Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K
filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is
an emerging growth company as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act of 1933 (§230.405 of this chapter) or Rule 12b-2 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (§240.12b-2 of this chapter).
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check
mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting
standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act. ¨
On February 25, 2026, O-I Glass, Inc.
(the “Company”) issued a press release providing a business update for the first quarter of 2026. A copy of the press release
is furnished as Exhibit 99.1 to this Current Report on Form 8-K and incorporated herein by reference.
In addition, the Company’s Chief Financial
Officer, John Haudrich, is scheduled to present at the BofA Securities 2026 Global Agriculture and Materials Conference (the “Conference”)
on Wednesday, February 25, 2026 at 10:30 a.m., Eastern Time.
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
Exhibit 99.1

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information, contact:
Chris Manuel, Vice President of Investor Relations
567-336-2600
Chris.Manuel@o-i.com
O-I TO PRESENT AT BofA SECURITIES
2026 GLOBAL AGRICULTURE AND MATERIALS CONFERENCE
Maintaining Full-Year 2026 Guidance, But Seeing
Additional Earnings Pressure in 1Q26
PERRYSBURG,
Ohio (February 25, 2026) — John Haudrich, Chief Financial Officer of O-I Glass, Inc. (“O-I,” NYSE: OI),
will present at the BofA Securities 2026 Global Agriculture and Materials Conference on Wednesday, February 25, 2026, at 10:30 a.m. ET.
During the
presentation, O-I will outline its strategy to enhance shareholder value through improved competitiveness, disciplined cost transformation,
and profitable growth. The company will highlight continued progress under its Fit to Win program, which has exceeded initial savings
targets and is driving margin expansion, stronger cash flow, and higher economic profit. O-I will also discuss progress toward its reaffirmed
2027 Investor Day commitments, along with actions to optimize its global manufacturing footprint and portfolio mix. Management will address
current market conditions and near-term earnings dynamics.
The company
is maintaining its full-year 2026 guidance, yet it now expects additional pressure on adjusted earnings per share in the first quarter
of 2026 due to recent developments, with results likely below the previously communicated estimate that the first quarter would contribute
12-16% of full-year 2026 adjusted earnings per share. In Europe, segment operating profit will be impacted by incremental commercial headwinds
from ongoing soft demand and heightened competitive pressures as well as higher, short-term supply chain costs associated with previously
announced actions to permanently close excess capacity at several locations by mid-2026.
Despite
these near-term headwinds, O-I remains focused on driving higher earnings, increasing economic profit, strengthening free cash flow, and
delivering sustainable, long-term value for shareholders.
BofA Securities 2026 Global Agriculture and Materials Conference
on February 25, 2026
A live webcast of the presentation will be available
at https://bofa.veracast.com/webcasts/bofa/globalagriculture2026/RnXq1t.cfm or can be accessed on the company’s Investor
Relations website, www.o-i.com/investors, in the News and Events section. A replay of the presentation will be available
on the website for a 90 days following the event.
Contact: Sasha Sekpeh, 567-336-5128 – O-I
Investor Relations
O-I news releases are available on the O-I website
at www.o-i.com.
About O-I Glass
At O-I
Glass, Inc. (NYSE: OI), we love glass and we’re proud to be one of the leading producers of glass bottles and jars around
the globe. Glass is not only beautiful, it’s also pure and completely recyclable, making it the most sustainable rigid packaging
material. Headquartered in Perrysburg, Ohio (USA), O-I is the preferred partner for many of the world’s leading food and beverage
brands. We innovate in line with customers’ needs to create iconic packaging that builds brands around the world. Led by our diverse
team of approximately 19,000 people across 64 plants in 18 countries, O-I achieved net sales of $6.4 billion in 2025. Learn
more about us:
o-i.com / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram / LinkedIn
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
The company uses certain non-GAAP financial measures,
which are measures of its historical or future financial performance that are not calculated and presented in accordance with GAAP, within
the meaning of applicable SEC rules. Management believes that its presentation and use of certain non-GAAP financial measures, including
adjusted earnings, adjusted earnings per share, free cash flow, segment operating profit, segment operating profit margin, EBITDA, adjusted
EBITDA, net debt, net debt leverage and adjusted effective tax rate provide relevant and useful supplemental financial information that
is widely used by analysts and investors, as well as by management in assessing both consolidated and business unit performance. These
non-GAAP measures are reconciled to the most directly comparable GAAP measures and should be considered supplemental in nature and should
not be considered in isolation or be construed as being more important than comparable GAAP measures.
Adjusted earnings relates to net earnings (loss)
attributable to the company, exclusive of items management considers not representative of ongoing operations and other adjustments
because such items are not reflective of the company’s principal business activity, which is glass container production. Adjusted
earnings are divided by weighted average shares outstanding (diluted) to derive adjusted earnings per share. Segment operating profit
relates to earnings (loss) before interest expense, net, and before income taxes and is also exclusive of items management considers not
representative of ongoing operations as well as certain retained corporate costs and other adjustments. Segment operating profit margin
is calculated as segment operating profit divided by segment net sales. EBITDA refers to net earnings, excluding gains or losses from
discontinued operations, interest expense, net, provision for income taxes, depreciation and amortization of intangibles. Adjusted
EBITDA refers to EBITDA, exclusive of items management considers not representative of ongoing operations and other adjustments.
Net debt leverage refers to total debt less cash divided by Adjusted EBITDA. Adjusted effective tax rate relates to provision
for income taxes, exclusive of items management considers not representative of ongoing operations and other adjustments divided by earnings
(loss) before income taxes, exclusive of items management considers not representative of ongoing operations and other adjustments. Management
uses adjusted earnings, adjusted earnings per share, segment operating profit, segment operating profit margin, and adjusted effective
tax rate to evaluate its period-over-period operating performance because it believes these provide useful supplemental measures of the
results of operations of its principal business activity by excluding items that are not reflective of such operations. The above
non-GAAP financial measures may be useful to investors in evaluating the underlying operating performance of the company’s business
as these measures eliminate items that are not reflective of its principal business activity.
Net debt is defined as total debt less cash. Management
uses net debt to analyze the liquidity of the company.
Further, free cash flow relates to cash provided
by operating activities less cash payments for property, plant, and equipment. Management has historically used free cash flow to evaluate
its period-over-period cash generation performance because it believes these have provided useful supplemental measures related to its
principal business activity. It should not be inferred that the entire free cash flow amount is available for discretionary expenditures,
since the company has mandatory debt service requirements and other non-discretionary expenditures that are not deducted from these measures.
Management uses non-GAAP information principally for internal reporting, forecasting, budgeting and calculating compensation payments.
The company routinely posts important information
on its website – www.o-i.com/investors.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains “forward-looking”
statements related to O-I Glass, Inc. (“O-I Glass” or the “company”) within the meaning of Section 21E
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”) and Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended. Forward-looking statements reflect the company’s current expectations and projections about future events at the time,
and thus involve uncertainty and risk. The words “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “will,”
“could,” “would,” “should,” “may,” “plan,” “estimate,” “intend,”
“predict,” “potential,” “continue,” “commit,” and the negatives of these words and other
similar expressions generally identify forward-looking statements.
It is possible that the company’s future
financial performance may differ from expectations due to a variety of factors including, but not limited to the following: (1) the
company’s ability to achieve expected benefits from cost management, efficiency improvements, and profitability initiatives, such
as its Fit to Win initiative, including expected impacts from production curtailments, reduction in force and furnace closures, (2) the
general credit, financial, political, economic, legal and competitive conditions in markets and countries where the company has operations,
including uncertainties related to economic and social conditions, trade policies and disputes, financial market conditions, disruptions
in the supply chain, competitive pricing pressures, inflation or deflation, changes in tax rates, changes in laws or policies, legal proceedings
involving the company, war, civil disturbance or acts of terrorism, natural disasters, public health issues and weather, (3) cost
and availability of raw materials, labor, energy and transportation (including impacts related to the current Ukraine-Russia and Israel-Hamas
conflicts and disruptions in supply of raw materials caused by transportation delays), (4) competitive pressures from other glass
container producers and alternative forms of packaging or consolidation among competitors and customers, (5) changes in consumer
preferences or customer inventory management practices, (6) the continuing consolidation of the company’s customer base, (7) risks
related to the development, deployment and use of artificial intelligence technologies, (8) the company’s inability to improve
glass melting technology in a cost-effective manner and introduce productivity, process and network optimization actions, (9) unanticipated
supply chain and operational disruptions, including higher capital spending, (10) seasonality of customer demand, (11) the failure
of the company’s joint venture partners to meet their obligations or commit additional capital to the joint venture, (12) labor
shortages, labor cost increases or strikes, (13) the company’s ability to acquire or divest businesses, acquire and expand plants,
integrate operations of acquired businesses and achieve expected benefits from acquisitions, divestitures or expansions, (14) the company’s
ability to generate sufficient future cash flows to ensure the company’s goodwill is not impaired, (15) any increases in the underfunded
status of the company’s pension plans, (16) any failure or disruption of the company’s information technology, or those of
third parties on which the company relies, or any cybersecurity or data privacy incidents affecting the company or its third-party service
providers, (17) risks related to the company’s indebtedness or changes in capital availability or cost, including interest rate
fluctuations and the ability of the company to generate cash to service indebtedness and refinance debt on favorable terms, (18) risks
associated with operating in foreign countries, (19) foreign currency fluctuations relative to the U.S. dollar, (20) changes in tax laws
or global trade policies, (21) the company’s ability to comply with various environmental legal requirements, (22) risks related
to recycling and recycled content laws and regulations, (23) risks related to climate-change and air emissions, including related laws
or regulations and increased ESG scrutiny and changing expectations from stakeholders, and the other risk factors discussed in the company's
filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
It is not possible to foresee or identify all
such factors. Any forward-looking statements in this document are based on certain assumptions and analyses made by the company in light
of its experience and perception of historical trends, current conditions, expected future developments, and other factors it believes
are appropriate in the circumstances. Forward-looking statements are not a guarantee of future performance and actual results or developments
may differ materially from expectations. While the company continually reviews trends and uncertainties affecting the company’s
results of operations and financial condition, the company does not assume any obligation to update or supplement any particular forward-looking
statements contained in this document.