NASDAQ:SHIM Shimmick Q3 2025 Earnings Report $3.83 +0.13 (+3.51%) As of 05/26/2026 04:00 PM Eastern ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Shimmick EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.01Consensus EPS -$0.04Beat/MissBeat by +$0.03One Year Ago EPSN/AShimmick Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$141.92 millionExpected Revenue$120.20 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$21.72 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AShimmick Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2025Date11/13/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, November 13, 2025Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsShimmick's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Thursday, August 13, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, August 14, 2026 at 4:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Shimmick Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 13, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Q3 revenue was $142 million with a $11 million gross margin and adjusted EBITDA of $4 million, marking the first positive adjusted EBITDA this year and evidence management says the turnaround is progressing. Positive Sentiment: Backlog rose by over $100 million sequential to $754 million, book‑to‑burn was 1.7, and management cites a >$9 billion 12‑month bidding pipeline plus $169 million of preferred‑bidder opportunities — boosting near‑term revenue visibility. Negative Sentiment: Legacy non‑core projects remain a drag: non‑core revenue fell to $35 million in Q3 but is now expected to be ~20% of full‑year 2025 revenue (vs. prior ~10% estimate) with negative margins, pressuring consolidated margins and pushing adjusted EBITDA toward the low end of the $5–$15M guidance range. Positive Sentiment: Management reports $48 million total liquidity (cash $18M + $30M availability) and says operational changes are translating to higher margins on Shimmick projects (management cited ~67% YoY margin expansion), supporting confidence in 2026 outlook. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallShimmick Q3 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to Shimmick's Third Quarter 2025 financial results. All participants will be in a listen-only mode until the question-and-answer session begins. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. If you have any objections, please disconnect at this time. I would now like to turn the call over to the Investor Relations team. Operator00:00:19Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us on today's conference call to discuss Shimmick's third quarter 2025 results. Slides for today's presentation are available on our Investor Relations section of our website, www.shimmick.com. During this call, management will make forward-looking statements based on current expectations and assumptions, which are subject to risk and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from our forward-looking statements if any of our key assumptions are incorrect. We identify the principal risk and uncertainties that may affect our performance in our reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which can also be found on our Investor Relations website. We do not undertake a duty to update any forward-looking statements. Today's presentation also includes references to non-GAAP financial measures. Operator00:01:11You should refer to the information contained in the company's Third Quarter Press Release for definitional information and reconciliations of historical non-GAAP measures to comparable GAAP financial measures. With that, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Ural Yal, Shimmick's CEO. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:01:30Good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us on today's call. I'm joined by Todd Yoder, Shimmick's CFO. I'm going to kick it off with our results for the third quarter and speak to our expectations for the remainder of 2025 and for an exciting 2026. Before I go there, I would like to reiterate our go-forward strategy, which has been consistent since I joined the company. There are three major components to our strategy: grow the top line through bidding and winning strategic new business that play into our strengths and market differentiators that will drive consistent margins; complete non-core projects that have impacted our profitability over the last two years; and implement operational improvements that build on our existing talent and result in more predictable, consistent margins and lower G&A as a percentage of revenue. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:02:18We are confident that our disciplined execution of the strategy is going to allow us to have a company that performs at or above the industry year after year. I am pleased to report that we are making progress. Moving to our financial results, starting with revenue, for the third quarter of 2025, we delivered revenue of $142 million with a gross margin of $11 million and an Adjusted EBITDA of $4 million. As I have mentioned over the last few quarters, the majority of our current business consists of our core Shimmick projects, those we have won since becoming independent from our previous ownership. The remainder consists of non-core projects, which were awarded prior to that transition, but represents the types of projects we no longer pursue. Throughout 2025, we have been making progress towards replacing more of these non-core projects with new Shimmick projects as we complete them. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:03:08Now, of the third quarter revenue, over 75% came from Shimmick projects, with a revenue of $107 million, representing a 6% increase Year-over-Year. We also expanded our gross margin on Shimmick projects from prior years' third quarter by 67% on the continued operational improvements we've implemented this year. We expect our core business to continue to generate higher margins as we continue to build our backlog. Our non-core projects' revenue was $35 million, a reduction of $30 million from the same quarter last year, reflecting our continued progress with those projects. We achieved positive Adjusted EBITDA for the first time this year and for the first time since the same period in 2024, so we can clearly see our strategy come to fruition in our financials. We've also maintained a strong liquidity position in the third quarter, finishing the quarter with a total liquidity of $48 million. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:04:03The momentum we're seeing is a direct outcome of the strategic shift we implemented earlier this year, which focused on pursuing projects that align closely with our strengths, deepening client partnerships to drive superior project outcomes, and reinforcing operational discipline to boost both execution and employee engagement. Looking ahead, we're particularly encouraged by the continued strength in market conditions and our backlog growth, which I'll touch on next. We continue to see a large and expanding addressable market, particularly in critical infrastructure segments where our expertise aligns closely with long-term national priorities. In September, and then in October again, we achieved $1 billion in bidding volumes, a clear indication that our pipeline remains both active and robust. Our 12-month bidding outlook stands at over $9 billion, demonstrating our disciplined pursuit strategy but also the favorable nature of the market conditions. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:05:01Water and Electrical projects remain the most compelling opportunities, driven by ongoing investment in infrastructure, in turn driven by technology, population patterns, and the ever-growing need for clean water. Given our strong presence and expertise in water and existing and growing electrical capabilities, we expect to see more of our backlog shifting towards these two sectors over the next couple of quarters. Within that, we're seeing notable success and increasing opportunities in the Texas water market, where significant funding, population growth, and infrastructure needs are creating a strong demand for our services. Our focused approach and our resources have positioned us to capture a growing share of these opportunities. We view the West Coast and Texas as a key growth engine within our broader water strategy, and the momentum we're seeing there reinforces our confidence in the scale and durability of this market. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:05:53We're also seeing strong momentum within our electrical segment, particularly across manufacturing and data center markets. Bidding activity in these areas has been exceptionally strong, reflecting continued investment in large-scale industrial and technology infrastructure. It's no secret that investments in mission-critical infrastructure are continuing at a fast pace across the country, and we're seeing more and more of our pipeline consisting of opportunities in this market sector. We're actively pursuing a number of high-quality opportunities in this space, and our teams are maintaining discipline to ensure we target the right projects with the right risk profiles. Given the strength of the pipeline and the volume of active bids, the outlook for the fourth quarter and the first quarter of next year is shaping up to be promising. All of this activity reinforces the strength and diversification of our end markets and positions us well as we move into 2026. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:06:45I'm pleased to share that our transformation is clearly hitting its stride. Over the past few quarters, we've seen meaningful progress in both the pace and the quality of our execution, and that progress is now shaping our results. We are starting to see the new Shimmick come to fruition. We achieved a book-to-burn ratio of 1.7 in the third quarter, a significant improvement from last quarter, and for the first time, we exceeded 1.0 in two years. During past quarters, I spoke about investments we're making in the sales side of the business, focusing on our core strengths while expanding our capacity to bid and win work consistently. This healthy backlog growth is a direct result of our strategy and is designed to fuel our growth into 2026. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:07:29As a result, in the third quarter, we grew our backlog by over $100 million, or 15% sequentially, and now it sits at $754 million as of October 3, 2025. To highlight a few of the project awards that were added to our backlog in the third quarter are the $116 million City of Modesto River Trunk Pump Station and the $51 million Belota Weir Modifications projects. Both of these projects are located in California and are designed to improve water quality for the local communities, shore up flood resilience, and maintain environmental stewardship. Additionally, we've been awarded contracts worth $60 million that added to our backlog in October. The $30 million City of Santa Monica Pier Bridge replacement that restores a historic structure along the Los Angeles shoreline and reflects our efforts to support the accelerating efforts to prepare the local infrastructure for the Upcoming 2028 LA Olympics. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:08:28We see a lot more of the Olympics-related opportunities as the preparations ramp up with various projects already in our pipeline throughout the region. The $30 million Port of Seattle Thermal 18 Shore Power Project is an electrical project that improves operational efficiencies at the port facilities while reducing carbon emissions. We have performed similar projects for other ports along the West Coast, and we expect more of these projects as the ports continue their electrification journeys. Lastly, after the third quarter concluded, we've been selected as preferred bidder on projects totaling $169 million, with projects that are predominantly in our core sectors of water and electrical construction. We are currently negotiating these contracts or waiting for awards from clients, which we expect to happen in the fourth quarter. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:09:20The steady increase in backlog provides greater visibility into future revenue and positions us well for continued growth as we move into 2026. All of this gives us confidence that the actions we've taken to strengthen the business are working. We are competing more effectively, delivering for our customers, and building a strong foundation for sustainable long-term performance. As we move forward, our focus remains on maintaining this momentum, executing with discipline, converting backlog efficiently, and continuing to drive consistent, profitable growth. Looking ahead, we feel confident about the trajectory we're on. We're seeing forward momentum in our business, and we will get stronger as we continue to capitalize on favorable market conditions and put the non-core work behind us. We will consistently execute our three-pronged strategy to achieve a growing, profitable, and dependable Shimmick in 2026 and in the future. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:10:16With that, I'd like to turn to Todd, who will review our financials in more detail. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:10:21Thank you, Ural, and thank you to all of you for joining us today. We're excited to share our third quarter results that really underscore our discipline and execution and operational improvements across the business. Before we jump into the numbers, I want to thank all of the talented men and women across Shimmick who continue to make it happen every day. The progress we've made so far this year would not be possible without your commitment and contributions. With that, let's jump into the third quarter results. As a reminder, all comparisons made today will be on a Year-over-Year basis as compared to the same period in 2024, unless otherwise noted. Total revenue for the third quarter of 2025 was $142 million, a decrease of 15% as compared to $166 million for the third quarter of 2024. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:11:22The Year-over-Year decrease was primarily the result of a one-time favorable claim settlement on our GGB project that contributed $31 million to revenue in the third quarter of 2024. Excluding this one-time GGB impact, our third quarter total revenue grew 5% Year-over-Year on a like-for-like basis. Shimmick project revenue for the third quarter of 2025 was $107 million, up 5% compared to $101 million last year. The net increase in Shimmick revenue was driven by $25 million of revenue from new projects ramping up, partially offset by $19 million impact from projects that are winding down and experience lower burn during the quarter. Non-core project revenue for the third quarter of 2025 was $35 million, a decrease of 46% as compared to $65 million last year. The decrease as compared to the prior year period was driven by the favorable GGB claim settlement that I mentioned earlier. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:12:41Gross margin for the third quarter of 2025 was $11 million, down $1 million compared to the gross margin of $12 million for the third quarter of 2024. The $1 million decrease was driven by the one-time GGB claim settlement, which contributed $11 million to gross margin in the third quarter of 2024. Excluding the GGB settlement impact, the third quarter of 2025 gross margin was $10 million higher on a Year-over-Year like-for-like basis. Gross margin recognized on Shimmick projects was $10 million, up 61% as compared to $6 million for the third quarter of 2024. The $4 million increase in gross margin was driven by $8 million of gross margin from new projects ramping up, partially offset by a $4 million decrease in gross margin from those projects winding down and that experienced lower burn during the period. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:13:44Gross margin recognized on non-core projects was $1 million for the third quarter of 2025, as compared to $6 million for the third quarter of 2024. The $5 million decrease was driven by the favorable GGB claim settlement that occurred in the third quarter of 2024. As a reminder, these non-core projects continue to wind down to completion, so no further gross margin will be recognized. In some cases, there may be additional costs associated with these projects, which are recognized in the period identified. G&A expense for the third quarter of 2025 was $14 million, down 5%, or nearly $1 million as compared to the second quarter of 2025. The favorable impact was driven by the continued execution of our transformation strategy. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:14:41We reported a net loss for the quarter of $4 million as compared to a net loss of $2 million for the third quarter of 2024. The $2 million difference was driven by gain on the sale of assets of $17 million in the third quarter of 2024, a decrease of $1 million in both gross margin and earnings from unconsolidated joint ventures. This was offset by the ERP Asset impairment and associated costs of $16 million taken in the third quarter of 2024, and an increase in other income and expense of $1 million. Adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter of 2025 was $4 million, as compared to Adjusted EBITDA of $30 million in the third quarter of 2024. The $30 million was driven by the one-time favorable GGB project settlement, and the ERP impairment was an add-back for the Q3 2024. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:15:48Turning to the balance sheet, unrestricted cash and cash equivalents at the end of the quarter totaled $18 million, and availability under our credit agreements totaled $30 million, resulting in total liquidity of $48 million. We feel comfortable that our liquidity ending the third quarter provides the capital needed to continue executing on our strategic and operational priorities. We booked new awards of $190 million during the third quarter and achieved a book-to-burn ratio of 1.7 times. At the end of the quarter, our total backlog was $754 million, which is a sequential increase of over $100 million from the second quarter of 2025. Our backlog mix continues to improve, with Shimmick projects now representing 86% of our total backlog to end the quarter. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:16:47We are fully committed to winning the right way, one of the three pillars that define our growth strategy of building sustainable, risk-balanced backlog, which centers around a disciplined approach to how we bid work, what work we bid, all while remaining focused on risk-balanced work that aligns with our strong self-perform capabilities. In our initial full-year 2025 guidance, we anticipated non-core projects would be approximately 10% of our total revenue, and we now expect non-core project burn to come in closer to 20% of our total revenue for the full year 2025, which drives an unfavorable mix impact to our total gross margin, as I described on our call last quarter. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:17:41Despite this negative mix impact, we remain confident in achieving our full-year 2025 guidance and anticipate the full-year revenue to land in the higher end of the provided range and Adjusted EBITDA to land toward the lower end of the provided range. For the full year 2025, we reaffirm our guidance communicated last quarter and expect to finish the year with Shimmick project revenue in the $405-$415 million range, with overall gross margin between 9%-12%. Non-core project revenue in the range of $80-$90 million, with gross margin between negative 15% and negative 5%, and consolidated adjusted EBITDA between $5-$15 million for the full year. With that, I thank you all for joining us on our call today and for your continued interest in Shimmick. Now back to Ural. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:18:45We are happy to report results from another quarter that advanced Shimmick towards the goals we set. We now have more capability than ever to bid and win more work and have the processes in place to ensure we are bidding projects that are right for us that will drive consistent profits. As a result, our backlog is growing for the first time in a while, and we see an ever-growing pipeline of opportunities, especially in the water and electrical fields. As 2025 comes to a close, we will continue to target backlog growth and strong margins achieved by healthy bidding activity, completion of non-core projects, and consistent execution driven by continuous operational improvements. As always, I want to thank the entire Shimmick team, our clients, and our industry partners for their support in our journey to create the Shimmick of the future. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:19:33Operator, you may now open the line for questions. Operator00:19:37We will now move to our question and answer session. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please click on the raise hand button, which can be found on the black bar at the bottom of your screen. You may remove yourself from the queue at any time by lowering your hand. When it is your turn, you'll receive a message on your screen asking to be promoted to a panelist. Please accept, wait a moment, and once you've been promoted, you'll hear your name called, and you may unmute your video and audio and ask your question. We'll pause a moment to assemble the queue. Your first question comes from the line of Aaron Spychalla from Craig Hallum Capital Group. Please unmute your audio and your video and ask your question. Aaron is just connecting. Will be one moment. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:20:31Yeah, hi, Ural and Todd. Thanks for taking the questions. First, on Axia, can you just kind of talk about how much of the pipeline or backlog that represents today and just how you're expecting growth there in the coming quarters, maybe what end markets are driving that, and just where you think that business can go as we look out for the next couple of years? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:20:54Yeah, that's a great question. Good to see you, Aaron. Yeah, so right now represents about 15-16% ish percentage, like the mid-teens, a little bit higher maybe. It represents a growing percentage of what we're bidding on kind of on a monthly basis. The markets generally are, we're continuing to focus on, we're seeing a lot of electrification-related work. We see a lot of industrial electrical work, both on water treatment plants and in other manufacturing-type facilities. We're starting to really bid and price data center and mission-critical type projects across the board on the electrical side. I see a growth there because it's representing a lot higher volume of the bids that we're putting in. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:21:49I think we're going to start to see an improvement on or an increase on the percentage on the backlog, and then that will turn into the top line over time. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:22:02Understood. And then maybe on data centers, just do you have some projects there? Maybe what markets are you seeing activity in and any kind of sizing and margin profile of those as we go with those? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:22:19Yeah. Texas, I talked about Texas. Texas has quite a few of those. We're actively bidding in Texas. We're bidding in the Tennessee, Georgia area. We're kind of following our kind of trusted clients to where those projects are at and trying to fill the needs that they have. There's a big shortage, and there's a lot of work in that arena right now. We're pursuing multiple opportunities and hope to be successful on some of them and then start getting that into the backlog. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:22:57Understood. Maybe just last question on cash flow. Can you talk about some of the dynamics there in the quarter and maybe how you see that trending in the coming quarters and just longer term as we get through these legacy projects? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:23:13Yeah. I'll start and turn over to Todd as well. Yeah, it ebbs and flows to some extent. Yes, we have a negative impact from the non-core legacy projects as we continue to get through those. We're still thinking we're going to be done at the end of 2026. The impact will, to some extent, continue at a decreasing level. Part of the positive is that as we get through and increase our backlog, and that translates into the top line, we're going to be able to generate cash that kind of offsets that impact. Over time, we expect to be in a better and better position into 2026. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:24:06Yeah, and I think you pretty much covered it. $48 million of liquidity ending the second quarter. We're comfortable with that position. I mean, there's a lot of puts and takes that go into it, the business being lumpy, as you know. Advance payments, retention collection, claims, changes in AP. There's a lot of noise in there, but I want to stay away from forecasting liquidity, but we're comfortable where we are. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:24:42Understood. Thanks for taking the questions. I'll turn it over. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:24:46Thanks, Aaron. Operator00:24:49Our next question comes from the line of Jerry Sweeney from Roth. Please unmute your audio and video and ask your question. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:24:58Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my call video. I got disconnected when I was jumping on to be elevated as a panelist. Did Aaron talk about guidance? Specifically, you're, I think, aiming for the lower end of the $5 million-$15 million, which sort of implies a pretty strong fourth quarter, which does have some seasonality involved. I wanted to see if we could unpack that a little bit in terms of what gives you confidence to hit the lower end. Is it just increasing margins in the backlog, increasing backlog in total, and just overall quality of work or what have you? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:25:42Yeah, that's a great question. I think generally the bottom line of that is, yes, I agree. It shows a strong fourth quarter. It's largely related to the new work starting to really kick in, and those are obviously higher margin work. It's starting to really offset the loss-generating non-core projects much better as we go through each quarter. I think that's where we're starting to see better results. Even with the seasonality, we expect for those newer projects that are driving higher margins to offset the lower margin work a lot better as we go forward. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:26:30Got it. You have talked a little bit about water and electrical being strong markets, but I think one of your strategies was to do more negotiated work and less bidding work. Just curious as to how that is coming along. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:26:49It's coming along well. As far as our bidding volume goes, negotiated work is starting to become a lot bigger portion of that as we go forward as well. We are hoping to—we have a couple of projects that are already in negotiation at the moment. We are hoping to see those go into backlog as well, and we will report on those as we go forward. Also, we are just looking at the water and the electrical market, especially the electrical market. A lot more of those are already delivered through negotiated contracts. Even when we are in a subcontractor, specialty sub position, it is still negotiated for the sub as well as the GC there. I think the more electrical we get, that number is going to start to go up as well. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:27:41I think it's a multi-year process to transition more to negotiated work, correct? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:27:46Yeah. 2027 is where we're going to really see benefits out of that effort. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:27:52Do you target a certain percentage of your backlog to be negotiated work or any type of, I don't want to say guidance, but thought on where it potentially could fall out? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:28:06Our goal is to get to 50%. I think that's a really good mix where you're really risk-balanced at that point. You always want to have some of the fixed price work, which drives higher revenues and faster burns, but you also want to balance that off with the lower risk negotiated contracts. If you can get to the 50/50 range, I think that's a very healthy place to be. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:28:29Got it. Then maybe one more from me. The non-Shimmick work, I mean, had positive gross margins. Was that just a function of just where the quarter fell out, or is that work? Do you have a little bit more visibility on that work, and can some of those margins stay close to flat to slightly positive on a go forward basis? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:28:55Yeah. I mean, yeah. So it's a couple of things where we're obviously getting through them. And as you get to the ends of those projects, there's always some scope growth that plays into that, the loose ends to tie in and finishing out the contract. Some of that's related to kind of closing out those issues and negotiating additional revenue for that scope growth with the clients. That's what drives it. We still continue. I think we're going to try to keep it as even as we possibly can, but we still have some work to do throughout 2026 to get those couple of projects done. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:29:36Okay. I mean, it was a nice positive surprise. Anyhow, that's it for me. I appreciate it. Thanks a lot. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:29:43Thank you, Jerry. Operator00:29:46There are no more questions at this time. I'd now like to turn the call over to Ural for closing remarks. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:29:54Thank you. Again, we're pleased to report another consistent quarter that Aligns with our plans, aligns with our strategic planning. We're looking forward to the next quarter, to the end of the year, as well as a bright 2026 for Shimmick. Thank you all for joining.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesHead of Investor RelationsTodd YoderEVP and CFOUral YalCEOAnalystsJerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital PartnersAaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital GroupPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly Report(10-Q) Shimmick Earnings HeadlinesShimmick Corporation Completes Public Equity Offering for CapitalMay 26 at 5:31 PM | tipranks.comShimmick Corporation Successfully Closes Public Offering of 4,289,500 Shares, Raising Approximately $14 MillionMay 26 at 4:30 PM | quiverquant.comQNobody Understands Why Trump Is Invading Iran (here’s the answer)Most investors are reacting to the Iran strikes without understanding the underlying motive driving the decision. Addison Wiggin, Founder of Grey Swan Investment Fraternity, says there is a hidden reason behind the bombing - and knowing it could change how you position your money right now. | Banyan Hill Publishing (Ad)Shimmick Corporation Announces Closing of Underwritten Public Offering of Common StockMay 26 at 4:15 PM | globenewswire.comShimmick stock tumbles on discounted share offeringMay 22, 2026 | investing.comShimmick Corporation Prices $13.1 Million Public Offering of Common StockMay 22, 2026 | quiverquant.comQSee More Shimmick Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Shimmick? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Shimmick and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About ShimmickShimmick (NASDAQ:SHIM) provides water and other critical infrastructure solutions in the United States. The company undertakes water and wastewater treatment infrastructure; water storage and conveyance, including dams, levees, flood control systems, pump stations, and coastal protection infrastructure; and mass transit, bridges, and military infrastructure projects. It serves federal, state, and local governments. The company was formerly known as SCCI National Holdings, Inc. and changed its name to Shimmick Corporation in September 2023. Shimmick Corporation was founded in 1990 and is headquartered in Irvine, California. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to Shimmick's Third Quarter 2025 financial results. All participants will be in a listen-only mode until the question-and-answer session begins. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. If you have any objections, please disconnect at this time. I would now like to turn the call over to the Investor Relations team. Operator00:00:19Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us on today's conference call to discuss Shimmick's third quarter 2025 results. Slides for today's presentation are available on our Investor Relations section of our website, www.shimmick.com. During this call, management will make forward-looking statements based on current expectations and assumptions, which are subject to risk and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from our forward-looking statements if any of our key assumptions are incorrect. We identify the principal risk and uncertainties that may affect our performance in our reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which can also be found on our Investor Relations website. We do not undertake a duty to update any forward-looking statements. Today's presentation also includes references to non-GAAP financial measures. Operator00:01:11You should refer to the information contained in the company's Third Quarter Press Release for definitional information and reconciliations of historical non-GAAP measures to comparable GAAP financial measures. With that, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Ural Yal, Shimmick's CEO. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:01:30Good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us on today's call. I'm joined by Todd Yoder, Shimmick's CFO. I'm going to kick it off with our results for the third quarter and speak to our expectations for the remainder of 2025 and for an exciting 2026. Before I go there, I would like to reiterate our go-forward strategy, which has been consistent since I joined the company. There are three major components to our strategy: grow the top line through bidding and winning strategic new business that play into our strengths and market differentiators that will drive consistent margins; complete non-core projects that have impacted our profitability over the last two years; and implement operational improvements that build on our existing talent and result in more predictable, consistent margins and lower G&A as a percentage of revenue. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:02:18We are confident that our disciplined execution of the strategy is going to allow us to have a company that performs at or above the industry year after year. I am pleased to report that we are making progress. Moving to our financial results, starting with revenue, for the third quarter of 2025, we delivered revenue of $142 million with a gross margin of $11 million and an Adjusted EBITDA of $4 million. As I have mentioned over the last few quarters, the majority of our current business consists of our core Shimmick projects, those we have won since becoming independent from our previous ownership. The remainder consists of non-core projects, which were awarded prior to that transition, but represents the types of projects we no longer pursue. Throughout 2025, we have been making progress towards replacing more of these non-core projects with new Shimmick projects as we complete them. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:03:08Now, of the third quarter revenue, over 75% came from Shimmick projects, with a revenue of $107 million, representing a 6% increase Year-over-Year. We also expanded our gross margin on Shimmick projects from prior years' third quarter by 67% on the continued operational improvements we've implemented this year. We expect our core business to continue to generate higher margins as we continue to build our backlog. Our non-core projects' revenue was $35 million, a reduction of $30 million from the same quarter last year, reflecting our continued progress with those projects. We achieved positive Adjusted EBITDA for the first time this year and for the first time since the same period in 2024, so we can clearly see our strategy come to fruition in our financials. We've also maintained a strong liquidity position in the third quarter, finishing the quarter with a total liquidity of $48 million. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:04:03The momentum we're seeing is a direct outcome of the strategic shift we implemented earlier this year, which focused on pursuing projects that align closely with our strengths, deepening client partnerships to drive superior project outcomes, and reinforcing operational discipline to boost both execution and employee engagement. Looking ahead, we're particularly encouraged by the continued strength in market conditions and our backlog growth, which I'll touch on next. We continue to see a large and expanding addressable market, particularly in critical infrastructure segments where our expertise aligns closely with long-term national priorities. In September, and then in October again, we achieved $1 billion in bidding volumes, a clear indication that our pipeline remains both active and robust. Our 12-month bidding outlook stands at over $9 billion, demonstrating our disciplined pursuit strategy but also the favorable nature of the market conditions. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:05:01Water and Electrical projects remain the most compelling opportunities, driven by ongoing investment in infrastructure, in turn driven by technology, population patterns, and the ever-growing need for clean water. Given our strong presence and expertise in water and existing and growing electrical capabilities, we expect to see more of our backlog shifting towards these two sectors over the next couple of quarters. Within that, we're seeing notable success and increasing opportunities in the Texas water market, where significant funding, population growth, and infrastructure needs are creating a strong demand for our services. Our focused approach and our resources have positioned us to capture a growing share of these opportunities. We view the West Coast and Texas as a key growth engine within our broader water strategy, and the momentum we're seeing there reinforces our confidence in the scale and durability of this market. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:05:53We're also seeing strong momentum within our electrical segment, particularly across manufacturing and data center markets. Bidding activity in these areas has been exceptionally strong, reflecting continued investment in large-scale industrial and technology infrastructure. It's no secret that investments in mission-critical infrastructure are continuing at a fast pace across the country, and we're seeing more and more of our pipeline consisting of opportunities in this market sector. We're actively pursuing a number of high-quality opportunities in this space, and our teams are maintaining discipline to ensure we target the right projects with the right risk profiles. Given the strength of the pipeline and the volume of active bids, the outlook for the fourth quarter and the first quarter of next year is shaping up to be promising. All of this activity reinforces the strength and diversification of our end markets and positions us well as we move into 2026. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:06:45I'm pleased to share that our transformation is clearly hitting its stride. Over the past few quarters, we've seen meaningful progress in both the pace and the quality of our execution, and that progress is now shaping our results. We are starting to see the new Shimmick come to fruition. We achieved a book-to-burn ratio of 1.7 in the third quarter, a significant improvement from last quarter, and for the first time, we exceeded 1.0 in two years. During past quarters, I spoke about investments we're making in the sales side of the business, focusing on our core strengths while expanding our capacity to bid and win work consistently. This healthy backlog growth is a direct result of our strategy and is designed to fuel our growth into 2026. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:07:29As a result, in the third quarter, we grew our backlog by over $100 million, or 15% sequentially, and now it sits at $754 million as of October 3, 2025. To highlight a few of the project awards that were added to our backlog in the third quarter are the $116 million City of Modesto River Trunk Pump Station and the $51 million Belota Weir Modifications projects. Both of these projects are located in California and are designed to improve water quality for the local communities, shore up flood resilience, and maintain environmental stewardship. Additionally, we've been awarded contracts worth $60 million that added to our backlog in October. The $30 million City of Santa Monica Pier Bridge replacement that restores a historic structure along the Los Angeles shoreline and reflects our efforts to support the accelerating efforts to prepare the local infrastructure for the Upcoming 2028 LA Olympics. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:08:28We see a lot more of the Olympics-related opportunities as the preparations ramp up with various projects already in our pipeline throughout the region. The $30 million Port of Seattle Thermal 18 Shore Power Project is an electrical project that improves operational efficiencies at the port facilities while reducing carbon emissions. We have performed similar projects for other ports along the West Coast, and we expect more of these projects as the ports continue their electrification journeys. Lastly, after the third quarter concluded, we've been selected as preferred bidder on projects totaling $169 million, with projects that are predominantly in our core sectors of water and electrical construction. We are currently negotiating these contracts or waiting for awards from clients, which we expect to happen in the fourth quarter. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:09:20The steady increase in backlog provides greater visibility into future revenue and positions us well for continued growth as we move into 2026. All of this gives us confidence that the actions we've taken to strengthen the business are working. We are competing more effectively, delivering for our customers, and building a strong foundation for sustainable long-term performance. As we move forward, our focus remains on maintaining this momentum, executing with discipline, converting backlog efficiently, and continuing to drive consistent, profitable growth. Looking ahead, we feel confident about the trajectory we're on. We're seeing forward momentum in our business, and we will get stronger as we continue to capitalize on favorable market conditions and put the non-core work behind us. We will consistently execute our three-pronged strategy to achieve a growing, profitable, and dependable Shimmick in 2026 and in the future. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:10:16With that, I'd like to turn to Todd, who will review our financials in more detail. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:10:21Thank you, Ural, and thank you to all of you for joining us today. We're excited to share our third quarter results that really underscore our discipline and execution and operational improvements across the business. Before we jump into the numbers, I want to thank all of the talented men and women across Shimmick who continue to make it happen every day. The progress we've made so far this year would not be possible without your commitment and contributions. With that, let's jump into the third quarter results. As a reminder, all comparisons made today will be on a Year-over-Year basis as compared to the same period in 2024, unless otherwise noted. Total revenue for the third quarter of 2025 was $142 million, a decrease of 15% as compared to $166 million for the third quarter of 2024. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:11:22The Year-over-Year decrease was primarily the result of a one-time favorable claim settlement on our GGB project that contributed $31 million to revenue in the third quarter of 2024. Excluding this one-time GGB impact, our third quarter total revenue grew 5% Year-over-Year on a like-for-like basis. Shimmick project revenue for the third quarter of 2025 was $107 million, up 5% compared to $101 million last year. The net increase in Shimmick revenue was driven by $25 million of revenue from new projects ramping up, partially offset by $19 million impact from projects that are winding down and experience lower burn during the quarter. Non-core project revenue for the third quarter of 2025 was $35 million, a decrease of 46% as compared to $65 million last year. The decrease as compared to the prior year period was driven by the favorable GGB claim settlement that I mentioned earlier. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:12:41Gross margin for the third quarter of 2025 was $11 million, down $1 million compared to the gross margin of $12 million for the third quarter of 2024. The $1 million decrease was driven by the one-time GGB claim settlement, which contributed $11 million to gross margin in the third quarter of 2024. Excluding the GGB settlement impact, the third quarter of 2025 gross margin was $10 million higher on a Year-over-Year like-for-like basis. Gross margin recognized on Shimmick projects was $10 million, up 61% as compared to $6 million for the third quarter of 2024. The $4 million increase in gross margin was driven by $8 million of gross margin from new projects ramping up, partially offset by a $4 million decrease in gross margin from those projects winding down and that experienced lower burn during the period. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:13:44Gross margin recognized on non-core projects was $1 million for the third quarter of 2025, as compared to $6 million for the third quarter of 2024. The $5 million decrease was driven by the favorable GGB claim settlement that occurred in the third quarter of 2024. As a reminder, these non-core projects continue to wind down to completion, so no further gross margin will be recognized. In some cases, there may be additional costs associated with these projects, which are recognized in the period identified. G&A expense for the third quarter of 2025 was $14 million, down 5%, or nearly $1 million as compared to the second quarter of 2025. The favorable impact was driven by the continued execution of our transformation strategy. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:14:41We reported a net loss for the quarter of $4 million as compared to a net loss of $2 million for the third quarter of 2024. The $2 million difference was driven by gain on the sale of assets of $17 million in the third quarter of 2024, a decrease of $1 million in both gross margin and earnings from unconsolidated joint ventures. This was offset by the ERP Asset impairment and associated costs of $16 million taken in the third quarter of 2024, and an increase in other income and expense of $1 million. Adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter of 2025 was $4 million, as compared to Adjusted EBITDA of $30 million in the third quarter of 2024. The $30 million was driven by the one-time favorable GGB project settlement, and the ERP impairment was an add-back for the Q3 2024. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:15:48Turning to the balance sheet, unrestricted cash and cash equivalents at the end of the quarter totaled $18 million, and availability under our credit agreements totaled $30 million, resulting in total liquidity of $48 million. We feel comfortable that our liquidity ending the third quarter provides the capital needed to continue executing on our strategic and operational priorities. We booked new awards of $190 million during the third quarter and achieved a book-to-burn ratio of 1.7 times. At the end of the quarter, our total backlog was $754 million, which is a sequential increase of over $100 million from the second quarter of 2025. Our backlog mix continues to improve, with Shimmick projects now representing 86% of our total backlog to end the quarter. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:16:47We are fully committed to winning the right way, one of the three pillars that define our growth strategy of building sustainable, risk-balanced backlog, which centers around a disciplined approach to how we bid work, what work we bid, all while remaining focused on risk-balanced work that aligns with our strong self-perform capabilities. In our initial full-year 2025 guidance, we anticipated non-core projects would be approximately 10% of our total revenue, and we now expect non-core project burn to come in closer to 20% of our total revenue for the full year 2025, which drives an unfavorable mix impact to our total gross margin, as I described on our call last quarter. Todd YoderEVP and CFO at Shimmick Corporation00:17:41Despite this negative mix impact, we remain confident in achieving our full-year 2025 guidance and anticipate the full-year revenue to land in the higher end of the provided range and Adjusted EBITDA to land toward the lower end of the provided range. For the full year 2025, we reaffirm our guidance communicated last quarter and expect to finish the year with Shimmick project revenue in the $405-$415 million range, with overall gross margin between 9%-12%. Non-core project revenue in the range of $80-$90 million, with gross margin between negative 15% and negative 5%, and consolidated adjusted EBITDA between $5-$15 million for the full year. With that, I thank you all for joining us on our call today and for your continued interest in Shimmick. Now back to Ural. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:18:45We are happy to report results from another quarter that advanced Shimmick towards the goals we set. We now have more capability than ever to bid and win more work and have the processes in place to ensure we are bidding projects that are right for us that will drive consistent profits. As a result, our backlog is growing for the first time in a while, and we see an ever-growing pipeline of opportunities, especially in the water and electrical fields. As 2025 comes to a close, we will continue to target backlog growth and strong margins achieved by healthy bidding activity, completion of non-core projects, and consistent execution driven by continuous operational improvements. As always, I want to thank the entire Shimmick team, our clients, and our industry partners for their support in our journey to create the Shimmick of the future. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:19:33Operator, you may now open the line for questions. Operator00:19:37We will now move to our question and answer session. At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please click on the raise hand button, which can be found on the black bar at the bottom of your screen. You may remove yourself from the queue at any time by lowering your hand. When it is your turn, you'll receive a message on your screen asking to be promoted to a panelist. Please accept, wait a moment, and once you've been promoted, you'll hear your name called, and you may unmute your video and audio and ask your question. We'll pause a moment to assemble the queue. Your first question comes from the line of Aaron Spychalla from Craig Hallum Capital Group. Please unmute your audio and your video and ask your question. Aaron is just connecting. Will be one moment. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:20:31Yeah, hi, Ural and Todd. Thanks for taking the questions. First, on Axia, can you just kind of talk about how much of the pipeline or backlog that represents today and just how you're expecting growth there in the coming quarters, maybe what end markets are driving that, and just where you think that business can go as we look out for the next couple of years? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:20:54Yeah, that's a great question. Good to see you, Aaron. Yeah, so right now represents about 15-16% ish percentage, like the mid-teens, a little bit higher maybe. It represents a growing percentage of what we're bidding on kind of on a monthly basis. The markets generally are, we're continuing to focus on, we're seeing a lot of electrification-related work. We see a lot of industrial electrical work, both on water treatment plants and in other manufacturing-type facilities. We're starting to really bid and price data center and mission-critical type projects across the board on the electrical side. I see a growth there because it's representing a lot higher volume of the bids that we're putting in. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:21:49I think we're going to start to see an improvement on or an increase on the percentage on the backlog, and then that will turn into the top line over time. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:22:02Understood. And then maybe on data centers, just do you have some projects there? Maybe what markets are you seeing activity in and any kind of sizing and margin profile of those as we go with those? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:22:19Yeah. Texas, I talked about Texas. Texas has quite a few of those. We're actively bidding in Texas. We're bidding in the Tennessee, Georgia area. We're kind of following our kind of trusted clients to where those projects are at and trying to fill the needs that they have. There's a big shortage, and there's a lot of work in that arena right now. We're pursuing multiple opportunities and hope to be successful on some of them and then start getting that into the backlog. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:22:57Understood. Maybe just last question on cash flow. Can you talk about some of the dynamics there in the quarter and maybe how you see that trending in the coming quarters and just longer term as we get through these legacy projects? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:23:13Yeah. I'll start and turn over to Todd as well. Yeah, it ebbs and flows to some extent. Yes, we have a negative impact from the non-core legacy projects as we continue to get through those. We're still thinking we're going to be done at the end of 2026. The impact will, to some extent, continue at a decreasing level. Part of the positive is that as we get through and increase our backlog, and that translates into the top line, we're going to be able to generate cash that kind of offsets that impact. Over time, we expect to be in a better and better position into 2026. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:24:06Yeah, and I think you pretty much covered it. $48 million of liquidity ending the second quarter. We're comfortable with that position. I mean, there's a lot of puts and takes that go into it, the business being lumpy, as you know. Advance payments, retention collection, claims, changes in AP. There's a lot of noise in there, but I want to stay away from forecasting liquidity, but we're comfortable where we are. Aaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital Group00:24:42Understood. Thanks for taking the questions. I'll turn it over. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:24:46Thanks, Aaron. Operator00:24:49Our next question comes from the line of Jerry Sweeney from Roth. Please unmute your audio and video and ask your question. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:24:58Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my call video. I got disconnected when I was jumping on to be elevated as a panelist. Did Aaron talk about guidance? Specifically, you're, I think, aiming for the lower end of the $5 million-$15 million, which sort of implies a pretty strong fourth quarter, which does have some seasonality involved. I wanted to see if we could unpack that a little bit in terms of what gives you confidence to hit the lower end. Is it just increasing margins in the backlog, increasing backlog in total, and just overall quality of work or what have you? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:25:42Yeah, that's a great question. I think generally the bottom line of that is, yes, I agree. It shows a strong fourth quarter. It's largely related to the new work starting to really kick in, and those are obviously higher margin work. It's starting to really offset the loss-generating non-core projects much better as we go through each quarter. I think that's where we're starting to see better results. Even with the seasonality, we expect for those newer projects that are driving higher margins to offset the lower margin work a lot better as we go forward. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:26:30Got it. You have talked a little bit about water and electrical being strong markets, but I think one of your strategies was to do more negotiated work and less bidding work. Just curious as to how that is coming along. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:26:49It's coming along well. As far as our bidding volume goes, negotiated work is starting to become a lot bigger portion of that as we go forward as well. We are hoping to—we have a couple of projects that are already in negotiation at the moment. We are hoping to see those go into backlog as well, and we will report on those as we go forward. Also, we are just looking at the water and the electrical market, especially the electrical market. A lot more of those are already delivered through negotiated contracts. Even when we are in a subcontractor, specialty sub position, it is still negotiated for the sub as well as the GC there. I think the more electrical we get, that number is going to start to go up as well. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:27:41I think it's a multi-year process to transition more to negotiated work, correct? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:27:46Yeah. 2027 is where we're going to really see benefits out of that effort. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:27:52Do you target a certain percentage of your backlog to be negotiated work or any type of, I don't want to say guidance, but thought on where it potentially could fall out? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:28:06Our goal is to get to 50%. I think that's a really good mix where you're really risk-balanced at that point. You always want to have some of the fixed price work, which drives higher revenues and faster burns, but you also want to balance that off with the lower risk negotiated contracts. If you can get to the 50/50 range, I think that's a very healthy place to be. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:28:29Got it. Then maybe one more from me. The non-Shimmick work, I mean, had positive gross margins. Was that just a function of just where the quarter fell out, or is that work? Do you have a little bit more visibility on that work, and can some of those margins stay close to flat to slightly positive on a go forward basis? Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:28:55Yeah. I mean, yeah. So it's a couple of things where we're obviously getting through them. And as you get to the ends of those projects, there's always some scope growth that plays into that, the loose ends to tie in and finishing out the contract. Some of that's related to kind of closing out those issues and negotiating additional revenue for that scope growth with the clients. That's what drives it. We still continue. I think we're going to try to keep it as even as we possibly can, but we still have some work to do throughout 2026 to get those couple of projects done. Jerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital Partners00:29:36Okay. I mean, it was a nice positive surprise. Anyhow, that's it for me. I appreciate it. Thanks a lot. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:29:43Thank you, Jerry. Operator00:29:46There are no more questions at this time. I'd now like to turn the call over to Ural for closing remarks. Ural YalCEO at Shimmick Corporation00:29:54Thank you. Again, we're pleased to report another consistent quarter that Aligns with our plans, aligns with our strategic planning. We're looking forward to the next quarter, to the end of the year, as well as a bright 2026 for Shimmick. Thank you all for joining.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesHead of Investor RelationsTodd YoderEVP and CFOUral YalCEOAnalystsJerry SweeneyAnalyst at Roth Capital PartnersAaron SpychallaAnalyst at Craig Hallum Capital GroupPowered by