Comfort Systems USA (FIX) stock jumps premarket after Q4 profit doubles and dividend rises

Comfort Systems USA (FIX) stock jumps premarket after Q4 profit doubles and dividend rises

February 20, 2026

New York, Feb 20, 2026, 05:42 (EST) — Premarket

  • Stock jumped roughly 6% in premarket trading after results hit late Thursday and the company raised its dividend.
  • Profit and cash flow surged, pushing the year-end backlog close to $12 billion.
  • Focus swings to management’s call later Friday, as investors hunt for clues on 2026 demand.

Shares of Comfort Systems USA Inc climbed 6.3% to $1,460 ahead of the bell Friday, lifted by a sharp gain in fourth-quarter profit and an increase to its quarterly dividend. The stock wrapped up Thursday’s session at $1,373.52, a 4.1% advance.

This move is significant because Comfort Systems has turned into a crowded trade for investors looking to tap into U.S. data-center construction fueled by AI spending. The key question: will bookings continue to outpace completed work? The Street was bracing for $6.73 a share on $2.33 billion in revenue. UBS’s Joshua Chan flagged that the backlog for the quarter might need to land between $10.5 billion and $10.7 billion, implying a book-to-bill ratio of about 1.5 times. Book-to-bill tracks new orders against revenue, while backlog refers to projects awarded but not yet finished.

Comfort Systems reported net income surged to $330.8 million, or $9.37 per diluted share, in the quarter ended Dec. 31, up from $145.9 million, or $4.09 per diluted share, the previous year. Revenue came in at $2.65 billion, rising from $1.87 billion. The company’s backlog at year-end hit $11.94 billion—“Backlog is just under $12 billion,” Chief Executive Brian Lane said.

The company reported operating cash flow at $468.5 million for the quarter, up sharply from $210.5 million a year ago.

Comfort Systems reported net income of $1.02 billion, or $28.88 per diluted share, for full-year 2025. That’s up sharply from $522.4 million, or $14.60 a share, the year before. Revenue climbed to $9.10 billion from $7.03 billion. Operating cash flow landed at $1.19 billion.

Lane pointed to “persistent demand and strong pipelines,” and said the company is “optimistic about our prospects for 2026.”

The board also bumped up its quarterly dividend by 10 cents to 70 cents per share. Shareholders on record as of March 6 will get paid March 17.

The run-up doesn’t give much margin for error ahead of Friday’s call. Any suggestion from management of softer bookings or more challenging project economics could bite. Comfort Systems points out the usual contracting risks, too: mispricing fixed-price contracts, labor or material cost swings, and the real chance that backlog faces delays or outright cancellations.

Artur Ślesik

Artur Ślesik is a technology and financial markets journalist at Bez-kabli.pl, covering artificial intelligence, semiconductors, technology stocks and emerging innovations. A graduate of Warsaw University of Technology, he combines a technical background with market analysis to explain how new technologies are shaping industries, businesses and investment trends worldwide.

Stock Market Today

  • £20,000 in Cash ISA for 5 Years Grows to £129,503, Still Behind £166,528 Return in Stocks
    July 11, 2026, 1:56 AM EDT. Cash ISAs are sticking to around 3% interest, giving savers about £129,503 after five years if they maxed out their £20,000 annual limit. By comparison, someone putting the same sum into a FTSE 100 tracker fund and picking up a 12.3% annual return, including dividends, would hit close to £166,528-so that's over £37,000 more than cash. The government is set to cut the annual Cash ISA allowance from £20,000 to £12,000 from next April, aiming to steer savers into stocks. Some advisers say cash feels safe, but inflation can eat into those returns, making it harder to build up a retirement pot. They point to options like ETFs for those looking for a better mix of growth and risk spread over the long term.