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Earnings Transcript

Ecolab Inc Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

$ECL February 10, 2026

Call Participants

Corporate Participants

Andrew HedbergInvestor Relations

Christophe BeckChairman and Chief Executive Officer (CEO)

Christophe BeckChairman and Chief Executive Officer

Scott KirklandChief Financial Officer

Analysts

Tim MulrooneyWilliam Blair

Manav PatnaikBarclays

Ashish SabadraRBC Capital Markets

John P. McNultyAnalyst

Christopher ParkinsonWolff Research

Seth WeberBMP Paribas

Andrew WittmannBaird

Vincent AndrewsMorgan Stanley

Patrick CunninghamAnalyst

David BegleiterDeutsche Bank

Shlomo RosenbaumAnalyst

Jeffrey J. ZekauskasJP Morgan

Matthew DeYoeAnalyst

Mike HarrisonSeaport Research

Laurence AlexanderJefferies

Edlain RodriguezAnalyst

Jason HaasWells Fargo

Josh SpectorUbs

Kevin W. McCarthyAnalyst

Scott SchneebergerOppenheimer

Bobby ZolperRaymond James

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Ecolab Inc (NYSE: ECL) Q4 2025 Earnings Call dated Feb. 10, 2026

Presentation

Operator

Greetings. Welcome to Ecolab’s fourth quarter 2025 earnings release conference call. At this time all participants are in listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press Star zero from your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded at this time. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Andy Hedberg, Vice President of Investor Relations. Andy, you may now begin.

Andrew HedbergInvestor Relations

Thank you. Hello everyone and welcome to Ecolab’s fourth Quarter Conference call. With me today are Christoph Beck, Ecolab’s Chairman and CEO, and Scott Kirkland, our cfo. A discussion of our results along with our earnings release and the slides referencing the quarter’s results are available on ecolab’s website@ecolab.com investors. Please take a moment to read the cautionary statements in these materials which state that this teleconference and the associated supplemental materials include estimates of future performance. These are forward looking statements and actual. Results could differ materially from those projected. Factors that could cause actual results to differ are described under the Risk Factors section in Our most recent form 10K and in our poster materials. We also refer you to the supplemental diluted earnings per share information in the release.

With that, I’d like to turn the call over to Christoph Beck for his comments.

Christophe BeckChairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you so much Andy and welcome to everyone joining us today. 2025 was another record year for Ecolab, now with record breaking sales margins, earnings per share and free cash flow. This was all enabled by the exceptional total value of a team and technologies delivered to customers helping them achieve better business outcomes, operational performance and environmental impact.

Thanks to our team’s dedication Expertise, we’re entering 2026 with strong momentum and are very well positioned to deliver continued high performance with confidence. In Q4 we delivered 15% adjusted EPS growth with quarterly growth strengthening throughout the year. This was driven by accelerating underlying sales growth and continued strong OI margin expansion. Organic sales grew 3% driven by 3% value pricing and positive volume growth. Volume actually was stronger than it appeared with performance improving across most of our businesses. Food and beverage accelerated to 5%, pest elimination and life sciences both accelerated to 7% and specialty continued to drive significant share gains, growing 7% as well.

Institutional’s underlying sales growth was consistent with prior quarters, excluding the unexpected short term impact from lower distributor inventories. We also maintained strong double digit growth in Global High Tech and Ecolab Digital and taken together, this strong momentum lifted Ecolab’s underlying volume growth to 2% driving mid single digit underlying organic sales growth when we exclude impact from basic industries, paper and these lower distributor inventories, in other words, our core businesses and our growth engines are doing very well. We expect the distributor impact to largely normalize in the first quarter of 2026. We also continue to anticipate basic industries and papers performance to progressively improve in 2026.

Combined with strong new business wins and continued momentum across our growth engines, we expect volume growth to get back to 1% as we exit the first quarter, with growth accelerating further as the year progresses. Our strengthening underlying sales drove organic operating income growth of 12% and expanded our organic operating income margin by 140 basis points to 18.5%. This resulted in a full year operating income margin of 18% of 150 basis points versus last year. We’re confident we can continue to expand our OI margin Well beyond the 20% now before I move into our 2026 outlook, I want to take a moment to acknowledge current events in Minnesota.

Ecolab has customers in more than 170 countries, but Minnesota has been our home for more than a century. It is where our headquarters sits and where thousands of our colleagues, customers and communities count on us every single day. In recent weeks, Ecolab along with other business leaders across the state have come together to call for de escalation and a constructive path forward. As a company that has always believed in doing well by doing good, we stepped in early to help rally business leadership and support the efforts underway. I’m proud of the progress we’re seeing and encouraged by the positive momentum as expressed in an open letter signed by 60 Minnesota based CEOs.

The business community has an important role in supporting stability, strengthening local businesses and helping build a brighter future for Minnesota. We will continue to work together to help ensure Minnesota remains a strong and resilient place to live, work and grow. Now, Looking ahead to 2026, our priorities are very clear. First, it’s rapidly grow total value delivered to customers across our core businesses. Second, it’s to accelerate our one Ecolab growth initiative and third is to fuel our growth engines. We expect 3 to 4% organic sales growth this year with growth accelerating as the year progresses driven by strengthening volume gains and continued 2 to 3% value price.

Total reported sales including the Avivo Electronics acquisition is expected to grow upper single digits in 2026 and with the strong growth Oimargin is anticipated to expand 100 to 150 basis points to more than 19% resulting in an OI growth of 14 to 16% altogether. This is expected to drive strong eps growth of 12 to 15%, which includes the headwind of additional non cash amortization from the Ovivo acquisition. Our first priority is to rapidly grow total value delivered, or as we call it, TVD across our core businesses. TVD is our formal framework for measuring the business outcomes, operational performance and environmental impact we deliver to customers.

When we deliver measurable value across these three dimensions, it not only drives share gains, but it earns equal apps the ability to value price and with a strong customer value pipeline heading into 2026, we remain very confident in delivering 2 to 3% pricing this year. What makes our value model so powerful is our best in class approach. With our scale digital intelligence and global service. Ecolab partners with customers to define what best in class looks like and scale it across their operations, helping them achieve peak performance. This is how consistently help customers lower costs, reduce risk and improve performance across their entire enterprise.

Innovation is also essential to our best in class value model and our 2026 lineup is strong and keeps getting stronger. In global high tech, we’re launching Direct to Chip Cooling as a service to the data center market. This brings liquid cooling right where it’s needed the most. The chip. By combining our CDU platform with Ecolab 3D trace, our real time monitoring, advanced cooling technology and on site service, we improve uptime, lower cooling costs and allow more power to be put towards compute in food and beverage. We’re launching cipiq, an AI enabled digital solution that uses real time analytics for a smarter way to optimize cleaning place.

It decreases capacity, reduces water and energy use and improves quality control and product safety, helping customers run more efficiently at a time when every hour of production matters. Early interest is strong and we’re looking forward to a healthy rollout in 2026. In Institutional Specialty, we focused on scaling our IQ Suite Dish IQ, Aqua IQ, Kitchen IQ and Beverage IQ. These solutions directly address labor shortages, guest satisfaction and rising operating costs, giving operators smarter, more automated ways to run their kitchens and front of the house operations. We expect strong growth from the suite in 2026 as well.

And in pest elimination, we’re expanding beyond our rodent focused smart devices with a new smart solution for cockroaches, extending the reach and impact of our pest intelligence platforms. Moving on to our second priority in 2026, expanding the One Ecolab growth initiative. We’ve demonstrated immense success over the last year. We’ve aligned our global resources to better serve our top 35 global customers where there is a 3.5 billion growth opportunity in 2025, sales growth with this group outpaced total company by approximately 2 percentage points. This year we’re expanding this model to our largest regional customers around the world, leveraging the tools, processes and sales structures built for our top 35 guesstimates.

Within one Ecolab, we’ve also delivered more than 100 million in SGNA savings as of year end 2025. We achieved this by consolidating functional work into our global centers of excellence and deploying a number of agentic AI applications as one of the most advanced companies. As we shared at investor day, our initial 1ecolab rollout exceeded expectations, allowing us to increase our savings target from 140 million to 225 million by 2020. And today we’re increasing our savings target again to 325 million by the same year 2027 due to the continued success of the overall program. Finally looking at our growth engines, they now represent about 20% of our portfolio including Avebo Electronics which closed earlier than expected.

Together our growth engines have very attractive long term OI margin profiles and in 2026 we expect them to collectively grow double digits, lifting Ecolab sales growth. When we look at what’s skilling that trajectory, global high tech is leading the way as AI expands and every part of its value chain depends on water. The fabs that make the chips, the power plants that fuel the chips and the data centers that run and cool down. Ecolab is uniquely positioned in all these markets to help enable the AI build out. With Avivo Electronics, now part of Ecolab, we provide the ultra pure water essential for semiconductor manufacturing, supporting the fabs producing the world’s most advanced chips.

As we bring our unmatched capabilities together, we’re building a unique circular water offering for the fast growing microelectronics sector. Innovivo is off to a strong start in 2026 as we have already secured several new fabs where our leading ultra pure water technologies will be deployed. On the data center side, the industry expects unprecedented demand for AI to continue to rapidly expand. Higher rack densities and rising cheap heat make liquid cooling mission critical. Our direct to chip cooling platform including integrated 3D razor monitoring and on site service positions us to help data centers improve cooling asset performance, reduce the power required to cool and return more power to compute.

And as the industry increasingly turns to water to cool next generation chips like Nvidia’s Vera Ribbon platform, we’re very well positioned. Backed by more than a century of experience managing cooling and water systems in complex environments at scale as strong as that momentum is, it’s only part of our growth engine story. Another major contributor is pest elimination. Nearly every Ecolab customer today uses some form of pest elimination. With our One Ecolab selling strategy, we are unlocking a 3 billion cross sell opportunity by delivering the most compelling outcomes in the industry. Targeting 99% pest relocation to our digital connected pest intelligence platform.

We lead us in deploying digital technologies to this commercial market and expect to have more than 1 million smart devices in the field in 2026. This technology not only drives best in class outcomes for our customers, but it also frees our team to spend more time driving strong sales growth while continuing to expand margin. We’re also seeing exceptional progress in Life Sciences. We delivered our best year yet in bioprocessing with sales up nearly 75% in 2025. Life sciences has the potential to be one of Ecolab’s highest margin businesses where we target long term operating margins of 30%.

We’re investing behind this attractive and significant long term opportunity with breakthrough biopharma purification innovations, new digital solutions and capacity expansions. That includes the capacity expansion of our life sciences industrial water purification business which is expected to begin production in the second half of this year, removing the constraints that created a drag in 2025 and positioning us for strong growth in the years ahead. And the fourth engine powering our growth is Ecolab Digital. We’ve grown this business to leave 400 million in annual of sales increasing more than 20% in 2025 and we’re still in the very early days.

We’re investing heavily to bring market leading digital solutions to our customers across our portfolio. In 2025 more than 25% of our innovation pipeline was digital which has grown significantly over the last few years. The strength of Ecolab Digital comes from its focus on solving critical customer challenges and increasing the total value delivered to our customers. With all of this, we enter 2026 confident in our ability to deliver continued strong performance and we off to a strong start in the first quarter. For the year we expect reported sales growth of 7 to 9% and organic sales growth of 3 to 4% with organic growth accelerating as the year progresses.

Driven by strengthening volume growth and with 100 to 150 basis points of OI margin expansion, we expect 14 to 16% OI growth and EPS growth of 12 to 15% including the impact of Ovivo. I’ll end where I often do. The best of Ecolab is yet to come. Our ability to improve customers business outcomes, operational performance and environmental impact is more relevant than ever and it’s powering consistent double digit EPS growth. So thanks so much for your interest and your investment in Ecolab. I look forward to your questions. Thanks, Gustav. That concludes our formal remarks. Operator, would you please begin the question and answer period?

Question & Answers

Operator

Thank you. We’ll now be conducting a question and answer session. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question per caller so those will have a chance to participate. If you have additional questions, please rejoin the Q and A queue. If you’d like to ask a question at this time, you may press Star one from your telephone keypad and a confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star 2 if you’d like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys.

One moment please, while we poll for questions. Thank you. And our first question is from the line of Tim Mulrooney with William Blair. Please see with your question.

Tim Mulrooney — Analyst, William Blair

Yeah, Good afternoon, Christoph.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Good afternoon, Tim.

Tim Mulrooney — Analyst, William Blair

I just wanted to double click on the. You gave a lot of good color in the prepared remarks, but I just want to double click on that volume cadence as you move through the year, specifically organic volumes, because I know you got a couple of headwinds from paper and basic and as well the inventory thing with institutional. So how do you think about these headwinds moving through the year as well as not then on the other side of it, you got that solid momentum in some of these other businesses. Can you walk me through these pieces and taking that all into account, how you’re thinking about the trajectory for organic volumes specifically as you move to the year?

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I’d love to, Tim. And our framework remains the same with the 1 to 2% volume growth and 2 to 3 to get to these 3 to 4. So for the year accelerating in 2026. And when I step back, the truth is that the volume growth in Q4 was almost the same as in Q3, as you know. So we round up or down our volume and the difference versus around zero and around one was actually only a few million dollars. So at the end of the day, it was almost the same in Q4 as in Q3, which is why earnings were strong.

And I feel great about where we’re going. But what makes me the most optimistic about our future is that, well, 85% of our businesses are doing great. As mentioned, FNB, which builds, we’re building around this F and B United idea of bringing hygiene and water very closely together. That’s done in North America well as accelerated to 5%, life science to 7, best to 7, water xpaper and basic to 5% and ins distribution inventory story there, well it was going the same at 4% with specialty steady at 7. So in other words, what I really like is that our portfolio is shifting to higher growth, higher margin businesses which is exactly where we want to go and we deal obviously.

So we see 15% of the portfolio that needs work. There will always be something and I expect paper and basics to kind of get to a much better place as we progress in 2026. So if I put all that improving the underperforming businesses of paper and basic normalization of the distributor inventory in institutional and 85% of the company growing very nicely. I expect Q1 to be pretty similar to Q4 but with acceleration towards the end of the quarter and acceleration continuing in the quarters to come during the year of 2026. So overall a very good trajectory especially from the underlying growth.

Tim Mulrooney — Analyst, William Blair

Thank you.

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Manav Patniak with Barclays. Please receive your question.

Manav Patnaik — Analyst, Barclays

Thank you. Christoph, I was hoping you could just double click on the global high tech piece, the water, the semis, the data center piece, post Avivo just help us size. What do you think the growth rate is, where the opportunities are and perhaps if you see any roadblocks to you achieving some of your growth ambitions there.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I’d love to Mana. Thanks for that question. So global high tech is kind of a new business for us. Started it three, four years ago, really focused on data centers and on fabs, which is the short term name. So for manufacturing of microelectronics chips. And if I step back, as I mentioned so many times, why are we so interested in that field? On one hand, well, AI demand is booming. Is that going to be a straight line to heaven? Probably not. There’s going to be ups and downs, slower ups probably as well going forward, but the trend are clearly up and we see it from an investment perspective.

Second, the power and water that’s required for that is incredible. As mentioned, by 2030 we expect an incremental need of power for the whole of the electrical consumption of India and the incremental needs of the fresh water use of the whole United States. So at the end of the day, well, at the heart of AI is water, as mentioned before, to produce the chips because they produced in ultra pure water to power the chips because power generation is the second largest water user in the world of the agriculture. And the third one is to Cool chips which is shifting towards water at the same time.

So high growth market where water is at heart of it and especially so on those two key areas of fabs and data centers. And one might argue that power generation is also part of it was kind of a flat market for a very long time. Well that’s changing because we need much more power. That’s going to help as well on the side. But it’s not part of our global high tech. So the way we’re thinking about building it on Fabs since one FAB requires the amount of water equivalent to 17 million people, that’s an example in Korea for instance there.

Well, the solution is to provide technology where you can recirculate water within the fab, which is really hard because at the same time the quality of the water that’s used to produce the chip is directly correlated to the quality of the advanced chips. And that thousand times more that’s used in blood injections by the way. So recycling water that’s difficult to recycle at the super high standard, well that’s exactly what ovivo helps us to do. That was the piece of the puzzle that was missing for us. And now we can provide so the semiconductor manufacturers with circular water solutions.

And we’re seeing very high interest from the key players out there. And the second and last I’ll mention is data centers. Well, for a long time they’ve been air cooled that required cooling towers with a lot of water that we’ve been used to manage for a very long time. Now that’s shifting to liquid cooling which means that you reuse the liquid in the data center, a liquid that’s coming straight on top of the chip. And that liquid is not water today, but it’s getting towards water tomorrow because it’s the liquid with the best thermal properties which is what we master the most as well at the same time.

So liquid cooling in circular mode for data centers and circular water for fabs manufacturing, that’s the way we’re thinking about it. We added ovivo for fabs and we will keep building our capabilities on data center Today combined these two businesses are roughly a billion dollar growing strong double digit right now at very high margin. And we see many opportunities to make that business way bigger in the years to come.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Ashish Sabhadra with RBC Capital Markets. Please receive your question.

Ashish Sabadra — Analyst, RBC Capital Markets

Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to drill down further on the drivers for the 100 to 150 basis point of margin expansion, you obviously raised the 1 collapse saving targets and talked about 100 million of savings already achieved in 2025. I was wondering if you could provide any incremental color on the savings in 26 but also tailwinds from pricing as well as mix shift in 26. Thanks.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Great. Thank you, Ashish. I’ll pass it to Scott just to stop the answer here. Yeah, thanks Ashish.

Scott Kirkland — Chief Financial Officer

Similar to the targets we set out at investor day last fall, this 100 to 150 basis points is anchored on really two things. Gross margins, which is at 75 to 100 basis points annually, which we’re thinking about that long term. Same set of targets for 2026 and then this 25 to 50 basis points of SGA leverage annually through 2030. So that’s how we get to this 100 to 150 basis points and then just diving into the gross margin. The drivers of that being the value based pricing that Christoph referenced. Our mix of businesses as you see these growth engines being higher margin businesses but also innovation.

And then on the SGA savings, if you look at over the last five years we’ve delivered sales productivity almost 30% which is sort of sales per head, which is part of that driver. Then on top of that, with that we’re also driving the one Eco Lab program which Christoph announced that we’ve now increased that savings target to 325 and that 325 as we think about it, about $120 million. So think up sort of a third. A third, a third, a little bit more than a third through the end of 25 and then the remaining 200 million will be sort of equally over the next two years. And so that’ll be a driver of that 25 to this 50 basis points as well.

Operator

Our next question is from the line of John McNulty with BMO Capital Markets to see if there are questions.

John P. McNulty

Yeah, good morning. Thanks. Thanks for taking or good afternoon, thanks. For taking my question. So wanted to drill down a little bit into the incremental margins because it looks like what we saw in Pest was kind of a really explosive incremental margin in terms of how much kind of came down to the bottom line. And then when I look at things like the life sciences side, it was dramatically less. So it was probably the weaker of. The performers of your businesses. So I guess can you unpack that a little bit in terms of what some of those dynamics be why we’re seeing such different results by segment and how we should be thinking about that going Forward.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Hey, thank you, John. Looks like Scott is on a roll, so he’s going to take the first part of your answer here.

Scott Kirkland — Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, thanks John. As we’ve talked about in the past, we don’t really think about incremental margins in that way. But I get your point. On life sciences and past the life sciences you saw the OI growth in low single digits in Q4, but frankly that was as we expected because we had targeted OI margins in that mid teen range. It was due to two things. One, as we talked about, we’re investing in that business, underlying margins are actually better. And on top of it you had a year on year comparison, sort of bad comp if you will on life sciences really because of performance based compensation and that business sales accelerate throughout the year as Christoph talked about and the OI growth for the full year was 30% and so they’ve earned that performance based compensation and but we really expect that business going forward to increase double digits into 26 and going forward.

And then pest as you mentioned was sort of the opposite. And again that was comparing against a comp. Last year, as you might remember, we had a spike in accidents at the end of last year which is creating a lower base point for them. But again that business is doing really well as Christoph said, growing 7% top line and OI margins north of 20% and we expect to continue that trajectory.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

So maybe a few points. Here’s to build on what Scott just said. Not every quarter is treated equal. You can have year on year comparisons like our accidents in pest elimination which were unfortunate a year prior. Obviously that’s changing. Obviously the March profile on a year on year basis. It’s also investment pacing by business. We all in the spirit of investing the right way at the right time. It’s not always equal in every quarter. And here I’m speaking about life science for instance as well but generally is really making sure that we get or beat the 20% OI margin that we’ve talked about.

So for 2027 we feel really good about it. So we’re at 18%. So last year we planning to be north of 19% in 26. And I’m already thinking about what’s beyond to 20% because many of our businesses are either beyond 20% already or have underlying margins that are already north of it, which is the case of life science.

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Chris Parkinson with Wolff Research. Please receive your question.

Christopher Parkinson — Analyst, Wolff Research

Good afternoon. Christoph, if we could just dig in a little bit to what you’re Seeing in the global water business, you know, over the last couple of quarters there’s been a bit of a divergence between light and heavy within water. Mining seems mixed, perhaps some life in certain metals. FNB seems like it’s inflected and papers continue to be a drag. But can you just kind of give the way you give us some insights on how you’re thinking about that business in 2026, you know, what you would need to see at the top and the bottom end and forgive me for coming up in my own range, but you know, to the 3.5% to 4 and a half percent range, call it for midpoint, obviously just how are you thinking about this business and what are you hearing from your teams to kind of confirm or deny the bottom or.

The top end of that range? Thank you

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I’d love to. Chris. Water is half the company, so it’s a big chunk of it. We’ve built that business since 2011, obviously when we acquired Malco. And our ambition was really to create the world’s water company. And we’ve come to that ambition over the last 10 years and there is that feeling that we’re just getting started on that journey now. That being said, we serving many end markets with water. Obviously some are growing very fast and some are growing a little bit less. But no one has the capabilities that we do have and the reach that we have around the world, plus the digital technology that we bring into it in order for our customers to reuse and recycle water.

So in a closed circle as mentioned. So for the GHT or global high tech example as I described a little bit before, so if we look at the performance of that business, Chris, yes, we grew 2% organic in Q4 as a whole. But if you exclude basic and paper which are in a down part of this cycle, well, water was growing 5% in Q4, which is very strong performance and we still want to get better than that. As I mentioned, the biggest business in there is food and beverage. We are merging hygiene and water to provide the best solutions for our customers around the world.

We’ve done it in North America. It’s led to very good results. 5% for that business is good in an industry that’s flat by the way, I mean the end customers that we are serving as well here and we’ve only done North America, we certainly united, we’re going to keep expanding around the world. Then there is the global high tech story that I just described before, Chris, which is close to a billion dollar, which is grow in strong double digit rate with very high margins as well at the same time. And then you have all the businesses in between from manufacturing areas for instance, to our institutional water business as well, which is providing water services to our institutional businesses as well.

But bottom line, so we end up with a business that underlying growth is close to the mid singles. So these 5% dragged down by basic and paper, but those two will recover. That’s the good and the less good things of a little bit more cyclical businesses and we will deal with that. So you bring together strong underlying growth, acceleration in global high tech and recovering of basic and paper industries and you end up in a pretty good place in a business that has strong margins. We had a very good quarter in Q4. I think it was the second highest quarter of the last five years from a margin perspective.

And water will get as well. So to the 20% and move beyond the 20% in the years to come.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Seth Weber with BMP Paribas. Please receive your question.

Seth Weber — Analyst, BMP Paribas

Christoph, in your prepared remarks in the. Slide deck there are a bunch of mentions about new business wins. I’m wondering can, can you just give. A little bit more color around that? Are these conquests from other providers or you know, just new, you know, companies that are new to the new to the space, that are kind of just adding suppliers or any color around these new business wins would be, would be helpful. Thank you.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, new business is the number one focus of the whole company. We have this mantra of we all in sales. So no one is not selling in the company. It’s either you dealing with customers every single day or you’re supporting someone who is serving customers every single day. I have this objective myself to meet once a week the CEO of a customer.

And last year I met close to 100 customers as well. So this is where we all collectively spend most of our time. Now we are focusing first and foremost on our current customers and our largest customers as well. As mentioned earlier, so our top 35 customers have a growth potential of three and a half billion. Well, this is where we want to focus our attention first and foremost because it’s the most obvious growth to get and that’s why we’re growing much faster with those customers than everyone else. And it’s the most cost effective way obviously.

So to get new business because we have service people going into those sites already today. So it’s expanding the share of wallet and at the same time it’s helping our customers because we go with End to end solutions, helping them get to best in class performance. They get better total value delivered better for their P and L, we get a share of it. So at the same time we get higher growth, better margin for us and it’s a better deal for our customers. That’s the first priority that we have and second it’s to do the same for our local large customers around the world.

And the third priority are more the individual customers around the world. And the last thing I’d say, we had our global blitz two weeks ago which is engaging the whole organization around the world on your business. And within one week we managed to grow our new business versus the same week a year ago by over 30% during that week as well. So a very good story. Our value proposition is very well received by our customers because they need it more than ever. Either because they don’t have enough water or they’re trying to improve their cost performance because they have price pressure, cost pressure and so on.

This is the value that Ecolab provides to them. This is the way we sell and this is why our new business is going very well while retention remains very stable as well. So across our businesses around the world.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Andrew Whitman with Baird. Please receive your question.

Andrew Wittmann — Analyst, Baird

Great. Excuse me. Thank you. I guess I wanted to ask a. Couple kind of, maybe kind of punch list items here, but usually you all. Have a view on FX that’s included in your guidance and I didn’t see one in this press release. Scott, I was wondering if you could talk about the FX rates that are implicit in your EPS guidance rates. So that was kind of, kind of. One there and then I just. On the, on the expected volume improvements. On the water side. Christoph. Are you seeing that? Is this just going to be a. Comps game where the comps get easier. Or are you in fact expecting the. Volumes in some of those more challenged industries to actually improve? And if so, what are you looking at that gives you that indication? Thank you.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Andy. So let me start with the second part and then I’ll pass the FX to Scott. Very different questions. Obviously the new business for the whole company has kept going up in absolute terms. So dollar of net new business, so net of what we might have lost, which is very little. Usually this is true for water and this is true for the challenge businesses as well of basic and paper. They also got to record new business. It’s just that the demand then afterwards of those businesses is lower year on year and that’s driving the growth or the slight decline that these two businesses are experiencing as well at the same time.

But generally New Business Indy is a very strong proposition for us. That’s why we focus the whole organization on it, making sure that whatever happens out there, new business is where you need to focus your time, gain share even in a market that might be declining. So good story. Even in our challenged businesses. Now on fx.

Scott Kirkland — Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, happy to answer the mechanical questions, Andy. So on the FX for 26, we’re not expecting a significant help or hurt. We’re sort of thinking it’s neutral the year. Just given the current position of the dollar, probably slightly favorable in the first half, but really assuming neutral in the second half going in, obviously the FX is pretty dynamic, you know, the macro environment. So that could change. But that’s our going in assumption. But even any upside in the first half, as you look at sort of all items below oi, there’s going to be offsets to that.

As we had in our in our guidance that the tax rate is going to go up from the 20.2 we had this year to somewhere between 28.5 to 21.5. And then also which wasn’t in our specific guidance, but other income is going to be a little bit of a headwind. It’ll be about $30 million next year. So that’s about a $20 million decrease on that other income just due to pension assumptions. So you know, if you look at as a whole below items, they’re not.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

A net help to but maybe a point on this FX because it’s always when we think about the next year or the beginning of the year, what are the assumptions that we’ve taken when I think a year ago or even all the years prior? Andy, we were almost never right. We thought that FX would be a massive headwind in 2025 while it was not, we thought that our delivered product cost would be pretty benign. Okay. The whole tariff situation changed quite a bit during the year as we now and we adjusted. So we’ve gotten used to become very agile to adapt to local conditions and make absolutely sure that we still deliver our 12 to 15 earnings per share.

So we hope or we think that FX is going to be pretty benign in 26. Maybe it’s not. And if it’s not, we will adjust accordingly as well as we’ve done in the past few years.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Vincent Andrews with Morgan Stanley. Please receive with your question.

Vincent Andrews — Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Thank you and good afternoon. Just a question on the one Ecolab Cost savings, you know, you raised it again. I’m just wondering if your assessment is that, you know, this will probably be the last raise to it or if you still think there’s opportunity there. Maybe there’s some conservatism in the number because it looks like the cash costs associated with achieving these benefits are still nicely above the benefits themselves. And I often think of those two lines, those two numbers ultimately intersecting. So maybe just your latest thoughts there and how that might carry forward in 27.

Thank you.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

You know, maybe a comment before I pass it to Scott. I don’t think it’s conservatism. It could have been, but it’s not. In that case, we’re leveraging, obviously, so technology, AI agents, agent technology as well here that no one has really done so far. So there is no real benchmark blueprint out there. You’ve probably seen that we ranked number nine on the Fortune AI list of most prepared companies for the age of AI. I really encourage the whole team to embrace technology, to stay at the frontier of what’s out there and to see how it works.

And for the most part it’s been a very good story. It’s not a perfect story. There are places where it didn’t work, but 80% of the time it’s working really well, where it’s driving better outcome for our customers, for our teams, the way we operate while at the same time driving huge productivity gains. And my feeling is that it’s going to keep improving in the years to come, but we don’t know exactly where it’s going to come from because the technology in some cases doesn’t even exist. Scott?

Scott Kirkland — Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Christoph said it very well. Vincent. You know, the savings momentum is better. Than we expected, as you said, Moving. From that 225 to 325 now by 2027, it’s that way as we’re learning, but also moving up the value chain as we deploy technology and AI and these high touch processes and then leveraging the global coes that Christophe runs through referenced before, which allows us to deploy that technology at scale. But I think as we think about 26 to 27, that incremental $200 million from what we’ve already realized. I would think about that pretty evenly. And then long term this is really enabler to this 25 to 50 basis point of SGA leverage, which is our long term target.

And that’s relative to historically what we’ve done, about 20 to 30 basis points. So really almost doubling our SGA leverage that we’ve had historically enabled by the One Equal app and the scalability that it provides.

Operator

Thank you. At this time, the next slide question is from the line of Patrick Cunningham with Citibank, please to see if there’s a question.

Patrick Cunningham

Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. Just on a digital sales piece, could. You maybe give us an update on how your ability to monetize these technologies. Has evolved and 2025, you know, where you ultimately see it going and where. You’Re getting the best traction with customers?

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Patrick. Love that question. Well, at Ecolab, we’ve been for a long time in the business of building great new businesses. And Ecolab Digital, as we know, as you know, is a fairly new business that we started two years ago. It’s not that we started digital technology and digital offerings to our customers two years ago. We just did it as part of our offering for 30 years when we invested in 3D tracer technology. And we haven’t monetized directly that offering to our customers for 28 years of the last 30 years that we’ve been in that field.

So we’re building that new organization. We created a dedicated organization on that opportunity. It is in the early years. It’s not perfect. It’s a bit rough on the edges at the beginning, but that’s always been true when we build new businesses. But the fact that we are already generating close to 400 million of sales, which encompasses only two components of it. It’s connected hardware and it’s software. Those are the two elements that are driving those 400 million at very high margin and growing obviously north of 20%. And I think we’ll grow probably 25% in 26 as well here.

And we really, at the beginning of it, you know, the way we think about digital sales at Ecolab and especially in the future, is what we call the 100, 100, 100, where 100% of the customer locations that we serve will have to be connected 100% of the applications that we provide to each of those locations. Think about a hotel where you have a dish machine, a laundry machine, an AC unit, pest elimination, ecosure audit systems and all that. Those are the applications. 100% of them need to be connected. And the third element is 100% of the time where people pay for it.

So 100% of the units or 100% of the applications, 100% billable offering. This is the way we think about it. And that’s why when I think about the 400 million we have today, we have just scratched the surface of what we can do, we still have a lot of customers using those technologies that do not pay because they still on the old programs. And we have a lot of customers that do not use it today, especially in institutional, because it’s relatively new that the cost barrier is not the barrier anymore. So for most of our customers as well, and we have millions of customers out there that can use it.

That’s why Ecolab Digital is a great story very early in that development and I think it’s going to become one of the biggest growth drivers of our company going forward by driving customer benefits ultimately because our promise is to help them reduce their total operating cost. That’s the TBD that we’ve always promised to our customers.

Operator

The next question is from the line of David Baglider with Deutsche Bank. Please receive your question.

David Begleiter — Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Thank you. Christoph. Back to basic industries and paper. Is your confidence in a back half recovery just because of easier comps or. Are you seeing some underlying improvement in these end markets as we progress through the quarter? Thank you.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks David. It’s a combination of both that industry. So the paper and packaging industry has had a dual challenge. On one hand, demand that was pretty low and at the same time related to it, consolidation of the industry. So consolidation means that they were closing paper mills and a paper mill for us is a big chunk. So it can be up to 10 or 15 million of sales in one location. Well, if it happens that that location gets closed, okay, there’s not much you can do because you’re not going to sell much to that location anymore.

So we had to go through that the last 12 to 24 months and that seems to be behind us. We haven’t seen in our environment milk closures in the last few months, which obviously is a good news for us as we enter 2026. New business is good in that business as well. Innovation is strong as well at the same time and the margin of that business was what, 13% last year? It’s not equal above average, but it’s still okay. If I may say so, the combination of both kind of recovering progressively and pretty good margins even in a down environment in 2025 makes me a bit more optimistic for 2026, but I’m not even close to declaring victory on this one.

Same for basic industries. Different industries obviously, but similar model as well. So we’re dealing with it, making sure we make money in all of those businesses. We keep gaining share as well. And as those industries recover, that’s going to help us as well. Over the next few quarters.

Operator

Our Next question is from the line of Shlomo Rosenblum with Stifel. Let’s just use your question.

Shlomo Rosenbaum

Hi, thank you very much. Quick, quick questions, Christoph. If you normalize for that distributor inventory reductions, again, you know, just looking at a normalized way, what’s going on with the volumes? Are the volumes actually going up? If you didn’t have that surprise, are the volumes going up or you still. You’re kind of at a flattish trajectory. And then there’s just a technical question, what to ask Afterwards. On slide 13 on the top left, it talks about water’s organic operating income. Growth is expected to something in the first quarter of 2026 and it’s blank or there’s a word missing.

Is that expected to go up, go down, be flat? If someone could just answer that. Thank you.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

So thank you, Shlomo. So a few questions, obviously that you have in there. Ins, institutional and specialty. Basically nothing changed from a demand perspective. And if you normalize, it was 4% organic. So for INS and 3% for the institutional division and 7% for specialty. So generally nothing to see in INS in a market that’s a difficult market. As you probably noticed, the restaurant and hospitality industry is not doing great right now. But we’re gaining a lot of share, which is really good. Maybe a comment on this distributor inventory, why did they go down? And that’s not under our control.

It’s obviously our customers deciding that, well, the better we become in our supply chain service, the more reliable, the more accurate we become. Well, the less inventory they need to carry from our products. We’ve seen that in the past a few times already. That happens mostly at the end of the year as well. That’s exactly what happens in the fourth quarter. And that takes a few weeks to happen and then it takes a few weeks or a few months to normalize as well. But it’s driven by two good things. On one hand, demand hasn’t changed and on the other hand, the inventories went down because our service improved.

Again, we don’t like the optics, but generally it’s a good thing as well. So going forward and your question on the water. So for the slide 13, I had no idea what slide 13 was, to be honest. So I’m glad I have some help here. I think that word was missing and what I’m seeing here, it should have said expected to accelerate. How will be tabs?

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Jeff Sakauskis with JP Morgan. Please see with your question.

Jeffrey J. Zekauskas — Analyst, JP Morgan

Thanks very much. I Have a couple of questions about Avivo. Is Avivo roughly 500 million in sales, maybe growing to 550? And is the EBIT, I don’t know. 75 million, the EBITDA 100? Can you give us an idea about that? And Ovivo is a combination, I think of sale of equipment and consumables. You know, what’s the balance between equipment sales and consumables? And in the fourth quarter it seems that you excluded it, you know, that is you took out the interest costs that were connected with the acquisition and the revenues of Ovivo itself. Why did you treat it that way from an accounting standpoint? And what do you plan to do in the first quarter?

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you. Thank you, Jeff. So I’ve got looking at me because I’m not the accountant here in the group there. So he’s going to take that question of the December accounting and I’ll cover your other questions after that.

Scott Kirkland — Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, thanks, Jeff. So, as you know, Avivo closed a bit earlier than we expected and wanted to show the Q4, really show the underlying business without the transaction noise, which was very consistent of how we handled both the Purelight and now for acquisitions. So if you look at it, because in Q4 the deal closed in the middle of December. In Q4 we had like a half a month of interest expense but very minimal sales and OI benefit just given the timing of flows and mix of the business geographically. So it would have been very noisy and was not part of our guidance that we had for Q4.

And again, it’s consistent with how we treated Purolite and Alco.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

That’s the first part of the question. So I hope it answered to your question, Jeff. And so now on OVA as a business business, it’s roughly half a billion. Yes, it’s a bit less than that and it’s growing double digits. The way it looks for the first quarter is double digit growth as well. I’ve been very pleased with the new. Business. In that field. It’s focused 99% on fabs, as you know. And we’ve closed a few very interesting deals in Singapore and in the US it’s very few customers as we know that are producing so microelectronic chips, but those are very big every single time. There’s no one that can do what Ovivo can do and there’s no one that can do what together we can do, which is this circular approach of reusing and recycling ultra Pure Water. 95% of the water does not get recycled in Microelectronics today, which is a major issue. Our ambition is to get north of 80% recycled.

So from 5% to 80% or in some cases even 100% of reuse. Now to your question on equipment and consumables. Ovivo as such is mostly technology and much less consumable. What’s important to us is the combination of Ecolab and Ovivo which then becomes very much like an ecolab business where it’s mostly consumables and technology as a secondary growth driver. That’s why we really like it. It was a technology that was really hard to develop. No one is even coming close to them. Jeff, we could have developed it ourselves. It would have taken years. The second issue is to get the credibility with those microelectronics manufacturers.

They’re very few and they’re not exactly risk takers for technologies that are absolutely critical to the cheap manufacturing. That would have been a second hurdle for us as well. And everything is happening as we speak as well at the same time. So a great business coming with what we have done for a very long time in terms of water management. While it’s a typical one plus one equals three, I think that for our fabs business it’s going to be game changing.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Master Dayo with Bank of America. Please receive your question.

Matthew DeYoe

Yeah, thanks for taking the call. My question, so you’re done with year one of oneecolab that you’d rolled out to like the three largest customers. What’s the feedback and any wins learnings you can take as you deploy this to. I think it’s the top 25 customers in 2026. So an incremental 20 so ads. And when do we see this as. More of a top line driver? You know, what kind of rollout do you ultimately need? Because it did feel like you have. A pretty considerable amount of sales opportunity just with that top 35 based on. The kind of conversations we’ve had over time.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah, so it’s 35 customers. So it’s our top 20 largest customers in the world and what we call our emerging 15. So those are not the biggest but the ones are having the potential to become some of our biggest. Microelectronics being a perfect example of one of those 15. So you get to 35, that could drive three and a half billion of share increase potential. That’s why we focus on those ones first and foremost. It’s simpler because it’s fewer customers and it’s the Biggest potential, the three and a half billion in many locations around the world.

So we’ve gotten organized behind all 35 customers, which are the biggest brands obviously that you know, in all industries as well at the same time. So that organization component has been done. The growth of those 35, as mentioned before, so is 2 percentage points higher than the rest of the company. So facts are demonstrating that it’s working. And it’s probably the second biggest moat that we have as a company. Our first being our team serving our customers everywhere around the world is delivering best in class performance. Basically, we help each of those customers understand what’s the best in class performance within their own company.

If it’s a restaurant, what’s the best guest satisfaction, what’s the best cost performance? What’s the best environmental impact? If it’s a data center, it’s uptime, cost and impact. You get the system here. And we help them drive the performance of all the units towards the best in class performing unit within their company. And we do the same across the industry, not sharing the names obviously to help our customers understand how far are they from best in class performance. So it’s been developed based on an idea from a few of our customers a few years back.

And those customers are ultimately asking even more than what we can deliver today, which is kind of a good problem to have because our customers, I would say, are ahead of us in terms of what they would like to see from us and what we can deliver. Well, that’s a good problem to have. And that’s where we are.

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Mike Harrison with Seaport Research. Please receive your question.

Mike Harrison — Analyst, Seaport Research

Hi, good afternoon.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Hi Mike.

Mike Harrison — Analyst, Seaport Research

Christoph, you mentioned the IQ suite. I was wondering if you could talk about what penetration looks like today versus where you think penetration could go over the next, say two to three years. You know, just, just curious, are you, are you 5 or 10% of the way to where you hope to be or more like 30, 40, 50%? And I guess as we think about growth in the IQ suite, you know, where would we expect that to show up? Does it show up in digital sales? Does it show up in institutional volume growth? Or does it show up in margin expansion? Or all three?

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

The short answer is all three, Mike. So first your question. Penetration. It’s in the low single digit today. So we’re very early here. As mentioned often this is something we did not exactly do in our institution end markets because it was too expensive for our customers to embrace that technology. Things have changed dramatically in the last two years and we have the knowledge and expertise from our water industrial businesses. So we kind of very well positioned for that. So very early on that journey. Second question, where it comes when our reporting segments are our traditional four reported segments that we have, the digital sales that we mentioning are the digital sales of those four segments.

So they included in the four segments which is the way. So we’ve presented it the last 12 or 13 months that we’re doing that. And last but not least, yes, it improves the margin because digital sales have way higher margins because there’s no real cost or hardware cost related to it on the software side. On the hardware side, it’s a little bit different, but it’s much higher than the average gross margin we have in the company. So it’s all three.

Operator

Our next question comes from the line of Lawrence Alexander with Jefferies. Please receive your question.

Laurence Alexander — Analyst, Jefferies

So good afternoon. Just wanted to flesh out a little bit how your thinking is evolving around the interplay between your MA targets and your margin targets. The 20% margin has been kind of an elusive one over the years and kind of now it’s within reach. You hinted earlier you may be thinking about moving it higher sooner rather than later. Would you what type of M and A would you consider that would structurally push back the margin target a few years or do you see that as given the types of things you look at, just sort of structurally unnecessary.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

So just to be clear, we’re not trying to push back any margin target 20% by 27. That remains the same. We had 18% last year. We get north of 19 in 2026 and we’ll get to 20% in 27 and then we’ll keep growing. So 100 to 150 basis points as we shared as well on investment today. And M and A needs to help getting there. We will never do an M and A deal that’s destroying value for shareholders. So return on investment needs to be at the right level. It needs to be growth and margin accretive.

Those are the plans afterwards. Whether everything happens as planned, well, that’s an execution question, obviously. But we are very disciplined in how we do ma. We will never do something that’s destroying value because what we say inside the company, that’s buying work and it’s dumb for shareholders. Well, those are two reasons for not doing that, at least not consciously. And we’ve done 100 deals the last 10 years. We have a lot of practice, we’ve learned a lot and we’re very successful in how we do M and A in General. So no change for the margin targets.

Operator

Our next question is in the line of John Roberts with Mizuho Securities. Please see with your question.

Edlain Rodriguez

Thank you. Hi, this is Edlin Rodriguez for John Christoph. Just one quick one on the 2026 guide. Can you talk about the factors that could drive the higher end or lower end of that range? Like what are the swing factors in there?

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

I guess all the things that we don’t know are going to happen. If we look at the last five years, there was not one year that happened as planned, not because of us, but because of what’s happening around us, around the world. So we have this range of the 12 to 15%. The fact that we are very agile as a company on how we run our businesses, how we manage value, price, how we drive surcharges. If we need getting as well more performance out of one Ecolab, as we discussed before as well, we have a great supply chain and procurement team as well, doing unbelievable work in whatever conditions out there.

So the big questions are the things I don’t know, but I know that the team knows how to deal with them. With everything we know now, I feel that the year is very well balanced and I feel really good about the 12 to 15.

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Jason Haas with Wells Fargo. Please to see with your question.

Jason Haas — Analyst, Wells Fargo

Hey, good afternoon and thanks for taking my question. I’m curious if you could talk about, hey, I’m curious if you talk about the cadence of the contribution from pricing as we go through 2026. And the reason I ask is because I believe you put in a tariff surcharge that went into effect the second half of 2025. So I’m curious if there’s like a go over effect where you’ll have more contribution from price in the first half of 2026 and then less than in the second half, is that the right way to think about it?

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Well, the key point is also that surcharge, which was a trade surcharge, we had an energy surcharge in 21 or 22, I’m losing track of the year. We convert all that into structural pricing and everything has been done as well. So as we speak, that’s why on one hand whatever happened on tariffs with the Supreme Court, I’m not worried about that. And on the other hand, well, it’s going to drive these 2 to 3% price in 2026 pretty consistently. So for the quarters to come, that’s obviously assuming that nothing else happens in 2026. But that’s not at the heart of your question here.

So basically a traditional year in 26 with 2 to 3% value price, which is obviously 100% margin driven by the total value delivered that we generate for our customers, which is a big growth driver for us and probably one of the best ones that I really like and we keep focusing on that in the future.

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Josh Spector with ubs. Please see us. Your question.

Josh Spector — Analyst, Ubs

Yeah, hi, good afternoon and thanks for squeezing me in. Just a quick one here. I know you guys were spending a bit more on capex the last couple years to basically grow into some new. Wins that I think you had in. Specialty, I guess with specialty growing 7% the last couple quarters. Is that now in the run rate or is there more of that to come and will Capex step down into next year as a result or stay at similar levels? Thanks.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Let me pass it to Scott.

Scott Kirkland — Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Hi Josh. Yeah, on CapEx, as you know, our historical Capex has been in this 5 to 6% range and about half of that is equipment at customer locations. So which is why this thing grows in proportion to sales. The 2026 capex came in at about 6 and a half percent of sales to your point, because we’re in growth, we’re investing in growth like the new business, but also the innovations around Dish, iq, pest intelligence, global high tech and that will continue to 2027. I expect that the CapEx or sorry into 26, I expect the CapEx for 26 to be around 7% and, and probably for the next couple of years because we’re continuing to invest in those growth engines really to focus on accelerating sales and expand margins.

So we’re investing organically and inorganically both to expand margins and drive sales. And at the end of the day it comes down to roic and we like where we’re at in ROIC and continue to expand that in line with. Our long term targets.

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Kevin McCarthy vertical research partners. Please receive your question.

Kevin W. McCarthy

Thank you and good afternoon. Christoph, on slide 6 you indicate organic sales growth of 3 to 4 accelerating through the year. And I just wanted to understand that acceleration piece better. Is that to do with the aforementioned normalization or stabilization in basic industries or. Are you expecting your higher growth platforms. To accelerate as well as. And then related to that, would you make a comment on the expected growth in your data center linked businesses this year?

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Two questions, Sierra. So you’re right, the three to four starts where we are now obviously. And so you were the Upper range or more of the three to four driven by both actually. So the normalization of the more challenged industries in paper and basic and our core and growth engine businesses that are doing extremely well. As we discussed before, our growth engines are growing double digit today and some of our core businesses like institutional and specialties are at 4, FNB at 5. So our core business and growth engines are doing really well at great margins and great margin development as well.

So it’s a combination of the two and more specifically the data center which we don’t exactly so disclose as such, but our global high tech business is growing pretty strong. Double digit sales. We will publish our exact numbers in the first quarter by the way. So I want to make sure I’m not getting ahead of my skis here. But we will get more color in the first quarter. But it’s one of our best businesses that we have here. Very strong, strong margin, growing double digits at strong rates and Farmeevo is going to help. And all the innovation I mentioned before on the cooling as a service is getting great reception from our customers that need it more than ever because chips get more powerful, they get more concentrated on a rack, they create more heat that requires more cooling.

And if that doesn’t happen, obviously so the data center stops operating. So it’s absolutely essential as a component of the compute offering here. So very good story and early on that story I think that that’s one of the businesses that’s going to become one of the best and biggest businesses we will have in the future.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Scott Sneeber with Oppenheimer. Please proceed with your question.

Scott Schneeberger — Analyst, Oppenheimer

Thanks very much. Just a quick one. In life sciences you had great momentum, a little setback in the fourth quarter on the margin trajectory. Looks like you’re doing some investments, some global capability build out. Just curious, is that going to be something that is pressured for multiple quarters or are we going to get back to inflect and head higher toward that target? Thanks.

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

It’s going to be a Great story in 26. We’ve been building that business for years. As you know. I always loved that opportunity. The first few years were more complicated than we were hoping. Not because of internal questions, but the market. It was a bit in a more challenging place after Covid. It helped us gain share, build further our business and now we’re collecting the fruits of what we built in life science. And you’ve seen the growth acceleration, bioprocessing which is a core part of it is doing extremely well in there is really at the forefront of innovation for the biotech industry as well at the same time.

So we all going to really like the growth of that business starting in Q1 by the way for life sciences. And our objective is to get to 30% margin but we will not reduce our investment in the meantime to get to the margin quicker. What we want to make sure is that we get as much share as we can in order to get the returns ultimately in the long run that that business deserves. So overall a great story that keeps getting stronger.

Scott Schneeberger — Analyst, Oppenheimer

Thank you.

Operator

Our final question is from the line of Bobby Zulper with Raymond James. Please issue their question.

Bobby Zolper — Analyst, Raymond James

Thanks for taking the question. How is your customer retention and institutional and specialty?

Christophe Beck — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

It hasn’t changed, so it’s always in the low to mid-90s in terms of retention. Attrition is obviously the reverse of that. It stayed very stable over the years. We’re looking at that very carefully because well, we want to make absolutely sure that we do not lose our customers. We have this mantra of never ever letting our customers down in institutional and specialty. Well, there’s another dimension. It’s restaurants closing. There’s not much we can do for that. It’s very different. So by country obviously. But the customers we have and the numbers I gave you include the closures that we can’t do anything against obviously.

So short answer, very stable. That’s why I really like what our institution is doing has done over the last five years as well. Shifting towards digital technology. All those IQ platforms that we talked about, Aqua IQ for instance, which is a remote service for pools around the world. When you think about the work that’s required while that’s taken over by AI with that application, those are game changing innovations in that business that didn’t exist five years ago. So institutionally in a very good place. Specialty that serves some more of the quick serve as part of this hospitality business as you’ve heard, so growing very nicely.

So at 7% very consistent with great margin as well. So I think that INS is in a very good shape. So I’ll end where I started. The company is doing well and I especially like the growth development we have in our core businesses on top of it. The growth engines that are 20% of the company today are growing double digits with over average margins as well. So our portfolio is shifting towards higher growth businesses, higher margins which is exactly where we want to get to. And that’s why I feel as good as I can be in 2026 with everything I know today.

Andrew Hedberg — Investor Relations

Thank you. That wraps up our fourth quarter conference call. This conference call and the associated discussion slides will be available for replay on our website. Thank you for your time and participation. Hope everyone has a great rest of the day.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and have a wonderful day.

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