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Gates Industrial Corporation GTES Acquisition and integration costs

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Other financials

Income statement

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Revenue$851.1M+0.4%
Gross profit$338.0M-1.9%
Operating income$109.9M-12.6%
Net income$59.7M-3.7%
EPS (diluted)$0.23-4.2%

Balance sheet

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Cash & equivalents$788.2M+22.6%
Total debt$2.2B-4.8%
Total equity$3.4B+8.5%
Total assets$7.1B+3.3%

Cash flow

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Operating cash flow$30.2M+314%
CapEx$16.7M-4.6%
Free cash flow$13.5M+232%

Valuation

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Market cap$7.13B+22.1%
Enterprise value$8.58B+12.2%
P/E28.6×+1.7×
P/S2.1×+0.3×

Profitability

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Gross margin39.6%-0.9pp
Operating margin13%-1.2pp
Net margin7.2%+0.8pp
FCF margin12.4%+2.9pp

Returns & leverage

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Return on equity7.7%+0.8pp
Debt / equity0.7×-0.1×
Current ratio3.7×+0.3×

Where this comes from

Reported directly by Gates Industrial Corporation in its filing.

Tagged under the XBRL concept us-gaap:BusinessCombinationAcquisitionRelatedCosts.

The official record: Gates Industrial Corporation’s 10-Q, filed May 1, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

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Questions, answered.

What is Gates Industrial Corporation's acquisition and integration costs?
Gates Industrial Corporation (GTES) reported acquisition and integration costs of $500K in Q1 2026.
How has Gates Industrial Corporation's acquisition and integration costs changed year-over-year?
Gates Industrial Corporation's acquisition and integration costs increased by 25.0% year-over-year, from $400K to $500K.
What is the long-term trend for Gates Industrial Corporation's acquisition and integration costs?
Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), Gates Industrial Corporation's acquisition and integration costs has grown at a -39.4% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $3.7M to $500K.
What does acquisition and integration costs mean?
This metric represents the non-recurring expenses incurred during the pursuit, execution, and post-merger integration of business acquisitions. It captures professional fees, legal costs, and operational alignment expenses necessary to combine acquired entities into the existing corporate structure. Monitoring these costs helps investors assess the efficiency of inorganic growth strategies and the total capital required to realize synergies.