NYSEAMERICAN:CMT Core Molding Technologies Q1 2025 Earnings Report $15.59 +0.68 (+4.56%) As of 05/9/2025 04:10 PM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Core Molding Technologies EPS ResultsActual EPSN/AConsensus EPS $0.33Beat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/ACore Molding Technologies Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected Revenue$68.46 millionBeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ACore Molding Technologies Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date5/8/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, May 8, 2025Conference Call Time10:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Core Molding Technologies Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 8, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 4 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the Core Molding Technologies First Quarter twenty twenty five Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:25I will turn the call over to Sandy Martin, three part advisers. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:31Thank you, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for the Core Molding Technologies conference call to review our first quarter twenty twenty five results. Joining me on the call today are the company's President and CEO, Dave Duvall Alex Panda, incoming CFO and Vice President, Corporate Controller and EVP and CFO, John Zimmer, who will join us for Q and A. This call is being webcast and can be accessed through coremt.com via an audio link on the Investor Relations Events and Presentations page. Today's call, including the Q and A session, will be recorded. Speaker 100:01:09Please be advised that any time sensitive information may no longer be accurate as of the date of any replay or transcript reading. I would also like to remind you that statements made in today's discussion that are not historical fact, including statements or expectations or future events or future financial performance are forward looking statements and are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. By their nature, forward looking statements are uncertain and outside the company's control. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied. Please refer to today's earnings press release for our disclosures on forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:52These factors and other risks and uncertainties are described in detail in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Core Molding Technologies assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements. Management will refer to non GAAP measures, including adjusted EPS and adjusted EBITDA, debt to trailing twelve months EBITDA ratio, free cash flow and return on capital employed. Reconciliations to the nearest GAAP measures can be found at the end of our earnings release. Earnings release has been submitted today to the SEC on Form eight ks. Speaker 100:02:27Now I would like to turn the call over to the company's President and CEO, Dave Duvall. Speaker 200:02:32Thank you, Sandy, and thank you all for joining us today. On May 1 we had the honor of ringing the New York Stock Exchange opening bell. It's a significant milestone for Core Molding and it was a moment of reflection on how far we've come from bank default just five years ago to a company with over $45,000,000 in cash, a strong execution culture, and a clear focus on growth. I want to thank the entire core team for making this transformation possible and although we're never done, we're proud when reflecting on our accomplishments. Over the past five years, we've delivered meaningful improvements in operations, profitability and product lines, the result of our must win battles. Speaker 200:03:12These efforts are evident in our ability to maintain and even expand gross margins during a difficult first quarter. Despite macroeconomic uncertainties affecting global manufacturing, we remain closely aligned with our customers and supply chain partners. Our ability to execute through challenging conditions positions us well to capitalize on opportunities in the current environment. We executed our strategy effectively in Q1, delivered solid gross margin expansion, profitability, and positive free cash flow despite lower sales which we previously anticipated. Notably, we achieved 99.3% on time delivery and maintained a quality level under 100 ppm parts per million, both industry leading metrics. Speaker 200:04:00This year's must win battle is focused on investing for growth. In Q1, we secured over $15,000,000 in annual new business, including $10,000,000 in the building products sector and $5,000,000 in the electric vehicle battery sector. The building product sector win stem from our focus on proprietary sheet molding compound or SMC as we call it, which allows for shorter quote to cash cycles compared to traditional engineered solutions. We expect this opportunity to generate approximately $5,000,000 in revenue in 2025, with demand beginning in Q2. Continued investment and operational improvements in our SMC compounding capabilities has enabled the growth. Speaker 200:04:45The electric vehicle battery win is our second program with this customer and demonstrates how our Voice of the Customer efforts can drive expansion within current customers. In addition, we've invested in our top coat paint capabilities at our Matamoros facility to support customers in the mobile machinery sector. This investment enhances our value proposition by enabling us to offer a fully integrated solution from proprietary SMC formulation to molding, assembly and painting all in one facility. This positions us as a complete solution provider for growing markets such as construction, industrial applications and heavy equipment. Turning to Q1 financials. Speaker 200:05:29Revenue was $61,000,000 Gross margin expanded to 19.2%, up two twenty basis points year over year and up three forty basis points sequentially. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 11.7% and cash flow from operations exceeded $6,000,000 We expect tooling revenue to ramp up through 2025 and Alex will provide more detail on the evolving revenue mix there. Core's unique business model and execution discipline create a durable competitive advantage, supporting margin stability and healthy cash generation even in a challenging economic environment. Although John is on the call today to assist with certain investor questions during our CFO transition, I'm excited to be joined by Alex who will cover the details of our first quarter financials. Alex? Speaker 200:06:22Thank you, Dave, and good morning, everyone. For the first quarter, sales were $61,400,000 down 21.4%. As previously reported, this was anticipated and primarily driven by lower demand in the medium and heavy duty truck vertical and powersports, offset somewhat by growth in our building products end markets. Our first quarter gross margin continued to improve and was $11,800,000 or 19.2% of sales compared to 17% in the year ago quarter. As Dave mentioned, our gross profit margin increased two twenty basis points from a year ago and improved three forty points from the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four. Speaker 200:07:05Our gross margin improvements are primarily due to a favorable product mix, operational efficiencies and better raw material costs. Since most of course cost of sales is variable, our ability to maintain gross margins within the targeted range is based on how effectively we manage variable expenses when demand changes. We typically have good visibility on demand to reduce variable costs when necessary and reduce gross margin volatility when revenues decline. SG and A expenses for the first quarter were 8,900,000 which included $500,000 in severance expenses for earlier restructuring. Excluding severance, SG and A costs for the first quarter were $8,400,000 compared to $8,600,000 in the prior year. Speaker 200:07:52Decreased SG and A costs were primarily due to the lower labor and benefits, including bonus accruals, which were partially offset by unfavorable foreign currency translations of $343,000 As part of our Q4 reduction efforts, certain employees were kept on through Q2 of twenty twenty five to ensure an orderly transition. We expect the restructuring to generate both gross margin and SG and A savings in 2025, some of which is already reflected in the first quarter gross margins. As we have previously communicated, our must win battle this year is to invest in growth. We are using some of the restructuring savings to invest in additional sales resources, as well as market analysis to enable us to focus our sales efforts in certain markets. Operating income for the quarter was 2,800,000.0 or 4.6% of sales compared to 6.1% of sales in the year ago period. Speaker 200:08:49Net interest expense was $16,000 in the first quarter compared to $82,000 in the quarter a year ago. Lower net interest expense was primarily due to higher interest income from cash accumulation that earns interest income. The first quarter's effective tax rate was 25.6% compared to 21.5% in the prior year quarter due to an income shift among our jurisdictions. Net income for the first quarter was $2,200,000 or diluted income per share of $0.25 compared to net income of $3,800,000 or diluted EPS of $0.43 in the comparable year period. Excluding the impact of severance, our first quarter diluted EPS would have been $0.29 compared to the $0.43 in the same period a year ago. Speaker 200:09:40First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $7,200,000 or 11.7%, an improvement from the 11.2% EBITDA margin in the year ago first quarter. We generated $6,100,000 in GAAP cash from operations, up from $5,100,000 a year ago. After capital expenditures of $1,800,000 in the first quarter, our positive free cash flow was $4,300,000 for the year's first three months. We expect twenty twenty five capital expenditures to be approximately 10,000,000 to $12,000,000 with a number of large press upgrade projects completing during the second quarter of twenty twenty five. As of 03/31/2025, we were in a strong total liquidity position of $94,500,000 which included $44,500,000 of cash plus $50,000,000 available under the revolver and capital credit lines. Speaker 200:10:37The company's term debt was $21,100,000 at the end of the quarter and our debt to trailing twelve months of EBITDA ratio continues to be less than one times. Our return on capital employed, a pre tax return metric, was 8.7% and excluding our cash balances was 11.7%. Both metrics are computed from our trailing twelve months of operating income to total capital employed. With lower sales volume, asset utilization was under pressure. We have the production capacity available to generate annual revenues of at least $450,000,000 and as we fill out our production schedule, we will see return on capital employed rebound. Speaker 200:11:19Please see our earnings release for our GAAP to non GAAP reconciliation tables. Our capital allocation strategy continues to focus on growth, organic and inorganic through acquisitions, managing our debt for flexibility and share repurchases. We will continue to be disciplined and selective concerning Core's M and A activities. We also understand that strategic growth for Core Moting will provide enterprise value expansion, strong cash flow generation and better return metrics. During the first quarter, we repurchased approximately 63,000 shares at an average price of $14.5 Dave will discuss our expectations for the full year more in a moment. Speaker 200:12:03For the first half of twenty twenty five, we now expect our revenues to be down between 1015% compared to previous guidance of down 5% to 10%. The change in guidance is mainly due to tooling sales shifting to the second half of the year and lower than expected product sales in heavy and medium duty truck market due to macroeconomic and regulatory uncertainties. One time tooling sales are recognized by customer acceptance of the tools and therefore are sporadic in nature from a timing standpoint and often will move between quarters. As John mentioned last quarter on tariffs, most of our raw materials are U. S. Speaker 200:12:41Sourced. We continue to mitigate tariff impacts for non U. S.-based raw materials, but expect to pass through incremental cost to customers. We will monitor and adjust our cost structure for any customer demand impacts as many OEMs we serve operate in Canada and Mexico. Although our products in both Canada and Mexico are USMCA compliant and currently are not subject to tariffs, the tariffs may impact our customers' sales, which could impact their demand for our products. Speaker 200:13:10We are working closely with our customers to understand this impact and adjust our production levels accordingly. And with that, I would like to turn it back to Dave. Dave? Thanks, Alex. In Q1, we repurchased over 63,000 shares, nearly a million dollars of stock, and followed up after that with another 1,000,000 post quarter in stock purchases. Speaker 200:13:32We view these repurchases as a high return investment in our own transformation and future. We remain active in M and A discussions. While we came very close to an acquisition last quarter, the seller ultimately chose a private equity buyer. Again, our pipeline remains robust and aligned with our strategic priorities. Like many companies, we are not providing formal twenty twenty five revenue guidance due to macro uncertainty. Speaker 200:14:00We are monitoring global trade dynamics and potential regulatory changes including the EPA's twenty twenty seven rule which may shift demand timing in key markets. In talking with executives at our large truck customers they specifically stated they are expecting no changes to model year 2027 emissions. Our team is in constant contact with customers and we are prepared to adapt quickly. Although full year revenue expectations are unclear, we believe we will be able to maintain gross margins in the 17% to 19% range for the full year as we adjust our variable costs with fluctuations in demand. Internally, we're focused on scaling operations and leveraging our fixed cost base. Speaker 200:14:45Our sales and marketing team is driving wallet share growth by engaging our OEM customer design cycles and promoting our full range of capabilities, including proprietary SMC formulations, large part molding, and now top coat painting. We continue to prioritize high value parts in sectors where our technical differentiation gives us an advantage. These include construction, energy, industrial, medical markets. Our technical solutions sales approach is driving better customer engagement and trade show participation is increasing our sales funnel. M and A remains an active part of our long term growth plan, but we're also confident in our organic growth opportunities, particularly through deeper integration with existing customers and entry into adjacent markets. Speaker 200:15:33I want to thank our team for their continued execution, our customers and shareholders for their trust, and our board for its ongoing support. Lastly, I'd like to share that Alex Panda, Eric Kalamaki, our COO, and I will attend the East Coast IDEAS Conference in New York City on June 11. We look forward to connecting with many of you there. With that, let's open the line for questions. Operator? Operator00:16:00Certainly. At this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. Operator00:16:18For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Your first question for today is from Chip Moore with Roth Capital. Speaker 300:16:39Good morning. Hey, everybody. Thanks for taking the question. And Alex, welcome to the call. I wanted to ask, I guess, just first on growth, maybe a little bit more. Speaker 300:16:50Dave, you called out, I think it was 15,000,000 of annual new business. Just maybe on that SMC, shorter quote to cash, what's the capacity and potential there? Then maybe some more insight on some of the funnel for new opportunities. Speaker 200:17:12All right. Now, we're pretty excited about the SMC. We've been pushing that for a while, really getting the capacity and the processes in place for the SMC to be able to sell that. We really didn't focus on that in the past. We do see it as an ongoing revenue opportunity for us and really selling our proprietary SMC. Speaker 200:17:31This is going into the construction industry. So you look at a lot of the doors and windows, things like that, they're SMC composite on the outside, a corrugated material on the inside. So we see a lot of opportunities with that and really also supplying the SMC into other markets as well. So I think a big thing for us is that it is much shorter on the quote to cash cycle time. You're really only approving a material that is either already approved or used in other applications. Speaker 200:18:07So it's much faster and simpler. We do see a lot of capacity in that area. We have two machines for producing SMC. So we see a lot of capacity and capability for that market itself and capacity already installed in Columbus for that. As far as pipeline, the challenge we have and we've seen it for the last several months is that the pipeline is almost inverted to where you have all these quotes coming through and with what you see in the market, everybody wants to wait before they find out what to do. Speaker 200:18:42A prime example is we're working with two large truck customers to where they're making a decision whether they want the manufacturing in The US or whether they want it in Mexico. Right? So for us, we would we would then capacitize. We'd looked at working and setting up a new plant in the Monterey area for one of the customers. And now they're looking at whether they want to delay that or whether they want to do it in The U. Speaker 200:19:05S. So it really is on the end customer side on delaying their decision making on major decisions. And for us, we're right in that major decision because once they decide to go with CORE and they say, we want to go in The US, now we're putting capacity or setting up a plant, and they have to spend a lot of money on tooling once they kick us off. So that's really the challenge and we have several large opportunities on the truck side, power sports. I think we're seeing some new opportunities even in the automotive on truck beds and things like that. Speaker 200:19:41It's waiting for those to come through the quote system and finalize a decision. Speaker 300:19:45Yeah. Yeah. That uncertainty. Are you seeing or do you think your footprint and having a fair amount of capacity right in The US and in Mexico, Is that you think going to be an advantage maybe with Speaker 200:20:01some things coming back domestically? No, absolutely. We're already going back through quotes that we had done in the past. Usually things that are high weight, low pack density, things maybe like a vault or lid itself or some of the more flat larger pieces that were done in China, being able to bring those back to The U. S. Speaker 200:20:22And we're actively going after that. I would say we're well positioned relative to capacity in The U. S. On being able to bring business back into The U. S. Speaker 200:20:31So a big part of our strategy is what opportunities does this present for core and how do we take advantage of those and get those into The U. S. Speaker 300:20:42Got it, that's helpful. Any more on some of those other markets you talked about more recently? I'm thinking like medical, the hospital beds, turf protection, of those type of newer areas, how are those going? Speaker 200:20:57Yes, good. I think the turf protection, we have products that are already shipped, they're already in production. We're working on the next gen with the customer that we deal with on the next generation. I think we're probably one of the few competitors that can actually mold that in one piece on the size of our presses that we have, which I think is a big advantage for us. Also on when you start looking at the medical, continue to once we I think we do a great job. Speaker 200:21:25Once we we have a customer that is a technical product and we're in there and they see what we can provide and do. So we see other opportunities in the medical relative to the beds as well as large equipment. So we see that as a big opportunity for us. We continue to drive into the energy. We do well with like generator basis, things like that. Speaker 200:21:46We're seeing more demand there. I think the big thing is that we're winning you're seeing wins on the smaller programs two to five million dollars but the bigger programs, the big $70,000,000 programs that we're going after, those are the ones that you're seeing getting held up from big decisions. Speaker 300:22:03Okay. Yeah, makes a lot of sense. Okay. And maybe just one last one. I think you called out some large press upgrades this quarter. Speaker 300:22:13What's going on there? Speaker 200:22:14What does that give you? Yes. Some of our presses are, I would say, older. They're in good shape, but you can speed them up with technology now between the valving and then hydraulics and the controls, the closed loop controls. So we are working on we're really evaluating. Speaker 200:22:31Does it make sense, we're evaluating concrete upgrade on at least one of our presses to evaluate if that gets it to the level that we want. So really it's about taking a press that it works, works well, but given the closed loop controls and the valving on it, you could operate it significantly faster if you had updated all the controls. Basically, the movement speeds and the control positions. Speaker 300:22:57Got it. Appreciate it. Sorry. Maybe one last one on you called out, Dave, I think you're coming close on on a deal last quarter, but but they went to PE. Maybe just right. Speaker 300:23:08What you see just one. Speaker 200:23:09Know, I would Speaker 300:23:10Yeah. Speaker 200:23:10On the call, I was actually gonna say, I actually got a phone call, and it was a, sorry. It's me, not you, call. We were close. Speaker 300:23:19In in general, like, it's multiples there and PE more active. I mean, I could imagine where your book value sits, maybe even core is right being looked at, but just your thoughts on valuations. Speaker 200:23:38Yes, I mean, before Core, I was with Carlyle Group and our idea of private equity and what we went after and the value proposition we were able to present to someone there was really about investing the money and growth and we're going to try to drive this and grow it and sell it. At Core, I think we offer something a lot different and I really thought that it was our competitive advantage in this case where if you have a company that's 20,000,000 to 80,000,000 they're probably a family company, maybe one or two plants, and it's a lot of legacy. And they really want a company that's going to come in and keep that going and take care of the family. And I think that's what Core offers to another company that's looking to sell. It's that continued legacy. Speaker 200:24:23And we see that a lot now. In this specific circumstance, you know, it was, you know, it something else something else mattered and it was quite a while. It was quite a decision process. I know he was going back into it many times and we had many discussions. Chip, yeah. Speaker 200:24:44What we're seeing in marketplace for acquisitions is multiples in between six and seven for some of the companies we've looked at. And like Dave said, were competitive in our pricing for this one. It just the owner decided to go PE for other reasons. Speaker 300:25:01Gotcha. No. I I appreciate it. Okay. I'll hop back in. Speaker 300:25:05Thanks very much. Operator00:25:29We have reached the end of the question and answer session, and I will now turn the call over to Dave Duvall for closing remarks. Speaker 200:25:37Alright. Well, thank you for your continued interest in our company, and we look forward to providing an update on our progress when we report second quarter results. Thank you, and have a great day. Operator00:25:48This concludes today's conference, and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallCore Molding Technologies Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Core Molding Technologies Earnings HeadlinesEarnings call transcript: Core Molding Q1 2025 earnings fall short, stock dipsMay 9 at 10:43 PM | investing.comCore Molding Technologies Reports Fiscal 2025 First Quarter ResultsMay 9 at 10:43 PM | morningstar.comTrump’s Bitcoin Reserve is No Accident…Remember when they said crypto would never go mainstream? Well, something remarkable has happened… BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, is now buying Bitcoin through ETFs. Fidelity, Goldman Sachs, and Citadel have joined them. We have the most pro-crypto administration in history. And the regulatory barriers are finally falling. May 10, 2025 | Crypto 101 Media (Ad)Core Molding Technologies Inc (CMT) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Highlights: Strategic Growth Amidst ...May 9 at 10:43 PM | finance.yahoo.comCore Molding Technologies (CMT) Projected to Post Quarterly Earnings on ThursdayMay 7 at 2:00 AM | americanbankingnews.comCore Molding Technologies Announces Timing of First Quarter Fiscal 2025 ResultsApril 28, 2025 | globenewswire.comSee More Core Molding Technologies Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Core Molding Technologies? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Core Molding Technologies and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Core Molding TechnologiesCore Molding Technologies (NYSEAMERICAN:CMT), together with its subsidiaries, operates as a molder of thermoplastic and thermoset structural products. The company offers a range of manufacturing processes that include compression molding of sheet molding compound, resin transfer molding, liquid molding of dicyclopentadiene, spray-up and hand-lay-up, direct long-fiber thermoplastics, and structural foam and structural web injection molding. It serves various markets, including medium and heavy-duty truck, automotive, power sport, construction, building products, industrial, utilities, and other commercial markets in the United States, Mexico, Canada, and internationally. The company was formerly known as Core Materials Corporation and changed its name to Core Molding Technologies, Inc. in August 2002. Core Molding Technologies, Inc. was incorporated in 1996 and is headquartered in Columbus, Ohio.View Core Molding Technologies ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Nearly 20 Analysts Raised Meta Price Targets Post-EarningsOXY Stock Rebound Begins Following Solid Earnings BeatMonolithic Power Systems: Will Strong Earnings Spark a Recovery?Datadog Earnings Delight: Q1 Strength and an Upbeat Forecast Upwork's Earnings Beat Fuels Stock Rally—Is Freelancing Booming?DexCom Stock: Earnings Beat and New Market Access Drive Bull CaseDisney Stock Jumps on Earnings—Is the Magic Sustainable? 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There are 4 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the Core Molding Technologies First Quarter twenty twenty five Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:25I will turn the call over to Sandy Martin, three part advisers. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:31Thank you, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for the Core Molding Technologies conference call to review our first quarter twenty twenty five results. Joining me on the call today are the company's President and CEO, Dave Duvall Alex Panda, incoming CFO and Vice President, Corporate Controller and EVP and CFO, John Zimmer, who will join us for Q and A. This call is being webcast and can be accessed through coremt.com via an audio link on the Investor Relations Events and Presentations page. Today's call, including the Q and A session, will be recorded. Speaker 100:01:09Please be advised that any time sensitive information may no longer be accurate as of the date of any replay or transcript reading. I would also like to remind you that statements made in today's discussion that are not historical fact, including statements or expectations or future events or future financial performance are forward looking statements and are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. By their nature, forward looking statements are uncertain and outside the company's control. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied. Please refer to today's earnings press release for our disclosures on forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:52These factors and other risks and uncertainties are described in detail in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Core Molding Technologies assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements. Management will refer to non GAAP measures, including adjusted EPS and adjusted EBITDA, debt to trailing twelve months EBITDA ratio, free cash flow and return on capital employed. Reconciliations to the nearest GAAP measures can be found at the end of our earnings release. Earnings release has been submitted today to the SEC on Form eight ks. Speaker 100:02:27Now I would like to turn the call over to the company's President and CEO, Dave Duvall. Speaker 200:02:32Thank you, Sandy, and thank you all for joining us today. On May 1 we had the honor of ringing the New York Stock Exchange opening bell. It's a significant milestone for Core Molding and it was a moment of reflection on how far we've come from bank default just five years ago to a company with over $45,000,000 in cash, a strong execution culture, and a clear focus on growth. I want to thank the entire core team for making this transformation possible and although we're never done, we're proud when reflecting on our accomplishments. Over the past five years, we've delivered meaningful improvements in operations, profitability and product lines, the result of our must win battles. Speaker 200:03:12These efforts are evident in our ability to maintain and even expand gross margins during a difficult first quarter. Despite macroeconomic uncertainties affecting global manufacturing, we remain closely aligned with our customers and supply chain partners. Our ability to execute through challenging conditions positions us well to capitalize on opportunities in the current environment. We executed our strategy effectively in Q1, delivered solid gross margin expansion, profitability, and positive free cash flow despite lower sales which we previously anticipated. Notably, we achieved 99.3% on time delivery and maintained a quality level under 100 ppm parts per million, both industry leading metrics. Speaker 200:04:00This year's must win battle is focused on investing for growth. In Q1, we secured over $15,000,000 in annual new business, including $10,000,000 in the building products sector and $5,000,000 in the electric vehicle battery sector. The building product sector win stem from our focus on proprietary sheet molding compound or SMC as we call it, which allows for shorter quote to cash cycles compared to traditional engineered solutions. We expect this opportunity to generate approximately $5,000,000 in revenue in 2025, with demand beginning in Q2. Continued investment and operational improvements in our SMC compounding capabilities has enabled the growth. Speaker 200:04:45The electric vehicle battery win is our second program with this customer and demonstrates how our Voice of the Customer efforts can drive expansion within current customers. In addition, we've invested in our top coat paint capabilities at our Matamoros facility to support customers in the mobile machinery sector. This investment enhances our value proposition by enabling us to offer a fully integrated solution from proprietary SMC formulation to molding, assembly and painting all in one facility. This positions us as a complete solution provider for growing markets such as construction, industrial applications and heavy equipment. Turning to Q1 financials. Speaker 200:05:29Revenue was $61,000,000 Gross margin expanded to 19.2%, up two twenty basis points year over year and up three forty basis points sequentially. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 11.7% and cash flow from operations exceeded $6,000,000 We expect tooling revenue to ramp up through 2025 and Alex will provide more detail on the evolving revenue mix there. Core's unique business model and execution discipline create a durable competitive advantage, supporting margin stability and healthy cash generation even in a challenging economic environment. Although John is on the call today to assist with certain investor questions during our CFO transition, I'm excited to be joined by Alex who will cover the details of our first quarter financials. Alex? Speaker 200:06:22Thank you, Dave, and good morning, everyone. For the first quarter, sales were $61,400,000 down 21.4%. As previously reported, this was anticipated and primarily driven by lower demand in the medium and heavy duty truck vertical and powersports, offset somewhat by growth in our building products end markets. Our first quarter gross margin continued to improve and was $11,800,000 or 19.2% of sales compared to 17% in the year ago quarter. As Dave mentioned, our gross profit margin increased two twenty basis points from a year ago and improved three forty points from the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four. Speaker 200:07:05Our gross margin improvements are primarily due to a favorable product mix, operational efficiencies and better raw material costs. Since most of course cost of sales is variable, our ability to maintain gross margins within the targeted range is based on how effectively we manage variable expenses when demand changes. We typically have good visibility on demand to reduce variable costs when necessary and reduce gross margin volatility when revenues decline. SG and A expenses for the first quarter were 8,900,000 which included $500,000 in severance expenses for earlier restructuring. Excluding severance, SG and A costs for the first quarter were $8,400,000 compared to $8,600,000 in the prior year. Speaker 200:07:52Decreased SG and A costs were primarily due to the lower labor and benefits, including bonus accruals, which were partially offset by unfavorable foreign currency translations of $343,000 As part of our Q4 reduction efforts, certain employees were kept on through Q2 of twenty twenty five to ensure an orderly transition. We expect the restructuring to generate both gross margin and SG and A savings in 2025, some of which is already reflected in the first quarter gross margins. As we have previously communicated, our must win battle this year is to invest in growth. We are using some of the restructuring savings to invest in additional sales resources, as well as market analysis to enable us to focus our sales efforts in certain markets. Operating income for the quarter was 2,800,000.0 or 4.6% of sales compared to 6.1% of sales in the year ago period. Speaker 200:08:49Net interest expense was $16,000 in the first quarter compared to $82,000 in the quarter a year ago. Lower net interest expense was primarily due to higher interest income from cash accumulation that earns interest income. The first quarter's effective tax rate was 25.6% compared to 21.5% in the prior year quarter due to an income shift among our jurisdictions. Net income for the first quarter was $2,200,000 or diluted income per share of $0.25 compared to net income of $3,800,000 or diluted EPS of $0.43 in the comparable year period. Excluding the impact of severance, our first quarter diluted EPS would have been $0.29 compared to the $0.43 in the same period a year ago. Speaker 200:09:40First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $7,200,000 or 11.7%, an improvement from the 11.2% EBITDA margin in the year ago first quarter. We generated $6,100,000 in GAAP cash from operations, up from $5,100,000 a year ago. After capital expenditures of $1,800,000 in the first quarter, our positive free cash flow was $4,300,000 for the year's first three months. We expect twenty twenty five capital expenditures to be approximately 10,000,000 to $12,000,000 with a number of large press upgrade projects completing during the second quarter of twenty twenty five. As of 03/31/2025, we were in a strong total liquidity position of $94,500,000 which included $44,500,000 of cash plus $50,000,000 available under the revolver and capital credit lines. Speaker 200:10:37The company's term debt was $21,100,000 at the end of the quarter and our debt to trailing twelve months of EBITDA ratio continues to be less than one times. Our return on capital employed, a pre tax return metric, was 8.7% and excluding our cash balances was 11.7%. Both metrics are computed from our trailing twelve months of operating income to total capital employed. With lower sales volume, asset utilization was under pressure. We have the production capacity available to generate annual revenues of at least $450,000,000 and as we fill out our production schedule, we will see return on capital employed rebound. Speaker 200:11:19Please see our earnings release for our GAAP to non GAAP reconciliation tables. Our capital allocation strategy continues to focus on growth, organic and inorganic through acquisitions, managing our debt for flexibility and share repurchases. We will continue to be disciplined and selective concerning Core's M and A activities. We also understand that strategic growth for Core Moting will provide enterprise value expansion, strong cash flow generation and better return metrics. During the first quarter, we repurchased approximately 63,000 shares at an average price of $14.5 Dave will discuss our expectations for the full year more in a moment. Speaker 200:12:03For the first half of twenty twenty five, we now expect our revenues to be down between 1015% compared to previous guidance of down 5% to 10%. The change in guidance is mainly due to tooling sales shifting to the second half of the year and lower than expected product sales in heavy and medium duty truck market due to macroeconomic and regulatory uncertainties. One time tooling sales are recognized by customer acceptance of the tools and therefore are sporadic in nature from a timing standpoint and often will move between quarters. As John mentioned last quarter on tariffs, most of our raw materials are U. S. Speaker 200:12:41Sourced. We continue to mitigate tariff impacts for non U. S.-based raw materials, but expect to pass through incremental cost to customers. We will monitor and adjust our cost structure for any customer demand impacts as many OEMs we serve operate in Canada and Mexico. Although our products in both Canada and Mexico are USMCA compliant and currently are not subject to tariffs, the tariffs may impact our customers' sales, which could impact their demand for our products. Speaker 200:13:10We are working closely with our customers to understand this impact and adjust our production levels accordingly. And with that, I would like to turn it back to Dave. Dave? Thanks, Alex. In Q1, we repurchased over 63,000 shares, nearly a million dollars of stock, and followed up after that with another 1,000,000 post quarter in stock purchases. Speaker 200:13:32We view these repurchases as a high return investment in our own transformation and future. We remain active in M and A discussions. While we came very close to an acquisition last quarter, the seller ultimately chose a private equity buyer. Again, our pipeline remains robust and aligned with our strategic priorities. Like many companies, we are not providing formal twenty twenty five revenue guidance due to macro uncertainty. Speaker 200:14:00We are monitoring global trade dynamics and potential regulatory changes including the EPA's twenty twenty seven rule which may shift demand timing in key markets. In talking with executives at our large truck customers they specifically stated they are expecting no changes to model year 2027 emissions. Our team is in constant contact with customers and we are prepared to adapt quickly. Although full year revenue expectations are unclear, we believe we will be able to maintain gross margins in the 17% to 19% range for the full year as we adjust our variable costs with fluctuations in demand. Internally, we're focused on scaling operations and leveraging our fixed cost base. Speaker 200:14:45Our sales and marketing team is driving wallet share growth by engaging our OEM customer design cycles and promoting our full range of capabilities, including proprietary SMC formulations, large part molding, and now top coat painting. We continue to prioritize high value parts in sectors where our technical differentiation gives us an advantage. These include construction, energy, industrial, medical markets. Our technical solutions sales approach is driving better customer engagement and trade show participation is increasing our sales funnel. M and A remains an active part of our long term growth plan, but we're also confident in our organic growth opportunities, particularly through deeper integration with existing customers and entry into adjacent markets. Speaker 200:15:33I want to thank our team for their continued execution, our customers and shareholders for their trust, and our board for its ongoing support. Lastly, I'd like to share that Alex Panda, Eric Kalamaki, our COO, and I will attend the East Coast IDEAS Conference in New York City on June 11. We look forward to connecting with many of you there. With that, let's open the line for questions. Operator? Operator00:16:00Certainly. At this time, we will be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. Operator00:16:18For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we poll for questions. Your first question for today is from Chip Moore with Roth Capital. Speaker 300:16:39Good morning. Hey, everybody. Thanks for taking the question. And Alex, welcome to the call. I wanted to ask, I guess, just first on growth, maybe a little bit more. Speaker 300:16:50Dave, you called out, I think it was 15,000,000 of annual new business. Just maybe on that SMC, shorter quote to cash, what's the capacity and potential there? Then maybe some more insight on some of the funnel for new opportunities. Speaker 200:17:12All right. Now, we're pretty excited about the SMC. We've been pushing that for a while, really getting the capacity and the processes in place for the SMC to be able to sell that. We really didn't focus on that in the past. We do see it as an ongoing revenue opportunity for us and really selling our proprietary SMC. Speaker 200:17:31This is going into the construction industry. So you look at a lot of the doors and windows, things like that, they're SMC composite on the outside, a corrugated material on the inside. So we see a lot of opportunities with that and really also supplying the SMC into other markets as well. So I think a big thing for us is that it is much shorter on the quote to cash cycle time. You're really only approving a material that is either already approved or used in other applications. Speaker 200:18:07So it's much faster and simpler. We do see a lot of capacity in that area. We have two machines for producing SMC. So we see a lot of capacity and capability for that market itself and capacity already installed in Columbus for that. As far as pipeline, the challenge we have and we've seen it for the last several months is that the pipeline is almost inverted to where you have all these quotes coming through and with what you see in the market, everybody wants to wait before they find out what to do. Speaker 200:18:42A prime example is we're working with two large truck customers to where they're making a decision whether they want the manufacturing in The US or whether they want it in Mexico. Right? So for us, we would we would then capacitize. We'd looked at working and setting up a new plant in the Monterey area for one of the customers. And now they're looking at whether they want to delay that or whether they want to do it in The U. Speaker 200:19:05S. So it really is on the end customer side on delaying their decision making on major decisions. And for us, we're right in that major decision because once they decide to go with CORE and they say, we want to go in The US, now we're putting capacity or setting up a plant, and they have to spend a lot of money on tooling once they kick us off. So that's really the challenge and we have several large opportunities on the truck side, power sports. I think we're seeing some new opportunities even in the automotive on truck beds and things like that. Speaker 200:19:41It's waiting for those to come through the quote system and finalize a decision. Speaker 300:19:45Yeah. Yeah. That uncertainty. Are you seeing or do you think your footprint and having a fair amount of capacity right in The US and in Mexico, Is that you think going to be an advantage maybe with Speaker 200:20:01some things coming back domestically? No, absolutely. We're already going back through quotes that we had done in the past. Usually things that are high weight, low pack density, things maybe like a vault or lid itself or some of the more flat larger pieces that were done in China, being able to bring those back to The U. S. Speaker 200:20:22And we're actively going after that. I would say we're well positioned relative to capacity in The U. S. On being able to bring business back into The U. S. Speaker 200:20:31So a big part of our strategy is what opportunities does this present for core and how do we take advantage of those and get those into The U. S. Speaker 300:20:42Got it, that's helpful. Any more on some of those other markets you talked about more recently? I'm thinking like medical, the hospital beds, turf protection, of those type of newer areas, how are those going? Speaker 200:20:57Yes, good. I think the turf protection, we have products that are already shipped, they're already in production. We're working on the next gen with the customer that we deal with on the next generation. I think we're probably one of the few competitors that can actually mold that in one piece on the size of our presses that we have, which I think is a big advantage for us. Also on when you start looking at the medical, continue to once we I think we do a great job. Speaker 200:21:25Once we we have a customer that is a technical product and we're in there and they see what we can provide and do. So we see other opportunities in the medical relative to the beds as well as large equipment. So we see that as a big opportunity for us. We continue to drive into the energy. We do well with like generator basis, things like that. Speaker 200:21:46We're seeing more demand there. I think the big thing is that we're winning you're seeing wins on the smaller programs two to five million dollars but the bigger programs, the big $70,000,000 programs that we're going after, those are the ones that you're seeing getting held up from big decisions. Speaker 300:22:03Okay. Yeah, makes a lot of sense. Okay. And maybe just one last one. I think you called out some large press upgrades this quarter. Speaker 300:22:13What's going on there? Speaker 200:22:14What does that give you? Yes. Some of our presses are, I would say, older. They're in good shape, but you can speed them up with technology now between the valving and then hydraulics and the controls, the closed loop controls. So we are working on we're really evaluating. Speaker 200:22:31Does it make sense, we're evaluating concrete upgrade on at least one of our presses to evaluate if that gets it to the level that we want. So really it's about taking a press that it works, works well, but given the closed loop controls and the valving on it, you could operate it significantly faster if you had updated all the controls. Basically, the movement speeds and the control positions. Speaker 300:22:57Got it. Appreciate it. Sorry. Maybe one last one on you called out, Dave, I think you're coming close on on a deal last quarter, but but they went to PE. Maybe just right. Speaker 300:23:08What you see just one. Speaker 200:23:09Know, I would Speaker 300:23:10Yeah. Speaker 200:23:10On the call, I was actually gonna say, I actually got a phone call, and it was a, sorry. It's me, not you, call. We were close. Speaker 300:23:19In in general, like, it's multiples there and PE more active. I mean, I could imagine where your book value sits, maybe even core is right being looked at, but just your thoughts on valuations. Speaker 200:23:38Yes, I mean, before Core, I was with Carlyle Group and our idea of private equity and what we went after and the value proposition we were able to present to someone there was really about investing the money and growth and we're going to try to drive this and grow it and sell it. At Core, I think we offer something a lot different and I really thought that it was our competitive advantage in this case where if you have a company that's 20,000,000 to 80,000,000 they're probably a family company, maybe one or two plants, and it's a lot of legacy. And they really want a company that's going to come in and keep that going and take care of the family. And I think that's what Core offers to another company that's looking to sell. It's that continued legacy. Speaker 200:24:23And we see that a lot now. In this specific circumstance, you know, it was, you know, it something else something else mattered and it was quite a while. It was quite a decision process. I know he was going back into it many times and we had many discussions. Chip, yeah. Speaker 200:24:44What we're seeing in marketplace for acquisitions is multiples in between six and seven for some of the companies we've looked at. And like Dave said, were competitive in our pricing for this one. It just the owner decided to go PE for other reasons. Speaker 300:25:01Gotcha. No. I I appreciate it. Okay. I'll hop back in. Speaker 300:25:05Thanks very much. Operator00:25:29We have reached the end of the question and answer session, and I will now turn the call over to Dave Duvall for closing remarks. Speaker 200:25:37Alright. Well, thank you for your continued interest in our company, and we look forward to providing an update on our progress when we report second quarter results. Thank you, and have a great day. Operator00:25:48This concludes today's conference, and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.Read morePowered by