Lead paragraph
Helios Technologies used its investor day presentation on March 27-28, 2026 to roll out CORE 2030, a strategic plan that targets a doubling of sales by 2030 and an operating EBITDA margin above 25% (Yahoo Finance, Mar 28, 2026). Management highlighted a three-pronged approach: organic growth through product content gains in mobile hydraulics and electronic controls, margin expansion from pricing and productivity, and a disciplined M&A program to accelerate scale. The company framed CORE 2030 as a multi-year value creation blueprint rather than a single-year guidance reset, setting explicit targets tied to 2030 financials and signalling acquisitive activity as a material component of execution. Investors reacted to the presentation with heightened interest in Helios’ ability to sustain margin expansion in a cyclical industrial end market where capital intensity and integration risk are both high.
Context
Helios Technologies, a maker of fluid power and electronic controls for mobile and industrial applications, presented CORE 2030 as a forward-looking framework at its investor day on March 27-28, 2026 (Yahoo Finance, Mar 28, 2026). The plan’s headline metrics — doubling revenue by 2030 and achieving EBITDA margins above 25% — are anchored to a combination of organic share gains and M&A. Historically, the company has grown through a mix of bolt-on acquisitions and targeted R&D to increase content per unit; management positioned CORE 2030 as both an extension of that playbook and a step-up in ambition. The timing of the announcement aligns with a broader sectoral reset: customers in agriculture, construction and specialty vehicles are investing in electrification and controls, creating addressable-market expansion opportunities that Helios says it intends to capture.
Helios’ stated targets must be read against the backdrop of 2024–25 industry dynamics. Capital spending among mobile equipment OEMs dipped in 2023 before recovering in 2024 as commodity cycles normalized; that recovery underpins management’s organic growth assumptions. At the same time, input-cost pressures and supply-chain reconfiguration have pressured margins across industrial components players, making Helios’ 25%+ EBITDA ambition dependent on sustained operational leverage and discrete cost actions. Management highlighted pricing, SKU rationalization and automation investments as near-term drivers of margin expansion, while presenting M&A as a mechanism to accelerate both top-line scale and cross-selling opportunities. The company’s repeated reference to a multi-year timeline signals awareness that execution risk is non-trivial and that short-term volatility is likely.
Data Deep Dive
The investor day materials and subsequent coverage (Yahoo Finance, Mar 28, 2026) specify three quantifiable pillars: (1) a revenue multiple that results in “double sales” by 2030 versus the company’s recent base period; (2) an operating EBITDA margin north of 25%; and (3) an active M&A pipeline to supplement organic gains. These three metrics serve as the core KPIs by which investors will likely judge execution. Management did not publish a single-year point estimate for 2026 revenue in the investor day slides released publicly, but did provide a pathway that assumes mid-single-digit organic growth plus targeted acquisitions across adjacent technologies and geographies.
On the margin side, 25%+ EBITDA represents a material uplift relative to where many industrial components peers have traded recently. If achieved, it would place Helios in the upper quartile of its competitive set on an EBITDA margin basis. The company’s margin plan relies on a combination of pricing recovery (to offset any residual commodity costs), productivity initiatives (automation, purchasing leverage) and mix-shifts toward higher-margin electronic control systems. Management also flagged tax efficiency and working capital improvements as contributors to free cash flow generation. Investors should monitor quarterly reports for three measurable signals: sequential gross margin improvement, year-over-year operating leverage in SG&A, and acquisition announcements with disclosed multiples or pro forma accretion estimates.
Sector Implications
A successful CORE 2030 execution would have implications beyond Helios’ own capital structure. For OEMs and distributors in agriculture, construction and specialty vehicle segments, larger suppliers with enhanced electronic control capabilities can simplify BOM complexity and accelerate platform convergence. That could compress purchasing choices and raise the bar on supplier selection criteria — favoring suppliers who can deliver integrated electro-hydraulic solutions at scale. From a valuation standpoint, a sustained move to 25%+ EBITDA margins would likely re-rate comparable valuations within the industrial components sector, given that margin expansion is a clear pathway to multiple expansion in private and public markets.
M&A activity should also rise if Helios demonstrates success, potentially consolidating niche players in sensors, electro-hydraulics and software-enabled controls. That prospect matters for private-equity owners and smaller public peers, whose exit values would be influenced by buyer appetite from scaled acquirers. Market participants should compare Helios’ ambitions to peers: achieving a twofold revenue increase by 2030 implies sustained CAGR materially above long-term GDP growth, and will require both consistent share gains and meaningful inorganic transactions. Investors will therefore scrutinize deal price discipline and integration playbooks, not just headline targets.
Risk Assessment
Execution risk is the most immediate concern. Doubling revenue in a six- to seven-year horizon requires consistent execution across multiple fronts: product development cycles, sales channel expansion, and integration of acquired businesses. Integration risk is not theoretical; historically, serial acquirers face dilution of culture, timing delays and one-off costs that can compress near-term margins. Helios’ plan explicitly counts on M&A, which raises two questions for investors: whether suitable targets will be available at reasonable multiples and whether the company will maintain return-on-capital thresholds while scaling.
Cyclicality in end markets is another material risk. Mobile equipment demand can reverse with commodity cycles or macro slowdowns, creating inventory build/burn dynamics that compress margins. Currency volatility and interest-rate regimes that increase the cost of capital also matter, particularly because M&A funding may rely on debt markets that are sensitive to rate moves. Finally, technological risk—specifically the pace at which OEMs adopt electrification and software-enabled controls—could alter addressable market dynamics. If control-system architectures consolidate around a small set of suppliers, revenues could concentrate and create customer concentration risks.
Fazen Capital Perspective
From a contrarian analytical stance, CORE 2030 should be evaluated as much for its operational levers as for its headline targets. While the market will focus on the 25%+ EBITDA claim and the revenue multiple, the non-obvious path to sustainably higher margins may come from a wedge of high-margin software and services tied to electronic controls rather than pure hardware scale. If Helios can monetize recurring software features, telematics-enabled services, or aftermarket subscriptions, the margin profile could rebase higher with less capital intensity than a purely transactional hardware play. That said, software monetization requires an expanded go-to-market capability and different commercial contracts, which are seldom accretive in year one.
We also note that M&A execution at scale requires constant recalibration of valuation frameworks. A disciplined playbook that prioritizes earnings accretion and cultural integration over absolute scale will be a better signal to capital markets than headline acquisition frequency. For institutional investors, monitoring deal-level metrics (purchase price multiples, projected synergies, payback period) and short-cycle operating KPIs (gross margin by product family, backlog progression) will provide earlier indications of whether CORE 2030 is on track. For further reading on M&A execution frameworks and sector-specific strategy, see our [M&A strategy](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [industrial components outlook](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) analyses.
Bottom Line
Helios Technologies has set a high bar with CORE 2030: doubling sales by 2030 and delivering 25%+ EBITDA; the plan is credible only if management can combine organic content gains with disciplined, accretive M&A and measurable margin improvements (Yahoo Finance, Mar 28, 2026). Monitoring quarterly margin progression, announced deals with disclosed economics, and execution on software-enabled revenue streams will be critical to assessing delivery.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: How soon will M&A activity be visible after the investor day?
A: Management indicated M&A is a core lever but did not provide a firm timetable for transactions. Practically, expect public announcements within 6–18 months if the company pursues bolt-ons; early signals include hiring of corporate development personnel, pre-deal financing arrangements, or stated integration milestones in quarterly calls.
Q: How does Helios’ 25%+ EBITDA target compare historically in the sector?
A: Achieving above-25% EBITDA would put Helios well above the mid-teens margin profile that many industrial components peers reported in recent years; historically, only a handful of integrated systems suppliers with significant software or service revenue streams sustain margins in that band.
Q: What are practical indicators investors should watch in the near term?
A: Watch sequential gross margin releases, SG&A as a percentage of sales, backlog composition toward electronic controls, and any disclosed deal multiples or accretion metrics. Those items will provide more actionable evidence of whether CORE 2030’s numeric targets are achievable.
