James Hardie shares tumble on bleak U.S. outlook, Azek deal concerns
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on May 21, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 23, 2026

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on May 21, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 23, 2026

James Hardie shares fell due to a bleak U.S. market outlook and concerns over the Azek acquisition, with North American volumes dropping 2% year-on-year.
By Roshan Thomas and Roushni Nair
(Reuters) -ASX-listed building materials group James Hardie forecast tepid earnings growth for its North American business while reporting a drop in annual profit on Wednesday, hammering its shares.
The results raised fresh concerns about the group's planned $8.8 billion acquisition of Chicago-based building products maker Azek, as looming U.S. trade tensions and tariffs threatened to further dampen homeowner spending on renovation projects.
Investors noted weakness in its North American operations, the company's biggest market and profit engine, where volumes fell 2% year-on-year in the fourth quarter and missed consensus estimates by 1%.
The world's biggest fibre cement maker projected softening North American market volumes in 2026, sales growth in the "low single digits", and lower capital spending overall at $325 million.
"There is softness in the U.S. across both large projects and repair and renovation markets - similar to what U.S. peers have been saying," John Lockton, head of investment strategy at MST Financial, said.
While the company's guidance factored in a cut in capital expenditure for fiscal 2026 and flagged a lower earnings base, the leverage ratio after the Azek acquisition remained "uncomfortably high", Lockton added.
James Hardie had said in March it planned to fund the cash portion of the Azek deal through debt financing.
The group said on Wednesday the deal "will further accelerate our sales growth by an incremental two and a half percentage points on top of our double-digit trajectory... and delivery of $500 million of run-rate commercial synergies over the next five years".
The company's Australia-listed shares were among the top drags on the main index, falling as much as 8.3% to A$35.30 before paring losses.
James Hardie said it expected low single-digit growth in total adjusted operating earnings in fiscal 2026, below consensus expectations of 8% growth.
It did not provide a clear profit outlook number for fiscal 2026 in its earnings announcement on Wednesday, contrary to similar announcements in the past.
Annual adjusted net income came in at $644.3 million, down from $707.5 million a year ago, but slightly ahead of analysts' estimates.
(Reporting by Roshan Thomas and Aaditya Govind Rao in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona, Sonali Paul and Jan Harvey)
James Hardie projected softening North American market volumes in 2026, with sales growth expected in the 'low single digits' and a lower capital spending overall at $325 million.
James Hardie's shares fell as much as 8.3% to A$35.30 before paring losses, making them one of the top drags on the main index.
Concerns were raised about the planned $8.8 billion acquisition of Azek due to looming U.S. trade tensions and tariffs that could further dampen market conditions.
James Hardie reported an annual adjusted net income of $644.3 million, down from $707.5 million a year ago, but slightly ahead of analysts' estimates.
James Hardie expected low single-digit growth in total adjusted operating earnings for fiscal 2026, which was below consensus expectations of 8% growth.
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