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Valmont Industries, Inc. (VMI)

Q1 2026 Earnings Call· Tue, Apr 21, 2026

$495.62

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Greetings. Welcome to Valmont Industries First Quarter 2026 earnings conference call. [Operator Instructions]. Please note this conference is being recorded. I will now turn the conference over to your host, Renee Campbell, Senior Vice President, Capital Markets and Risk. Ms. Campbell, you may begin.

Renee Campbell

Analyst

Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. With me today are Avner Applbaum, President and Chief Executive Officer; John Schwietz, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Eric Johnson, Chief Accounting Officer. Earlier this morning, we issued a press release announcing our first quarter 2026 results. Both the release and the presentation for today's webcast are available on the Investors page of our website at valmont.com. A replay of the webcast will be available later this morning. To stay updated with Valmont's latest news releases and information, please sign up for e-mail alerts on our Investor site. We'll begin today's call with prepared remarks and then open it up for questions. Please note that this call is subject to our disclosure on forward-looking statements, which is outlined on Slide 2 of the presentation and will be read in full after Q&A. With that, I'd now like to turn the call over to Avner.

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

Thank you, Renee. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Turning to Slide 4. I'll start with a few key messages for the quarter. First, we delivered a strong start to the year with sales growth, record first quarter earnings per share and progress against our strategic priorities. This reflects our discipline and focused execution across the business. We remain committed to serving customers, managing what we can control and advancing our value drivers. Our performance reflects the execution of our strategy. We're prioritizing high-value offerings, strengthening our core businesses and improving operational performance. Our strategy is anchored in markets with durable demand drivers, most notably utility while continuing to improve the quality and resiliency of our earnings. Second, infrastructure is performing well, supported by a growing demand for energy. This includes the need to expand the electrical grid to support data centers and the need to replace aging assets. Our capacity expansion plans are on track, and these actions are driving improvements in throughput and overall operational performance as reflected in the 27% sales growth in North America Utility. Third, in agriculture, we were able to grow in North America year-over-year due to favorable pricing. I also want to recognize our teams in Middle East who continue to navigate a very challenging environment. The safety and well-being of our employees remain our top priority. We are focused on supporting them as they manage through the ongoing situation. We appreciate their commitment to one another and to our customers during this time. Turning to Slide 5 for a review of our current market dynamics, starting with North America Utility. Our customers are implementing multiyear increases in capital spending, driving strong demand in utility infrastructure. U.S. Utilities are planning roughly $1.4 trillion of investment through 2030, up meaningfully from…

John Schwietz

Analyst

Thank you, Avner. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. I'd like to start by thanking Avner and the Board for their confidence in me as I step into the CFO role. I appreciate the opportunity to build upon the strong foundation already in place. I look forward to working closely with our teams across Valmont to reinforce financial discipline, support our strategy, and deliver long-term value for our customers, employees and shareholders. Turning to Slide 9. Net sales of $1.03 billion increased 6.2% year-over-year driven by sales growth and infrastructure, particularly North America Utility. Operating income increased to $155.6 million and operating margins improved 190 basis points to 15.1%, reflecting stronger performance in both segments. Our tax rate remained steady at approximately 26%. Diluted earnings per share was $5.51, a 27.5% increase from prior year. Moving to our segment results on Slide 10. I want to start by highlighting a change to our infrastructure product line revenue reporting beginning this quarter. We have realigned to better reflect the markets that we serve and how we manage them. We are now reporting our North America Infrastructure businesses separately and have consolidated international infrastructure and global solar into 1 product line. A quarterly recast for 2025, reflecting these updates is included in the appendix of today's presentation. Now moving to Infrastructure results. Sales of $806 million grew 14.1% year-over-year. North America Utility sales increased 27.4% driven by pricing and higher volumes. Sales in North America Lighting and Transportation declined 4.4% due to the production challenges as noted by Avner. North America Coatings sales increased 13.3% supported by healthy infrastructure and data center demand. North America Telecommunications sales decreased 3.9% as volume softened due to a shift in carrier spending allocation. International Infrastructure sales increased 6.9% due to favorable…

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

Thank you, John. Moving to Slide 14. We continue to advance our 3 core value drivers, catching the infrastructure wave, positioning agriculture for growth and executing disciplined resource allocation. These priorities are guiding how we invest in capacity, strengthen our product and technology offerings and align our cost structure supporting improved performance and more consistent profitable growth over time. We continue to drive above-market growth in Infrastructure through targeted investments in capacity and operational efficiency, and we're seeing the benefits reflected in our sales volume. In Agriculture, we are growing our presence in emerging markets and investing in aftermarket and technology to improve the mix of higher-margin business. Finally, our disciplined resource allocation initiatives are on track. Overall, we are confident in our 2026 performance and achieving our long-term value driver targets. We look forward to sharing more details at our upcoming Investor Day on June 16. Before we close, I want to thank the entire Valmont team for their efforts navigating a dynamic first quarter. With that, I will now turn the call over to Renee.

Renee Campbell

Analyst

Thank you, Avner. At this time, the operator will open up the call for questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Nathan Jones with Stifel.

Nathan Jones

Analyst

Good morning, everyone. I guess I'll start with a question on the 232 tariffs. We've been getting a lot of questions from investors, as I'm sure you guys have as well. I think the anticipation was probably that these new tariffs were going to be more impactful to Valmont than you guys are talking about them being. Can you maybe just provide a little bit more color on -- I know John said using poured and melted U.S. steel helps protect from that. But can you just -- any more color you can give us around that? And then how you plan to mitigate that with customers?

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

John, do you want to take that one?

John Schwietz

Analyst

Yes. Thank you. So Nathan, first, of course, we welcome the clarity that we got on April 6 with the updated regulations. So our understanding of these rules are incorporated in our guidance. As you mentioned, really, the upside of this guidance is that we need to maximize U.S. poured and melted steel. So that's what we've been doing for the last few quarters is maximizing that, and that's what we'll continue to do. Of course, tariffs are changing, they adjust and as they adjust, we adjust our pricing and also our supply chains. This takes a little bit of time to take hold. But overall, we feel comfortable with it. And as we've mentioned on prior calls, the objective for us is to be tariff-cost-profit neutral. And so -- and that's what's incorporated in our guidance.

Nathan Jones

Analyst

That's helpful. I guess my second question is around the U.S. Utility business. Through the last 12 to 18 months, I think the company has been talking about effectively being out of capacity and having to increase CapEx to add capacity which it's been doing. But I think the story was kind of that $1 of CapEx was going to increase capacity by $1 and the business is clearly outperforming the level of CapEx that's going into it. Can you talk a little bit about where the additional productivity is coming from or how we should think about $1 of CapEx now translating into maybe more than $1 of capacity?

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

Sure. So we are -- let me start up, we're very pleased with our quarterly results. I mean, we've grown Utility by more than 27%. And to your point, a lot of the growth is driven by the strength in the environment with -- coupled with our investment in capacity. Capital is clearly one of the areas that we're investing to increase our capacity, and we're going to invest between $170 million to $200 million this year, with the majority of that going into Utility. So capital is one lever, but let me just address it a little broader, right? It's a whole system of capacity increases. So we have our capital. We have our operational capacity, and we have our commercial capacity. So just to give a little bit more flavor to that, while we're adding capital, every day, our employees go into the shop and look for opportunities to increase our throughput. And we are getting a lot of innovation, continuous improvement to drive the increased output. So as an example, in one of our plants, we're looking at bottlenecks, and we noticed that in some cases, if we add some labor, we will increase our output. And we did a quick, very successful hiring event, and we were able to increase the capacity at that site. We had another site where we saw that the flow was not perfect. We did a couple of Kaizen events. We got the flow significantly improved, just to name another example. So we have over -- we have 24 facilities in the U.S. Each one of them, we are taking many actions to drive the increased output. And we should see this trend continued into Q2. We're expecting to see a very strong similar type growth or even better in the second quarter. And in fact, we should expect to see a very strong year in Utility as well. So just to sum it up, we're taking many initiatives, capital being one of them. We are seeing that with capital, we're driving more than one for one. So that is another area of an improvement. And we look forward to keep on capitalizing on the strength of this market.

Operator

Operator

Our next question is from Chris Moore with CJS Securities.

Christopher Moore

Analyst

Recognizing you don't necessarily provide backlog on a quarterly basis. Can you give any big picture thoughts in terms of kind of what it looks like today versus kind of year-over-year or sequentially?

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

Yes, sure. So we are seeing -- sequentially, our backlog is relatively flat, but it has been up year-over-year. And I think it's important to note, the backlog reflects the strength of our business, but it is only a data point, reflecting the strength in that market. So just to give a little bit more color, we do take an approach to managing our lead times. We're currently improved our lead times. We have best lead times in the industry right now between 42 to 44 weeks on our bid market. We have a lot of projects in the pipeline that don't show up in the backlog with a lot of our alliance customers. It actually -- it's an advantage to us not to have them in the backlog. So you don't have to take too much risk as it relates to the pricing of steel, et cetera. But overall, I think the most important point is we are seeing unprecedented demand in this market. We are -- I mentioned that the IOUs are planning to spend $1.4 trillion through 2030, which is significantly higher than we've seen just recently. So that's -- which was about $1.1 trillion. So call that about 27% increase in their projections. So going into the year, we were thinking we're going to grow 8% to 10% on our Utility. Well, right now, this year, it's going to be much stronger than that. We're probably going to see growth between mid-teens to high teens in the Utility space. So overall, all indications are this market is robust, we have not seen it like this for decades, and we're very pleased on where we are positioned with our backlog, our lead time and our alliance with our customers.

Christopher Moore

Analyst

Very helpful. And maybe just one on Ag. So maybe can you talk a little bit about rising fertilizer prices, potential impact on pivot demand, not necessarily for '26. It sounds like there could be kind of a lag in demand, but what might be felt in '27? And just how much visibility do you have on that front?

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

So there's not great visibility into 2027. But the way we look at it, fertilizer is an input cost -- significant input cost, and it will have impact on farmers, will put more pressure on their profitability, and they have been under pressure. So at this point, we continue to expect to have a challenging environment in 2026. And we're focused on areas where we could drive farmer profitability. We're supporting our farmers with our aftermarket, our technology, enabling our dealers to ensure they can improve their profitability. And as we know, these markets have strong long-term fundamentals. And as the market will improve, we'll be ready to capitalize.

Operator

Operator

Our next question is from Tomo Sano with JPMorgan.

Tomohiko Sano

Analyst

John, congrats on your new role.

John Schwietz

Analyst

Thank you.

Tomohiko Sano

Analyst

And for North America Utility, could you comment on any changes in pricing or the competitive landscape on pricing power infrastructures? What gives you confidence in your ability to sustain or enhance pricing, especially as competitive dynamics evolve, please?

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

Thank you for the question. The market environment continues to be extremely strong right now. We always focus on value pricing. We are the leader in the market with the highest market share. And we provide the utilities with mission-critical products and solutions supported by our strength in our engineering, our reliability, quality, on-time delivery. And in this environment, there's very strong value in our offering, especially in a constrained environment. And the entire industry has been very disciplined around pricing. So while there will continue to be growth in this area and our competitors will continue to invest, we remain very disciplined, taking pricing leadership and as evident by our Q1 performance, which had significant pricing in our performance pretty much demonstrates that there's no concern regarding pricing in this environment.

Tomohiko Sano

Analyst

And follow-up on Ag margins, have you hold up well despite lower sales. If the sales headwinds persist what structure -- structural mix factors do you see as most critical for sustaining or even expanding margins in this segment, please?

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

Yes. Thank you, Tomo. So as you mentioned, Ag margins did well this quarter. We're pleased with the result at 14.8%. So that was driven, as you know, by favorable pricing and also an improved product mix and regional mix. As we look through the rest of the year, as you mentioned, there are some headwinds. And so if we look at our margins for the rest of the year in Ag, we have the seasonality impact of moving more towards international, less in North America, that will put some pressure on our margins for the rest of the year. Also, the impact of the fixed cost deleverage in our Dubai facility will also add pressure to our margins. So I'd say that we'll -- certainly, this year, we will be in the mid-teens to low teens for margins in Ag this year.

Operator

Operator

Our next question is from Brian Drab with William Blair.

Brian Drab

Analyst

Like Nathan, most of the questions lately have been around the Section 232. So I just wanted to ask one -- maybe the same question just in a little bit different way. But -- you have in the 10-K, I think that there's about $220 million worth of product in the Utility business coming in from Mexico. And I haven't found that 10% figure anywhere. So I'm just curious, is that part of the new structure? Is it stated that it's 10% if you're using melted and poured U.S. steel for finished product coming in from Mexico? Or is that just kind of how your assessment after looking through everything? And if so, given it's 10%, is this -- and you put that on the $220 million or so, so it's an incremental roughly $20 million in costs that you have to absorb?

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

Thank you for the question. So yes, 10% is part of the new regulation, and you're thinking about this the right way. So that's approximately the number from Mexico from our output for Mexico and exports to the United States, that varies year-by-year. As I mentioned earlier about the transition of our supply chain. So -- the goal here is to maximize the U.S. melt and pour steel, and that will reduce our tariff exposure and cost over time. That's what the teams are doing. And that will take some time. But we're making rapid progress in making sure that we adjust that to maximize our U.S. melt and pour steel. That will bring us closer to the incremental 10%.

Brian Drab

Analyst

Okay. But you can't size the incremental cost for us at all. You don't want to quantify that today. I don't want to press you too much on it, but that's what we're looking for?

John Schwietz

Analyst

Yes. So I'd say your general range, how you're thinking about it is approximately right.

Avner Applbaum

Analyst

And I'll just add, right, we're seeing strong growth, right? So that $220 million is going to easily be $250 million. So as we grow and capitalize on the market, well, we'll pay more tariffs. But of course, we make very strong margins out of our plant in Mexico. So no concerns on our end.

Brian Drab

Analyst

Right. Well, and it all just seems like my conclusion at the moment is it is kind of negligible given the size of that business and given the pricing power and given the pricing dynamics across the industry and what you're doing operationally. So -- but thanks for the clarification. On the Utility business, also you mentioned that the price and volume drove the growth. You mentioned in the press release, you listed price first in the description of that strength. Can you just talk about the breakdown of price versus volume driving the business? And then also is the price being supported more just by steel kind of skyrocketing. Or is it -- and secondarily by the market demand?

John Schwietz

Analyst

Okay. So thanks for the question. So if we look at Q1, the 27% increase was driven primarily by price, as you know. It's important to note, though, that volume was an important contributor as well for Q1, that was in the double digits. As we look through the rest of the year, Avner noted mid-teens to upper teens and growth rate expectations for Utility, we expect that, Brian, to be a balance between price and volume for 2026. As it is to your question about the price environment, Avner gave some good comments on what we're seeing in the price environment. To Avner's comments, we are pricing to market. We're constantly testing the top of that market. But yes, some of that is passed through contract pricing with regards to material escalations and then also logistics escalation. So yes, that's a component of it. But as Avner mentioned, we have confidence in the overall pricing environment for Utility.

Operator

Operator

We have reached the end of our question-and-answer session. I will now turn the call over to Renee Campbell for closing remarks.

Renee Campbell

Analyst

Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. A replay of this call will be available for playback on our website and by phone for the next 7 days. We look forward to speaking with you again next quarter.

Operator

Operator

These slides and the accompanying oral discussion contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are based on assumptions made by management considering its experience in the industries where Valmont operates, perceptions of historical trends, current conditions, expected future developments and other relevant factors. It is important to note that these statements are not guarantees of future performance or results. They involve risks, uncertainties, some of which are beyond Valmont's control and assumptions. While management believes these forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, numerous factors could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated. These factors include, among other things, risks described in Valmont's reports to the Securities and Exchange Commission, SEC, the company's actual cash flows and net income, future economic and market circumstances, industry conditions, company performance and financial results, operational efficiencies, availability and price of raw material, availability and market acceptance of new products, product pricing, domestic and international competitive environments, geopolitical risks and actions and policy changes by domestic and foreign governments, including tariffs. The company cautions that any forward-looking statements in this release are made as of its publication date and does not undertake to update these statements, except as required by law. The company's guidance includes certain non-GAAP financial measures, adjusted diluted earnings per share and adjusted effective tax rate presented on a forward-looking basis. These measures are typically calculated by excluding the impact of items such as foreign exchange, acquisitions, divestitures, realignment or restructuring expenses, goodwill or intangible asset impairment, changes in tax law, change in redemption value of redeemable noncontrolling interests and other nonrecurring items. Reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are not provided, as the company cannot do so without unreasonable effort due to the inherent uncertainty and difficulty in predicting the timing and financial impact of such items. For the same reasons, the company cannot assess the likely significance of unavailable information, which could be material to future results.