MasterBrand Inc. has completed its all-stock merger with American Woodmark Corp., combining two of the largest residential cabinet manufacturers in North America at a time when builders are closely watching material costs and product availability.
The transaction, first announced earlier this year, creates what MasterBrand calls the most comprehensive portfolio of cabinetry brands and products in the region, spanning stock, semi-custom, and premium lines for kitchens, baths and other spaces in the home, according to the company’s announcement.
Under the terms of the deal, American Woodmark shareholders received 5.150 shares of MasterBrand common stock for each American Woodmark share. Pre-merger MasterBrand shareholders now hold about 63% of the combined company’s outstanding shares. American Woodmark has become a wholly owned subsidiary of MasterBrand.
The combined company will continue to operate under the MasterBrand name and trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol MBC. American Woodmark’s common stock will be delisted from the Nasdaq Stock Market.
MasterBrand, based in Beachwood, Ohio, will keep a presence in American Woodmark’s longtime home of Winchester, Virginia, the companies said.
Scale play in a tight construction market
For homebuilders and residential contractors, the merger further concentrates cabinet manufacturing capacity among a smaller number of national suppliers. Both MasterBrand and American Woodmark have long supplied volume builders as well as big-box retailers and independent dealers, which means purchasing teams could see changes in product assortments, pricing programs and service models as the integration moves forward.
MasterBrand said the combination will expand its operational footprint and geographic reach, with a goal of providing “greater overall choice, superior service, and enhanced value” across the value chain. The company is targeting roughly $90 million in annual run-rate cost synergies by the end of year three and expects the deal to be accretive to adjusted diluted earnings per share in year two.
Those synergy targets matter for builders because they underpin the rationale for offering broader lines while potentially stabilizing or improving pricing and lead times. How much of the cost savings flow through to customers will depend on competitive dynamics in the cabinet category and on overall construction demand, which has been pressured by higher interest rates and affordability constraints even as new-home construction remains structurally undersupplied in many markets.
Leadership and governance changes
Dave Banyard will remain president and CEO of MasterBrand. Three former American Woodmark directors — Andrew Cogan, Philip Fracassa and Daniel Hendrix — joined MasterBrand’s board as independent directors at closing. MasterBrand board chair David Petratis will remain in that role.
Given that the transaction closed just ahead of MasterBrand’s June 4, 2026, annual meeting, Fracassa will be up for re-election this year along with the other Class I directors, as previously disclosed in the company’s proxy filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Why this matters for builders
The cabinet package is a critical component of kitchen and bath design, cycle time and buyer satisfaction on new-home projects. A larger MasterBrand could have several implications for builders and remodelers:
- Product breadth: A wider portfolio may simplify sourcing across entry-level, move-up and luxury lines, especially for multi-market builders trying to standardize specifications.
- Supply chain resiliency: A larger, more geographically dispersed manufacturing footprint could help mitigate regional disruptions, though integration work can create temporary friction.
- Pricing power: With another major combination in the building products space, procurement teams may need to sharpen competitive bids and leverage regional or specialty manufacturers to maintain negotiating leverage.
- Design flexibility: If MasterBrand rationalizes overlapping SKUs, design centers may see changes in finish and style availability, requiring updates to option catalogs and buyer presentations.
The companies noted that their forward-looking expectations for synergies and earnings accretion reflect current operating conditions, including existing tariffs, and do not assume future tariff changes or shifts in market demand.
Advisers
Rothschild & Co served as exclusive financial adviser, and Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP served as legal counsel to MasterBrand. C Street Advisory Group advised on strategic communications and investor relations.
Jefferies LLC served as financial adviser, and McGuireWoods LLP served as legal counsel to American Woodmark.
