$FTAI EXECUTIVE CALL SUMMARY: FTAI AVIATION LTD (02/26/26)
FTAI Aviation’s Q4 2025 call emphasized 3 concurrent growth engines: (1) rapid scaling of the Aerospace Products engine maintenance exchange business (MRE) with sustained mid-30% segment margins and a stated pathway toward 40% margins, (2) acceleration of the Strategic Capital Initiative (SCI) into a scaled, fee-generating asset manager for midlife 737NG and A320ceo aircraft, and (3) formal commercialization of FTAI Power to convert CFM56 engines into 25 MW aeroderivative turbines aimed at hyperscaler and data-center-driven “bring your own power” demand. Reported Q4 adjusted EBITDA of $277.2 million rose 10% year-over-year, but the quarter appeared modestly softer than implied internal expectations and consensus optics, with Bloomberg noting Q4 revenue of $662.0 million versus $692.2 million consensus and adjusted EBITDA of $277.2 million versus $288 million consensus; shares reportedly fell 6% postmarket. Management directly attributed some near-term softness to timing (customer deliveries shifting from Q4 into Q1) and a temporary cost-productivity lag from hiring ahead of volume. The most material new information relative to the prior guide was an increase in 2026 segment EBITDA guidance by $100 million (to $1.625 billion total segment EBITDA) alongside a reduction in 2026 free cash flow guidance to approximately $915 million, driven by incremental growth investments (SCI II co-investment acceleration and Power working capital). Capital return messaging strengthened via a 14% dividend increase to $0.40 per share quarterly. The call reinforced an explicit strategy of prioritizing speed of market adoption and absolute EBITDA growth over maximizing near-term margin percentage, signaling a willingness to trade mix and pricing for share capture if large-airline program opportunities materialize.
QUARTER PERFORMANCE AND VARIANCE DRIVERS
Q4 adjusted EBITDA of $277.2 million comprised $195.0 million from Aerospace Products, $113.2 million from Leasing, and -$31.0 million from Corporate and Other (including interest segment elimination and Power startup expense). The mix shift continued toward Aerospace Products as the primary growth driver. Aerospace Products delivered $195.0 million of adjusted EBITDA at a 35% margin, up 66% year-over-year from $117.3 million in Q4 2024 and up 8% sequentially from $180.4 million in Q3 2025. Leasing produced approximately $113 million of adjusted EBITDA, including $20 million from SCI (management fees and co-investment returns) and $93 million from balance sheet leasing assets. Corporate and Other remained a meaningful drag, and its linkage to Power startup expense establishes an expected near-term offset to consolidated EBITDA as the Power platform ramps.
Management acknowledged that Aerospace Products EBITDA landed “a little bit less than what we thought it would be a few months ago,” citing 2 specific factors: (1) hiring ahead of volume created a “slight lag” between costs and productivity, and (2) certain customers “preferred to take delivery in Q1 as opposed to Q4,” shifting some engines from 2025 into 2026. This framing implies a near-term revenue and EBITDA re-timing rather than demand deterioration, though it also highlights that quarterly cadence can be affected by customer scheduling decisions and internal onboarding efficiency. Bloomberg’s reported Q4 revenue miss versus consensus is directionally consistent with delivery timing slippage. The central near-term debate is whether the Q4 miss is a 1-quarter timing issue that mechanically benefits Q1, or evidence that scaling frictions (labor onboarding, parts availability, shop throughput) are increasing as volume grows.
AEROSPACE PRODUCTS: DEMAND, CAPACITY, AND MARGIN STRUCTURE
Aerospace Products was positioned as a structurally advantaged beneficiary of airlines extending legacy narrowbody fleets due to OEM delivery constraints and next-generation engine maintenance challenges. Management asserted that LEAP and GTF shop visits are “not expected to surpass the CFM56 and V2500 until at least the middle of the next decade,” supporting a multi-year runway for CFM56 and V2500 aftermarket demand. The aftermarket spend environment was described as strengthening, with management stating total maintenance spend is now expected to grow at a 10%+ rate to approximately $25 billion per year, up from $22 billion per year projected previously. Retirements were characterized as historically low, and shop visit demand as shifting toward heavier overhauls, consistent with longer economic useful lives for CFM56 and V2500 engines.
Operationally, module output was the principal disclosed throughput KPI. Management reported refurbishment of 228 CFM56 modules in Q4 across 3 facilities, up 68% versus Q4 2024, and 757 modules for full-year 2025, surpassing a 750 module target. For 2026, the module production target was raised from 1,000 to 1,050 modules (+39% versus 2025), signaling confidence in capacity ramp and/or reduced friction from parts and labor constraints. The disclosed drivers of output improvement were systematically framed as “people, parts, and process,” including: expansion of the Montreal Training Academy (220 trainees enrolled; 50+ graduates per quarter), integration of Palantir’s AI platform to reduce downtime and optimize supply chain execution, scaling of Rome headcount (101 to 185) post-JV launch, Miami expansion and integration of the ATOPS acquisition, and investments in component repair capacity (Pacific Aerodynamics and Prime Engine Accessories, plus references to expanded piece-part repair capability in Montreal and a Connecticut accessory repair hub).
Margin outlook was discussed in unusually explicit operational terms. Management reiterated a goal to lift Aerospace Products margins from 35% toward 40% in 2026, citing 3 key enablers: PMA HPT blade approval, lower-cost parts supply (including used serviceable material and a multi-year agreement with CFM), and expanded piece-part repair capability. A key quote-level takeaway was the assertion that “everything we wanted to have in place to achieve that 40% margin is in place,” indicating that management views the margin bridge as executional rather than contingent on additional external approvals. However, management also introduced an important conditional: if major airline programs can be won sooner by prioritizing adoption, then “we will prioritize that over adding incremental margin.” This positions 2026 as potentially a margin-flex year where realized margin could remain in the mid-30% range if pricing and mix are used aggressively to accelerate share capture, even while the cost structure could support higher margins.
A strategic differentiator emphasized throughout was the relationship with CFM and the concept of an open aftermarket. Management described the CFM agreement as multi-year and covering parts supply, piece-part repairs, component repairs, and thrust performance upgrades, with the stated effect of increasing supply resilience and lowering total costs for customers. The implication is reduced risk of OEM hostility and improved access to constrained parts, which, if realized, would be directly supportive of both output and margin targets. The competitive implication is that FTAI is attempting to operate as a scaled, low-cost, high-availability alternative to traditional shop visits, with a “fixed price engine” offering and an exchange model designed around speed and uptime.
AVIATION LEASING AND SCI: SHIFT TO FEE-DRIVEN ASSET MANAGEMENT
Leasing continued to be repositioned away from balance sheet aircraft leasing toward a fee-driven and co-invested asset management model through SCI. In Q4, SCI contributed $20 million to Leasing EBITDA via management fees and co-investment returns, while balance sheet leasing contributed $93 million. Management stated that the mix should keep shifting toward SCI as new SPV partnerships are launched programmatically and balance sheet leasing is reduced.
SCI was framed as a major 2025 accomplishment and a key growth vector for 2026. SCI I reportedly secured $2 billion of equity commitments in 10 months and was described as the largest fund dedicated to narrowbody midlife aircraft. With financing partners (Atlas/Apollo affiliate and Deutsche Bank), total capital was described as $6 billion. Deployment was characterized as strong: 130 aircraft closed in 2025; as of the call date, 276 aircraft closed or under LOI, representing $5.3 billion of the $6.0 billion target, with full investment expected by the end of Q2 2026. The portfolio was described as concentrated in aircraft with engine maintenance needs, which structurally benefits FTAI’s MRE volumes through engine exchanges and reinforces the cross-platform “flywheel” between asset management and aftermarket services.
SCI II fundraising was initiated with an anchor equity commitment; management indicated an expectation to begin investing SCI II by 06/30/26. SCI II size was indicated as likely launching around $6 billion, with the longer-term stated ambition to build a $20 billion asset management business and become the world’s largest manager of midlife narrowbody aircraft. Management’s sourcing commentary suggested confidence in feeding SCI scale: the opportunity set was described as roughly $30 billion per year in current-generation narrowbody investing, and market supply was argued to be increasing as airlines take new deliveries and lessors face portfolio age and debt constraints. The key underwriting advantage highlighted was FTAI’s ability to solve engine shop visit intensity and provide engines via exchanges, which typical financial buyers cannot.
The principal risk embedded in the SCI narrative is capital intensity and timing: while SCI is presented as “asset-light,” it still requires meaningful co-investment and working capital timing that can pressure near-term free cash flow. Additionally, SCI returns depend on aircraft residuals, lease rates, and maintenance economics; while current conditions appear supportive, a normalization of lease rates or a shift in airline demand could reduce returns and fundraising momentum.
CASH FLOW, LEVERAGE, AND CAPITAL RETURN
Adjusted free cash flow for 2025 was reported as $724 million, above original guidance of $650 million but below revised mid-year guidance of $750 million. Management emphasized that Q4 included targeted growth investments that increased inventory and strategic positioning, including $52 million of incremental SCI co-investment, approximately $150 million of additional turbines/inventory associated with Power ramp preparation, and $50 million of hot section parts investments for the engine maintenance business in a constrained parts environment. This indicates a deliberate choice to pull forward working capital and inventory to protect 2026 execution, at the cost of near-term cash conversion.
Balance sheet commentary was constructive. Leasing ended 2025 at 2.6x leverage, at the low end of a 2.5x to 3.0x target range. Management cited 2-notch upgrades by both S&P and Fitch and stated the objective of maintaining a BB rating across all 3 agencies was achieved. This potentially lowers funding costs and expands financing flexibility, which matters for both balance sheet leasing and fund-level financing structures.
Capital return policy was incrementally more shareholder-friendly. The quarterly dividend was raised from $0.35 to $0.40 per share (2nd consecutive quarterly increase), with payment on 03/23/26 to holders of record on 03/13/26. The dividend increase, combined with a lower 2026 free cash flow guide due to growth investment, increases the importance of sustained EBITDA growth and working capital discipline to preserve financial flexibility.
2026 GUIDANCE UPDATE VERSUS PRIOR GUIDANCE
Management stated confidence in achieving guidance outlined in October and then raised it. Total segment EBITDA guidance for 2026 was increased by $100 million to $1.625 billion from $1.525 billion. The updated 2026 segment split was guided at $1.05 billion for Aerospace Products (up from $1.00 billion) and $575 million for Aviation Leasing (up from $525 million), with Leasing upside described as “primarily” from insurance settlements tied to Russian asset recoveries and Aerospace upside tied to higher production and scaling.
Free cash flow guidance for 2026 was reduced to approximately $915 million, despite higher EBITDA, due to incremental growth investments and timing. Management explicitly described the bridge as $100 million of additional EBITDA offset by incremental cash deployment toward SCI II and Power working capital. The call included 2 different quantitative framings of SCI cash timing: $85 million of increased SCI investments (in prepared remarks) and approximately $137 million acceleration of SCI II investment (in Q&A), which suggests a definitional difference between incremental versus total acceleration, or additional growth cash uses beyond SCI II and Power not fully enumerated in the Q&A bridge. The headline implication is clear: cash generation is being reinvested to accelerate growth platforms, and near-term cash yield is subordinated to longer-duration value creation.
The operational guidance update that most directly supports the Aerospace EBITDA raise was the module production target increase to 1,050 modules from 1,000. If achieved with stable-to-improving margins, this implies 2026 EBITDA growth is expected to be supported by both higher volume and cost leverage, potentially augmented by mix and parts strategy improvements. The key uncertainty is management’s stated willingness to trade margin for adoption; the EBITDA guide suggests confidence in absolute profit growth even if margin percentage is not maximized.
FTAI POWER: STRATEGIC RATIONALE, ECONOMICS, AND EXECUTION RISK
FTAI Power was presented as a structurally attractive adjacency leveraging the company’s core competency in CFM56 engines, and as a response to accelerating electricity demand driven by AI data centers and the perceived mismatch between traditional infrastructure timelines and near-term capacity needs. The value proposition was framed as adapting the “most proven and widely deployed” commercial aviation engine platform into a 25 MW trailer-mounted aeroderivative unit capable of rapid deployment (management cited about 2 weeks to deploy on site) and flexible application (baseload, backup, peaking). Customer interest was stated to be strongest in baseload deployments, consistent with the “bring your own power” theme.
Technical specs disclosed were directional rather than differentiating: management estimated 25 MW output, 35% to 40% efficiency, and a 9,000 heat rate, described as comparable to other aeroderivatives sold over the past 30 to 40 years. The asserted differentiation is economics and serviceability rather than thermodynamic performance. Management argued the primary margin driver is an unmatched turbine input cost, given access to near-fully depreciated CFM56 assets that can be repurposed into a 10 to 20 year second life. Management stated margins are expected to be “as good or better” than current Aerospace Products margins, implying mid-30% to 40%+ contribution margins over time. This claim is strategically important but remains unproven because commercial pricing, warranty terms, conversion cost structure, and balance-of-plant content (generators, gearboxes, controls) are not yet disclosed.
Execution planning was described across 5 dimensions: feedstock/working capital, facility readiness, procurement strategy, customer engagement, and timing. Working capital required was targeted at approximately $250 million for turbine feedstock and a rotable pool of key components; approximately $150 million of inventory build occurred in Q4 2025 to secure turbines for the 2026 ramp, with an additional $100 million implied in 2026. Facility readiness actions included retrofitting Montreal to establish a dedicated production line and emphasizing strict separation between Aerospace and Power components for regulatory and asset integrity reasons. Procurement strategy was described as multi-vendor sourcing plus collaboration with proven third-party vendors and build-out of in-house capabilities to control production from turbine through final assembly. Customer engagement was described as active with hyperscalers and data center operators, but management declined to provide order book specifics, anchor customers, or contract structures. Timing guidance was explicit: first production units of Mod-1 expected to be delivered in Q4 2026, with a target of 100 units of production in 2027.
The largest investment implication from Power is asymmetric optionality versus execution opacity. The call provided enough specificity to validate seriousness (inventory build, facility retrofit, working capital plan, stated unit specs, and a defined delivery timeline), but it did not provide the commercial evidence typically required to underwrite a 100-unit ramp (signed orders, pricing, backlog, delivery schedule, customer concentration, or site readiness). Management acknowledged production ramp details are not fully mapped yet (“we haven't really mapped all that out yet”), which indicates non-trivial planning still underway despite confidence in material readiness and procurement actions. The service model was framed as a longer-cycle recurring revenue opportunity: turbines would require maintenance every 5 to 6 years, and FTAI expects to apply the same exchange model as in Aerospace to deliver “zero downtime” for customers, potentially creating a durable aftermarket annuity if the installed base scales.
A non-obvious strategic risk is cross-platform resource allocation and feedstock interaction. Management asserted Power is not cannibalistic, emphasizing the natural life extension after a 30-year aerospace life and stating that using engines that otherwise would be parted out “doesn't take away” from aerospace supply. However, if Power economics materially exceed part-out economics, incentives could emerge to pull engines earlier or compete for feedstock, potentially tightening parts supply and affecting Aerospace cost structures. Management attempted to preempt this by pointing to the scale of the CFM56 universe (approximately 20,000 engines) and a 2% to 3% retirement/part-out rate, implying 400 to 600 engines per year become available, and that sourcing 100 engines annually would represent roughly 25% of a 400-engine part-out stream.
KEY QUOTES FROM THE CALL (LIMITED EXCERPTS)
Guidance raise: “We're updating our outlook to increase total EBITDA by $100 million.”
Updated 2026 segment guide: “we now expect total business segment guidance of $1.625 billion.”
2026 free cash flow: “we now expect 2026 free cash flow of approximately $915 million.”
Module target increase: “revising our 2026 target upward from 1,000 to 1,050 modules.”
Margin bridge confidence: “everything we wanted…to achieve that 40% margin is in place.”
Adoption versus margin tradeoff: “we will prioritize that over adding incremental margin.”
Power timing: “first production units of Mod-1…delivered in the fourth quarter of this year.”
Power specs: “25-megawatt output…35% to 40% efficiency…and a 9,000 heat rate.”
Power margin ambition: “margins…as good or better than…Aerospace Products.”
Demand framing: “particular interest in baseload deployments…bring your own power.”