ITEM 1. BUSINESS
General
Ralliant Corporation (“Ralliant,” the “Company,” or “it”) is a global technology company with businesses that design, develop, manufacture, and service precision instruments and highly engineered products. Ralliant empowers engineers with precision technologies essential for breakthrough innovation in an electrified and digital world, enabling its customers to bring advanced technologies to market faster and more efficiently. Its strategic segments – Test and Measurement and Sensors and Safety Systems – include well-known brands with prominent positions across a range of attractive end markets. The Company is headquartered in Raleigh, North Carolina, and has a global team of approximately 7,000 employees with solutions that are used in more than 90 countries by over 90,000 customers.
On May 27, 2025, the Board of Directors of Fortive Corporation (“Fortive” or the “Former Parent”) approved the separation of Fortive’s Precision Technologies (“PT”) operating segment through the pro rata distribution of all of the issued and outstanding common stock of Ralliant to Fortive's stockholders (the “Separation”). Ralliant’s Registration Statement on Form 10, as amended, was declared effective by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) on May 30, 2025.
In connection with the Separation, on June 27, 2025, the net assets of the Ralliant businesses were contributed to Ralliant, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Former Parent, and, as partial consideration for such contribution, Ralliant made a cash payment to Fortive in the amount of $1.15 billion. In addition, on June 27, 2025, the 100 shares of Ralliant common stock held by Fortive were recapitalized into 112,730,036 shares of Ralliant common stock. All per share amounts in the Consolidated and Combined Statements of (Loss) Earnings have been retroactively adjusted to give effect to this recapitalization.
On June 28, 2025, the first day of the Company’s third fiscal quarter, Ralliant completed the Separation. The Separation was completed on such date in the form of a pro rata distribution to Fortive shareholders of record as of the close of business on June 16, 2025 (the “Record Date”) of all of the issued and outstanding shares of Ralliant common stock held by Fortive. Each Fortive shareholder as of the Record Date received one share of Ralliant common stock for every three shares of Fortive common stock held on the Record Date. Ralliant’s common stock began “regular way” trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) under the ticker symbol “RAL” on June 30, 2025.
Ralliant is a Delaware corporation and was incorporated in 2024 in connection with the Separation.
Ralliant Business System
The Ralliant Business System (“RBS”) is the engine that drives the Company’s growth culture, combining an integrated toolkit of best practices, a continuous improvement mindset, and a disciplined operating cadence to deliver sustainable results. RBS creates a competitive advantage for Ralliant. Across the Company, RBS is a shared language that connects teams around the world and meaningfully empowers them to bring precision technologies to market faster.
RBS consists of a comprehensive set of processes and tools, across three pillars: Lean Operational Excellence, Innovation & Commercial Excellence, and Leadership. All pillars work individually and together to deliver upon the shared goal of driving sustained profitable growth while creating value for Ralliant’s people, customers, and shareholders.
RBS was originally developed by Danaher Corporation and further evolved and applied by the Former Parent, to continuously improve business performance in the areas of quality, delivery, cost, growth, and innovation. Ralliant continues to evolve RBS including the infusion of AI-powered approaches to accelerate its business performance, ways of working, and impact. Ralliant’s operating companies leverage RBS to identify and eliminate inefficiencies and to promote sustainable improvements in product development, sales and marketing, supply chain management, and manufacturing efficiency.
RBS is the foundation of the Company’s culture of innovation, relentless execution, problem solving, and continuous improvement promoting discipline, speed, focus, and efficiency in delivering solutions to customers.
Business and Industry Overview
Ralliant has decades of domain expertise in delivering high precision innovative solutions, extensive proprietary assets that include a portfolio of approximately 2,200 active patents, and the trust of its diverse customers. The Company’s customers include engineers at industry leading companies, research institutions, and governments, across semiconductor, datacenter, consumer electronics, automotive, energy storage, defense and space, utilities, industrial manufacturing, and other industries. The team of over 1,300 engineers across the globe enables the Company’s unique ‘engineer to engineer’ approach, which allows the Company to build enduring trust, credibility, and partnerships with customers across both Fortune 1000 companies and next generation start-up enterprises.
The Company primarily operates in the following end markets: semiconductor, diversified electronics, communications, utilities, defense and space, industrial manufacturing, and other.
These end markets are large, diverse and are experiencing tailwinds in electrification and digitization. The Company’s focus on continuous innovation and its extensive product portfolio will position the Company as an enabler of technologies necessary to drive electrification and digitization. With key application expertise and solutions for engineers to enable advancements, the Company is positioned to benefit from these secular tailwinds. The following key trends and drivers of the Company’s primary end markets underlie favorable secular growth trends the Company expects to benefit from are:
Semiconductor:
•Next generation semiconductor technologies with higher power density, efficiency, and high-performance computing capability are required to support electrification and digitization across a wide range of end markets, which provides demand for Ralliant’s power test and measurement solutions as well as high-performance communications interface test and measurement solutions.
Diversified Electronics:
•Power electronics within factories, connected homes, smart buildings, digital health, AI data centers, and mobility is creating a need for high performance electronics, which has resulted in stable demand for Ralliant’s electronic test and measurement solutions in order to ensure the performance, reliability and safety of these electronic components and systems.
Communications:
•Exponential growth in data from next generation computing and networking technologies (AI/Machine Learning, Quantum Computing, Edge Computing, Silicon Photonics) creates the need for the Company’s communications test and measurement solutions to ensure compliance with new communications protocols.
Utilities:
•The growing need for power and efficient energy management in diverse industries (AI data centers and electrification of everything), increasing adoption of renewables (wind, solar, and hydrogen), bi-directional flow of power in the grid and distributed energy resource management are driving grid complexity and capacity expansion. This has created demand for the Company’s grid monitoring solutions, which monitor critical assets that are deployed in the grid, including transformers, switch gears, solar and wind farms, and nuclear reactors.
Defense and Space:
•Continued super-cycle of investments in defense technologies, as well as the rise of electric propulsion systems for satellites and spacecrafts, have increased demand for the Company’s precise safety ignition systems and energetic materials.
Industrial Manufacturing and Other:
•The rise of industrial automation and the increasing digitization of manufacturing workflows are accelerating global investment in precision sensing technologies.
•Safety and regulatory needs are becoming increasingly complex, and the cost of failure is rising rapidly for critical environments monitoring such as food and beverage as well as healthcare.
Competitive Strengths
The Company’s differentiation is rooted in enduring trust and long-standing relationships with innovation leaders. Engineers depend on the Company’s deep expertise in precision as well as its reliability to advance next-generation technologies and safeguard mission-critical applications. Some of the Company’s competitive strengths include:
•Long-standing global reputation as a trusted innovation partner to engineers. The Company is a team of passionate engineers serving engineers. Its ability to understand and address unique challenges faced by engineers positions the Company as a trusted ally and preferred innovation partner. The Company operates as a global company with diverse channels, regional manufacturing footprints, and product development teams designed to best meet local needs, with the scale advantage and credibility of a global solutions provider. A wide range of customers trust the Company’s precision technology expertise.
•World-class precision technology expertise and intellectual property. The Company believes its ability to harness decades of domain expertise and customer application know-how uniquely positions it to deliver precision, accuracy, and reliability for cutting edge technologies and mission critical applications. This leadership is shown through the Company’s prominent positions in power electronics testing, high-performance data communications interface testing, energy storage systems testing, transmission transformer health monitoring, electronic ignition safety systems, and sensing solutions for monitoring critical environments.
•The Ralliant Business System. The Company’s team has been united by RBS, which has been consistently and rigorously applied across the Company’s businesses, leveraging Lean Operational Excellence, Innovation & Commercial Excellence, and Leadership principles. Through the application of RBS, the Company expects to drive continuous improvement, measured by metrics such as quality, delivery, cost, growth, and innovation.
•Industry leading partner ecosystem. The Company’s people are its key strategic advantage. Through decades of cultivation, the Company has built an extensive eco-system of loyal partners that enable its scale and reach and accelerate expansion to new markets. These partners are deeply engaged and committed to the Company’s high performance culture and are empowered to deliver customer value.
Purpose and Guiding Principles
Ralliant’s shared purpose and Guiding Principles define the Company’s culture and guide how teams show up, work together, and create value for customers and shareholders. Ralliant’s purpose is rooted in the success of its customers and their use of the Company’s precision technologies to create confidence that innovators, scientists, and engineers need to achieve breakthrough advancements across critical industries. The Guiding Principles provide a framework for behaviors expected of employees.
Ralliant’s Five Guiding Principles are:
•Win as One Team: We seek to understand diverse perspectives, build trust and collaborate across teams, and rally around shared goals to win together.
•Solve Problems: We tackle problems head-on with urgency and resilience, using data and customer insights to get to the root cause and solve what matters most.
•Learn by Doing: We actively experiment and pivot in real time, quickly learning from our experiences and growing through reflection, feedback, and shared learning.
•Unlock Growth: We listen intently, stay curious and challenge our assumptions to spark bold ideas that generate value and deliver lasting impact for our customers.
•Own Our Future: We dream big, prioritize through focus and foresight, and hold ourselves accountable to create the future we want.
Reportable Segments
The Company operates and reports its results in two segments, Test and Measurement and Sensors and Safety Systems, each of which is further described below.
Test and Measurement
The Test and Measurement segment provides precision test and measurement instruments, systems, software, and services. Through its portfolio of industry leading solutions, including oscilloscopes, probes, source measuring units, semiconductor test systems, high-power bi-directional power supplies, and measurement analysis software packages, the Test and Measurement segment empowers scientists, engineers, and technicians to create and realize technological advances with greater efficiency, speed, and accuracy. Customers for these products and services include, among others, semiconductor design companies, foundries, integrated device manufacturers, hyperscalers, manufacturers of networking components and systems, defense technology and space program providers, consumer electronics design and manufacturing companies, electric mobility companies, designers and manufacturers of renewable energy systems, manufacturers of industrial electronics, and universities and advanced research laboratories.
Products and services within the Company’s Test and Measurement segment are marketed under a variety of leading brands, including TEKTRONIX, KEITHLEY INSTRUMENTS, SONIX, and EA ELECTRO-AUTOMATIK.
Sensors and Safety Systems
The Sensors and Safety Systems segment provides leading power grid monitoring solutions, safety systems for mission critical defense and space applications, and sensing solutions for critical environments where uptime, precision, and reliability are essential. This includes advanced monitoring, protection, and diagnostic solutions for high-voltage electrical assets in power generation, transmission, and distribution. Sensors and Safety Systems’ energetic materials, ignition safety systems, and precision pyrotechnic devices are used in mission-critical applications such as satellite deployment, rocket propulsion initiation, aerial vehicle safety systems, and military defense systems. The Sensors and Safety Systems segment also provides premium sensing products encompassing liquid level, flow, and pressure sensors, motion sensors and components, and hygienic sensors. Customers for these products and services include, among others, designers and manufacturers of critical power grid assets, power utilities, federal defense agencies, space agencies, defense suppliers, commercial aerospace and aviation companies, food and beverage processors, industrial manufacturers, hyperscalers, data center infrastructure providers, building automation and HVAC providers, healthcare providers, and semiconductor capital equipment providers.
Products and services in the Company’s Sensors and Safety Systems segment are marketed under a variety of brands, including QUALITROL, GEMS SENSORS, SETRA SYSTEMS, HENGSTLER DYNAPAR, ANDERSON-NEGELE, DOVER MOTION, SPECIALTY PRODUCT TECHNOLOGIES, and PACIFIC SCIENTIFIC ENERGETIC MATERIALS COMPANY.
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The following discussion includes information common to all of the Company’s segments.
Materials
Ralliant’s manufacturing operations employ a wide variety of raw materials, including electronic components, steel, plastics and other petroleum-based products, aluminum, and copper. Prices of oil and gas affect the Company’s costs for freight and utilities. The Company purchases raw materials from a large number of independent sources around the world. Tariffs affect the Company’s costs for impacted materials or components it imports into the United States and other countries. Based on the annual spend among the Company’s various suppliers, no single supplier is considered material. However, some components that require particular specifications or qualifications are dependent on a single supplier or a limited number of suppliers that can readily provide such components. The Company utilizes a number of techniques to address potential disruption in and other risks relating to the Company’s supply chain, including in certain cases the use of safety stock, alternative materials that meet the quality and regulatory requirements, and qualification of multiple supply sources. While external events such as natural disasters, geopolitical events, and hostilities have raised material and shipping costs in certain markets, the Company’s supply chain has been responsive to these dynamics, as the Company has implemented solutions to effectively support its operations and to help countermeasure production material shortages and distribution limitations. For further discussion of risks related to the materials and components required for the Company’s operations, please refer to “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report.
Intellectual Property
Ralliant owns numerous patents, trademarks, copyrights, and trade secrets, and has licenses to use intellectual property owned by others. Although in aggregate the Company’s intellectual property is important to its operations, the Company does not consider any single patent, trademark, copyright, trade secret, or license to be of material importance to any segment or to the business as a whole. From time to time, the Company engages in litigation to protect its intellectual property rights. For a discussion of risks related to the Company’s intellectual property, please refer to “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report. All capitalized brands and product names throughout this Annual Report are trademarks owned by, or licensed to, Ralliant.
Competition
Ralliant’s businesses generally operate in highly competitive markets, and the Company believes that it is a leader across many of its products and industry verticals. Because of the range of the products and services the Company sells and the variety of industries it serves, the Company encounters a wide variety of competitors, including larger companies or divisions of larger companies with substantial sales, marketing, research, and financial capabilities, as well as well-established competitors who are more specialized than the Company in particular geographic markets or industry verticals. The Company also faces increased competition as a result of the entry of competitors, including those with lower cost manufacturing locations, and increasing consolidation and scaling of some of its competitors. The segments in which the Company operates are fragmented with numerous global and regional players, and the number of competitors varies by product and service line. In the Company’s Test and Measurement segment, its main competitors include Keysight Technologies, Rohde & Schwarz, Ametek, and Teledyne Technologies, among others. In the Company’s Sensors and Safety Systems segment, the main competitors include Esco Technologies, Ensign-Bickford Aerospace & Defense, Endress+Hauser, ifm Efector, and Brooks Instrument, among others.
Key competitive factors vary among Ralliant’s businesses and product and service lines, but include the specific factors noted above with respect to each particular business and typically also include price, quality, performance, delivery speed, applications expertise, distribution channel access, service and support, technology and innovation, breadth of product, service and software offerings, and brand name recognition. For a discussion of risks related to competition, please refer to “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report.
Seasonal Nature of Business
General economic conditions impact Ralliant’s business and financial results, and certain of its businesses experience seasonal and other trends related to the industries and end markets that they serve. For example, sales of capital equipment are often stronger in the fourth calendar quarter and sales to OEMs are often stronger immediately preceding and following the launch of new products. Overall, the Company’s sales have historically been lowest in the first quarter and highest in the fourth quarter due to seasonal purchasing patterns. For a discussion of risks related to seasonality, please refer to “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report.
Human Capital Management
Ralliant’s approximately 7,000 team members are integral to the execution of its strategy and achievement of its business objectives. The Company seeks to foster a performance-oriented, people-first culture and to build high-performing teams by attracting and retaining talented individuals with diverse skills, backgrounds, and perspectives.
Ralliant provides employees with access to tools, training, and professional development opportunities intended to support their growth and advancement. The Company is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer and maintains policies and practices designed to comply with applicable employment laws and regulations in its hiring, promotion, and other employment practices.
Career Development, Performance, and Reward Systems
Ralliant’s people and culture strategy is centered on creating opportunities for employees to improve continuously through experience, learning, and collaboration that drive growth and development. Ralliant’s Talent Management Philosophy provides a systematic framework for managing talent, based on six core principles: Performance, Behaviors, Differentiation, Accountability, Transparency, and Development. This approach sets expectations for leadership in stewarding talent and helps foster an environment in which employees can expect support and professional development.
Development is tied into Ralliant’s performance processes to drive results and career advancement for top talent across global teams through a simplified, high impact “Success Model” rooted in the Company’s five Guiding Principles and reflected in its reward systems.
The Company has consistent and fair compensation programs that reflect its pay-for-performance philosophy and rewards employees for their contributions to the Company’s success. In addition to base compensation and other usual benefits, many full-time employees participate in some form of incentive-based compensation program that provides payments based on successful business outcomes.
The Company provides its employees with benefits designed to support their overall physical, financial, emotional, and social well-being. These benefits vary by location but generally include health and welfare benefits and programs to support financial security. Employees can access emotional well-being resources through global employee assistance programs.
Additionally, Ralliant invests in its people through growth and development opportunities, ranging from leadership development and RBS immersion to hands-on skill building in the three RBS pillars: Lean Operational Excellence, Innovation & Commercial Excellence, and Leadership. Ralliant’s leadership development offerings include People Leader Experience, supporting new people leaders with the skills to lead others, and Accelerated Leadership Experience focused on growing the capacity and readiness of Ralliant’s future leaders.
Employee Experience and Feedback
As part of the Company’s dedication to employee engagement, leaders across the organization regularly gather feedback through quarterly touchpoints and pulse surveys. This approach enables the Company to identify areas for growth and address concerns promptly. The Company utilizes employee feedback mechanisms to inform its workplace practices and initiatives and to support an environment in which employees can contribute to the execution of the Company’s strategy and overall business performance.
Government Contracts
Although the substantial majority of the Company’s revenue in 2025 was from customers other than governmental entities, each of the Company’s segments has agreements relating to the sale of products and services to government entities. As a result, the Company is subject to various statutes and regulations that apply to companies doing business with governments and government-owned entities. For a discussion of risks related to government contracting requirements, please refer to “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report.
Regulatory Matters
The Company faces extensive government regulation both within and outside the United States relating to the development, manufacture, marketing, sale, and distribution of its products, software, and services. The following sections describe certain significant laws and regulations that the Company is subject to. These are not the only laws and regulations that the Company’s businesses must comply with. For a description of the risks related to the laws and regulations that the Company’s businesses are subject to and that have impacted or may impact the Company, please refer to “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report.
Anti-Bribery and Anti-Corruption Laws
The Company is subject to various laws and regulations in the United States and other countries relating to anti-corruption and anti-bribery, including the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (“FCPA”), the U.K. Bribery Act, and similar laws in other jurisdictions. These laws generally prohibit companies, their officers and employees, and their intermediaries from making improper payments to governmental officials or private persons to exert influence or secure an improper advantage in order to obtain or retain business. The Company relies on third parties, including distributors, agents, and customs brokers, to conduct business in certain international markets with heightened corruption risk, which may include interactions with individuals who are considered governmental officials, increasing the Company’s exposure to anti-corruption compliance risks. Violations of these laws or even allegations of violations of these laws could pose reputational risks, subject the Company to investigations and related litigation, cause disruptions to the Company’s business, and result in monetary fines, legal costs, and damages and other sanctions.
Data Privacy and Security Laws
As a global organization, the Company is subject to data privacy, data protection, and information security laws, regulations, and customer-imposed controls in numerous jurisdictions as a result of having access to and processing confidential, personal, and/or sensitive data in the course of its business.
Data privacy, data protection, and security laws are rapidly evolving across the globe. Across the European Economic Area, the General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”) and similar laws in the United Kingdom and Switzerland impose strict requirements on how the Company processes personal data, including obligations to notify supervisory authorities and/or affected individuals of data breaches in certain circumstances, and to put in place additional safeguards to facilitate the transfer of personal data outside of Europe. Regulators may impose significant fines for non-compliance with these laws.
In the United States the California Consumer Privacy Act, as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act, includes certain features similar to the GDPR, and is part of a broader trend of comprehensive state privacy legislation in the United States. Other U.S. states have enacted, or are considering enacting, comparable legislation.
Several other countries in which the Company operates, such as China, India, and Brazil, have passed, and other countries are considering passing, laws that meaningfully expand the compliance requirements around confidential, personal, and/or sensitive data that the Company may have access to or process in the course of its business. China has passed a comprehensive data protection law, the Personal Information Protection Law, and may require a copy of personal data relating to citizens to be maintained on local servers when transferring personal data outside of China alongside additional data transfer safeguards. India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act introduces a requirement for a legal basis for personal data processing (generally consent), enhanced individual rights, and heightened security obligations for personal data processing. Brazil’s Lei Geral de Proteção de Dados (“LGPD”) also imposes data privacy, data protection, and security compliance requirements for businesses that are located or do business in Brazil. Although the LGPD shares similarities with the GDPR, it also contains a number of unique features, including specific legal bases not found in the GDPR. In these countries and elsewhere, the laws applicable to data privacy, data protection, and information security may require changes to business practices, systems, or process, and may necessitate additional investment for compliance purposes.
Environmental Laws and Regulations
The Company’s operations and properties are subject to laws and regulations relating to environmental protection, including those governing air emissions, water discharges, and waste management, as well as workplace health and safety. These laws and regulations increasingly include requirements related to climate change, energy use, emissions reporting, and sustainability matters, which could increase compliance costs or require changes to the Company’s operations. The Company has received notification from the United States Environmental Protection Agency, and from state and non-U.S. environmental agencies, that conditions at certain sites where the Company and others previously disposed of hazardous wastes and/or are or were property owners require clean-up and other possible remedial action, including sites where the Company has been identified as a potentially responsible party under United States federal and state environmental laws.
For a discussion of the environmental laws and regulations that the Company’s operations, products, and services are subject to and other environmental contingencies, please refer to Note 14 to the consolidated and combined financial statements included in this Annual Report. For a discussion of risks related to compliance with environmental and health and safety laws and risks related to past or future releases of, or exposures to, hazardous substances, please refer to “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report.
Export/Import Regulations
The Company sells products and services to customers all over the world and is required to comply with various U.S. export/import control and economic sanctions laws, such as:
•the International Traffic in Arms Regulations administered by the U.S. Department of State, Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, which, among other things, impose license requirements on the export from the United States of defense articles and defense services listed on the United States Munitions List;
•the Export Administration Regulations administered by the U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security, which, among other things, impose licensing requirements on the export, in-country transfer, and re-export of certain dual-use goods, technology, and software (which are items that have both commercial and military or proliferation applications);
•the regulations administered by the U.S. Department of Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control, which implement economic sanctions imposed against designated countries, governments, and persons based on United States foreign policy and national security considerations;
•U.S. anti-boycott laws administered under the Export Administration Regulations, which prohibit participation in certain foreign boycotts and require reporting of boycott-related requests, and
•the import regulations administered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Other nations’ governments have implemented similar export/import control and economic sanction regulations, which may affect the Company’s operations or transactions subject to their jurisdictions. These controls and regulations may impose licensing requirements on exports of certain technology and software from the United States and may impact the Company’s ability to transact business in certain countries or with certain customers.
The Company has developed compliance programs and training to prevent violations of these programs and regulations, and the Company regularly monitors changes in the laws and regulations. Changes in these or other import or export laws and regulations may restrict or further restrict the Company’s ability to sell certain products and solutions and may require it to develop additional compliance programs and training. For a discussion of risks related to export/import control and economic sanctions laws, please refer to “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in this Annual Report.
Competition Laws
Ralliant’s global operations are subject to complex and changing antitrust and competition laws and regulations, including conflicting laws and regulations in the jurisdictions in which it operates. The Company has implemented policies and procedures designed to promote compliance with applicable global laws and regulations concerning competition, but there can be no assurance of complete and consistent compliance with all laws and regulations given the complex and evolving policies implemented by governments around the world. If the Company is found to have violated laws and regulations concerning competition, it could materially adversely affect the Company’s business, reputation, results of operations, and financial condition.
Whistleblower Laws
Ralliant is subject to various whistleblower protection laws, including Sarbanes-Oxley Act, Dodd-Frank Act, the False Claims Act, and the E.U. Whistleblower Directive, that prohibit retaliation against whistleblowers who report alleged misconduct internally or to government authorities. Non-compliance with whistleblower protection laws can result in fines, penalties, litigation, and reputational harm for the Company. The Company maintains internal mechanisms that allow employees to report concerns confidentially and without fear of retaliation, though employees may choose to report concerns externally, including to governmental authorities.
International Operations
Ralliant’s products and services are available in markets worldwide, and its principal markets outside the United States are in Europe and Asia. The Company also has operations around the world, and this geographic diversity allows it to draw on the skills of a worldwide workforce, provides greater stability to its operations, allows the Company to drive economies of scale, provides revenue streams that may help offset economic trends that are specific to individual economies, and offers the Company an opportunity to access new markets for products. In addition, the Company believes that its future growth depends in part on its ability to continue developing products and sales models that successfully target high-growth markets outside of the United States.
The Company’s products and services are sold either directly to customers by the Company and its subsidiaries, or indirectly through third-parties such as representatives and distribution partners. The manner in which the Company’s products and services are sold differs by business and by region. The Company predominantly sells through direct channels. Outside of the United States, a larger percentage of the Company’s sales occur through indirect channels compared to inside the United States. This is a result of, among other factors, the Company’s distinct go-to-market strategies in the United States and outside of the United States, as well as the nature of the customers served in the United States. In countries with low sales volumes, the Company generally relies on indirect sales through representatives and distributors.
Available Information
The Company maintains an internet website at investors.ralliant.com where it makes available, free of charge, its annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, reports filed pursuant to Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), other SEC filings and amendments thereto, if any, filed or furnished pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, as soon as reasonably practicable after filing such material with, or furnishing such material to, the SEC. The Company’s internet website and the information contained in, or linked from, that website are not incorporated by reference into this Annual Report. The SEC maintains an internet website that contains reports, proxy and information statements, and other information regarding issuers that file electronically with the SEC at www.sec.gov.
Use of Website to Provide Information
From time to time, the Company has used, and expects in the future to use, its internet website as a means of disclosing material information to the public in a broad, non-exclusionary manner, including for purposes of the SEC’s Regulation Fair Disclosure. Financial and other material information regarding the Company is routinely posted on its website and accessible at investors.ralliant.com. In order to receive notifications regarding new postings to the Company’s website, investors are encouraged to enroll on its website to receive automatic email alerts.
ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS
Carefully consider the risks and uncertainties described below, together with the information included elsewhere in this Annual Report and other documents the Company files with, or furnishes to, the SEC from time to time. The risks and uncertainties described below are those that the Company has identified as material but are not the only risks and uncertainties facing the Company. Ralliant’s business is also subject to general risks and uncertainties that affect many other companies, such as market conditions, economic conditions, geopolitical events, changes in laws, regulations or accounting rules, fluctuations in interest rates, terrorism, wars or conflicts, major health concerns, natural disasters or other disruptions of expected business conditions. Accordingly, the below should not be considered to be a complete statement of all potential risks and uncertainties facing the Company. Additional risks and uncertainties not currently known to the Company or that the Company currently believe are immaterial also may materially and adversely affect Ralliant’s business, including its results of operations, liquidity, and financial condition.
You should read these risk factors in conjunction with Part II, Item 7, “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations,” and the consolidated and combined financial statements and accompanying notes in Part II, Item 8, of this Annual Report.
Risks Related to the Company’s Business Operations
Conditions in the global economy, the markets the Company serves, and the financial markets may adversely affect the Company’s business and financial results.
The Company is impacted by general economic conditions, and adverse economic conditions arising from any slower than anticipated global economic growth, reduced demand or consumer confidence, energy, manufacturing or component supply constraints arising from international conflicts, high inflation rates and the corresponding interest rate policies, volatility in currency and credit markets, actual or anticipated default on sovereign debt, changes in global trade policies (including new or increased tariffs), unemployment and underemployment rates, reduced levels of capital expenditures, changes in government fiscal and monetary policies, political initiatives targeted at reducing government funding, government deficit reduction and budget negotiation dynamics, government shutdowns, sequestration, other austerity measures, political and social instability, other geopolitical conflict, sanctions, natural disasters, public health crises, terrorist attacks, and other challenges affect the Company and its distributors, customers, and suppliers, including having the effect of:
•reducing demand for the Company’s products and services, limiting the financing available to the Company’s customers and suppliers, increasing order cancellations, and resulting in longer sales cycles and slower adoption of new technologies;
•increasing the difficulty in collecting accounts receivable and the risk of excess and obsolete inventories;
•increasing price competition in the markets the Company serves;
•creating or exacerbating supply interruptions, which disrupt the Company’s ability to produce the Company’s products;
•increasing the risk of impairment of goodwill and other long-lived assets (such as the current period non-cash goodwill impairment charge of $1.44 billion recorded in the Test & Measurement segment, primarily driven by revised expectations for the EA Elektro-Automatik (“EA”) business, as discussed in Note 5 to the consolidated and combined financial statements included in this Annual Report), and the risk that the Company may not be able to fully recover the value of other assets such as real estate and tax assets;
•increasing the impact of currency translation; and
•increasing the risk that counterparties to the Company’s contractual arrangements will become insolvent or otherwise unable to fulfill their contractual obligations which, in addition to increasing the risks identified above, could result in preference actions against the Company.
In addition, adverse general economic conditions may lead to instability in U.S. and global capital and credit markets, including market disruptions, limited liquidity, and interest rate volatility. If the Company is unable to access capital and credit markets on terms that are acceptable to the Company or the Company’s lenders are unable to provide financing in accordance with their contractual obligations, the Company may not be able to make certain investments or acquisitions or fully execute its business plans and strategies. Furthermore, the Company’s suppliers and customers are also dependent upon the capital and credit markets. Limitations on the ability of customers, suppliers, or financial counterparties to access credit at interest rates and on terms that are acceptable to them could lead to insolvencies of key suppliers and customers, limit or prevent customers from obtaining credit to finance purchases of the Company’s products and services, and cause delays in the delivery of key products from suppliers.
If growth in the global economy or in any of the markets the Company serves slows for a significant period, if there is significant deterioration in the global economy or such markets, if there is instability in global capital and credit markets, or if improvements in the global economy do not benefit the markets the Company serves, the Company’s business and financial results will be adversely affected.
Trade relations between the United States and other countries, including the imposition of new or increased tariffs, have had, and are expected to continue to have, an adverse effect on the Company’s business and financial results.
The Company participates in various end markets outside the United States. During the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025, sales outside the United States accounted for 48.7% of the Company’s total sales. In addition, the Company has several facilities outside the United States, many of which serve multiple Ralliant operating companies in manufacturing, distribution, product design, and selling, general and administrative functions.
There continues to be significant uncertainty about the future relationship between the United States and other countries, including with respect to trade policies, treaties, government regulations, sanctions, tariffs, and application thereof. Recent and ongoing changes to U.S. tariff policy have resulted in broad-based increases in tariff rates, and several countries, including China, have imposed or threatened to impose retaliatory measures on imports from the U.S. The U.S. government has announced various modifications to its tariff policy, and further changes may be made in the future. Although the Company is continuing to evaluate the impact of these evolving developments, it cannot predict the ultimate scope, duration, or effect, including the imposition or application of new or increased tariffs between the United States and other countries. Changes to trade policies, retaliatory measures, and sustained uncertainty in global trade relationships have negatively impacted, and are expected to continue to negatively impact, the Company’s operations and financial results through supply chain disruptions, increased input costs, delayed shipments, and increased operational complexity and costs. Additionally, these developments have contributed in the past and may in the future contribute to adverse macroeconomic conditions and increased economic nationalism, which could further reduce demand for the Company’s products and negatively impact its business.
The Company’s growth could suffer if the markets into which the Company sells its products and services decline, do not grow as anticipated, or experience cyclicality.
The Company’s growth depends in part on the growth of the markets which it serves, and visibility into its markets is limited (particularly for markets into which the Company sells through distribution). The Company’s quarterly sales and profits depend substantially on the volume and timing of orders received during the fiscal quarter, which are
difficult to forecast. Any decline or lower than expected growth in the Company’s served markets could diminish demand for the Company’s products and services, which could adversely affect the Company’s financial results. Certain of the Company’s businesses operate in industries that may experience periodic, cyclical downturns. For example, the Company’s Test and Measurement segment serves the semiconductor end market, which is affected by cyclical trends in downstream markets, including cyclicality in automotive and consumer electronics due to consumer spending trends. The Test and Measurement segment also serves the communications end market, which experiences cyclicality driven by significant one-time investments to support transitions to new communication standards and technologies, and the EV industry, which is currently experiencing a slowdown due to slower-than-anticipated progress of EV adoption. The Company’s Sensors and Safety Systems segment serves the industrial manufacturing end market, which experiences expansions and contractions driven by the macroeconomic environment and overall economic growth trends, and the utilities end market, which is influenced by secular trends such as grid modernization. The Company also serves the defense and space end market, which is heavily influenced by the spending and policy actions of the U.S. federal government and allied governments that rely on U.S. suppliers to provide products and services important to their national defense. Changes in U.S. or other government defense spending, including as a result of changes in policy, budgetary positions or priorities in connection with elections or otherwise, can negatively impact the results and growth prospects of this end market. U.S. defense spending levels are difficult to predict and may be impacted by numerous factors such as the evolving nature of the national security threat environment, U.S. national security strategy, U.S. foreign policy, the domestic political environment, macroeconomic conditions, and the ability of the U.S. government to enact relevant legislation such as authorization and appropriations bills.
In addition, in certain of the Company’s businesses, demand depends on customers’ capital spending budgets, and product and economic cycles can affect the spending decisions of these entities. Demand for the Company’s products and services is also sensitive to changes in customer order patterns (including the timing of large projects), which may be affected by announced price changes, changes in the Company’s competitors’ pricing discounts and other incentive programs, new product introductions, customer inventory levels, and customer needs. These factors have adversely affected, and in the future could adversely affect, the Company’s growth and results of operations.
The Company’s financial performance varies quarterly due to seasonal purchasing patterns, which can significantly impact quarterly results.
Certain of the Company’s businesses experience seasonal variations, with certain quarters typically generating higher sales due to customer purchasing patterns, which can significantly impact quarterly results. The sale of the Company’s products and services is dependent on customers whose industries are subject to seasonal trends in the demand for their products. The Company’s sales have typically been lowest in the first quarter and highest in the fourth quarter. Failing to meet quarterly sales and earnings expectations due to these seasonal trends could negatively impact investor confidence, resulting in stock price volatility and potential reputational damage.
The Company faces intense competition, and if it is unable to compete effectively, the Company may experience decreased demand and decreased market share. Even if the Company competes effectively, the Company may be required to reduce prices for the Company’s products and services.
Many of the Company’s businesses operate in industries that are intensely competitive and have been subject to consolidation. Because of the range of the products and services the Company sells and the variety of markets it serves, the Company encounters a wide variety of competitors, and it could encounter additional competition in the future, including from Former Parent. See “Business — Competition.” In order to compete effectively, the Company must maintain longstanding relationships with major customers and continue to grow the Company’s business by establishing relationships with new customers, continually developing new or enhanced products and services to maintain and expand the Company’s brand recognition and leadership position in various product and service categories, and penetrating new markets, including high-growth markets. The Company’s failure to compete effectively or pricing pressures resulting from competition may adversely impact the Company’s financial results, and the Company’s expansion into new markets may result in greater-than-expected risks, liabilities, and expenses.
The Company’s growth depends in part on the timely development and commercialization, and customer acceptance, of new and enhanced products and services based on technological innovation.
The Company generally sells its products and services in industries that are characterized by rapid technological changes, frequent new product introductions, and changing industry standards. If the Company does not develop innovative new and enhanced products and services on a timely basis, the Company’s offerings will become obsolete over time and the Company’s competitive position and financial results will suffer. The Company’s success will depend on several factors, including the Company’s ability to:
•accurately identify customer needs and preferences and predict future needs and preferences;
•allocate the Company’s research and development funding to products and services with higher growth prospects;
•anticipate and respond to the Company’s competitors’ development of new products and services and technological innovations;
•differentiate the Company’s offerings from competitors’ offerings and avoid commoditization;
•innovate and develop new technologies and applications, and acquire or obtain rights to third-party technologies that may have valuable applications in the Company’s served markets;
•obtain adequate intellectual property rights with respect to key technologies before the Company’s competitors do;
•successfully commercialize new technologies in a timely manner, price them competitively, and cost-effectively manufacture and deliver sufficient volumes of new products of appropriate quality on time; and
•stimulate customer demand for and convince customers to adopt new technologies.
In addition, if the Company fails to accurately predict future customer needs and preferences or fails to produce viable technologies, the Company may invest heavily in research and development of products and services that do not lead to significant sales, which would adversely affect the Company’s profitability. Even if the Company successfully innovates and develops new and enhanced products and services, the Company may incur substantial costs in doing so, and the Company’s profitability may suffer.
Changes in industry standards and governmental regulations may reduce demand for the Company’s products or services or increase the Company’s expenses.
The Company competes in markets in which the Company and the Company’s customers must comply with supranational, federal, state, local, and other jurisdictional regulations, such as regulations governing health and safety, the environment, electronic communications, and market standardizations. The Company develops, configures, and markets the Company’s products and services to meet customer needs that are impacted by these regulations and standards. These regulations and standards are complex, change frequently, have tended to become more stringent over time, and may be inconsistent across jurisdictions. Any significant change or delay in implementation in any of these regulations or standards (or in the interpretation, application, or enforcement thereof) could reduce or delay demand for the Company’s products and services, increase the Company’s costs of producing or delay the introduction of new or modified products and services, or restrict the Company’s existing activities, products, and services. In addition, in certain of the Company’s markets, growth depends in part upon the introduction of new regulations or implementation of industry standards on the timeline the Company expects. In these markets, the delay or failure of governmental and other entities to adopt or enforce new regulations or industry standards, or the adoption of new regulations or industry standards that differ from the Company’s expectations or which the Company’s products and services are not positioned to address, could adversely affect demand. In addition, regulatory deadlines or industry standard implementation timelines may result in substantially different levels of demand for the Company’s products and services from period to period.
The Company’s reputation, ability to do business, and financial results may be impaired by improper conduct by any of the Company’s employees, agents, or business partners.
The Company cannot provide assurance that its internal controls and compliance systems will always protect the Company from acts committed by employees, agents, or business partners of the Company (or of businesses the Company acquires or partners with) that violate U.S. or non-U.S. laws, including the laws governing payments to government officials, bribery, fraud, kickbacks, and false claims, sales and marketing practices, conflicts of interest, competition, export and import compliance, money laundering, and data privacy. In particular, the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, the U.K. Bribery Act, and similar anti-bribery laws in other jurisdictions generally prohibit companies and their intermediaries from making improper payments to government officials for the purpose of obtaining or retaining business, and the Company operates in many parts of the world that have experienced governmental corruption to some degree. Any such improper actions or allegations of such acts could damage the Company’s reputation and subject the Company to civil or criminal investigations in the United States and in other jurisdictions and related stockholder lawsuits, could lead to substantial civil and criminal, monetary and non-monetary penalties and could cause the Company to incur significant legal and investigatory fees. In addition, the Company relies on the third parties with whom the Company does business to adhere to the law and to the Company’s standards of conduct. Violations of law or the Company’s standards of conduct by such third parties could have a material effect on the Company’s financial results.
Any inability to consummate acquisitions at appropriate prices, and to make appropriate investments that support the Company’s long-term strategy, could negatively impact the Company’s growth rate and stock price.
The Company’s ability to grow sales, earnings, and cash flow depends in part upon the Company’s ability to identify and successfully acquire and integrate businesses at appropriate prices and realize anticipated synergies, and to make appropriate investments that support the Company’s long-term strategy. Any inability to do so could adversely impact the Company’s growth rate and the Company’s stock price. Acquisitions and investments that align with the Company’s portfolio strategy may be difficult to identify and execute for a number of reasons, including high valuations, competition among prospective buyers, the availability of affordable funding in the capital markets, general market conditions, and the need to satisfy applicable closing conditions and obtain antitrust and other regulatory approvals on acceptable terms. In addition, competition for acquisitions and investments may result in higher purchase prices. Changes in accounting or regulatory requirements or instability in the credit markets could also adversely impact the Company’s ability to consummate acquisitions and investments.
The Company’s acquisition of businesses, investments, joint ventures, and other strategic relationships could negatively impact the Company’s financial results.
As part of the Company’s business strategy, the Company acquires businesses, makes investments, and enters into joint ventures and other strategic relationships in the ordinary course, some of which may be material; please refer to “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” for additional details. These acquisitions, investments, joint ventures, and strategic relationships involve a number of financial, accounting, managerial, operational, legal, compliance, and other risks and challenges, including the following, any of which could adversely affect the Company’s financial results:
•any business, technology, service, or product that the Company acquires or invests in could under-perform relative to the Company’s expectations and the price that the Company paid for it, or not perform in accordance with the anticipated timetable, or the Company could fail to operate any such business profitably;
•the Company may incur or assume significant debt in connection with its acquisitions, investments, joint ventures, or strategic relationships, which could also cause a deterioration of the Company’s credit ratings, result in increased borrowing costs and interest expense, and diminish the Company’s future access to the capital markets;
•acquisitions, investments, joint ventures, or strategic relationships could cause the Company’s financial results to differ from its own or the investment community’s expectations in any given period, or over the long term;
•pre-closing and post-closing earnings charges could adversely impact operating results in any given period, and the impact may be substantially different from period to period;
•acquisitions, investments, joint ventures, or strategic relationships could create demands on the Company’s management, operational resources, and financial and internal control systems that the Company is unable to effectively address;
•the Company could experience difficulty in integrating personnel, operations, and financial and other controls and systems and retaining key employees and customers;
•the Company may be unable to achieve cost savings or other synergies anticipated in connection with an acquisition, investment, joint venture, or strategic relationship;
•the Company may face regulatory scrutiny as a result of perceived concentration in certain markets, which could cause additional delay or prevent the Company from completing certain acquisitions that would be beneficial to its business;
•the Company may assume by acquisition or strategic relationship unknown liabilities, known contingent liabilities that become realized, known liabilities that prove greater than anticipated, internal control deficiencies, or exposure to regulatory sanctions resulting from the acquired company’s or investee’s activities and the realization of any of these liabilities or deficiencies may increase the Company’s expenses, adversely affect its financial position, or cause the Company to fail to meet its financial reporting obligations;
•in connection with acquisitions and joint ventures, the Company may enter into post-closing financial arrangements such as purchase price adjustments, earn-out obligations, and indemnification obligations, which may have negative or unpredictable financial results;
•in connection with acquisitions and investments (such as the EA acquisition in the first quarter of 2024), the Company has recorded significant goodwill and other intangible assets on the Company’s balance sheet and if the Company is not able to realize the value of these assets, the Company has been, and may in the future be, required to incur charges relating to the impairment of these assets (such as the current period $1.44 billion non-cash goodwill impairment charge recorded in the Test & Measurement segment and primarily driven by revised expectations for the EA business); and
•the Company may have interests that diverge from those of its joint venture partners or other strategic partners and the Company may not be able to direct the management and operations of the joint venture or other strategic relationship in the manner it believes is most appropriate, exposing it to additional risk.
The indemnification provisions of acquisition agreements by which the Company has acquired companies may not fully protect it, and as a result, the Company may face unexpected liabilities.
Certain of the acquisition agreements by which the Company has acquired companies require the former owners to indemnify the Company against certain liabilities related to the operation of the acquired company before the Company acquired it. In most of these agreements, however, the liability of the former owners is limited, and certain former owners may be unable to meet their indemnification responsibilities. The Company cannot assure you that these indemnification provisions will protect it fully or at all, and as a result the Company may face unexpected liabilities that adversely affect the Company’s financial results.
Divestitures or other dispositions could negatively impact the Company’s business, and contingent liabilities from businesses that the Company has sold could adversely affect the Company’s financial results.
The Company assesses the strategic fit of the Company’s existing businesses and may divest or otherwise dispose of businesses that are deemed not to fit with the Company’s strategic plan or are not achieving the desired return on investment. These transactions pose risks and challenges that could negatively impact the Company’s business. For example, when the Company decides to sell or otherwise dispose of a business or assets, the Company may be unable to do so on satisfactory terms within the Company’s anticipated timeframe or at all, and even after reaching a definitive agreement to sell or dispose of a business the sale is typically subject to satisfaction of pre-closing conditions which may not be satisfied. In addition, divestitures or other dispositions may dilute the Company’s earnings per share, have other adverse financial and accounting impacts, and distract management, and disputes may arise with buyers in connection with the sale or after. In addition, the Company has retained responsibility for or has agreed to indemnify buyers against some known and unknown contingent liabilities related to a number of businesses the Company has sold or disposed of. Although the resolution of these contingencies has not had a material effect on the Company’s financial results so far, the Company cannot be certain that the resolution of such contingencies in the future will not have a material effect on its financial results.
The Company’s operations, products, and services expose it to the risk of environmental, health, and safety liabilities, costs, and violations that could adversely affect the Company’s reputation and financial results.
The Company’s operations, products, and services are subject to environmental laws and regulations, which impose limitations on the discharge of pollutants into the environment and establish standards for the use, generation, treatment, storage, and disposal of hazardous and non-hazardous wastes. The Company must also comply with various health and safety regulations in the United States and abroad in connection with the Company’s operations. In addition, some of the Company’s operations require the controlled use of hazardous or energetic materials in the development, manufacturing, or servicing of the Company’s products. The Company has received notification from the United States Environmental Protection Agency, and from state and non-U.S. environmental agencies, that conditions at certain sites where the Company and others previously disposed of hazardous wastes or are or were property owners require clean-up and other possible remedial action, including sites where the Company has been identified as a potentially responsible party under United States federal and state environmental laws.
The Company cannot assure you that its environmental, health, and safety compliance program has been or will at all times be effective. Failure to comply with any of these laws could result in civil and criminal, monetary and non-monetary penalties, and damage to the Company’s reputation. In addition, the Company cannot provide assurance that the Company’s costs of complying with current or future environmental protection and health and safety laws will not exceed the Company’s estimates or adversely affect the Company’s financial results. Moreover, any accident that results in significant personal injury or property damage, whether occurring during development, manufacturing, servicing, use, or storage of the Company’s products, may result in significant production interruption, delays, or claims for substantial damages caused by personal injuries or property damage, harm to the Company’s reputation, and reduction in morale among the Company’s employees, any of which may adversely and materially affect the Company’s results of operations.
In addition, the Company may incur costs related to remedial efforts or alleged environmental damage associated with past or current waste disposal practices or other hazardous materials handling practices. The Company is also, from time to time, party to personal injury or other claims brought by private parties alleging injury due to the presence of or exposure to hazardous substances. The Company may also become subject to additional remedial, compliance, or personal injury costs due to future events such as changes in existing laws or regulations, changes in agency direction or enforcement policies, developments in remediation technologies, changes in the conduct of the Company’s operations, and changes in accounting rules. For additional information regarding these risks, please refer to Note 14 to the consolidated and combined financial statements included in this Annual Report. The Company cannot assure you that the Company’s liabilities arising from past or future releases of, or exposures to, hazardous substances will not exceed the Company’s estimates or adversely affect the Company’s reputation and financial results or that the Company will not be subject to additional claims for personal injury or remediation in the future based on the Company’s past, present, or future business activities.
The Company’s businesses are subject to extensive regulation; failure to comply with those regulations could adversely affect the Company’s financial results and business, including its reputation.
In addition to the environmental, health, safety, anticorruption, data privacy, and other regulations noted elsewhere in this Annual Report, the Company’s businesses are subject to extensive regulation by U.S. and non-U.S. governmental and self-regulatory entities at the supranational, federal, state, local, and other jurisdictional levels, including the following:
•the Company is required to comply with global import laws and export control and economic sanctions laws, which may affect the Company’s transactions with certain customers, business partners, and other persons and dealings between the Company’s employees and between the Company’s subsidiaries. In certain circumstances, export control and economic sanctions regulations may prohibit the export of certain products, services, and technologies. In other circumstances, the Company may be required to obtain an export license before exporting the controlled item. Compliance with the various import laws that apply to the Company’s businesses can restrict its access to, and increase the cost of obtaining, certain products and at times can interrupt the Company’s supply of imported inventory. The Company is also subject to audits or investigations by one or more domestic or foreign government agencies relating to its compliance with these regulations. An adverse outcome in any such audit or investigation could subject the Company to fines or other penalties;
•the Company also has agreements to sell products and services to government entities, and is subject to various statutes, regulations, and other requirements that apply to companies doing business with government entities, including, but not limited to, the Federal Acquisition Regulation (“FAR”) and federal agency-specific FAR supplements, such as the U.S. Department of War's Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement. The laws governing U.S. government contracts differ from the laws governing private contracts. For example, these laws impose a broad range of requirements, including various procurement, import and export, security, contract pricing and cost, contract termination and adjustment, audit, product integrity, and government accounting requirements. New regulations or changes to existing requirements could increase the Company’s compliance costs. Further, the Department of War and other U.S. federal government agencies have adopted rules and regulations requiring contractors and subcontractors to implement a set of cybersecurity measures to attain the safeguarding of contractor systems that process, store, or transmit certain information. Implementation and compliance with these cybersecurity requirements is complex and costly, and could result in unforeseen expenses, lower profitability, and, in the case of non-compliance, penalties, and damages, all of which could have an adverse effect on the Company’s business. These cybersecurity requirements also impact the Company’s supply base, which could impact cost, schedule, and performance on programs if suppliers do not meet the requirements and therefore, do not qualify to support the programs. The Company’s contracts and subcontracts with government end customers are often subject to termination, reduction, or modification for convenience of the government, or subject to default based on performance. Additionally, the Company may underestimate the costs of performing under the contract. In certain cases, a governmental entity may require the Company to pay back amounts such government entity has paid to the Company. Government contracts that have been awarded to the Company following a bid process could become the subject of a bid protest by a losing bidder, which could result in loss of the contract. The Company is also subject to U.S. and other government inquiries and investigations that can arise from internal or external audits regarding the Company’s compliance with the requirements governing U.S. government contracts. Any failure to comply with provisions of the Company’s government contracts or other applicable laws and regulations can lead to fines or other penalties, including civil or criminal enforcement under the U.S. False Claims Act or similar enforcement legislation, suspension, or debarment against new government business, and reputational harm;
•the Company is also required to comply with increasingly complex and changing data privacy and protection regulations in multiple jurisdictions that regulate the collection, use, protection, and transfer of personal data, including the transfer of personal data between or among countries. In particular, data privacy and data protection laws have been passed in the European Economic Area, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, California, China, Brazil, and India. The Company may also face audits or investigations by one or more domestic or foreign government agencies relating to the Company’s compliance with these regulations. An adverse outcome in any such audit or investigation could subject the Company to fines or other penalties. That or other circumstances related to the Company’s collection, use, and transfer of personal data could harm its reputation or adversely affect its business and financial position;
•the Company is also required to comply with complex and evolving U.S., state, and foreign laws regarding the distribution of the Company’s products and services. These rules are subject to change due to new or amended legislation or regulations, administrative or judicial interpretation, or government enforcement policies. Any such change could adversely impact the Company’s current distribution business models and result in a decrease in sales or expose the Company to other significant costs affecting its business and financial position;
•the Company is also subject to the federal False Claims Act (the “FCA”), which imposes civil and criminal liability on individuals or entities that knowingly submit false or fraudulent claims for payment to the government or knowingly make, or cause to be made, a false statement in order to have a false claim paid, including qui tam or whistleblower suits. There are many potential bases for liability under the FCA. In addition, the Company could be held liable under the FCA if it is deemed to “cause” the submission of false or fraudulent claims; and
•the Company is also required to comply with ever changing labor and employment laws and regulations in multiple jurisdictions, which could negatively impact the Company’s business or financial position.
These are not the only regulations that the Company’s businesses must comply with. Generally, regulations the Company is subject to have tended to become more stringent over time and may be inconsistent across jurisdictions. The Company and the industries in which the Company operates have at times been, and may in the future be, under review or investigation by regulatory authorities. Failure to comply (or any alleged or perceived failure to comply) with the regulations referenced above or any other regulations could result in civil and criminal, monetary and non-monetary penalties, and any such failure or alleged failure (or becoming subject to a regulatory enforcement investigation) could also damage the Company’s reputation, disrupt the Company’s business, limit its ability to manufacture, import, export, and sell products and services, result in loss of customers and disbarment from selling to certain federal agencies, and cause the Company to incur significant legal and investigatory fees. Compliance with these and other regulations may also affect the Company’s returns on investment, require it to incur significant expenses or modify the Company’s business model, or impair the Company’s flexibility in modifying product, marketing, pricing, or other strategies for growing the Company’s business. The Company voluntarily complies with the standards of certain industrial standards bodies such as the International Standards Organization (ISO) and SEMI Standards, and, in certain cases, follow third-party certification guidelines, including for UL, CSA, ATEX, CE, and FM approvals. This voluntary compliance enables the Company to sell its products into certain applications and in certain geographies and to satisfy certain customer requirements and expectations. Failure to comply with these rules could result in withdrawal of certifications the Company relies on to sell the Company’s products and services and otherwise adversely impact the Company’s business and financial results. For additional information regarding these risks, please refer to the section entitled “Business — Regulatory Matters.”
Climate change, or legal or regulatory measures to address climate change, may negatively affect the Company.
Climate change resulting from increased concentrations of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere could present risks to the Company’s operations. Physical risk resulting from acute changes (such as hurricane, tornado, wildfire, or flooding) or chronic changes (such as droughts, heat waves, or sea level changes) in climate patterns can adversely impact the Company’s facilities and operations and disrupt the Company’s supply chains and distribution systems. Concern over climate change has resulted, and may in the future result, in new or additional legal or regulatory requirements designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, increase climate-related disclosure, or mitigate the effects of climate change on the environment (such as taxation of, or caps or prohibitions on the use of, carbon-based energy). Any such new or additional legal or regulatory requirements, including extensive disclosure requirements being implemented in various jurisdictions, including in the European Union and domestically, may increase the costs associated with, or disrupt, sourcing, manufacturing, and distribution of the Company’s products, which may adversely affect the Company’s business and financial results. In addition, any actual or perceived failure to adequately address stakeholder expectations with respect to environmental or related matters, including inability to comply with conflicting expectations, may result in the loss of business, adverse reputational impacts, and challenges in attracting and retaining customers.
International economic, political, legal, compliance, and business factors could negatively affect the Company’s financial results.
In 2025, 48.7% of the Company’s sales were derived from customers outside the United States. In addition, many of the Company’s manufacturing operations, suppliers, and employees are located outside the United States. The Company’s principal markets outside the United States are in Europe and Asia. Since the Company’s growth strategy depends in part on the Company’s ability to further penetrate markets outside the United States and increase the localization of the Company’s products and services, the Company expects to continue to increase the Company’s sales and presence outside the United States, particularly in high-growth markets, such as Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, and Asia. The Company’s international business, including the Company’s business in high-growth markets outside the United States, is subject to risks that are customarily encountered in non-U.S. operations, as well as increased risks due to significant uncertainties related to political and economic changes, including:
•impact of geopolitical conflict;
•interruption in the transportation of materials to the Company and finished goods to its customers;
•differences in terms of sale, including payment terms;
•local product preferences and product requirements;
•changes in a country’s or region’s political or economic conditions, including changes in its relationship with the United States, particularly with respect to China;
•trade protection measures, sanctions, increased trade barriers, imposition of new or additional tariffs on imports or exports, embargoes, and import or export restrictions and requirements;
•new conditions to, and possible restrictions of, existing free trade agreements;
•epidemics, such as the coronavirus outbreak, that adversely impact travel, production, or demand;
•unexpected changes in laws or regulatory requirements, including negative changes in tax laws in the United States and in countries in which the Company manufactures or sells its products;
•limitations on ownership and on repatriation of earnings and cash;
•the potential for nationalization of enterprises;
•limitations on legal rights and the Company’s ability to enforce such rights;
•difficulty in staffing and managing widespread operations;
•differing labor regulations, including collective labor arrangements;
•difficulties in implementing restructuring actions on a timely or comprehensive basis; and
•differing protection of intellectual property.
Any of these risks could negatively affect the Company’s financial results and growth rate.
Changes in U.S. GAAP could adversely affect the Company’s reported financial results and may require significant changes to the Company’s internal accounting systems and processes.
The Company prepares its consolidated and combined financial results in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of America (“GAAP”). These principles are subject to interpretation by the Financial Accounting Standards Board, the SEC, and various bodies formed to interpret and create appropriate accounting principles and guidance. Any new or amended standards may result in different accounting principles, which may significantly impact the Company’s reported results, result in volatility of the Company’s financial results, require the Company to apply new or amended standards retroactively, and require significant changes to the Company’s internal accounting systems and processes, which may impose significant costs and divert management attention and resources.
The Company has been, and may in the future be, required to recognize impairment charges for the Company’s goodwill and other intangible assets.
As of December 31, 2025, the net carrying value of the Company’s goodwill and other intangible assets totaled approximately $2.47 billion. In accordance with GAAP, the Company periodically, and at least annually, assesses these assets to determine if they are impaired. Significant negative industry or economic trends (including adverse changes in customer preferences and adoption of new technology), disruptions to the Company’s business, changes in government fiscal and monetary policies, political initiatives targeted at reducing government funding, government deficit reduction and budget negotiation dynamics, inability to effectively integrate acquired businesses, unexpected significant changes or planned changes in the use of the Company’s assets, changes in the structure of the Company’s business, divestitures, market capitalization declines, or increases in associated discount rates may impair the Company’s goodwill and other intangible assets. Any charges relating to such impairments adversely affect the Company’s results of operations in the periods recognized.
In the fourth quarter of 2025, in connection with its annual impairment testing, the Company recorded a $1.44 billion non-cash goodwill impairment charge in the Test & Measurement segment, primarily driven by revised expectations for the EA business due to the slower‑than‑anticipated progression and recent reduction in industry forecasts of future EV adoption. Any additional future determination of impairment of goodwill or other intangible assets could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial condition and results of operations. See “Critical Accounting Estimates” and Note 5 to the consolidated and combined financial statements included in this Annual Report for additional information.
Foreign currency exchange rates, including the volatility thereof, may adversely affect the Company’s financial results.
In 2025, sales outside the United States accounted for 48.7% of the Company’s total sales. These transactions expose the Company to foreign currency fluctuations, which have in the past, and may in the future, adversely affect the Company’s financial results. Strengthening of the U.S. dollar would increase the effective price of the Company’s products sold in U.S. dollars into other countries, which could require the Company to lower its prices or lead to reduced demand for its products. The Company’s non-U.S. dollar sales and expenses are translated into U.S. dollars for reporting purposes, and the strengthening or weakening of the U.S. dollar could result in less favorable financial results. The Company also faces exchange rate risk from its subsidiaries owned and operated in foreign countries and its investments in non-U.S. dollar currencies and non-U.S. dollar denominated borrowing.
Changes in the Company’s tax rate or exposure to additional tax liabilities or assessments could affect the Company’s profitability. In addition, audits by tax authorities could result in additional tax payments for prior periods.
The Company is subject to income, transaction, and other taxes in the United States and in multiple foreign jurisdictions. The Company’s future income tax provision, cash taxes paid, and effective tax rate could be volatile and difficult to predict due to changes in business profit by jurisdiction, changes in the legal entity structures, intercompany arrangements, or foreign currency exchange rates, or changes in tax laws, policies, regulations, or accounting principles, including interpretations or retroactive applications thereof. As a result of changes to tax laws, regulations, accounting principles, or global tax standards, the Company may record tax expense or benefit that is material to the quarter and year of change. Furthermore, certain tax laws are inherently ambiguous, requiring subjective interpretation on the application thereof. The Company’s interpretation and the corresponding amount of taxes the Company pays is, and may in the future continue to be, subject to audits by U.S. federal, state, and local tax authorities and by non-U.S. tax authorities. If these audits result in payments or assessments different from the Company’s reserves, the Company’s future results may include unfavorable adjustments to the Company’s tax liabilities and financial results could be adversely affected.
The Company has not made any provision for foreign remittance taxes on undistributed earnings of certain non-U.S. subsidiaries to the extent such earnings are considered to be indefinitely reinvested in the operations of those subsidiaries. If the Company’s intentions with respect to the reinvestment of these earnings change, or if the Company determines to repatriate such earnings from foreign jurisdictions, the Company’s income tax provision, cash taxes paid, and effective tax rate could increase. In addition, changes in U.S. international tax laws and related reforms may increase uncertainty and could adversely affect the Company’s income tax provision, cash taxes paid, and effective tax rate. Furthermore, many jurisdictions in which the Company operates have implemented, or are in the process of implementing, tax law and administrative changes to align with the base erosion and profit shifting initiatives led by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, which could significantly increase the Company’s income tax provision, cash taxes paid, and effective tax rate.
The Company is subject to a variety of litigation and other legal and regulatory proceedings in the course of the Company’s business that could adversely affect the Company’s financial results.
The Company is subject to a variety of litigation and other legal and regulatory proceedings incidental to the Company’s business (or the business operations of previously owned entities), including claims for damages arising out of the use of products or services and claims relating to intellectual property matters, employment matters, tax matters, commercial disputes, disputes with the Company’s suppliers or vendors, competition and sales and trading practices, environmental matters, personal injury, insurance coverage, and acquisition- or divestiture-related matters, as well as regulatory investigations or enforcement. The Company may also become subject to lawsuits as a result of past or future acquisitions or as a result of liabilities retained from, or representations, warranties, or indemnities provided in connection with, divested businesses. These lawsuits may include claims for compensatory damages, punitive and consequential damages, or injunctive relief. The defense of these lawsuits may divert the attention of the Company’s management; the Company may incur significant expenses in defending these lawsuits; the Company may experience disruption in supply or sales; and the Company may be required to pay damage awards or settlements or become subject to equitable remedies that could adversely affect the Company’s operations and financial results. Moreover, any insurance or indemnification rights that the Company may have may be insufficient or unavailable to protect it against such losses. In addition, developments in proceedings in any given period may require the Company to adjust the loss contingency estimates that it has recorded in the Company’s financial statements, record estimates for liabilities or assets that the Company was previously unable to estimate, or pay cash settlements or judgments. Any of these developments could adversely affect the Company’s financial results and reputation, and the Company cannot assure you that the Company’s liabilities in connection with litigation and other legal and regulatory proceedings will not exceed the Company’s estimates.
If the Company does not or cannot adequately protect its intellectual property, or if third parties infringe its intellectual property rights, the Company may suffer competitive injury or expend significant resources enforcing its rights.
The Company owns numerous patents, trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets, and other intellectual property and has licenses to intellectual property owned by others, which in aggregate are important to the Company’s business. The intellectual property rights that the Company obtains, however, may not be sufficiently broad or otherwise may not provide the Company a significant competitive advantage, and patents may not be issued for pending or future patent applications owned by or licensed to the Company. In addition, the steps that the Company and the Company’s licensors have taken to maintain and protect the Company’s intellectual property may not prevent it from being challenged, invalidated, circumvented, designed-around, or becoming subject to compulsory licensing, particularly in countries where intellectual property rights are not highly developed or protected. In some circumstances, enforcement may not be available to, or economically viable for, the Company because an infringer has a dominant intellectual property position or for other business reasons, or countries may require compulsory licensing of the Company’s intellectual property. The Company also relies on nondisclosure and noncompetition agreements with employees, consultants, and other parties to protect, in part, trade secrets and other proprietary rights. There can be no assurance that these agreements will adequately protect the Company’s trade secrets and other proprietary rights and will not be breached, that the Company will have adequate remedies for any breach, that others will not independently develop substantially equivalent proprietary information, or that third parties will not otherwise gain access to the Company’s trade secrets or other proprietary rights. The Company’s failure to obtain or maintain intellectual property rights that convey competitive advantage, adequately protect the Company’s intellectual property, detect or prevent circumvention or unauthorized use of such property, and the cost of enforcing the Company’s intellectual property rights could adversely impact the Company’s business, including its competitive position and financial results.
Third parties may claim that the Company is infringing or misappropriating their intellectual property rights and the Company could suffer significant litigation expenses, losses, or licensing expenses or be prevented from selling products or services.
From time to time, the Company receives notices from third parties alleging intellectual property infringement or misappropriation. Any dispute or litigation regarding intellectual property could be costly and time-consuming due to the complexity of many of the Company’s technologies and the uncertainty of intellectual property litigation. The Company’s intellectual property portfolio may not be useful in asserting a counterclaim, or negotiating a license, in response to a claim of infringement or misappropriation. In addition, as a result of such claims of infringement or misappropriation, the Company could lose its rights to critical technology, be unable to license critical technology or sell critical products and services, be required to pay substantial damages or license fees with respect to the infringed rights, be required to license technology or other intellectual property rights from others, be required to cease marketing, manufacturing, or using certain products, or be required to redesign, re-engineer, or re-brand the Company’s products at substantial cost, any of which could adversely impact the Company’s competitive position and financial results. Third-party intellectual property rights may also make it more difficult or expensive for the Company to meet market demand for particular product or design innovations. If the Company is required to seek licenses under patents or other intellectual property rights of others, the Company may not be able to acquire these licenses on acceptable terms, if at all. Even if the Company successfully defends against claims of infringement or misappropriation, the Company may incur significant costs and diversion of management attention and resources, which could adversely affect the Company’s business and financial results.
Disruptions in, or breaches in security of, the Company’s information technology systems have adversely affected, and in the future could adversely affect, the Company’s business.
The Company relies on information technology systems, some of which are managed by third parties and some of which are managed on a decentralized, independent basis by the Company’s operating companies, to process, transmit, and store electronic information (including sensitive data such as confidential business information and personally identifiable data relating to employees, customers, and other business partners), and to manage or support a variety of critical business processes and activities. These systems (or the systems of third parties upon whom the Company relies) have been in the past, and in the future may be, damaged, disrupted, accessed, or shut down due to attacks by computer hackers, nation states, cyber-criminals, computer viruses, ransomware, phishing schemes, denial of service attacks, user error or malfeasance by employee or former employees, power outages, hardware failures, telecommunication or utility failures, catastrophes (including natural disasters and terrorist attacks), or other similar events, and in any such circumstances the Company’s system redundancy and other
disaster recovery planning may be ineffective or inadequate. Since the techniques used to obtain unauthorized access to systems, or to otherwise sabotage them, change frequently and are often not recognized until launched against a target, the Company may be unable to anticipate these techniques or to implement adequate preventative measures. As these threats continue to evolve, particularly around cybersecurity, the Company may be required to expend significant resources to enhance its control environment, processes, practices, and other countermeasures. While the Company has designed and implemented controls to restrict access to its data and information technology infrastructure, it is still vulnerable to unauthorized access through cyber-attacks, theft, and other security breaches. In addition, although the Company seeks to improve its countermeasures to prevent such events, it may be unable to anticipate every scenario and it is possible that certain cyber threats or vulnerabilities will be undetected or unmitigated in time to prevent an attack on the Company, its customers, or third parties. Security breaches of the Company’s systems or lack of sufficient controls in the Company’s systems (or the systems of the Company’s customers, suppliers, or other business partners) could result in the misappropriation, change, destruction, exfiltration, or unauthorized disclosure of confidential information or personal data belonging to the Company or to its employees, partners, customers, or suppliers.
Like many multinational corporations, the Company’s information technology systems have been subject to computer viruses, malicious codes, and other cyber-attacks that have resulted in disruption of the Company’s operations, unauthorized access to confidential information, and increased the cost of operations through containment, investigation, and remediation efforts, including cybersecurity incidents in the fourth quarter of 2023. To date, the disruptions from such cybersecurity incidents have not materially impacted the Company’s business strategy, results of operations, or financial condition. However, the Company expects to be subject to similar incidents in the future as such attacks become more sophisticated and frequent, any of which may have a material adverse impact on the Company’s business strategy, results of operations, or financial condition. Increasing use of AI may increase these risks, including through the development of increasingly sophisticated or novel forms of cyber-attack. Geopolitical tensions or conflicts may further heighten the risk of cyber-attacks. Although the Company has insurance coverage for protecting against damages resulting from cyber-attacks and other privacy and security incidents, it may not be sufficient to cover all possible claims. Any of the attacks, breaches, or other disruptions or damage described above, as well as corresponding remediation efforts, can disrupt the Company’s operations, delay production and shipments, result in theft of the Company and the Company’s customers’ intellectual property and trade secrets, damage customer and business partner relationships and the Company’s reputation, or result in defective products or services, legal claims and proceedings, liability and penalties under privacy laws, and increased costs for security and remediation, each of which could adversely affect the Company’s business and financial results.
The Company uses artificial intelligence in, and is in the process of further incorporating artificial intelligence into, the Company’s business and in the Company’s products, services, operations, and product development processes, and challenges with properly managing its use could result in reputational harm, competitive harm, legal liability, and operational disruption, and adversely affect the Company’s results of operations.
The Company incorporates, and is in the process of further incorporating, AI solutions, including generative AI, into the Company’s products, services, operations, and developmental processes. In addition, third parties upon whom the Company relies use AI-enabled or -integrated systems and tools, including systems and tools that include generative AI for customers and the Company’s workforce. The Company’s competitors or other third parties may incorporate AI into their products or operational processes more quickly, more effectively, or at a lower cost than the Company, which could impair the Company’s ability to compete effectively and adversely affect its results of operations. Certain AI technologies may enable, or accelerate the pace of, disruption in the Company’s industry, including by allowing existing and future competitors to compete with or outpace the Company in areas in which the Company currently has a competitive advantage.
AI is an emerging technology, and ineffective or inadequate AI development or deployment, safeguards, controls, or application practices by the Company or third parties could result in unintended consequences. There are significant risks, uncertainties, and costs involved in developing and deploying AI, and there can be no assurance that the usage of AI will enhance the Company’s products or services or be beneficial to its business, including its efficiency or profitability. For example, models, including large language models, underlying AI solutions that the Company uses may be flawed or may be based on datasets that are biased or insufficient, or datasets of poor quality. In addition, any latency, disruption, or failure in the Company’s AI systems or data infrastructure could result in delays or errors in its offerings or operational activities. In addition, the Company’s AI-related efforts, particularly those related to generative AI, subject the Company to risks related to intellectual property infringement or
misappropriation, data privacy, and cybersecurity, among others. It will require significant resources to develop, test, validate, secure, and maintain the Company’s platforms, services, and features to successfully implement AI and minimize any unintended harmful impacts. There can be no assurance that the Company’s use of AI will yield the intended benefits or that the Company will be able to effectively mitigate the associated risks.
The regulation of AI by government or other regulatory agencies is evolving, and it is uncertain how various laws related to intermediary liability, intellectual property, privacy, data use, and other issues will apply to content generated by AI. Compliance with new or changing laws, regulations, or industry standards relating to AI may impose significant operational costs, require changes to the Company’s technology, processes, or governance frameworks, or may limit or foreclose the Company’s ability to develop, deploy, or use AI technologies. The Company’s use of AI could also result in real or perceived social harm, unfairness, or other outcomes that undermine public confidence in the Company’s use and deployment of AI, which could thereby harm the Company’s business reputation and erode customer trust.
Defects and unanticipated use or inadequate disclosure with respect to the Company’s products or services could adversely affect the Company’s business, reputation, and financial results.
Manufacturing or design defects impacting safety, cybersecurity, or quality issues (or the perception of such issues) for the Company’s products and services can lead to personal injury, death, property damage, data loss, or other damages. These events could lead to recalls or safety or other public alerts, result in product or service downtime, or the temporary or permanent removal of a product or service from the market, and result in product liability or similar claims being brought against the Company. Recalls, downtime, removals, and product liability and similar claims (regardless of their validity or ultimate outcome) can result in significant costs, as well as negative publicity and damage to the Company’s reputation that could reduce demand for the Company’s products and services.
Adverse changes in the Company’s relationships with, or the financial condition, performance, purchasing patterns, or inventory levels of, key distributors and other channel partners could adversely affect the Company’s financial results.
Certain of the Company’s businesses sell a significant amount of their products to key distributors and other channel partners that have valuable relationships with customers and end-users. Some of these distributors and other partners also sell the Company’s competitors’ products or compete with the Company directly, and if they favor competing products for any reason, they may fail to market the Company’s products effectively. Adverse changes in the Company’s relationships with these distributors and other partners, or adverse developments in their financial condition, performance or purchasing patterns, could adversely affect the Company’s financial results. The levels of inventory maintained by the Company’s distributors and other channel partners, and changes in those levels, can also significantly impact the Company’s results of operations in any given period. In addition, the consolidation of distributors and customers in certain of the industries in which the Company operates could adversely impact the Company’s profitability.
The Company’s financial results are subject to fluctuations in the cost and availability of commodities or components that the Company uses in its operations.
As further discussed in the section entitled “Business — Materials,” the Company’s manufacturing and other operations employ a wide variety of components, raw materials, and other commodities. Prices for and availability of these components, raw materials, and other commodities have fluctuated significantly in the past. In particular, widespread supply chain challenges due to labor, raw material, and component shortages, as well as widespread logistics issues, have affected companies in multiple industries (including the Company), raised material and shipping costs, limited the quantities available, and extended the lead time required for supplies and deliveries. Any sustained interruption in the supply of these items, including as a result of general supply chain constraints, increasing demand outpacing supplies, or contractual disputes with suppliers or vendors, could adversely affect the Company’s business again in the future. In addition, due to the highly competitive nature of the industries that the Company serves, the cost-containment efforts of the Company’s customers, and the terms of certain contracts the Company is party to, if commodity or component prices rise, the Company may be unable to pass along cost increases through higher prices. If the Company is unable to fully recover higher commodity or component costs through price increases or offset these increases through cost reductions or alternative supply, or if there is a time delay between the increase in costs and the Company’s ability to recover or offset these costs, the Company could experience lower margins and profitability, and the Company’s financial results could be adversely affected.
If the Company cannot adjust its manufacturing capacity, supply chain management, or the purchases required for its manufacturing activities to reflect changes in market conditions, customer demand, and supply chain disruptions, the Company’s profitability may suffer. In addition, the Company’s reliance upon sole or limited sources of supply for certain materials, components, and services could cause production interruptions, delays, and inefficiencies.
The Company purchases materials, components, and equipment from third parties for use in the Company’s manufacturing operations. The Company’s income could be adversely impacted if the Company is unable to adjust the Company’s purchases and supply chain management to reflect any supply chain or transportation disruptions or changes in customer demand and market fluctuations, geopolitical disruptions, severe weather events, increases in demand outpacing supply capabilities, labor shortages, seasonality, or cyclicality. During a market upturn or general supply chain disruptions, suppliers have extended lead times, limited supplies, or increased prices. If the Company cannot purchase sufficient products at competitive prices and quality and on a timely enough basis to meet demand for the Company’s products, the Company may not be able to satisfy market demand, product shipments may be delayed, the Company’s costs may increase, or the Company may breach its contractual commitments and incur liabilities.
Conversely, in order to secure supplies for the production of products, the Company sometimes enters into noncancelable purchase commitments with vendors, which could impact the Company’s ability to adjust its inventory to reflect declining market demands. If demand for the Company’s products is less than the Company expects, the Company may experience additional excess and obsolete inventories and be forced to incur additional charges and its profitability may suffer.
In addition, some of the Company’s businesses purchase certain requirements from sole or limited source suppliers for reasons of quality assurance, cost effectiveness, availability, contractual obligations, or uniqueness of design. If these or other suppliers encounter financial, operating, quality, or other difficulties or if the Company’s relationship with them changes, including as a result of contractual disputes, the Company might not be able to quickly establish or qualify replacement sources of supply. The supply chains for the Company’s businesses could also be disrupted by supplier capacity constraints, operational or quality issues, bankruptcy or exiting of the business for other reasons, decreased availability of key raw materials or commodities, and external events such as natural disasters, severe weather events that are occurring more frequently or with more intense effects as a result of global climate change, public health crises, war, terrorist actions, governmental actions, and legislative or regulatory changes, among others. Any of these factors could result in production interruptions, delays, extended lead times, and inefficiencies.
Because the Company cannot always immediately adapt its production capacity and related cost structures to changing market conditions, the Company’s manufacturing capacity may at times exceed or fall short of the Company’s production requirements. Any or all of these problems could result in the loss of customers, provide an opportunity for competing products to gain market acceptance or market share, and otherwise adversely affect the Company’s profitability.
The Company’s restructuring activities could have long-term adverse effects on its business.
The Company has implemented, and may continue to implement, significant restructuring activities across the Company’s businesses to adjust its cost structure, including the Cost Savings Program announced in 2025 to address dis-synergies within the Test & Measurement segment following the Separation. These significant restructuring activities as well as the Company’s regular ongoing cost reduction activities (including in connection with the integration of acquired businesses) reduce its available talent, assets, and other resources and could slow improvements in the Company’s products and services, adversely affect its ability to respond to customers, and limits its ability to increase production quickly if demand for the Company’s products increases. Restructuring activities may also pose legal issues in various jurisdictions, including difficulty terminating certain contracts and arrangements, and negatively impact the Company’s ability to attract, recruit, and retain qualified personnel. In addition, delays or failure in implementing planned restructuring activities or other productivity improvements, unexpected costs, or failure to meet targeted improvements may diminish the operational or financial benefits the Company realizes from such actions and cause reputational harm. Any of the circumstances described above could adversely impact the Company’s business and financial results.
Work stoppages, works council campaigns, and other labor disputes could adversely impact the Company’s productivity and results of operations.
The Company has various non-U.S. collective labor arrangements. The Company is subject to potential work stoppages, works council campaigns, and other labor disputes, any of which could adversely impact the Company’s productivity, results of operations, and reputation.
If the Company suffers loss to its facilities, supply chains, distribution systems, or information technology systems due to catastrophe or other events, its operations could be seriously harmed.
The Company’s facilities, supply chains, distribution systems, and information technology systems are subject to the risk of catastrophic loss due to fire, flood, earthquake, hurricane, public health crises, war, terrorism, or other natural or man-made disasters, including those related to climate change. If any of these facilities, supply chains, or systems were to experience a catastrophic loss, it could disrupt the Company’s operations, delay production and shipments, result in defective products or services, damage customer relationships and the Company’s reputation, and result in legal exposure and large repair or replacement expenses. The third-party insurance coverage that the Company maintains will vary from time to time in both type and amount depending on cost, availability, and the Company’s decisions regarding risk retention, and may be unavailable or insufficient to protect it against losses.
The Company’s ability to attract, develop, motivate, and retain senior leaders and other key employees is critical to its success, and failure to do so could negatively affect its business.
The Company’s future performance is dependent upon the Company’s ability to attract, develop, motivate, and retain senior leaders and other key employees. The loss of services of senior leaders and other key employees or the failure to attract, motivate, and develop talented new executives or other key employees could prevent the Company from successfully implementing and executing business strategies, and therefore adversely affect the Company’s financial results. In particular, the market for highly skilled employees and leaders in the technology industry remains competitive. The Company’s success also depends on its ability to attract, develop, motivate, and retain a talented employee base. The Company’s brand, culture, ability to provide competitive compensation, locations of operations, and reputation are important to its ability to recruit and retain key employees in these competitive markets. If the Company is not competitive or successful in its recruiting efforts, if it cannot attract or retain key employees, if it does not adequately ensure effective succession planning or transfer of knowledge for the Company’s key employees, or if its employees leave the Company due to impacts from the Separation, its ability to deliver and execute on its operational, development, or portfolio strategies would be adversely affected.
Risks Related to the Separation and the Company’s Relationship with Fortive
The Company has a limited history of operating as a separate, publicly-traded company. Its historical financial information prior to the Separation is not necessarily representative of its future results as a separate, publicly-traded company.
The historical information about the Company prior to the Separation in this Annual Report refers to its businesses as operated by and integrated with Fortive. Following the Separation, the Company’s financial statements are presented on a consolidated basis. The Company’s historical financial information included in this Annual Report prior to the Separation is derived from the combined financial results and accounting records of Fortive. Accordingly, such financial information does not necessarily reflect the financial condition, results of operations, or cash flows that the Company would have achieved as a separate, publicly-traded company during the periods presented or those that the Company will achieve in the future, primarily as a result of the factors described below:
•prior to the Separation, the Company’s businesses were operated by Fortive as part of its broader corporate organization, rather than as a separate, publicly-traded company. Fortive or one of its affiliates performed various corporate functions for the Company such as legal, treasury, accounting, auditing, human resources, investor relations, corporate affairs, and finance. The Company’s historical financial results prior to the Separation reflect allocations of corporate expenses from Fortive for such functions and are likely to be less than the expenses the Company would have incurred had the Company operated as a separate publicly-traded company. The Company’s costs related to such functions previously performed by Fortive may therefore increase;
•prior to the Separation, the Company’s businesses were integrated with the other businesses of Fortive. Historically, the Company shared economies of scope and scale in costs, employees, vendor relationships, and customer relationships. Although the Company has entered into agreements with Fortive in connection with the Separation, these arrangements may not fully capture the benefits that the Company enjoyed prior to the Separation as a result of being integrated with Fortive and may result in it paying higher charges than in the past for these services. This could have an adverse effect on the Company’s results of operations and financial condition;
•generally, the Company’s working capital requirements and capital for its general corporate purposes, including acquisitions and capital expenditures, were historically satisfied as part of the company-wide cash management policies of Fortive. As a separate, publicly-traded company, the Company’s results of operations and cash flows are likely to be more volatile, and the Company may need to obtain additional financing from banks, through public offerings or private placements of debt or equity securities, strategic relationships or other arrangements, which may or may not be available and may be more costly;
•as a part of Fortive, the Company was able to take advantage of Fortive’s overall size and scope to obtain more advantageous procurement terms. As a standalone company, the Company may be unable to obtain similar arrangements to the same extent that Fortive did, or on terms as favorable as those Fortive obtained, prior to completion of the Separation;
•the cost of capital for the Company’s businesses may be higher than Fortive’s cost of capital prior to the Separation;
•the Company may not realize the same tax benefits that were available to it when it was a part of Fortive;
•the Company’s historical financial information prior to the second quarter of 2025 does not reflect the debt or the associated interest expense that the Company incurred as part of the Separation; and
•as an independent public company, the Company is subject to, among other things, the reporting requirements of the Exchange Act, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (the “Sarbanes-Oxley Act”), the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, and the listing standards of the NYSE and must prepare its standalone financial results according to the rules and regulations of the SEC. These reporting and other obligations place significant demands on the Company’s management and administrative and operational resources. Moreover, to comply with these requirements, the Company has had to migrate its systems, including information technology systems, implement additional financial and management controls, reporting systems and procedures, and hire additional accounting, finance, and legal staff. The Company has incurred, and expects to continue to incur, additional annual expenses related to these steps, and those expenses may be significant. If the Company is unable to implement its financial and management controls, reporting systems, information technology, and related procedures in a timely and effective fashion, the Company’s ability to comply with its financial reporting requirements and other rules that apply to reporting companies under the Exchange Act could be impaired.
Other significant changes have occurred and may continue to occur in the Company’s cost structure, management, financing, and business operations as a result of operating as a company separate from Fortive. For additional information about the past financial performance of the Company’s businesses and the basis of presentation of the historical consolidated and combined financial statements, please refer to the section entitled “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and the consolidated and combined financial statements and accompanying notes included elsewhere in this Annual Report.
The Company may not achieve some or all of the expected benefits of the Separation, and the Separation may adversely affect its businesses.
The Company may not be able to achieve the full strategic and financial benefits expected to result from the Separation, or such benefits may be delayed or not occur at all. The Separation was designed to provide the following benefits, among others:
•allow each company to more effectively pursue its distinct operating priorities and strategies and enable its respective management to better focus on strengthening its organic businesses and operations, to more effectively address its singular operating and other needs, and to focus exclusively on its unique opportunities for long-term growth and profitability;
•give each business the ability to create its own optimal capital structure, manage capital allocation and capital return strategies with greater agility and focus, and concentrate its financial resources solely on its own operations without having to compete for investment capital;
•create an independent equity structure for both companies, affording each with direct access to the capital markets and an enhanced ability to capitalize on unique growth opportunities, and enabling each company to use its own pure-play equity currency to pursue accretive merger and acquisition opportunities;
•permit each company to more effectively attract, retain, and motivate talent as a separate company, and to offer stock-based incentive compensation to its employees and executives that is more closely aligned with the specific growth objectives, financial goals, and performance of its business; and
•allow investors to more clearly understand the separate business models, financial profiles, and investment identities of the two companies and to separately value each company based on its distinct investment identity.
The Company may not achieve these and other anticipated benefits for a variety of reasons, including, among others:
•as a part of Fortive, the Company’s businesses benefited from Fortive’s size and purchasing power in procuring certain goods and services. As a separate entity, the Company may be unable to obtain these goods, services, and technologies at prices or on terms as favorable as those Fortive obtained prior to the Separation. The Company also incurs costs for certain functions previously performed by Fortive, such as accounting, tax, legal, human resources, and other general administrative functions, that may be higher than the amounts reflected in the Company’s historical financial results, which could cause its profitability to decrease;
•the actions required to separate the Company’s and Fortive’s respective businesses could disrupt the Company’s operations;
•certain costs and liabilities that were otherwise less significant to Fortive as a whole are more significant for the Company as a separate company;
•the Company has incurred and will continue to incur costs in connection with the transition to being a separate, publicly-traded company, including accounting, tax, legal, and other professional services costs, recruiting and relocation costs associated with hiring or reassigning the Company’s personnel, costs related to establishing a new brand identity in the marketplace, and costs to separate and establish new information systems;
•the Company may be more susceptible to market fluctuations and other adverse events than if it were still a part of Fortive;
•the Company’s businesses are less diversified than Fortive’s businesses prior to the Separation; and
•under the terms of the Tax Matters Agreement, the Company is restricted for a period of two years following the Separation from taking certain actions that could cause the Separation or certain related transactions (including certain transactions undertaken as part of the internal reorganization) to fail to qualify as tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes or other applicable law (or otherwise fail to qualify for their intended tax treatment). These restrictions may limit the Company’s ability to pursue certain strategic transactions or engage in other transactions that might increase the value of its businesses.
If the Company fails to achieve some or all of the benefits expected to result from the Separation, or if such benefits are delayed, its businesses, operating results, and financial condition could be adversely affected.
In connection with the Separation, each of Fortive and Ralliant agreed to indemnify each other for certain liabilities. If the Company is required to pay under these indemnities to Fortive, its financial results could be negatively impacted. In addition, there can be no assurance that the Fortive indemnities will be sufficient to insure the Company against the full amount of liabilities for which Fortive will be allocated responsibility, or that Fortive’s ability to satisfy its indemnification obligation will not be impaired in the future.
Pursuant to the separation and distribution agreement by and between the Company and Fortive (the “Separation Agreement”) and certain other agreements with Fortive, the Company and Fortive each agreed to indemnify the other for certain liabilities, in each case for uncapped amounts. Indemnities that the Company may be required to provide Fortive are not subject to any cap, may be significant, and could negatively impact the Company’s business. Any amounts the Company is required to pay pursuant to these indemnification obligations and other liabilities could require it to divert cash that would otherwise have been used in furtherance of the Company’s operating business and could negatively affect its financial position, results of operations, and cash flows.
Further, third parties could also seek to hold the Company responsible for any of the liabilities that Fortive has agreed to retain, and there can be no assurance that the indemnity from Fortive will be sufficient to protect the Company against the full amount of such liabilities, or that Fortive will fully satisfy its indemnification obligations. In addition, Fortive’s insurance will not necessarily be available to the Company for liabilities associated with occurrences of indemnified liabilities prior to the Separation, and in any event, Fortive’s insurers may deny coverage to the Company for such liabilities. Moreover, even if the Company ultimately succeeds in recovering from Fortive or such insurance providers any amounts for which the Company is held liable, the Company may be temporarily required to bear these losses. Each of these risks could negatively affect the Company’s businesses, financial position, results of operations, and cash flows.
If the Separation, together with certain related transactions, fails to qualify as a transaction that is generally tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes, or if certain internal restructuring transactions fail to qualify as transactions that are generally tax-free for applicable tax purposes, the Company could incur significant U.S. federal income tax liabilities and, in certain circumstances, the Company could be required to indemnify Fortive for material amounts of taxes and other related amounts pursuant to indemnification obligations under the Tax Matters Agreement.
It was a condition to the Separation that Fortive receive a private letter ruling from the IRS or an opinion of its outside tax counsel, in each case, satisfactory to the Fortive board of directors, regarding the qualification of the Separation, together with certain related transactions, as a “reorganization” within the meaning of Sections 368(a)(1)(D) and 355 of the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”), and that such ruling or opinion, as applicable, shall not have been withdrawn, rescinded, or modified in any material respect. The IRS private letter ruling received by Fortive was based upon and relies on, among other things, various facts and assumptions, as well as certain representations, statements, and undertakings from Fortive and Ralliant, including facts, assumptions, representations, statements, and undertakings relating to the past and future conduct of the companies’ respective businesses and other matters. If any of these facts, assumptions, representations, statements, or undertakings are or become inaccurate, incomplete, or not otherwise satisfied, or if any such undertaking is not complied with, Fortive may not be able to rely on the IRS private letter ruling and could be subject to significant tax liabilities.
Notwithstanding Fortive’s receipt of the IRS private letter ruling, the IRS could determine on audit that the Separation or any related transaction is taxable for U.S. federal income tax purposes if it determines that any of the facts, assumptions, representations, statements, or undertakings upon which the ruling was based are not correct or have been violated, or for other reasons, including as a result of certain changes in the stock ownership of Fortive or the Company after the Separation or other post-Separation actions or transactions. Accordingly, notwithstanding Fortive’s receipt of the IRS private letter ruling, there can be no assurance that the IRS will not assert that the Separation or any of the related transactions does not qualify for tax-free treatment for U.S. federal income tax purposes, or that a court would not sustain such a challenge. In the event the IRS were to prevail in any such challenge or if the Separation or any related transaction is determined to be taxable for U.S. federal income tax purposes, Fortive or its shareholders could incur significant U.S. federal income tax liabilities, and the Company could also incur significant liabilities, including as a result of its indemnification obligations to Fortive under the tax matters agreement by and between the Company and Fortive (the “Tax Matters Agreement”).
In addition, prior to the Separation, Fortive and its subsidiaries completed an internal reorganization, and material tax costs were incurred by Fortive, the Company, and the Company’s respective subsidiaries in connection with the internal reorganization, including non-U.S. tax costs resulting from transactions in non-U.S. jurisdictions. Although the transactions comprising the internal reorganization were intended to be completed in a tax-efficient manner, and certain internal restructuring transactions were intended to qualify as tax-free for applicable tax purposes, there can be no assurance that the relevant taxing authorities will not assert that the tax treatment of the relevant transactions differs from the intended tax treatment. In the event the relevant taxing authorities prevail with any challenge in respect of any relevant transaction, Fortive and its subsidiaries could be subject to significant tax liabilities, and the Company could also incur significant tax liabilities, including as a result of its indemnification obligations to Fortive under the Tax Matters Agreement.
Under the Tax Matters Agreement, the Company is generally required to indemnify Fortive against taxes incurred by Fortive and related amounts resulting from (a) any inaccuracy or breach of a representation, covenant, or undertaking made by the Company in any of the Separation-related agreements and documents or in any documents relating to the IRS private letter ruling, the opinion of tax counsel relating to the Separation, or any other opinions of Fortive’s tax advisors relating to the internal reorganization, (b) an acquisition of all or a portion of the Company’s equity securities or assets, whether by merger or otherwise (and regardless of whether the Company participated in or otherwise facilitated the transaction), or (c) any other action undertaken or failure to act by the Company affecting the voting rights of the Company’s capital stock or the capital stock of certain affiliates of the Company. Any such indemnification obligation could adversely affect the Company’s business, financial condition, cash flows, and results of operations.
The Company may be affected by significant restrictions, including on its ability to engage in certain desirable capital-raising, strategic, or other corporate transactions, for a two-year period following the Separation in order to avoid triggering significant tax-related liabilities.
Under current U.S. federal income tax law, a spin-off that otherwise qualifies for tax-free treatment can be rendered taxable to the former parent corporation and its shareholders as a result of certain post-spin-off transactions, including certain acquisitions of shares or assets of the spun-off corporation. For example, a spin-off may result in taxable gain to the former parent corporation under Section 355(e) of the Code if it were later deemed to be part of a plan (or series of related transactions) pursuant to which one or more persons acquire, directly or indirectly, shares representing a 50 percent or greater interest (by vote or value) in the spun-off corporation. To preserve the tax-free treatment for U.S. federal income tax purposes of the Separation and certain related transactions, and in addition to the Company’s indemnity obligations described under the Tax Matters Agreement, the Company is restricted from taking any action that prevents the Separation, together with certain related transactions, from being tax-free for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Under the Tax Matters Agreement, for the two-year period following the Separation, the Company is subject to specific restrictions on its ability to enter into certain acquisition, merger, liquidation, sale, and stock redemption transactions with respect to its stock. Moreover, the Company is subject to restrictions on discontinuing the active conduct of its trade or business, the issuance or sale of stock or other securities (including securities convertible into its stock but excluding certain compensatory arrangements), and sales of assets outside the ordinary course of business. Further, the Tax Matters Agreement imposes similar restrictions on the Company and its subsidiaries that are intended to prevent certain transactions undertaken as part of the internal reorganization from failing to qualify for their intended tax treatment. These restrictions may limit the Company’s ability to pursue certain strategic transactions or other transactions that the Company may believe to be in the best interests of its stockholders or that might increase the value of its business, and may reduce its strategic and operating flexibility.
Changes by Fortive to certain tax elections on prior tax returns could adversely affect the Company’s effective tax rate and tax liabilities.
Changes made by Fortive to certain tax elections, positions, or filings on prior tax returns could have a direct impact on the Company, including potentially increasing the Company’s effective tax rate and tax liabilities. Any such changes could also trigger additional tax payments, interest, or penalties, and could affect the Company’s overall tax planning strategies, which could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s financial condition and cash flows.
Certain of the Company’s employees and directors may have potential or perceived conflicts of interest because of their equity interest in Fortive.
Because of their current or former positions with Fortive, certain of the Company’s employees and directors own equity interests in Fortive. Continuing ownership of shares of Fortive common stock and equity awards could create, or appear to create, potential conflicts of interest if the Company and Fortive face decisions that could have implications for both Fortive and the Company after the Separation. For example, potential or perceived conflicts of interest could arise in connection with the resolution of any dispute between Fortive and the Company regarding the terms of the agreements governing the Separation and the relationship with Fortive thereafter. These agreements include the Separation Agreement, transition services agreement (“Transition Services Agreement”), employee matters agreement, Tax Matters Agreement, intellectual property matters agreement, FBS license agreement, Fort Solutions license agreement, and any commercial agreements between the parties or their affiliates. Potential or perceived conflicts of interest may also arise out of any commercial arrangements that the Company may enter into with Fortive in the future. The Company has in place policies and processes governing conflicts of interest to address this risk. These include, for example, the Company’s Code of Conduct, the Corporate Governance Guidelines adopted by the Company’s Board of Directors (the “Board”), the Nominating and Governance Committee’s oversight of related person transactions, and the Board’s practice for directors to disclose any actual or potential conflict and recuse themselves from discussion and voting on the matter.
Fortive may fail to perform under various agreements entered into as part of the Separation or the Company may fail to have necessary systems and services in place when certain of the agreements expire.
The Separation Agreement and other agreements entered into in connection with the Separation determined the allocation of assets and liabilities between Ralliant and Fortive following the Separation and include certain indemnifications related to the liabilities and obligations of each company. The Transition Services Agreement entered into in connection with the Separation provides for the performance of certain services by each company for the benefit of the other for a period of time after the Separation. The Company relies on Fortive to satisfy its performance and payment obligations under these agreements. If Fortive is unable or unwilling to satisfy its obligations under these agreements, including its indemnification obligations, the Company could incur operational difficulties or losses.
In connection with the Separation, the Company established or expanded its own tax, treasury, internal audit, investor relations, corporate governance and listed company compliance, and other corporate functions. The Company has incurred, and expects to continue to incur, costs in connection with replicating these corporate functions to replace the corporate services that Fortive historically provided the Company prior to the Separation. Any failure or significant downtime in the Company’s financial, administrative, or other support systems or in the Fortive financial, administrative, or other support systems during the transitional period in which Fortive provides the Company with support could negatively impact the Company’s results of operations or prevent the Company from paying its suppliers or employees, executing its business strategy (including business combinations) and foreign currency transactions, or performing administrative or other services on a timely basis, which could negatively affect the Company’s results of operations.
The Company’s inability to resolve favorably any disputes that arise between the Company and Fortive with respect to its past and ongoing relationships may adversely affect its operating results.
Disputes may arise between Fortive and the Company in a number of areas relating to the Company’s ongoing relationships following the Separation, including:
•labor, tax, employee benefit, indemnification, and other matters arising from the Company’s Separation;
•employee retention and recruiting;
•business combinations involving the Company or Fortive; and
•the nature, quality, and pricing of services that the Company and Fortive have agreed to provide each other.
The Company may not be able to resolve potential conflicts, and even if the Company does, the resolution may be less favorable than if the Company were dealing with an unaffiliated party, which in each case could adversely affect its operating results.
The Company may be held liable to Fortive if the Company fails to perform certain services under the Transition Services Agreement, and the performance of such services may negatively impact its business and operations.
In connection with the Separation, Ralliant and Fortive entered into the Transition Services Agreement, which provides for the performance of certain services by each company for the benefit of the other for a period of time after the Separation. If the Company does not satisfactorily perform its obligations under the agreement, the Company may be held liable for any resulting losses suffered by Fortive, subject to certain limits. In addition, during the periods covered by the Transition Services Agreement, the Company’s management and employees may be required to divert their attention away from the Company’s business in order to provide services to Fortive, which could adversely affect its business.
Risks Related to the Company’s Indebtedness
The Company’s currently outstanding and future indebtedness could adversely affect the Company’s businesses and its ability to meet its obligations, pay dividends, and repurchase shares of its common stock.
As of December 31, 2025, the Company had outstanding indebtedness of approximately $1.15 billion, and had the ability to incur an additional $750.0 million of indebtedness under its revolving credit facility. This debt could have important, adverse consequences to the Company and its investors, including:
•requiring a substantial portion of the Company’s cash flow from operations to make interest payments;
•making it more difficult to satisfy other obligations;
•increasing the Company’s vulnerability to general adverse economic and industry conditions;
•reducing the cash flow available to fund capital expenditures and other corporate purposes and to grow the Company’s businesses;
•limiting the Company’s ability to pay dividends or repurchase shares of its common stock;
•placing the Company at a competitive disadvantage relative to its competitors that may not be as highly leveraged;
•limiting the Company’s flexibility in planning for, or reacting to, changes in its businesses and industries; and
•limiting the Company’s ability to borrow additional funds as needed or take advantage of business opportunities as they arise.
The credit agreement governing the Company’s credit facilities (the “Credit Agreement”) contains restrictive covenants that could limit its ability to engage in activities that may be in its long-term interest, including incurring additional indebtedness, merging or engaging in other fundamental changes, selling assets, paying dividends or making distributions, or repurchasing shares of its common stock, and require the Company to maintain compliance with an EBITDA-based leverage ratio. If the Company breaches any of these restrictions and cannot obtain a waiver from the lenders on favorable terms, subject to applicable cure periods, the outstanding indebtedness, including under the Company’s revolving credit facility (and any other indebtedness with cross-default provisions), could be declared immediately due and payable, which would adversely affect the Company’s liquidity and financial results. Additionally, the Company’s outstanding term loans bear interest at floating rates and are subject to market movements in interest rates, which makes interest cost more difficult to predict and could result in higher interest expense. For additional information regarding the Company’s indebtedness, please refer to Note 9 to the consolidated and combined financial statements included in this Annual Report.
The risks described above will increase with the amount of indebtedness the Company incurs, and in the future, the Company may incur significant indebtedness in addition to the indebtedness described above. In addition, the Company’s actual cash requirements in the future may be greater than expected.
The Company may not be able to generate sufficient cash to service all of the Company’s indebtedness and may be forced to take other actions to satisfy the Company’s obligations under its indebtedness, which may not be successful.
The Company’s ability to make scheduled payments on or refinance its debt obligations depends on its financial condition and operating performance, which are subject to prevailing economic and competitive conditions and to certain financial, business, legislative, regulatory, and other factors beyond its control. If the Company is unable to refinance its debt obligations, it will need to repay its outstanding indebtedness at maturity. The Company may be unable to maintain a level of cash flow from operating activities sufficient to permit it to pay the principal and interest on the Company’s indebtedness as it becomes due.
If the Company’s cash flows and capital resources are insufficient to fund its debt service obligations, the Company could face substantial liquidity problems and could be forced to reduce or delay investments and capital expenditures, or to dispose of material assets or operations, alter or eliminate its dividend payments, seek additional debt or equity capital, or restructure or refinance its indebtedness. The Company may not be able to effect any such alternative measures on commercially reasonable terms or at all and, even if successful, those alternative actions may not allow it to meet its scheduled debt service obligations and could adversely affect the Company’s business and financial condition. The Credit Agreement imposes restrictions on its ability to dispose of assets and the use of proceeds from those dispositions. The Company may not be able to consummate those dispositions or to obtain proceeds in an amount sufficient to meet any debt service obligations when due.
In addition, the Company conducts its operations through its subsidiaries. Accordingly, repayment of the Company’s indebtedness depends on the generation of cash flow by its subsidiaries, including certain international subsidiaries, and their ability to make such cash available to the Company by dividend, debt repayment, or otherwise. The Company’s subsidiaries may not have any obligation to pay amounts due on its indebtedness or to make funds available for that purpose. The Company’s subsidiaries may not be able to, or may not be permitted to, make adequate distributions to enable it to make payments in respect of its indebtedness. Each subsidiary is a distinct legal entity and, under certain circumstances, legal, tax, and contractual restrictions may limit its ability to obtain cash from its subsidiaries. Additionally, a significant portion of the Company’s cash flow is generated by subsidiaries outside the U.S., which may be subject to regulations that could prevent or delay the repatriation of funds. In the event that the Company does not receive distributions from its subsidiaries, the Company may be unable to make required principal and interest payments on its indebtedness.
The Company’s inability to generate sufficient cash flows to satisfy its debt obligations, or to refinance its indebtedness on commercially reasonable terms or at all, may materially adversely affect its business, financial condition, and results of operations and the Company’s ability to satisfy its obligations under its indebtedness, pay dividends on or repurchase shares of its common stock.
Challenges in the capital markets or deterioration in the Company’s financial condition may adversely affect the Company’s ability to access capital on favorable terms or at all.
Volatility in global financial markets, including elevated interest rates as experienced during 2024 and most of 2025, could increase borrowing costs or affect the Company’s ability to borrow funds. Additionally, a material decline in the demand for the Company’s services or in the solvency of its customers or suppliers or other significantly unfavorable changes in economic conditions may adversely affect the Company’s business and financial condition.
Risks Related to Shares of the Company’s Common Stock
If the Company is unable to implement and maintain effective internal control over financial reporting, investors may lose confidence in the accuracy and completeness of the Company’s financial reports and the market price of its common stock may be negatively affected.
The Company’s financial results were previously included within the combined results of Fortive, and the Company was not directly subject to the reporting and other requirements of the Exchange Act. As a result of the Separation, the Company is directly subject to reporting and other obligations under the Exchange Act, including the requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which will, beginning with the Company’s second Annual Report on Form 10-K, require annual management assessments of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial reporting and an opinion by the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm as to the effectiveness of its internal control over financial reporting. At such time, the Company’s independent registered
public accounting firm may issue a report that is adverse in the event it is not satisfied with the level at which the Company’s internal control over financial reporting is documented, designed, or operating. These reporting and other obligations will place significant demands on the Company’s management and administrative and operational resources, including accounting resources. The Company may not have sufficient time to meet these obligations by the applicable deadlines.
The process of designing, implementing, and testing the internal control over financial reporting required to comply with these obligations is time consuming, costly, and complicated. If the Company identifies material weaknesses in its internal control over financial reporting, if the Company is unable to comply with the requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in a timely manner or to conclude that its internal control over financial reporting is effective, or if the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm is unable to express a favorable opinion as to the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting, investors may lose confidence in the accuracy and completeness of its financial reports, the market price of its common stock could be negatively affected, and the Company could become subject to investigations by the SEC or other regulatory authorities, which could limit Ralliant’s ability to access the global capital markets and could have a material adverse effect on the Company’s business, financial condition, results of operations, and cash flows.
The obligations associated with being a public company require significant resources and management attention, which could negatively affect the Company’s business and financial condition.
As a public company listed on the NYSE, the Company is required to, among other things:
•prepare and file periodic reports, current reports, proxy statements, and other filings in compliance with the federal securities laws;
•have its own board of directors and committees thereof, which comply with federal securities laws and applicable NYSE listing standards;
•maintain an internal audit function;
•maintain the Company’s own financial reporting and disclosure compliance functions;
•maintain internal policies, including those relating to insider trading and disclosure controls and procedures; and
•comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the Dodd-Frank Act, and the rules and regulations promulgated by the SEC, the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, and the NYSE.
These reporting and other obligations place significant demands on the Company’s management and its administrative and operational resources, and the Company faces increased legal, accounting, administrative, and other costs and expenses relating to these demands that it did not incur as a segment of Fortive. The Company’s investment in compliance with existing and evolving regulatory requirements has resulted and will continue to result in increased administrative expenses and a diversion of management’s time and attention from sales-generating activities to compliance activities, which could have an adverse effect on its business, financial position, results of operations, and cash flows.
The market price of shares of the Company’s common stock has been, and may in the future be, volatile, which could cause the value of your investment to decline.
The market price of the Company’s common stock has been, and may in the future be, highly volatile and could be subject to wide fluctuations. From time to time, equity markets may experience significant price and volume fluctuations. This market volatility, as well as general economic, market, or political conditions, could reduce the market price of shares of the Company’s common stock regardless of its operating performance. In addition, the Company’s operating results could be below the expectations of public market analysts and investors or its own guidance due to a number of potential factors, including variations in the Company’s quarterly operating results or dividends to stockholders, additions or departures of key management personnel, failure to meet analysts’ earnings estimates, publication of research reports about its industry, litigation and government investigations, changes or proposed changes in laws or regulations or differing interpretations or enforcement thereof affecting its business, adverse market reaction to any indebtedness the Company may incur or securities the Company may issue in the
future, changes in market valuations of similar companies or speculation in the press or investment community, announcements by the Company or its competitors of significant contracts, acquisitions, dispositions, strategic partnerships, joint ventures, or capital commitments, or adverse publicity about the industries the Company participates in or individual scandals, and in response, the market price of shares of its common stock could decrease significantly.
In the past few years, stock markets have experienced extreme price and volume fluctuations. In the past, following periods of volatility in the overall market and the market price of a company’s securities (whether due to its financial results, industry developments, or other factors), securities class action litigation has often been instituted against such company. Such litigation, if instituted against the Company, could result in substantial costs and a diversion of the Company’s management’s attention and resources.
The Company cannot guarantee the continued payment of dividends on its common stock, or the timing or amount of any such dividends.
Any future declaration and payments of dividends, including any change in the timing and amount thereof, on the Company’s common stock will be determined by the Company’s Board in its discretion and will depend on business conditions, financial results, and other factors that the Board deems relevant. The Company’s ability to pay dividends will depend on its ongoing ability to generate cash from operations and on its access to the capital markets. The Company cannot guarantee that the Company will continue to pay dividends in the future, or the timing or amount of any such dividends.
If securities or industry analysts do not publish research or publish misleading or unfavorable research about the Company’s business, its stock price and trading volume could decline.
The trading market for the Company’s common stock depends in part on the research and reports that securities or industry analysts publish about the Company or its business. If one or more of the analysts who covers the Company’s common stock downgrades its stock or publishes misleading or unfavorable research about its business, its stock price would likely decline. If one or more of such analysts ceases coverage of Ralliant common stock or fails to publish reports on the Company regularly, demand for Ralliant common stock could decrease, which could cause the Company’s common stock price or trading volume to decline.
Your percentage ownership in the Company may be diluted in the future.
In the future, your percentage ownership in the Company may be diluted because of equity issuances for acquisitions, capital market transactions, or otherwise. The Company has granted equity awards to its employees and directors under its stock incentive plan and anticipates granting additional awards from time to time. These awards will have a dilutive effect on your percentage ownership in the Company as well as the Company’s earnings per share, which could adversely affect the market price of its common stock.
In addition, the Company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation authorizes the Company to issue, without the approval of its stockholders, one or more classes or series of preferred stock having such designation, powers, preferences and relative, participating, optional and other special rights, including preferences over the Company’s common stock respecting dividends and distributions, as the Board generally may determine. The terms of one or more classes or series of preferred stock could dilute the voting power or reduce the value of the Company’s common stock. For example, the Company could grant the holders of preferred stock the right to elect some number of its directors in all events or on the happening of specified events or the right to veto specified transactions. Similarly, the repurchase or redemption rights or liquidation preferences that the Company could assign to holders of preferred stock could affect the residual value of the Company’s common stock.
Certain provisions in the Company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation and bylaws, and of Delaware law, may prevent or delay an acquisition of the Company, which could decrease the trading price of its common stock.
The Company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws contains, and Delaware law permits, provisions that are intended to deter coercive takeover practices and inadequate takeover bids and to encourage prospective acquirers to negotiate with the Board rather than to attempt an unsolicited takeover not approved by the Board. These provisions include, among others:
•until the fourth annual stockholder meeting following the Separation, the inability of the Company’s stockholders to call a special meeting;
•the inability of the Company’s stockholders to act by written consent;
•rules regarding how stockholders may present proposals or nominate directors for election at stockholder meetings;
•the right of the Board to issue preferred stock without stockholder approval;
•until the fourth annual stockholder meeting following the Separation, the division of the Board into three classes of directors, with each class consisting, as nearly as may be possible, of one-third of the total number of directors and serving a three-year term, which could have the effect of making the replacement of incumbent directors more time-consuming and difficult;
•so long as the Board is classified, the provision that stockholders may only remove directors for cause;
•the ability of the Company’s directors, and not stockholders, to fill vacancies (including those resulting from an enlargement of the Board) on the Board; and
•until the fourth annual stockholder meeting following the Separation, the requirement that the affirmative vote of stockholders holding at least two-thirds of the Company’s voting stock is required to amend its amended and restated bylaws and certain provisions in its amended and restated certificate of incorporation.
In addition, because the Company has not chosen to be exempt from Section 203 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (the “DGCL”), this provision could delay or prevent a change of control that the Company’s stockholders may favor. Section 203 provides that, subject to limited exceptions, persons that acquire, or are affiliated with a person that acquires, more than 15% of the outstanding voting stock of a Delaware corporation (an “interested stockholder”) shall not engage in any business combination with that corporation, including by merger, consolidation, or acquisitions of additional shares, for a three-year period following the date on which the person became an interested stockholder, unless (i) prior to such time, the board of directors of such corporation approved either the business combination or the transaction that resulted in the stockholder becoming an interested stockholder; (ii) upon consummation of the transaction that resulted in the stockholder becoming an interested stockholder, the interested stockholder owned at least 85% of the voting stock of such corporation at the time the transaction commenced (excluding for purposes of determining the voting stock outstanding (but not the outstanding voting stock owned by the interested stockholder) the voting stock owned by directors who are also officers or held in employee benefit plans in which the employees do not have a confidential right to tender or vote stock held by the plan); or (iii) on or subsequent to such time the business combination is approved by the board of directors of such corporation and authorized at a meeting of stockholders by the affirmative vote of at least two-thirds of the outstanding voting stock of such corporation not owned by the interested stockholder.
The Company believes these provisions will protect its stockholders from coercive or otherwise unfair takeover tactics by requiring potential acquirers to negotiate with the Board and by providing the Board with more time to assess any acquisition proposal. These provisions are not intended to make the Company immune from takeovers. However, these provisions will apply even if the offer may be considered beneficial by some stockholders and could delay or prevent an acquisition that the Board determines is not in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders. These provisions may also prevent or discourage attempts to remove and replace incumbent directors.
The Company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation designates the state courts in the State of Delaware or, if no state court located within the State of Delaware has jurisdiction, the federal court for the District of Delaware, as the sole and exclusive forum for certain types of actions and proceedings that may be initiated by its stockholders. The Company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation further designates the federal district courts of the United States of America as the sole and exclusive forum for the resolution of any complaint asserting a cause of action arising under the Securities Act. These forum selection provisions could discourage lawsuits against the Company and its directors and officers.
The Company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation provides that, unless the Company consents in writing otherwise, the state courts in the State of Delaware or, if no state court located within the State of Delaware has jurisdiction, the federal court for the District of Delaware, will be the sole and exclusive forum for any derivative action or proceeding brought on behalf of the Company, any action asserting a claim of breach of a fiduciary duty owed by any of its directors, officers, employees, or stockholders to the Company or its stockholders, any action asserting a claim against the Company or any of its directors or officers arising pursuant to any provision of the DGCL or its amended and restated certificate of incorporation or amended and restated bylaws, any action asserting a claim against the Company or any of its directors or officers governed by the internal affairs doctrine, or any action asserting an “internal corporate claim” as defined in the DGCL. The Company recognizes that this forum selection clause may impose additional litigation costs on stockholders in pursuing any such claims, particularly if the stockholders do not reside in or near the State of Delaware.
Section 22 of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), creates concurrent jurisdiction for federal and state courts over all suits brought to enforce any duty or liability created by the Securities Act or the rules and regulations thereunder. Accordingly, both state and federal courts have jurisdiction to entertain such claims. To prevent having to litigate claims in multiple jurisdictions and the threat of inconsistent or contrary rulings by different courts, among other considerations, the Company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation further provides that, unless the Company consents in writing otherwise, the federal district courts of the United States of America will be the sole and exclusive forum for resolving any complaint asserting a cause of action arising under the Securities Act. Section 27 of the Exchange Act creates exclusive federal jurisdiction over all suits brought to enforce any duty or liability created by the Exchange Act or the rules and regulations thereunder, and as a result, the exclusive forum provision does not apply to actions arising under the Exchange Act or the rules and regulations thereunder. While the Delaware Supreme Court ruled in March 2020 that federal forum selection provisions purporting to require claims under the Securities Act be brought in federal court are “facially valid” under Delaware law, there is uncertainty as to whether other courts will enforce the Company’s federal forum selection provision described above. The Company’s stockholders will not be deemed to have waived compliance with the federal securities laws and the rules and regulations thereunder as a result of the Company’s forum selection provisions.
Although Ralliant believes these forum selection provisions benefit the Company by providing increased consistency in the application of law in the types of lawsuits to which they apply, these provisions may limit the ability of the Company’s stockholders to bring a claim in a judicial forum that such stockholders find favorable for disputes with the Company or its directors or officers, and it may be costlier for Ralliant stockholders to bring a claim in the designated courts than other judicial forums, each of which may discourage such lawsuits against Ralliant and its directors and officers. If a court were to find the Company’s forum selection provisions inapplicable to, or unenforceable in respect of, one or more of the specified types of actions or proceedings, the Company may incur additional costs associated with resolving such matters in other jurisdictions and it may not obtain the benefits of limiting jurisdiction to the courts selected.