quarter. This resulted in free cash flow of $359 million. Free cash flow for the full year was $1.45 billion. We repurchased $168 million of stock in the fourth quarter. When including $20 million of dividends, total shareholder distributions were $188 million. For the full year, total shareholder distributions more than doubled versus the prior year to $1 billion. Cash and cash equivalents ended the year at $1 billion. Our net cash position increased to $602 million. Moving to our financial outlook, we have provided detailed guidance for the year in our earnings release. I will now provide additional color on the guidance and our first quarter outlook.

Starting with Subsea, during the fourth quarter, we incurred restructuring charges related to simplification and industrialization actions being taken to further improve operating efficiency. As Doug indicated, our financial results and operating momentum remain strong, but we know we can achieve even more. These actions will deliver sustainable improvements in 2026, with additional benefits to be realized beyond the current year. With that in mind, we are updating our previous Subsea guidance provided in October. We now expect revenue of $9.4 billion, with Adjusted EBITDA margin of 21.5% at the midpoint of the full year range. This implies growth in Subsea Adjusted EBITDA of 16% when compared to 2025.

For the first quarter, we anticipate Subsea revenue to increase low single digits sequentially, while adjusted EBITDA margin is expected to improve approximately 50 basis points from the 18.9% reported in the fourth quarter. Moving to Surface Technologies, we are guiding to full-year revenue of just over $1.2 billion, with adjusted EBITDA margin improving to 17.25% at the midpoint of the guidance range. For the first quarter, we anticipate Surface Technologies revenue to decline approximately 10% when compared to fourth quarter results, with an adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 16.5%. Turning to corporate, we are guiding to full-year expense of $120 million, with an expectation that we will incur approximately $40 million in the first quarter. Lastly, I want to comment on our free cash flow guidance.

We remain committed to a very disciplined, asset-light approach to capital management. We anticipate capital expenditures to approximate $340 million for the full year, representing just over 3% of revenue. Additionally, we expect full year free cash flow to be in a range of $1.3 billion-$1.45 billion. This would imply free cash flow conversion of approximately 65% at the midpoint of guidance. And as previously indicated, we expect to return at least 70% of free cash flow to shareholders in 2026 through dividends and share repurchases. In closing, I am very proud that we delivered on our financial targets in 2025. When excluding foreign exchange, we increased total company Adjusted EBITDA to $1.8 billion, an increase of 33% versus 9% growth in revenue.

We drove strong improvement in Adjusted EBITDA margin for Subsea and Surface Technologies, with increases of 340 and 170 basis points, respectively. We delivered growth in total company backlog to $16.6 billion, up 15% from the prior year. I’m also proud to share our full-year guidance for 2026, which reflects continued operational momentum, with total company Adjusted EBITDA expected to exceed $2.1 billion at the midpoint of our guidance items. This represents growth in Adjusted EBITDA of 15% versus 2025, when excluding foreign exchange, with margin expansion in both segments. Lastly, we expect strong cash conversion from our growing EBITDA, and given the flexibility provided by our strong balance sheet, you should expect us to return the majority of this free cash flow to our shareholders.

Operator, you may now open the line for questions.

Regina, Conference Operator: We will now begin the question-and-answer session. To ask a question, press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. Our first question will come from the line of Arun Jayaram with J.P. Morgan Securities. Please go ahead.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities: Good morning, Doug and team. Doug, I wanted to see if you could elaborate on your thoughts on margin expansion potential from industrializing the SURF process. You talked about this morning in your prepared remarks about delivering further advancements in your integrated project execution. So I was wondering if you could maybe shed some light on your thoughts on industrializing the SURF process, to drive margins higher.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Thank you, Arun, and good morning. Look, I’d be happy to. As I noted in, I think, a prior quarter, you know, when we started down the path of industrialization and the configure-to-order, you know, product architecture, which we call Subsea 2.0, that was prior to the merger. So it was obviously focused on the assets that reside on the seabed, because that was what was within the scope of FMC Technologies at the time. As a fully integrated company, we now have access to not only the seabed, but the water column in addition.

I think that, you know, so that is where our focus is now, is to expanding that Configure-to-order applications and all the efficiency gains and all the improvements in terms of reduction of cycle time for our clients and improved project certainty in terms of the delivery of the projects, which our clients benefit from, to the remainder of the subsea environment. You’re referring to the SURF or, if you will, the water column. I will say this: I think that the opportunities there are as substantial as the opportunities we are experiencing now from the Subsea 2.0 architecture on the seabed.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities: Great. Great. And just, you know, my follow-up, Doug, is, you mentioned how 10% of your backlog is called legacy, you know, called maybe lower margin kind of backlog from, from a few years ago. But as you look at the margins that you’re booking in backlog today, relative to your, your Subsea, 2026 guide of 21.5% for EBITDA, can you talk about how much visibility do you have on further margin expansion, Subsea? You know, how many years of margin expansion do you see when you think about that backlog versus what you’ve guided to this morning?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Sure. So let me start by confirming that, you know, we are inbounding at a level that is accretive to our backlog margin, and that’s important, and that will obviously flow through revenue and then ultimately through EBITDA, EBITDA margin. So you will see that, and as you know, we have a substantial backlog already, which is very high quality, and we’re adding additional quality to that. Look, I’ve said this publicly. I want our clients to win, and if our clients win, they like us to win as well... So this isn’t about pricing, or this isn’t about margin. This is about the relentless pursuit of reduction of cycle time and certainty.

If I can sit down with a client and show them that we have the unique capability, and the only ones who can deliver them a project significantly, you know, in a significantly shorter timeframe, accelerating their time to first oil or first hydrocarbon, and giving them certainty in that outcome, then I share a greater economic of that value that I create. So we feel that we have a long way to go in terms of the reduction of cycle time. Remember, this industry, you know, we just started this with the creation of TechnipFMC. We have a long way to go. We talked about it in response to the first part of your question. There’s even more scope within our own remit, let alone further innovation that we are working on today as well. So that is our focus.

That’s what we think about every single day. That’s why we make our customers win, and that’s why we win as well.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities2: Great. Thank you.

Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Scott Gruber with Citigroup. Please go ahead.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities2: Yes, good morning, Doug. You mentioned the renewed interest in Greenfield developments. Just wanted to see if you could unpack that a bit more for us. You know, we’re obviously hearing exploration mentioned on some customer calls, but just how widespread is the renewed interest in exploration across your customer base and across geographies?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Yeah. Good morning, Scott. I’m gonna parse the question just a little bit, right? Because there’s greenfield developments, and then there’s exploration. You’re right to point out exploration leads to future greenfield developments. But I wanna make sure everybody recognizes or appreciates that there are substantial greenfield developments where the exploration has already been done. These projects didn’t move forward for a variety of reasons, including, you know, take everything I said to Arun’s question in the inverse. The industry wasn’t good about reducing cycle time. The industry was not good about certainty in terms of delivery, and because of that, the economics didn’t necessarily support those projects to move forward. So we’re seeing quite a few greenfield developments that are that the exploration has been done, that, if you will, have been in the queue.

In addition to that, you’re hearing about increases in exploration budgets. You’re hearing about new emerging basins being identified, be it the equatorial margin in Brazil, we are hearing about Colombia now. I mean, almost every day, we wake up hearing new news of new opportunities in the offshore environment. We would humbly like to think that’s because we’ve given our customers the confidence and the ability to go back and really scrub that portion of their portfolio or their reserve base and look for those opportunities. So, you know, really, Scott, they’re quite global in nature, and I’m only parsing the fact that, you know, this isn’t about waiting on seismic and waiting on exploration drilling.

That’s happening, and that’s good because that will continue to feed the hopper, if you will, and I kinda referred to that when I talked about through the end of the decade and beyond. But as importantly, there are opportunities out there that are being accelerated right now, so that and we have the tools and the kit and the ability necessary to accelerate those developments for our customers.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities2: I appreciate that. Then, a quick follow-up on Arun’s question around the SURF standardization. Sounds like there’s a big opportunity here, and I remember having a detailed discussion with you maybe a year ago or so about it, and I know this, you know, takes a while to execute on. But where do you stand in that process, and kinda how much more is there to go?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Yeah, I thought I was gonna get away without committing to it, Scott, so thanks for circling back.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities2: Well, I wasn’t gonna let you.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: You know, look, you know, that’s fair. Look, we’ve been working on it for a bit. We’re impatient, our customers are impatient, and that’s a good thing, but we wanna make sure we do it right. But look, there’ll be more to come, and we’ll be excited to share that news with the industry.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities2: Great. Look forward to it. Thank you.

Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Mark Wilson with Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Mark Wilson, Analyst, Jefferies: Thank you, and good morning. I’d like to ask Doug about the point you make about you see considerable upside still. And just to check how clearly returns have been coming through, margin has been improving, 3 years now of $10 billion inbound in Subsea and another $1 billion to come, and more opportunities in greenfield than you’ve ever seen. So could I ask regarding the volume you see able to continue to do going forward, considering that CapEx also remaining at just 3% of revenue? You spoke in the past about no expansion to roof line was a key element of previous years. In terms of the capacity that’s within this business, should there be more of a response beyond, I don’t know, the $10 billion level?

How much volume capacity do you think there is within your existing setup? And I think I particularly speak to the Subsea 2.0, if that’s done at 2 of your 3 facilities. Thanks, Doug.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: ... Thank you, Mark. I definitely knew I wasn’t gonna get away with this one, so it’s a fair question, and let me give you a direct response. So as you pointed out, we’ve had a healthy, you know, rate of inbound. We’ve had $30 billion over three years. We just now reaffirmed the $10 billion for 2026, but we’re also showing a subsea opportunity list that is really expanding at a rate that we have not seen before. If you look at the number of awards, the number of projects that were awarded in this quarter, i.e., they came out of the subsea opportunity list. You know, we’re talking about the net increase, but if you look at the gross increase, it was quite substantial, and there’s others to come.

So as we look forward, and you’re right, you’re hearing this from our clients, which is more important, it’s just-- we’re just basically, you know, gathering that information and sharing that with you. Their focus is on offshore. Their focus is on developing offshore reserves. Their focus is on adding reserves by focusing on offshore opportunities, and again, we’re seeing that happen around the world across our client set. And as we’ve talked about before, our client set has expanded quite dramatically, 3-4 times what it was historically. There’s many new companies that are operating and performing offshore subsea developments, enabled by the simplicity and the ability to work with one company, TechnipFMC, in an iEPCI 2.0 direct award manner.

But if I really kind of encapsulate your whole question, and, and to me, what it really comes down to is, you know, is, is this $10 billion a magic number, or where do we go from here? And I wanna be very, very clear that the subsea opportunity list is both growing and accelerating, and we fully expect that this will be reflected in inbound order growth in 2027 and beyond.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities2: I’ll hand it over. Thank you, Doug.

Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Derek Podheiser with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.

Derek Podheiser, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Hey, good morning, Doug. I wanted to go back to your comments around your portfolio approach, specifically bp’s Tiber and Kaskida. Maybe could you help provide us with tangible examples of how, you know, Tiber is leveraging the engineering and equipment progress with Kaskida to help drive down costs and increase your efficiencies? Ultimately, just, just trying to understand more what this—what this means for your earnings power and margins moving forward if you have more of this portfolio approach from your customers.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Sure, Derek. And look, all the credit goes to bp. We’re humbled and honored to be their partner in the Paleogene. I want to start with that. Working together in many, many discussions, we came to the conclusion that there was a different way of working than the historical way of working together. And when we looked at it, you know, we knew we wanted to go towards standardization.

We knew we wanted to have repeatability, you know, the old saying, "Design one, build many." But when you have large gaps of time and distance in between projects, when you introduce new project directors on both sides, our side, their side, when you introduce new engineering teams, both sides, our side, their side, et cetera, et cetera, and then you get into the supply chain, and you’re, you’re dealing with a supply chain that you turn on, you turn off, you turn on, you turn off, you’re never going to get those efficiencies. So BP decided to take a very different approach. We are extremely humbled and honored to be part of it. I don’t want to get into, if you will, the dollar savings, because I think that would be, you know, not appropriate for me to do. That’s more, you know, BP’s business.

But they clearly are benefiting. We clearly are benefiting as a result of the ability to be able to have continuity, visibility and continuity into our own manufacturing, also being able to have one single project team instead of sending up two teams, and in the supply chain, because our suppliers benefit from that visibility and that continuity as well. So, again, I don’t like to talk about margin. I like to talk about improving Subsea project returns, which benefits our customer and also benefits us.

Derek Podheiser, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Yeah, no, that, that’s very helpful. Appreciate that. And then maybe on subsea services, you know, clearly a differentiator for the company. I think you previously guided that it should grow, you know, in line with your top line growth, which we have the guidance down. But maybe could you touch upon what your expectations are for the subsea services side of things? Is this an expectation around, you know, $1.9 billion-$2 billion for the year? Just maybe some more color and help on how we should think about services as we look into 2026.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: So again, in line with revenue, so let’s call it $2 billion.

Derek Podheiser, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Great. Perfect. Thank you, Doug. I’ll turn it back.

Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Victoria McCulloch with RBC. Please go ahead.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities3: Morning. Thank you very much for your time. Just one for me, on Surface Technologies, I guess, to slightly different point of discussion, but a similar theme. You’ve seen a material increase in the margin over the past 12 months in Surface Technologies. You attribute it in the presentation to operational efficiencies. This is what you spoke to us about a year ago. But can you give us an idea of how this compared to your expectation on how this would deliver? And again, on that, on Surface Technologies, how much more is there to achieve there?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Look, very proud of the segment. As we talked about in a prior call, you know, we took a decision to really look at that business, make some tough decisions, really focus on the right customers in the right geographies, utilizing the right technologies.... So if you will, high-grading our portfolio, this isn’t, that isn’t a business when you focus on market share, that it ends up very well. So we took a different approach, and we said: Look, we’re gonna focus on quality and not quantity, and we’re gonna high-grade our portfolio. We’ve done that. It’s performing very well, as you can see, as a result of that. There were some incremental benefits in Q4, but as we move forward, we expect this segment to continue to operate at a very high level.

You know, it’s now 65% of our business in Surface Technologies is in our international portfolio. We continue to benefit from the investments that we’ve made, both in Saudi Arabia as well as in Abu Dhabi, in terms of local content, local manufacturing. And so, yeah, that’s really, that’s how I would summarize. You know, the outlook remains, you know, difficult because of the North America market, but we obviously benefit from the strength of having the majority of our portfolio outside of the North America market.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities3: Thanks very much. And maybe just a follow-up to look at Subsea. Can you talk to us a bit about how your discussions with customers have been in a very choppy macro environment? But again, you know, reflecting, you know, how there is greater CapEx moving offshore, and we are seeing pressure, certainly, and discussion points around resources and reserves life. Those are conflicting, I guess, points, but more is being added to the Subsea. Do we think that potentially the market is more caught up in the spot pricing than your customers are when they have discussions with you? And, you know, how much does that benefit TechnipFMC in, you know, from a, from a, I guess, pricing perspective?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Sure. I would say, I would describe it this way: one of the benefits of being in the offshore market is, you know, our customers, you know, take, you know, some of that near-term choppiness, if you will, is smoothed out. They understand these are prolific reserves. You know, these are prolific reserves. So when they’re going after these, they have a denominator that’s much different than any other investment opportunity they have in their portfolio. So all that they’re looking for is, obviously, a forward view of the commodity price, and a confidence to execute the project, both from their team as well as from the industry.

And this is where, you know, this has been the biggest change that has occurred, you know, in the last several years, is they have regained their confidence because of what we have created with TechnipFMC, with the Subsea 2.0 configure-to-order product line, and with our commitment to them and to the investment community of our relentless pursuit of the reduction of cycle time. So we don’t talk about price, we talk about improving project returns, which benefit our clients. As I said earlier, if it benefits our clients, it benefits us. And, you know, once you get that mindset and you get out of a fixed asset mindset of day rate, utilization, and pricing, you can really change your conversation with the clients.

We have a seat at the table far earlier than anyone else, and they give us visibility now as they look from, and take a project approach that is unprecedented. Because they like what we’re doing, and they want to make sure that they have the access to our EPCI 2.0 solution, which leads to this level of direct awards. That is now over 80% of our business is direct awarded to our customer, never to, from our customer, and never goes out to a competitive tender.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities3: Super. Thanks very much for your time today.

Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Dave Anderson with Barclays. Please go ahead.

Eddie, Analyst, Barclays: Hi, good morning. This is Eddie, came on for Dave with a prior commitment this morning. Deb, you mentioned operators are increasingly taking a portfolio approach to their opportunities. Of course, this provides you with greater visibility on Subsea orders, but does this also maybe result in more content with this approach, where we’re developing two projects simultaneously, results in more content for you than if developed one after the other? And do you expect more companies to start to adopt this portfolio approach going forward, or is this really limited to a few select majors?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Sure, Eddie. Thank you, and give our say hi to David for us. In regards to the approach, you’re onto something very astute. You know, remember, we’re the architects. So when we’re talking about either a portfolio approach or an integrated FEED study leading to an integrated EPCI study, we are the architects. Now, we will always design the field to ensure the best suitability for the reservoir, you know, the best in terms of the relentless pursuit of reduction of cycle time. But clearly, we are going to make sure that if we have any technologies that are applicable that are going to help meet those objectives, that we’re going to incorporate those into the architecture.

So the benefit of being the architect and the builder, if you will, you know, it’s pretty clear that there are benefits of being able to do both, and we’re uniquely positioned as the only company that has the capability to do both. So that’s the position we’re in. So, yes, to your point, there are—it does create opportunities. Now, in terms of the portfolio approach, you have, look, you have to have the asset base, right? So not all clients have a reservoir that has a clear line of sight to doing, you know, multiple Greenfield developments. Sometimes it’s a one-off development, and that’s absolutely fine. That’s absolutely normal.

But where clients have the ability to do multiple greenfield developments within a regional area, if you will, it’s certainly applicable to any client, and BP is not the only one. I thought it was appropriate to pass the message about BP and what they’re doing to Paleogene because I do, you know, it was a recent award, and I do think it’s appropriate to do so, but others are looking at the same approach.

Eddie, Analyst, Barclays: Got it. Thanks for that color. So a number of signs pointing to a 2027 inflection in offshore activity, it seems to be reflected in your growing Subsea opportunities list. But could you talk to customer behavior and what you’re seeing from them? You’ve consistently mentioned sort of this growing shift of capital into offshore. I guess, what inning do you think we’re in, in terms of operators shifting capital to offshore? Just wanted to get your sense of if most operators are already there at this point, or if we’re still in the early stages of this capital shift into offshore.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: A good question, and I, I don’t want to answer on behalf of my clients. That would be inappropriate. I’m a service guy, always have been. I know where I am on, you know, in, in the food chain. I would just look at their behavior, and I think what you’re seeing in their behavior is they are in the very early stages, and they see a long runway ahead.

Eddie, Analyst, Barclays: Got it. Great. Thanks, Doug. I’ll turn it back.

Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Caitlin Donahue with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Caitlin Donahue, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: Good morning, and thank you for taking my questions. Doug, you mentioned that iEPCI and Subsea 2.0 are representing a good portion of total Subsea inbound orders, orders in 2025. Can you speak to your long-term expectations for this continued adoption? How do you see this flowing through to further margin expansion over the next few years?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: A great question, Caitlin. We’ve identified. You know, we said that the iEPCI was the majority of our inbound orders this past year, which is really quite substantial. You know, a new product architecture like Subsea 2.0 configure-to-order, introducing that into the market is one challenge. An even greater challenge is when you change the commercial model. So look, there was a point in time, it was a few years ago, admittedly, but there was a point in time where I said, if we could achieve one-third of our orders from iEPCI or integrated, the integrated approach, that, you know, that would be substantial. We’re obviously well beyond that.

And when you look at the different applications around the world, neither iEPCI or Subsea 2.0 have any sort of a technical limit or, you know, commercial limit, you know, that they both couldn’t go to 100%. What I did allude to in my prepared remarks, though, is in legacy fields, you know, is Subsea 2.0 backwards compatible? Yes. You know, is iEPCI applicable in brownfield, greenfield, emerging markets, you know, old, you know, mature markets? Yes. But sometimes you will find customers who just want to either repeat the past, because it’s a small tieback and, you know, maybe the last activity in that field or that region, for them. So I think there’s always gonna be a percentage.

But, you know, Caitlin, it’s a fair challenge, and I think that, we certainly approach every opportunity as iEPCI 2.0 until proven otherwise. And, you will see and continue to see both iEPCI and 2.0. As a result of that, you’ll see iEPCI and 2.0 continue to grow, in our inbound.

Caitlin Donahue, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: That’s helpful. Thank you. And then just one more question on the Subsea 1Q revenue guide. I know it’s the increase sequentially of low single digits. Is that just more of a comment on, you know, a little bit less of that muted seasonality that we’re seeing in 1Q as a result of some of these macro factors? Or there are certain regions that you can call out that you’re really looking at for some of this increased activity through 2026?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Sure. I’m gonna give that to Alf, he’ll get into that detail, but if you don’t mind, I’d like him just to first kinda summarize, you know, the revision to the two point-- or to the 2026 guidance because I don’t want that to get lost on the call. It was an important element.

Eddie, Analyst, Barclays: Well-

Caitlin Donahue, Analyst, Goldman Sachs: All right.

Alf, CFO, TechnipFMC: So thanks for the question. Yep, thanks for the question. So, so first of all, just to summarize, you know, we did, we did raise Subsea guidance, as you probably all noted. It’s an important piece of reaching company Adjusted EBITDA for the year. The Adjusted EBITDA, we expect to be above $2.1 billion. So that is built on a lot of the things that Doug talked about already. You know, we clearly achieved our inbound objective in 2025. We have a growing opportunity list. We’re committed to $10 billion, and have a solid path to that. The high-quality backlog, all of those things come together and gives us confidence. And then the Subsea services revenue and growth on top is giving us a $2 billion business. So we thought it was important to-

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: ... as we were overall initiating guidance for the company to update this. If you look at the margin profile of Subsea, and again, we, I wanna point out that we are introducing through the restructuring, charges we’ve taken, this quarter, we’re initiating actions, and we are further taking actions in 2026 to further boost our margin expansion, not only in 2026, but also beyond. And I think with what Doug said, we are very focused on driving revenue and margin expansion into the years beyond 2026. Regarding the Q1, it is definitely what you were talking about. There is nothing big happening or anything structural that you should think about more than the seasonality.

We continue to have two quarters a year where several of our vessels in our fleet is either dry docked, they might be in for maintenance or some sort of upgrade and taking advantage of the slower period, in particular in the North Sea area. And that’s what you see pronounced in Q4, and you will continue to see some of that in the first quarter, but there is nothing really otherwise. The underlying run rate of our subsea business is very strong, and then coupled with all the things that we already said about our outlook and our ability to expand margins, we’re confident in the overall guidance that we have given for subsea.

Eddie, Analyst, Barclays: Thanks for the color. I’ll turn it back.

Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Mark Zienke with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.

Mark Zienke, Analyst, TD Cowen: Hey, thanks. Doug, I’m gonna ask you, if you could, to quantify two things, to the extent you’re able to. So first, on this portfolio approach that you’re talking about, in working with the customers, can you maybe help us understand how much of the sales funnel of opportunities that you’re looking at? And I realize, you know, we’ve got the Subsea opportunity slide, and then there’s, like, all these other discussions that you’re having that might not be on the slide. So if you sort of take that together, is there a percentage of the stuff that you’re discussing with customers that would be part of a portfolio approach?

Then, as we think about, you know, $10 billion of orders this year, more than $10 billion in 2027 and beyond, what proportion of those orders would be coming from the portfolio approach?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Yeah, Mark, hard to put a hard number on it, only because, as I said earlier, it, you know, it depends on the client, and it depends upon their portfolio in that particular geography, if you will, because, you know, when you do the portfolio approach, it’s, it’s more focused around a particular reservoir or a particular geography. So I would say today, it’s, it’s, you know, it’s a smaller portion, but it’s something that our customers are responding well to. And I think looking at their own future developments and seeing where and how it could be applied within their own, their own opportunity list. So, you know, I guess that’s the big difference, Mark, is we’re sitting down, looking at their opportunity list instead of, as we were in the past, sitting around waiting to receive a request for tender.

It’s a very different seat at the table than we used to have.

Mark Zienke, Analyst, TD Cowen: Yep. Okay, that’s helpful. And then the other thing to quantify, and this is really just to maybe level set and understand, you talked about 80% of the orders being direct awarded, right? So, with services and IEPCI and so forth. How much of revenue is direct-- is coming from direct awarded projects, maybe in 2025, 2026 and 2027? Just so we can get a sense of, you know, the progression on the revenue side and maybe versus what order, what the order percentage is.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Sure, Mark. So I think if you go back, you know, just a couple of years, we used to talk about 50%. I think two years ago, maybe one year ago, we started talking about 70%, this year, 80%. You know, projects take two to three years to flow through, so I think that gives you a pretty good roadmap, and that’s obviously going to benefit us going forward.

Mark Zienke, Analyst, TD Cowen: Great. Thanks so much, Doug. I’ll turn it back.

Regina, Conference Operator: Our next question will come from the line of Saurabh Pant with Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities1: Hi, good morning, Doug.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Good morning. How are you?

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities1: Good, good, good, Doug. Maybe I’ll just dig into the whole subsea opportunity list discussion. The one thing that I’m noticing, Doug, is that there are more and more projects that are gas-directed versus just oil-directed, right? We remember, a decade back, anybody struck a big gas reservoir, it used to be a disappointing moment, right? But we are more and more developing these bigger reservoirs that are part of the opportunity list. But for you, as the, as the subsea architect, how much difference does it make if a project is oil versus gas? Is there any revenue intensity, impact, anything we should read into the complexity and, by extension, margin impact potentially down the road from just the whole oil versus gas dynamic in subsea?

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: No, it’s a great observation. It actually is something we internally had anticipated would happen a bit sooner than it has happened. But we are seeing a shift towards gas, and, you know, that’s partly driven by the... You know, there was quite an expansion in terms of LNG capacity around the world. You know, that’s slowing down, but, you gotta feed that. And what people don’t... I guess the dots that people don’t necessarily connect is other than in the US and Russia, almost all gas, almost all LNG is fed by offshore reservoirs, not onshore reservoirs. That’s a generalization, but it’s, but it’s directionally correct. So, okay, two things happen. One, you know, you have to develop the offshore assets to, for the feed gas, but then over time, you now have a massive investment in an LNG facility.

You have to continue to feed that with gas. So you almost commit yourself to continuing doing subsea developments offshore, once you build that LNG facility. So we see that happening around the world, and we’re obviously a beneficiary of that. In terms of gas versus oil, you know, we love everybody equally. That being said, a gas tree tends to be a higher unit cost than an oil tree, and it typically has to do with a more corrosive environment, and the velocities that we need to be able to, you know, control and operate safely in a subsea environment. So net, a gas equipment tends to be more complex. It’s better for us because it’s more differentiated and it, you know, that’s who we are. It fits better.

You know, it just creates even greater differentiation versus the rest of the industry. You know, but either way, you know, we’ll take either one. We’re just here to help our customers reach their objective.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities1: Right. Right. Okay, okay, that’s fantastic, Doug. And then, Alf, maybe one for you on the whole free cash flow discussion. Like you said, 2026 guidance implies 65% conversion out of EBITDA at the midpoint. But we were talking about orders, working capital is a big part of it, right? So if orders start to inflect again from that $10 billion annualized run rate in 2027 and beyond, working capital should be a tailwind again, just how you get paid from a timing perspective, right? So are we looking at a prolonged period, 2-3 years, where free cash flow conversion out of EBITDA is gonna be higher than that 65% working capital neutral number we were talking about on the last call?

Alf, CFO, TechnipFMC: Yeah. So thanks for the question. So first of all, your observation is correct. We’ve had, first of all, a really strong and exceptionally strong free cash flow generation this past year. I think our cash conversion is actually mathematically close to 80%. And it is, it, in terms of the foundation for this, is always gonna be both commercial and operational execution towards your goals, and that is the foundation of improving our working capital. Now, we’re setting ourselves up for another strong year. We are clearly improving working capital once again from the same variables that I talked about, the commercials and operational side. And as well, we, we couldn’t forget that our CapEx is being kept at a 3.2% level.

However, having said that, you know, looking out several years, there’s always a mix of orders, et cetera, so you can never fully predict. But in general, if we are able to continue to have good commercial success in terms of how work is falling into where we have commercial strengths to realize, and as well, we need to execute on this because it’s not just not just commercially setting up, it we need to execute on this. There is opportunity to continue this, but I would caution against just assuming that you can, in perpetuity, keep putting up better and better working capital numbers, because every year you start at a better position, and you need to improve from there.

There are still, from some of the cash that you’re collecting, you still need to execute, and that creates a timing of where outflows could be higher. So I won’t speculate out more than say that 2026 is gonna be a really good year where we improve working capital again. But I still think we need to focus on the neutral when we look in the very long term.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities1: Yep. No, that makes sense, Alf. Right, I mean, the whole point is that yours is a very low capital intensity business, right? So on a true cycle basis, your free cash flow power would be really strong. That’s what I wanted to just get into. So thank you. Thank you a lot. Thanks a lot, Doug. Alf.

Alf, CFO, TechnipFMC: Yeah, thank you. Clearly confirmed.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Do we have time for one more question? Our final question will come from the line of Paul Redmond with BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.

Arun Jayaram, Analyst, J.P. Morgan Securities0: Yeah, thank you very much for taking one more question. You mentioned earlier that you are the only company that is an architect and a developer. But I also wanted to ask, what are the risks about replication on iEPCI or on Subsea 2.0 with your competitors? Because a company generating such fantastic margins, growth, growth in backlog, you’d assume that companies would start to pick up and think about how we could possibly challenge this. Are you seeing any actions by customers to copy what you’re doing? Is it copyable? Thank you very much.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: Sure, Paul. The short answer is, it’s very difficult. You know, it’s difficult. Many years ago, back in 2017, I said it took us four years. You know, so get, you know, kind of an idea of how much detailed engineering program it requires. Look, can others do it? Yes. We have never said we’re the only ones that can do it. We are the only ones who chose to do it. We chose a path of integration, while either or others have chosen a path of consolidation. Just a different strategy. We’re gonna stick with our strategy. I will now turn the call back over to Matt Seinsheimer for any closing comments.

Matt Seinsheimer, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Development, TechnipFMC: Thank you. This concludes today’s conference call. A replay of the call will be available on our website beginning at approximately 3:00 P.M., New York time today. If you have any further questions, please feel free to reach out to the investor relations team. Thank you for joining us. Regina, you may now end the call.

Doug Pferdehirt, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, TechnipFMC: This does conclude our call today. Thank you again for joining. You may now disconnect.