Downer EDI Limited/Announcement
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Appendix 4D

Half Year Results18 February 2026DOWIndustrials

Results for announcement to the market
for the period ended 31 December 2025

Appendix 4D

31 Dec 202531 Dec 2024%

$’m$’mchange

REPORTED

Revenue from ordinary activities4,828.0 5,196.2

Other income32.7 25.0

Total revenue and other income from ordinary activities4,860.7 5,221.2 (6.9) %

Total revenue including joint ventures and other income4,918.8 5,505.7 (10.7) %

Earnings before interest and tax175.5 133.4 31.6 %

Earnings before interest and tax and amortisation of acquired intangible assets (EBITA)184.9 150.1 23.2 %

Profit from ordinary activities after tax attributable to members of the parent entity93.4 69.3 34.8 %

Profit from ordinary activities after tax and before amortisation of acquired intangible assets (NPATA)104.6 87.2 20.0 %

UNDERLYING

Earnings before interest and tax and amortisation of acquired intangible assets (EBITA)227.1 204.3 11.2 %

Profit from ordinary activities after tax and before amortisation of acquired intangible assets (NPATA)136.1 127.2 7.0 %

31 Dec 202531 Dec 2024%

centscentschange

Basic earnings per share14.0 10.3 35.9 %

Diluted earnings per share

(i)

14.0 10.3 35.9 %

Net tangible asset backing per ordinary share27.7 32.6 (15.0) %

Dividend31 Dec 2025

Interim

31 Dec 2024

Interim

Dividend per share (cents)12.9 10.8

Franked amount per share (cents)12.9 8.1

Dividend record date04/03/202627/02/2025

Dividend payable date02/04/202627/03/2025

Redeemable Optionally Adjustable Distributing Securities (ROADS)

Dividend per ROADS (in Australian cents)2.28 3.10

New Zealand imputation credit percentage per ROADS 100 % 100 %

ROADS payment dateQuarter 1 Quarter 2Quarter 3 Quarter 4

Instalment date FY202615/09/2025 15/12/2025

Instalment date FY202516/09/2024 16/12/202417/03/2025 16/06/2025

Downer EDI Limited's

Dividend Reinvestment Plan remains suspended.

(i) At 31 December 2025 and 2024, the Redeemable Optionally Adjustable Distributing Securities (ROADS) were deemed anti-dilutive and consequently, diluted EPS remained at 14.0 cents per share (Dec 2024: 10.3 cents per share).

Loss of control over entities

Details of loss of control over entities are disclosed in Note E2 Disposal of businesses in the Condensed Consolidated Financial Report.

Details of associates and joint venture entities

Details of associates and joint venture entities are disclosed in Note E1 Interest in joint ventures and associate entities in the Condensed Consolidated

Financial Report.

Auditor qualification or review

The reports have been reviewed and contain an independent auditor's report.

For commentary on the results for the period and review of operations, please refer to the Directors' Report and separate media release.

=== IR PAGE TRANSCRIPT: Webcast Transcript HY26 ===

DG-CA-TP009-AU Page 1 of 19
Version: 1.2

© Downer. All Rights Reserved Warning: Printed documents are UNCONTROLLED

1H26 Results, Investor webcast transcript 20 February 2026, 10am

Operator: Thank you for standing by and welcome to the Downer 1H26 results. All

participants are in listen only mode. There will be a presentation followed by a

question-and-answer session. If you wish to ask a question, you will need to press

the star key followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. I would now

like to hand the conference over to Mr Peter Tompkins, CEO. Please go ahead.

Peter Tompkins: Good morning and thank you for joining our 2026 half year results presentation.

I'm here today with our group CFO, Mal Ashcroft and following our prepared

remarks, Mal and I will be pleased to take your questions.

Turning to slide 2 and The Downer Advantage. We are a leading provider of

integrated services across Australia and New Zealand. We plan, deliver and

maintain essential infrastructure that enables our communities to thrive. Our

differentiators – sovereign capability, scale and leadership positions with good

growth potential are aided by four key tailwinds.

The first tailwind, energy, where our 50-plus years of experience in power and high

voltage electrical engineering is being deployed into the grid transformation that's

underway. And we're seeing opportunities convert after several years of planning

with a solid outlook for growth.

Second, Defence, we've been a trusted private sector delivery partner to Defence

for more than 80 years and today have around $4 billion of secured work across

the lifecycle of Defence assets.

Third, population growth, and a socio-cultural evolution that's increasing reliance

on public services, requiring improvements to existing assets and driving higher

expectations of end users, particularly in metropolitan areas. With more than 90%

of our revenue government-related, supporting social infrastructure outcomes in

housing, education and health, this is a strong demand driver.

This all links to the final tailwind, being reindustrialisation. We have sophisticated

supply chains delivering local content and integrating international technology.

On the topic of technology, we are seeing more opportunity with AI to make our

back office more efficient and to assist both our white collar and field workforce in

gaining deeper insights from data on our customers' assets to drive higher

performance and value for money through optimised planning. In terms of the value

proposition of our business model, we don't see AI as a threat to how we engage

with our customers and provide value.

Downer EDI Limited

ABN 97 003 872 848

Triniti Business Campus

39 Delhi Road

North Ryde NSW 2113

1800 DOWNER

www.downergroup.com


1.2 Page 2 of 19


Now turning to our key messages on slide 3, and the headline is we continue to

deliver consistent, year-on-year improvement and we are on track to exceed our

management target of greater than 4.5% EBITA margin across FY25 and FY26.

We are growing earnings through the disciplined delivery of projects governed by

a mature risk management framework, winning good quality work that is increasing

work-in-hand, and we are seeing that the diversification and balance across our

portfolio provides good earnings resilience. At the same time, we see ongoing

opportunity for improvement to further enhance contract margins and reduce cost-

to-serve going forward.

Turning to slide 4, the EBITA margin for the second half was 4.6%, an improvement

of 90 basis points from the prior period. Underlying NPATA increased 7% to $136

million, while statutory NPAT rose 30% to $98 million. Underlying EBITA grew 11%

to $227 million, driven by higher earnings across all three operating segments and

lower corporate costs. And this was supported by strong cash delivery with

normalised conversion above 90%. Our balance sheet continues to strengthen,

with net debt to EBITDA of 0.8 times supported by the proceeds collected from the

divestment of Keolis Downer in December. The interim dividend of $0.129 per

share, 100% franked, represents a 19% increase on 1H25 and a payout ratio of

65%.

Now turning to slide 5, we are committed to our disciplined approach to project

selection and our focus on quality of revenue, which is a key driver of margin

expansion that we are achieving. Excluding divested businesses, first half

underlying revenue was slightly lower compared to 1H25 pro forma, down 3.6%,

which was broadly aligned with expectations. As the waterfall shows, revenue

reductions in Transport and Energy & Utilities were partially offset by growth in

Facilities. In Transport, the decline reflected softness in Australian Transport

Agency spend impacting Roads, the application of our risk guard rails in Hawkins,

and the planned completion of successful projects including the City Rail Link in

Auckland and the High Capacity Metro Trains project in Victoria.

In Energy & Utilities, strong growth in Power Projects was offset by the previously

signalled decline in Telco and the timing of several new Water contracts which are

expected to generate their planned volumes in the second half. We also note that

the ex-translation of our New Zealand based revenues were also negatively

impacted by the weaker Kiwi dollar.

Facilities delivered growth across government, facilities management, health and

education and the Defence EMOS contract performed well in its final months.


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Our focus has been on reshaping the portfolio and lifting revenue quality over the

past three years and we've exited lower margin, higher risk and non-core

businesses. Our goal is that the simplified and disciplined focus on revenue quality

will enhance the predictability of our earnings and reduce volatility going forward.

That reset largely completes at the end of this financial year and beyond that, as

outlined at our recent investor day, we are targeting a shift to sustainable medium-

term growth and have set management targets that support these ambitions.

On slide 6, our work-in-hand grew by 8.9% to $38.2 billion and this gives us

confidence that we can sustainably grow our business in the future. The increase

was driven by strong growth in Energy & Utilities, which was up 21.6% and

Facilities which was up 20% with new wins, renewals and extensions across

power, water, energy, industrial, Defence and housing. This was partially offset by

a small work-in-hand decline in our Transport business. However, our work-in-

hand number for transport excludes $1 billion of larger preferred bidder positions

comprising the state highway maintenance contracts in New Zealand announced

in December and a new Sydney motorway network maintenance contract, both of

which we expect to sign shortly. We've got a robust order book that's long-dated,

diversified and resilient, more than 90% government-related and approximately

90% services.

So slide 7 illustrates the outcome of our ongoing back-to-basics strategy, with the

underlying EBITA margin up to 4.6% and this is our best performance in over a

decade. All three operating segments contributed to this improvement and I'll touch

on the main highlights as we move through each segment update.

Starting with Transport on slide 8, EBITA increased 12.4% to $129 million, with

margin expanding 80 basis points to 5.3%. We continue to see the benefits of

improved operational performance, contract delivery and cost management. In

Australia, the Queensland Train Manufacturing Program contributed to higher

earnings. The prototype train is currently being manufactured in Korea, with testing

to commence in Australia late in 2026 or early 2027. The Torbanlea facility is also

nearing completion, and this will enable local manufacturing to commence next

year.

The Australian Road Services business continued to navigate variable Transport

Agency spend, however, we did see improved volumes in Victoria, South Australia

and WA, although offset by lower activity in New South Wales and Queensland.

We expect a stronger second half, driven largely by the historical seasonality skew

and some anticipated improvement in market dynamics.


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In New Zealand, Hawkins maintained good profitability from a lower revenue base

and in projects, several larger transport contracts are nearing completion, including

Auckland City Rail Link, which also accounts for some of the lower revenue

compared to the prior period. In August, we announced the award of a NZ$311

million State highway construction project and in December, we were named

preferred contractor for four NZTA State highway maintenance regions. This

outcome means we maintain our footprint in the North, which generates the

majority of overall maintenance volumes. However, we will be transitioning out of

two smaller South Island regions ahead of the new contracts commencing in May.

At our investor day, I said we were close to announcing a senior executive

appointment to lead our Transport & Infrastructure business, which we have now

finalised. Doug Moss, a highly experienced industry leader, will commence at

Downer in April to accelerate our plans to achieve the full potential of our T&I

business in Australia and New Zealand and I look forward to welcoming Doug.

Moving to slide 9 and looking ahead, we remain confident in the medium- and long-

term Transport outlook with attractive underlying opportunities and value drivers

that align with our integrated value chain. In Australia, we expect Transport Agency

spend to normalise over time, driven by the need to maintain network performance.

Our Rail business is targeting significant opportunities with the Future Fleet

program in New South Wales and the MR5 train franchise opportunity in Victoria.

In New Zealand, we are well positioned to support national and regional

infrastructure programs, including $6 billion of projects which are coming to market

over the next three years.

Turning to Energy & Utilities on slide 10, EBITA increased 18% to $58 million, with

margin up 110 basis points to 4.4%, driven by a strong performance in Power

Projects, with the successful delivery of major transmission lines and substations.

Our Energy & Industrial business also had improved activity levels, including

successful completions of major shutdowns in power generation. The Water

business has a strong work-in-hand position, however, its contribution in the first

half was impacted by the timing of new work that has been secured. We are

expecting a stronger second half as these contracts and activities ramp up.

The result was also impacted by a previously foreshadowed decline in our Telco

business following the completion of the main construction phase for NBN and a

consolidation of delivery partners by the major carriers, which reduced our

volumes. This resulted in us resetting our cost base to reflect our view of the future

demand profile.


1.2 Page 5 of 19


During the period, we secured a number of strategically significant contract wins,

driving a 21.6% increase in work-in-hand to $6.2 billion. Power Projects was

awarded approximately $700 million of new work, including appointments to

several panels, including Powerlink and Transgrid, along with new orders relating

to battery energy storage systems and renewable grid connections. As we outlined

at the investor day, the strength and quality of work-in-hand underscores the

growth potential for this business, which is led by a high-calibre executive team.

Turning to slide 11 and the market outlook for Energy & Utilities, where we continue

to see strong span in essential energy and water networks. As touched on before,

the energy market continues to be reshaped by decarbonisation and the need for

greater network resilience, driving sustained investment in power transmission

storage, connections, stabilisation and resilience. At the same time, ageing water

infrastructure and environmental standards that are increasing, drives the need for

upgrades and maintenance programs. This is giving a high demand in water

services, with customers moving to package up individual projects into large

programs for delivery over several years.

Moving to slide 12, Facilities, where we continue to consistently generate steady

performance, reinforcing its role as a good contributor to the Group and a top

quartile market performer. Facilities had a good half, with revenue increasing 2.4%

to $1.1 billion. EBITA rose 9.4% to $78 million with EBITA margin expanding to

7%. The result was driven by contributions from government and facilities

management where we mobilised new contracts for Homes NSW and the

Department of Home Affairs, and both are performing well.

The Defence Estate Management business also had solid volumes on the EMOS

contract, which concluded at the end of January and transitioned to the new

Property and Asset Services contract, or PAS, where margins will reset lower from

February 2026. The demobilisation of the EMOS contract and the mobilisation of

PAS across Defence's three largest regions, New South Wales, ACT and

Queensland, was a complex transition executed successfully by our team in

partnership with the Defence team. You can see here, too, that work-in-hand grew

20% in the period.

Looking at the Facilities outlook on slide 13 and there continues to be plenty of

opportunity for integrated facilities management solutions and partnering. In

Defence, infrastructure investment and capability programs support a solid outlook

over the medium term. The focus on sovereign capability and our northern posture

underpin demand for Defence estate and facilities services, where Downer has a

strong footprint. And demographic shifts, including an ageing population, continue


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to drive long-term demand for essential services in health, education and social

housing.

Slide 14 highlights the consistent improvement we've delivered over the past three

years across the range of metrics. In September, we commenced a share buyback

of approximately 5% of issued capital, complementing fully franked dividend

growth and our higher payout ratio target range. As Mal will cover shortly, we still

maintain capacity to invest in growth.

Finally, ESG on slide 15, we continue to invest in programs that make our

operations more efficient and also support our commitment to reduce emissions.

In the first half, we achieved a 2% reduction in absolute Scope 1 and 2 emissions

on first half 2025 levels. Tragically, I note that in January of this year, a team

member in New Zealand passed away following a workplace incident involving a

vehicle. I want to acknowledge this tragic loss and extend my sincerest

condolences to the family and workmates of our colleague.

I will now hand over to Mal, who will take you through the financial performance in

more detail.

Mal Ashcroft: Thanks Peter and good morning, everyone. This half continues the performance

momentum we've been building over the last two-and-a-half years. The headlines

for me are the ongoing consistency of our delivery and our period-on-period

improvement, with margin expansion, cash-backed earnings, uplift in our

profitability and the strength of our balance sheet. Pleasingly, we're on track to

exceed our 4.5% EBITA margin target averaged across FY25 and ‘26 and expect

further margin expansion in the second half with an improvement on the FY25

second half margin of 5%. We continue to see the benefit of ongoing operational

improvements in contract delivery and cost management reflected in the margins

we are delivering. We continue to focus on improving our cost-to-serve and have

a number of programs underway which will deliver benefits in future periods.

As we discussed at our investor day in November, we still see a lot of improvement

potential in our business, which is motivating for our team and underpins our FY30

management ambitions. With the portfolio simplification program now largely

complete, we anticipate underlying and pro forma revenue to converge in FY27,

simplifying our reporting. For comparability, today I'm referring to pro forma results,

which are adjusted for the contribution of divested businesses and individually

significant items, as these present the most relevant and comparable view of our

business performance. I expect one of the focus areas of the result will be on our

top line performance, so I'll spend some further time on the composition and drivers

and our view of the implications for the outlook.


1.2 Page 7 of 19


We had previously positioned in our outlook statements that we expected

underlying revenue to be flat to slightly down on FY25 pro forma revenue for the

full year and we've updated that today. Underlying revenue and pro forma revenue

declined by 3.6% and 4.9% against pro forma first half 2025 revenue, or 6.9% on

a statutory basis, which was broadly in line with our expectations for the half,

reflecting our continued focus on quality over volume. We continue to see the

benefits of our quality of revenue focus on our EBITA margin improvements

delivered, with improved project selection disciplines and our adjusted risk appetite

and guardrails. We've seen, as expected, our preferred positions translate into

work-in-hand growth, which is up 8.9%, with strategic wins across Energy, Water,

Defence and Transport, which align with our future areas of targeted growth in our

FY30 management ambitions previously announced.

Starting with the positives on our revenue performance, we saw strong

performance across several areas of the portfolio. Facilities delivered 2.4% growth,

driven by government and integrated facilities management, with solid EMOS

volumes in the Defence estate management ahead of the transition to the new

PAS contract which commenced in February 2026. In Energy & Utilities, our Power

Projects business had strong double-digit growth as expected, supported by higher

activity in transmission line and substation projects, alongside solid activity levels

in our Energy & Industrial business. In Transport, our Rail business result benefited

from strong execution and build progress on the $4.6 billion Queensland Train

Manufacturing Project, which is 41% complete to date and provided a strong

contribution in the period.

Our revenue decline was in Energy & Utilities and Transport, which were down

11.5% and 4% respectively on a pro forma basis in the period. In Energy & Utilities,

we'd previously flagged the softening in the Australian Telco market as we

approached the end of the infrastructure build phase of the NBN and the impact of

the consolidation of service providers by NBN and other major carriers, where

we've seen heightened competition for a smaller pie impacting margins, work

volumes and the risk profile of new work. This has had a significant impact in the

period, accounting for just over half of our overall net reduction in Group revenue

for the period. In response, we have reset the cost base of the business to reflect

our forward view of market demand and importantly, expect the revenue impact

rebase and run rate through the second half before stabilising as we head into

2027.

Our Water business also had a softer top line in the period, impacted by the timing

of new work ramp ups in water. Importantly, we're expecting a stronger second

half and beyond in Water with a strong work-in-hand position and customer

demand profile. In Transport, softer Australian Transport Agency spend continued


1.2 Page 8 of 19


as expected in the first half with variability in activity levels across the country. Our

asphalt volumes were down approximately 3% against the corresponding period,

with lower activity levels in New South Wales and Queensland Road Services

businesses, which was partially offset by growth in Victoria, South Australia and

WA. We're expecting a stronger second half supported by seasonality and an

improved opportunity pipeline in regions like Queensland.

In New Zealand, we also experienced softer turnover levels with our previously

highlighted and deliberate risk reset of our lower margin Hawkins business

impacting revenues and a transition period in our infrastructure business as we

phased from large project completions to our new growth pipeline. Pleasingly, we

still delivered bottom line improvement against this backdrop. Foreign exchange

also impacted reported revenue with weaker New Zealand dollar affected

translated revenue and earnings. The impact on our revenue of the period was

approximately $41 million.

EBITA increased 11% on an underlying basis, 18% on a pro forma basis, with the

underlying EBITA margin lifting to 4.6%, up approximately 90 basis points on the

period and this was 4.5% on a pro forma basis. This positions us well to exceed

the greater than 4.5% average EBITA margin target across FY25 and FY26 with

good earnings momentum, and we expect our second half EBITA margin to grow

on the 5% margin achieved in FY25, albeit the rate of margin growth period-on-

period will slow. EBITA improvement was across the board, underpinned by a

12.4% uplift in Transport despite the market variability, the successful turnaround

of the Energy & Utilities business, up 18%, and another solid contribution from

Facilities up 9% on the prior half. Our corporate costs reduced by $4.6 million or

9.3%.

Importantly, the Group's margin expansion has been driven by disciplined project

selection, improved contract delivery, the benefits of portfolio simplification and

reducing low margin business and contracts and the significant progress in

resetting our performance culture and reducing our cost-to-serve. We have

continued to mature our risk and opportunity management disciplines, including

our contingency management for risks in the portfolio. Statutory NPAT increased

by 30% to $98 million and the underlying NPATA was up 7% to $136 million.

D&A reduced by 13% to $142 million in the period, with benefits from our

optimisation program, particularly on property and fleet reductions and IT

rationalisation, coming through the results. I expect further benefits to realise in the

second half, particularly from IT amortisation and leased assets. Our net interest

expense reduced by approximately $6 million to $34 million in the period due to

lower net debt and reduced lease liabilities and the effective tax rate returned to


1.2 Page 9 of 19


historic levels at 29.4% and we expect the trends to continue in these areas in the

second half.

Operating cash flow of $312 million, when adjusted for interest and tax payments,

was 6.4% higher half on half. We continue to make progress with developing our

cash culture and we've delivered another cash-backed result with normalised cash

conversion of 90.5% in line with our greater than 90% target. We expect the cash

conversion levels to be maintained in the second half.

We've provided a reconciliation from pro forma to statutory EBITA. Underlying

earnings represent the statutory result adjusted for individually significant items, or

ISIs, while pro forma is our underlying earnings, excluding contributions from

divested businesses to enable a like-for-like comparison between the two periods.

For this half, we reported $220 million in pro forma EBITA, up 18%, underlying

EBITA for the half was $227 million, up 11%, while statutory EBITA was up 23%

to $185 million.

The level of non-underlying adjustments is reducing against previous periods as

anticipated. This reflected a 22% reduction in ISIs compared to the prior period.

ISIs in the half primarily relate to $5.9 million in net loss on divestment and exit

costs. This comprised losses on the exit of an Australian cleaning and catering

contract and the sale of the New Zealand cleaning businesses, partially offset by

gains from the disposal of the remaining interest of Keolis Downer and the transfer

and demobilisation of the Victorian Power Maintenance contract.

We had $16.1 million in transformation and restructuring costs, including ongoing

investment in technology and operating model changes, which are delivering

efficiencies supporting our margin improvement. We have $13.9 million of

impairments and asset related charges, of which $10 million related to a rail facility

previously impaired in the prior period, $6.3 million of legal and regulatory costs,

including ACCC proceedings and the shareholder class action. These items are

consistent with previously disclosed categories and reflect the continued execution

of our transformation agenda, which continues to support improvements in the

underlying business.

Moving to our cash result, the operating cash flow of $312 million, when adjusted

for interest and tax, was up 6.4%. Free cash flow of $105 million generated in the

half was underpinned by the operating cash flow of $227 million. This was partially

impacted by higher tax payments of approximately $20 million but, importantly,

these enabled the continuation of our 100% franking and our interest payments

were lower, which was another positive. That outcome reflects disciplined

execution of our back-to-basics approach to cash, strong contract delivery,


1.2 Page 10 of 19


improved billing and collections, resolution of variations in claims and continued

capital discipline.

Gross Capex was $56 million in the half, which was down approximately 5% and

remained controlled. We continue to be focused on improving asset utilisation and

disciplined asset sweating. Net Capex of $53 million was the result in the period.

As flagged in November at our investor day, we are expecting a return to an

investment cycle and with some new contracts coming online in the second half,

we expect Capex to increase in the second half.

Lease payments reduced 15% to $63 million, driven by reduced fleet and site

footprint as part of our cost-out programs and also impacted by divestments. We

returned capital to shareholders, spending $64 million on our share buyback

program, which commenced in September 2025, to buy back up to 5% of shares

on issue. This continues to signal our confidence in the business. In addition, we

received $77 million in net divestment proceeds, largely from the sale of our

interest in Keolis Downer completed in December, further strengthening the

balance sheet. We entered the second half in a strong position with over $680

million in cash, $2.3 billion in liquidity, providing significant headroom to fund

growth and optimise our shareholder returns.

Turning to the balance sheet, we're very well positioned to support our transition

to growth. Net debt to EBITDA improved further to 0.8 times, down from 0.9 times

at June 2025 and well below our target leverage of around 1.5 times. The result

was driven by ongoing improvement in our profitability and ongoing reductions in

our net debt levels, which reduced 46% year-on-year to $242 million at December,

supported in part by the repayment of our USPPs in July and assisted by the

proceeds from divestments. This continues to provide us with capital management

flexibility and importantly, provides capacity to invest in future growth opportunities

while also delivering shareholder returns, reflected in the commencement of the

buyback and higher dividend payments.

We remain well within the thresholds required to comply with all financial covenants

and to maintain our Fitch BBB stable investment grade rating, reflecting improved

margins and a stronger balance sheet. Interest cover has strengthened materially,

increasing to over nine times, reflecting both stronger earnings and lower debt. We

expect our total committed debt to reduce further in FY26 once our AMTN bridge

expires in the second half.

Turning to the debt profile, we've simplified and extended maturities. The USPP

notes were repaid in July. We're targeting a further extension to our average

maturity profile to around four years through an issuance of an AMTN in April. As


1.2 Page 11 of 19


at December, weighted average debt maturity was 3.1 years. Weighted average

cost of debt, 5.4%, which is broadly consistent with where we were in the second

half last year. Our interest expense was down $6.2 million to $34 million, driven by

lower net debt and reduced lease liabilities from our fleet and property initiatives.

We're expecting net debt levels to progressively increase due to our expected

heightened investment levels and the buyback in the second half. Finally, we

retained substantial bonding capacity of around $700 million, which is critical to

supporting the opportunity pipeline across core markets. Overall, the balance

sheet is in a strong position and ready to support our transition to growth.

Moving to capital allocation and our capacity to invest to grow, the capital allocation

framework continues to guide disciplined decision making, balanced reinvestment,

strengthening the balance sheet and delivering returns to shareholders. At its core,

the framework is simple: our businesses are expected to self-fund their share of

corporate costs, taxes and their maintenance Capex, contribute to their share of

dividends paid and maintain balance sheet discipline. We govern our investment

decision-making through an investment committee where business cases are

reviewed, tested and aligned with strategy, cost estimates and risks, and

achievability of targeted benefits are assessed against minimum return thresholds.

We're commencing our transition to sustainable growth and have capacity both

from our free cash flow and the balance sheet position and debt capacity to invest

in organic and inorganic growth initiatives that are aligned with our strategy. At our

investor day we provided detailed insights into our markets and where we see

opportunities and drivers of future growth in our core businesses. As we approach

delivery of our financial targets and our momentum in performance improvement

continues, we now have clear capacity and flexibility across three dimensions: the

investment, portfolio optimisation and capital returns.

Organic and growth Capex will remain disciplined and aligned to market conditions

and outlook, focused on enhancing efficiency, capacity and productivity across the

fleet, asphalt plants and operational technology linked to tender outcomes and

growth opportunities. Capex is expected to increase in the second half, reach a

gross Capex of around $170 million in FY26, trending back towards historical

averages of which $56 million has already been incurred in the first half. Investment

will also continue into the next phase of transformation and strategic initiatives.

During the period, $26 million was invested towards anticipated $60 million of

transformation investment in FY26. These programs will continue into future

periods with further updates to be provided following the completion of our

business planning cycle over the next few months. In relation to M&A and capital

recycling, the divestment cycle is largely complete, with divesting 11 businesses


1.2 Page 12 of 19


and contracts from FY23 onwards – freeing up management capacity, simplifying

the business, lifting margins and recycling capital. We are and have been

selectively considering inorganic opportunities, including asset and business

purchases, typically bolt-ons to our core businesses or in logical adjacencies which

align with our strategy and capability sets assessed through a disciplined and

balanced risk return lens, with a clear focus and shareholder value creation. We

will remain disciplined as we consider these opportunities.

Finally, capital returns remain a priority. We continue to target our 60% to 70%

dividend payout ratio, fully franked in FY26 and our on-market share buyback of

up to 5% of issued capital, which is well underway, having executed approximately

25% of the program since it commenced in the first quarter. We continue to monitor

the role of our ROADS securities in the capital structure. With declines in New

Zealand interest rates and comparing cost of funds against other longer-term

sources of funds, they remain a cost-effective funding instrument at this time.

In summary, the foundations are firmly in place. We have a stronger portfolio,

higher margins, cash-backed earnings and a resilient balance sheet giving us

confidence as we transition from turnaround to sustainable growth towards our

FY30 management ambition targets.

I'll now hand back to Peter to close with priorities and outlook.

Mr Tompkins: Thank you, Mal. We're now on slide 23 and looking at our balanced scorecard. We

introduced these at the investor day in November and when we bring it all together,

we're targeting underlying EPS CAGR of 9% from FY25 which is hardwired into

our LTI scorecard to be measured in FY28. We're also targeting revenue growth

of 4% to 5% CAGR from FY26 to FY30 and, at the same time, continued margin

expansion towards 6% for the Group.

Finally, turning to outlook, our first half performance was in line with our

expectations. Our focus continues to be building a high-quality order book with

adherence to our risk guardrails and operating discipline. For FY26, on an

underlying basis, we are targeting earnings and EBITA margin improvement and

NPATA of $295 million to $315 million. This is assuming no material changes in

economic conditions or market demand and no material weather disruptions. We

expect underlying revenue for the full year to be slightly lower than FY25 pro forma

revenue.

I'll now open the call up to your questions.

Operator: Thank you. If you wish to ask a question, please press star/one on your telephone

and wait for your name to be announced. If you wish to cancel your request, please


1.2 Page 13 of 19


press star then two. If you're on a speakerphone, please pick up the handset to

ask your question. First question comes from Rohan Sundram with MST Financial.

Please go ahead.

Mr Sundram: (MST Financial, Analyst) Hi Peter and Mal. Thanks. Just a quick one, you

mentioned the opportunities to lift contract margins. Is that to say you're seeing

further opportunities? Or maybe if you can just give us a rehash on where you see

the opportunities across the portfolio, thank you.

Mr Tompkins: Yes, look, it is across the portfolio just in terms of what we bid – bid less, win more

– focusing on those projects that align to our 5 Cs and including that where we can

work more closely with our partner, provide higher value outcomes and therefore

lift margins over time. That leads into where we see more focus just in the

execution of work to optimise our cost base and also to ensure that we continue to

reduce our cost-to-serve through the corporate overhead as well. They have been

focus areas since FY23, FY24 and we continue to see more opportunity. Mal

mentioned some areas where we will be investing in capability that will continue to

drive down the cost-to-serve and we're progressing those through this year and

they will help us achieve our end-of-year targets into FY30.

Mr Sundram: (MST Financial, Analyst) Thank you, Peter. Mal, a question on the cash

conversion, 87% in the first half on my count looks pretty good. It seems higher

than historical. Is the first half still a seasonally softer conversion half or is the

seasonality starting to ease? Are you still looking for a full 100%, or thereabouts,

conversion by the end of the year?

Mr Ashcroft: Yes, on the cash side, seasonality probably plays less into it, and it does get

impacted by some of the larger long-term contracts that have milestone-related

mechanisms for payments. So that's the thing that can impact our cash conversion

from period to period from a timing perspective. But, at the moment, with where

we see the portfolio on the forecast, we're targeting for that greater than 90%. Our

outlook at the moment is we'll continue to deliver cash-backed earnings in the

second half. So we're quite positive about that.

Mr Sundram: (MST Financial, Analyst) Great, thanks, guys.

Operator: The next question comes from Megan Kirby-Lewis with Barrenjoey. Please go

ahead.

Ms Kirby-Lewis: (Barrenjoey, Analyst) Good morning. My question is just on the work-in-hand

conversion to revenue, so up a strong 9% in the period, but if you could just help

us with thinking about when that starts to flow through to the top line, that would

be great.


1.2 Page 14 of 19


Mr Ashcroft: So I think, when you look at work-in-hand, it's obviously our forward order book

and it's spread over the term of the contracts that have been won. If you look at

the major announcements that we've had, they're actually quite widespread across

each of the portfolio areas that we have, so we've seen wins across Energy &

Utilities, across Defence, across Facilities and those projects – sorry, I should say

Water as well – we see those projects in mobilisation and actually starting to come

on board in the second half. So we will see the benefit of that work-in-hand start to

contribute through the second half into FY27.

Equally, as we look at the forward pipeline of opportunity, we mentioned in the

materials that we have a couple of preferred positions that we're expecting to

announce in the second half, both in the Transport side and the Facilities side. But

in the Energy & Utilities side, we continue to see a very strong pipeline of

opportunity, particularly in the Power Projects and around the energy transition

related areas. On the Water side, the work's actually been won. It's really the

mobilising and ramp up of the programs that our customers have already in place.

So we've got really good confidence levels about that trending up.

Ms Kirby-Lewis: (Barrenjoey, Analyst) That's great and I guess just on the flip side, just to clarify on

the risk guardrail reset, would you expect that to largely be complete by end F26?

Mr Ashcroft: Yes, so one of the things we called out there was the Hawkins business and that

did have an impact in this period. You'll see that run rate out in FY26. Then broadly

speaking, the other area that we've touched on in this result was the Telco impact

of those market dynamics. Again, we would expect that run rates out in the second

half and stabilises into FY27. So, some of the things that are impacting that

revenue result in this half, or a good number of them, run rate out through the

second half.

Ms Kirby-Lewis: (Barrenjoey, Analyst) Super helpful, thank you.

Operator: The next question comes from Cameron Needham with Bank of America. Please

go ahead.

Mr Needham: (Bank of America, Analyst) Yes, good morning all. Thanks very much for the

presentation. Just firstly, on QTMP, picking up on slide 33, are you able to actually

give us a little more detail and quantify the FY27 year-on-year impact you're

expecting to see in terms of the savings or revenues as the project transitions and

also how we should think about margins evolving as well as the project transitions

to maintenance activities? Thank you.

Mr Tompkins: Yes, look, we don't provide the specifics other than that you can see there are

three distinct phases to the project and we're now coming towards the end of the


1.2 Page 15 of 19


maintenance facility and also the manufacturing facility. I said on the call that we

move into prototype testing and then ramp up production of the trainsets and so it

takes a period to get into a steady state high manufacturing cadence. So, we said

last time that the peak revenue out of those construction activities were concluding,

that's now the case and we move into a ramp up again towards higher volume

levels in the manufacturing. We don't talk about individual margin contributions for

the project.

Mr Needham: (Bank of America, Analyst) Sure, understood. Then just second question if I can,

just on transformation investment, how should we be thinking about returns on that

investment, please?

Mr Ashcroft: Yes, so what we talked about at investor day, and we haven't talked about specific

returns, but we do have minimum hurdle returns for any sort of investment or

allocation and they are risk-adjusted, depending on the nature of the investment.

If I look at a number of the investments that we're looking at that either have a

system modernisation or a process automation adoption of AI and getting some

operational efficiency, the payback periods that we're seeing on those sorts of

investments tend to be around two to three years. So, they're very strong return

profiles for us and we're having investments in a couple of areas of around $5

million to $10 million parcels.

So, they're not large investments in the sense that we're doing major IT, high risk

transformation. We've got really good confidence levels about the outcomes that

we're going to deliver. So very much focused on the frontline, focused on business

priorities and focused on the customer and people priorities that we have.

Mr Needham: (Bank of America, Analyst) Very clear, thanks very much. I'll hand it back there.

Operator: The next question comes from Nic Daish with RBC. Please go ahead.

Mr Daish: (RBC, Analyst) Thank you, and thank you for the presentation. Just a couple from

me. I'm just curious, the guidance implies a very, very strong second half. Now,

my impression is that typically you see the Transport division be weighted toward

the second half. I just want to understand, across the other two divisions, if there

are any contributors to that seasonality, or is it wholly the Transport division that is

driving that expectation?

Mr Tompkins: The business as a whole generally skews to the second half, and we see the skew

to this second half consistent with prior periods. Nothing remarkable there to call

out, other than what you've mentioned there around the seasonality of our Roads

and Transport business and also just coinciding with the end of government budget

periods as well. So typical skew for the second half across the board.


1.2 Page 16 of 19


Mr Daish: (RBC, Analyst) Got it. If you were to put a number on it, I suppose I could figure

that out with the guidance you provided, so yes, never mind, that's fine. The other

one is just around the buyback. I mean, I think you're about $65 million of the way

through what is about a $230 million - $260 million buyback. I'm just curious on

how much of a priority that is. I know at investor day you were starting to talk about

further investment in Capex into the business and I’d imagine that is the priority

right now, but curious on how you're thinking about that moving forward, please.

Then, as part of that, I noticed that the gross capital expenditure number has come

down to $170 million from what was about $190 million at investor day. So just

interested in what's driving that please as well.

Mr Ashcroft: I can talk about both. So look, absolutely remain committed to the buyback. We

got some good progress as you mentioned in the first half, so we're up at about

$64 million to 31 December, so no change to sizing of that. We've got 5% to work

through and our expectation is that we work through that through the second half

into early FY27. If you zip back to the balance sheet and capital allocation, we're

at 0.8 times and so we've got a lot of capacity relative to our target gearing levels

of 1.5 times. Even after you adjust for completing the share buyback program,

there is still quite a lot of capacity in the balance sheet to support growth. So, look,

at this stage, we'll revert back to the comments we made at the investor day. We

see really great growth opportunities in the energy and industrial space, particularly

around energy transition and water. We see great opportunity in Defence in the

Facilities space and we're seeing counter cyclical opportunities across Transport

where we're looking at asset purchase opportunities and other things there. So,

there is an opportunity for organic growth in the pipeline of opportunities we see,

and we have started to look at, now for some time, inorganic opportunities. You

haven't seen us announce anything significant, which I'd suggest reflects some of

the discipline we've got around deploying that capital. But we remain very confident

that there'll be good opportunities on strategy for us to deploy that capital in the

coming periods that'll be accretive to what we're doing.

Mr Daish: (RBC, Analyst) Got it, thank you. I've just got one more if I can, please. Defence

has been very public about selling property assets in the southern States and

redeploying that into the northern States. You’re clearly well positioned in

Queensland. That process is relatively early days, but I'm just curious on if you're

starting to get inbound questions and queries from Defence about different

opportunities over and above your responsibilities associated with EMOS, please.

Mr Tompkins: Yes, just in terms of the consolidation, look, this was a program that Defence have

been working on through a detailed audit process for some time in consultation

with the estate maintainers. I think first observation about the footprint that we

maintain, my assessment is that those locations that are going into the asset


1.2 Page 17 of 19


recycling program, they are the smaller footprints and, by their nature of being in

this audit outcome, are underutilised. So the activities that require the support of

estate management and maintenance are relatively small. As those people are

transferred to other estate locations, our people will transfer with those as well. So

that's a long way of saying a very small impact and we've got a program to support

Defence in realising those outcomes through getting ready for eventual sale

processes.

Mr Daish: (RBC, Analyst) I understand, thank you very much.

Operator: The next question comes from John Purtell with Macquarie. Please go ahead.

Mr Purtell: (Macquarie Group, Analyst) G’day, Peter and Mal. I just had two questions, thanks.

First one on revenue, obviously your first half revenue was down 4%, appreciate

you said revenue will be down for the full year, but would you expect that the

revenue decline in the second half to be less negative than the first? You've

obviously called out the ramp up of water contracts there or do you think the profile

is going to be pretty similar?

Mr Tompkins: Look, we are expecting it to be a little bit better than the first half profile, principally

because of those ramp ups that you've identified and a bit of momentum coming

into the Roads business as well. So a little bit better is what we are expecting.

Mr Purtell: (Macquarie Group, Analyst) Thank you. Just a second one in two parts, obviously

we saw at your recent investor day you were very positive on Energy & Utilities in

particular, your work-in-hand was up to 21% with this result. But I suppose the

question is, when do you expect the contract opportunities to more meaningfully

emerge in transmission and substation? Do you expect meaningful opportunities

over the next six to 12 months, for example? The second part is related to the risk

profile in these areas. Obviously the sector's had its challenges in some of these

segments, so how do you manage the risk around that? Thank you.

Mr Tompkins: So, John, first question first. The answer is yes, the more meaningful projects that

we are targeting will be awarded in the next six months. What you've seen in our

result is a bit of a two-speed business here where we have been doing a lot of in-

field work successfully – and that's been our philosophy from the beginning. You

have one or two of those more meaningful projects and then you have capability

that can deliver really successfully around those in-field jobs, which could be a $50

million substation job, it could be connection work that's still high voltage and it

gives us the opportunity to scale workforces into these larger projects as they come

online.


1.2 Page 18 of 19


That really then goes to your second question around risk profiles. The strategy

very much is to feed those larger meaningful projects with the in-field capability. It

always comes back to our 5 Cs; capability, capacity, more fundamentally. We think

we've got a good handle on our pipeline, what we target, the clients we target that

work to deliver in partnership with and, as always, we're looking at the commercial

risk allocation. I think as an industry, there are no-go areas for everybody and it's

a fairly coherent and well-understood discussion on what are asset-owner risks,

what are shared risks and what are contractor risks and we're very comfortable

with the maturity of that risk allocation in the sector.

Mr Purtell: (Macquarie Group, Analyst) Thank you.

Operator: The next question comes from Nathan Reilly with UBS. Please go ahead.

Mr Reilly: (UBS, Analyst) Morning, gents. Just wanted to look a little deeper around your

FY30 growth ambitions. Can you just remind me, are the plans there to achieve

those organically, just noting some of the comments you've made around growth

investment going forward, so are you able to tell me what level of growth

investments you think you might need to put in to realise those ambitions, whether

it's organic or inorganic? Also, just keen to understand the interplay there with the

transformation investment that you talked about as well.

Mr Tompkins: Look, I think the first point is we built those targets based off the organic opportunity

in the businesses with the new portfolio and the pipeline that we see in the medium

term. Then, of course, with our balance sheet position, we're looking to supplement

our existing capability with things we don't have, but that's not material in the

context of the targets that we've set for ourselves. Then, on the transformation

there Nathan, what was the question?

Mr Reilly: (UBS, Analyst) That supports those FY30 ambitions or is that separate?

Mr Tompkins: It certainly supports. As we reduce our cost-to-serve over time and look to invest

to realise benefits, that's certainly part of how we see continuing to improve our

financial metrics overall.

Mr Reilly: (UBS, Analyst) Got it. You’ve got $60 million in FY26, will that be recurring at that

sort of level over the next few years, beyond FY26 to support those targets?

Mr Ashcroft: It's not a level of investment at the moment that I would expect to recur at those

sorts of levels out to the FY30 ambition periods. But we are in the process of

updating our plans for FY27 and there will be a level of ongoing investment through

FY27. I think, just to give you a reference point, one of the charts that we provided

in the investor day, I think it's in the appendix to the pack, gives you a rough


1.2 Page 19 of 19


indication of the timeline of the projects that we're working on. So there's a range

that have two- to three-year horizons and that's where most of them sit at the

moment and a couple that have longer tails. But certainly not expecting that the

levels will ramp up from where they are.

Mr Reilly: (UBS, Analyst) That's helpful. Thank you.

Operator: Once again, if you wish to ask a question, please press star/one on your telephone

and wait for your name to be announced. There are no further questions of this

time. I'll hand it back to Mr Tompkins for closing remarks. Please go ahead.

Mr Tompkins: Thank you. I'd like to thank all of my colleagues at Downer for their hard work in

contributing to this result today and I wish you all a good day for reporting season.

Thank you.

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