NASDAQ:UFPT UFP Technologies Q4 2025 Earnings Report $220.78 +8.35 (+3.93%) As of 11:10 AM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast UFP Technologies EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.44Consensus EPS $2.26Beat/MissBeat by +$0.18One Year Ago EPS$2.10UFP Technologies Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$148.92 millionExpected Revenue$149.07 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$157.00 thousandYoY Revenue Growth+3.40%UFP Technologies Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2025Date2/24/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, February 25, 2026Conference Call Time8:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Annual ReportEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by UFP Technologies Q4 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 25, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Revenue milestone: Full-year sales rose 19.5% to $602.8 million, representing nearly a tripling since 2021 while operating income and EPS increased substantially over the four-year period. Negative Sentiment: AJR labor headwind: The company absorbed $6.3 million of extra labor costs in 2025 (including $1.2 million in Q4) from E-Verify-related attrition, with improvements expected each quarter but some carryover into early 2026. Negative Sentiment: Cybersecurity incident: A ransomware attack on Feb 14 resulted in data being taken and destroyed, though credible backups and contingency plans kept operations running; investigation continues and the company expects insurance to limit material financial impact. Positive Sentiment: Capacity and contract momentum: Multiple program launches, facility expansions in the Dominican Republic (including a sixth building in April), and contract extensions — including expanded volume with the largest customer and an infection-prevention deal through 2030 — position the company for continued growth. Positive Sentiment: Strong cash and balance sheet: The company generated about $92 million of cash from operations in 2025, paid down ~$53.9 million of debt, ended the year at ~1.1x leverage, and funded acquisitions while maintaining capacity to invest. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallUFP Technologies Q4 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, welcome to the UFP Technologies fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ron Lataille, Vice President, Treasurer, and Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:00:42Thank you, operator. Good morning, and thank you for joining us on our 2025 year-end earnings conference call. With me on today's call is our CEO and Chairman, Jeff Bailly. Today, we will make some forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, the accuracy of which is subject to risks and uncertainties. Wherever possible, we will try to identify those forward-looking statements by using words such as believe, expect, anticipate, pursue, forecast, and similar expressions. Our forward-looking statements are based on our estimates and assumptions as of today and should not be relied upon as representing our estimates or views on any subsequent date. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:01:34Please refer to the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information and the risk factors in our most recent 10-K and subsequent 10-Qs and 8-Ks, including disclosure of the factors that could cause results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. During this call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures, which include organic sales growth, adjusted gross margin, adjusted operating income, adjusted SG&A, adjusted EPS, and EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures discussed in this call is contained in the associated press release and is available in the Investor Relations section of our website. I'll now turn the call over to Jeff. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:02:26Thank you, Ron. I am pleased with our 2025 results and our progress on key strategic initiatives. Sales grew 19.5% for the full year, bringing our total revenue to $602.8 million. This is a significant revenue milestone and represents nearly a tripling of revenue since 2021. During that same four-year period, operating income grew 435%, and EPS grew 419%. We also made significant progress on several key strategic initiatives related to contract extensions, program launches, facility expansions and related moves, and adding and training of new direct labor talent in St. Charles, Illinois, related to our previously disclosed E-Verify attrition issues. 2025 EPS grew 15.4%, despite absorbing $6.3 million in labor inefficiencies at our Illinois AJR facility. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:03:37The AJR E-Verify labor inefficiency was $1.2 million in Q4, less than half of the $3 million Q3 impact, demonstrating the progress that is being made in onboarding and training new direct labor team members. We are continuing to make progress, expanding our capabilities and capacity in the Dominican Republic. In Santiago, we launched our second major program and have recently negotiated a lease for a third building, which will allow us to further expand our safe patient handling business and transfer a third major program. Each program transfer, when complete, saves our customers money and increases our profit potential. In La Romana, D.R., three significant new programs launched. Our fifth building and related move of equipment, materials, and personnel is now complete. It houses a new expanded product development center, a newly launched external capital program, and a centralized warehouse to support buildings one through four. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:04:46We plan to take possession of a sixth building in April, which will further expand our robotic surgery capacity to support anticipated growth. We have also expanded and extended our contract with our largest customer, materially increasing the volumes on existing programs and adding an additional program. We have also made exciting progress in other markets, funding a contract extension with our largest infection prevention customer that runs through 2030. In the orthopedic sterile packaging space, we have also won new business and added new capabilities in Ireland, which adds significant value to our global offerings. On the human resources front, our new director-level talent, one level below our corporate officers, is making significant contributions in the U.S., Ireland, and the D.R. This group runs our day-to-day operations and is doing a great job. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:05:47On the acquisition front, integrations of the four acquisitions completed in 2024 and the three completed in 2025 are all progressing well. We continue to search for additional strategic acquisitions that will increase our value to customers while maintaining our disciplined approach. Finally, our CEO transition planning with Mitch Rock is essentially complete, and he is well prepared to succeed me as CEO in June. I will continue for 1 year as executive chair to support him and provide assistance in vetting new acquisition opportunities and key strategic hires. With a robust pipeline of new growth opportunities, significant progress on our strategic initiatives, including multiple successful program launches, exciting new talent in our company, and a strong balance sheet to fund future growth, we remain very bullish about our future. I'll now hand it over to Ron to provide more color on our financials. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:06:45Thank you, Jeff. I am also pleased with our fourth quarter and year-end results as we delivered solid numbers despite working through the labor challenge at AJR, referred to by Jeff. Before I provide more color on our results, I want to spend a few minutes on the cybersecurity breach disclosed in an 8-K last evening. The attack was detected on the morning of Saturday, February 14th. By that evening, forensic incident response consultants were engaged, and by Sunday evening, they were on site in Newburyport. This was a classic ransomware attack that appears to have impacted many, but not all, of our IT systems. Data was taken and then destroyed. Fortunately, we had credible duplicate backups and a thorough contingency plan that allowed us to operate since the date of the incident. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:07:41At this point, the incident caused minimal interruptions to our operations, and we believe our primary information systems are being brought back online this week in all material respects. From a financial standpoint, we have cybersecurity insurance and do not expect a material impact to our operations, cash or liquidity, though our investigation is continuing. Moving to operations, overall sales were up nicely, largely fueled by growth in the safe patient handling, infection control, and orthopedic packaging medical submarkets. As anticipated, organic sales growth for the year was low single digits. This is largely due to abnormally high 2024 sales in robotic surgery, as well as backlog in our safe patient handling business due to the labor issue at AJR. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:08:34Gross profit as a percentage of sales or gross margin decreased in 2025 to 28.3%, largely due to the $6.3 million in extra labor costs incurred at AJR, which are all reflected in cost of sales. Absent these additional labor costs, gross margins would have increased to 29.3%. As Jeff mentioned, we improved efficiency levels in the fourth quarter and anticipate further ongoing improvement. Adjusted operating margin for the year was 17.1% of sales, within our target range of 17%-20%, despite the extra labor costs. Our effective tax rate of 17.2% for the full year of 2025 was down from a year ago, reflecting a continued shift in pre-tax income to the Dominican Republic, where we effectively pay no income taxes. 2025 was a strong year for cash generation. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:09:36We had approximately $92 million in cash from operations, despite $12.9 million in capital expenditures and funding three acquisitions, we paid down approximately $53.9 million in debt and ended the year with a leverage ratio of approximately 1.1 times. With that, I now turn it back to the operator for questions. Operator00:09:59We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. Our first question comes from Brett Fishman with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Analyst at KeyBank Capital Markets00:10:26Hey, this is Will on for Brett. Good news around the contract extension. Could you just provide us any directional color on how we should think about volumes with your largest customer in 2026 and 2027, and maybe how we should think about the minimum volumes for 2028 and 2029? I have 1 more as a follow-up. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:10:46Sure. I mean, clearly the contract extension is great news for us. It extended two additional years, which we knew was coming, but it makes the rest of the world settle down, and it was expanded to add additional program, and the two programs in place, increased materially. Our customers, all of them now, have come to us and said, "Please do not give any information that could allow the outside world to protect our business and or put us at any competitive disadvantage." We are now unfortunately not able to give any commentary on how significantly it went up. You know, they agreed to the words, material, because it is a material increase of where we are now. The same applies, unfortunately, for giving guidance on 2026 and 2027. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:11:27You can kind of refer to the previous contract, and you know, there's minimums that they have to hit. I think it has to be in the low sevens the last couple of years. They have consistently been higher than those minimums. Under strict instructions from many of our customers, we're not going to be able to give specifics, unfortunately. Analyst at KeyBank Capital Markets00:11:48Okay. Yeah, I think that makes sense. Maybe, just going over to AJR, regarding the headwind, like you indicated a $1.2 million impact in 4Q. How are you thinking about this impact in 1Q and maybe just any impact in the rest of 2026? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:12:11Yeah, the team is making consistent progress, and there's a couple different objectives. One was to bring on new people because our team was way down. We have staffed up to the level that we needed to be. Some are still temps, some are permanent. When they get to a certain level of skill, they switch over. Two things happen then. The skill goes up, and the cost goes down. We are continuing to transition to temps, but we're not bringing in new people in general right now. Those two things are all forward progress we're going to look forward to. We're running overtime now, so we're at their level, so we can keep up with our existing team, and we're running overtime to knock down any backlog that exists. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:12:47We did, unfortunately, have backlog carry over into this year, which is, you know, good news for the revenue of this year, but it's bad news that we haven't completely caught up with our customer. When that backlog is worked down, we will get rid of the overtime as well. Everything going forward should be progress. We expect Q1 will have some impact. It will be less than the fourth quarter, and then it'll diminish after that. Yeah, there will be some carry on, but continued progress is expected in each consecutive quarter. Operator00:13:25Our next question comes from Justin Ages with CJS Securities. Please go ahead. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS Securities00:13:31Hi. Morning, all. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:13:34Morning. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:13:36Morning. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS Securities00:13:36Can you give us a little more color on the puts and takes of the flat med tech growth? I know you mentioned infection prevention, just trying to, you know, take a look into 2026 and kind of size what's going to be the main drivers of growth there in med tech. Thank you. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:13:56We're expecting continued robust growth in the patient services market, that is expanding on its own, and we're catching up from the prior year. I think that'll be a super strong year. We've also launched three new programs of late, one in infection prevention, two in robotic surgery, which are both positive influences going forward. There's some other markets that are coming along, that sort of represent growth in the future, that are in the development stages now. Those are a little more, wound care and/or diagnostics. I don't think those will hit 2026 revenue. Well, they hit the list of things we're excited about going forward. That's sort of the update on what we expect to be robust growth next year. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:14:38Justin, I'll let me elaborate, Ron. If you're talking about flat med tech growth, specifically for the Q4, just a reminder that we had some revenue pulled into Q3. Sales in Q3 were higher, if you recall, than we had anticipated. That's part of the reason why sales, specifically for the fourth quarter, were a bit softer. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS Securities00:15:05That's helpful. Thanks for that. Second, on the cybersecurity incident, you mentioned systems are back online, but is there any disruption in business that will impact growth rates? Operationally seems to be things are back in order, but in terms of, you know, performing for customers, is there any impact there, or is that still under investigation? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:15:31I mean, big picture, it's not good news, obviously, that somebody's able to get into our system. It was really good news, how our team responded and how robust our backup systems were. We were back in action literally day one, making parts, but we didn't have the ability, day one, to label everything properly and ship everything. There will be a delay in how things get shipped. I'll turn it over to Ron to give you some specifics, but the key is we were able to keep making everything we needed to make. There may be some delays in when some of these things actually ship. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:16:01Yeah, the event happened mid-quarter, we are back online in all of our ERP systems as we speak. The team, fortunately, we had the wherewithal years ago, our Senior Vice President of IT, in conjunction with our operations leadership, developed a pretty robust contingency plan to operate without systems for this exact reason, and we launched that contingency plan. Albeit inefficiently, we were able to make parts and ship to the customers with manual invoicing. I don't think there's going to be a material impact on Q1 in its entirety. It'll be soft within the month of February, within the quarter, but we'll make up for it in March. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS Securities00:16:50That's super helpful. Thanks for taking the questions. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:16:54You're welcome. Operator00:16:54Our next question comes from Max Michaelis with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:17:01Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. A few here around the contract extension, just around the facility, I guess. That's sixth facility. Are you guys on the hook for that entire investment, or are you getting any help from your largest customer here? I should say, as well as what's sort of the timeline of completion of that facility, too? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:17:24Yeah. With all of our major contracts, there's co-investment, with really, without exception. Some of them, the customers are on the hook for literally all of the capital. Again, under confidentiality with the customer, we haven't been able to give out all those details. I can tell you our primary responsibility in this contract extension relates to leases and personnel. Capacity is ramping up, so capital will be purchased, and it will be installed, and we will be starting, I think we take possession of the sixth building in April. We will begin, first of all, we have to get the thing fit for use, which is put in clean rooms and get it all fit and set up. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:18:07It'll start this year, and we'll be adding that capacity, and, like I just mentioned, our primary responsibility is leases and personnel. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:18:17Perfect. Okay, you guys called out safe patient handling in the press release as well. Is there any way you can kind of size that opportunity for us? It seems like it's going to be solid opportunity here. You expect more growth in 2026. Just kind of give us, can you give us an idea of what the market size is there or just any way you can help us? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:18:39Yeah, I think that's a large and growing market. We've partnered with the market leader. You know, we're experiencing double-digit growth without making up for previous backlog additions. I think that you can look forward to robust growth in that market for multiple years. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:19:00All righty. Thanks, guys. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:19:03You're welcome. Operator00:19:04Our next question comes from Andrew Cooper with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:19:11Hey, everybody. Thanks for the questions. Maybe first, just want to clarify some of the commentary around new programs. I think in the release you mentioned, we launched three new programs. It sounded like referring to the La Romana facility. Just curious, I know you had talked about two, and then you mentioned one new one in the extended contract. Are those the three, or is there an additional program that's sort of net new that we need to think about for that facility or that line of business? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:19:42Yeah. Two of the programs were the multimillion dollar programs we had referred to in the past that we're launching at the end of the year. They were both robotic surgery related. The 3rd one was actually not robotic surgery. We had three different plants sort of collaborate and come together with their materials expertise and process expertise to really design an infection prevention device, start to finish, that will ship directly to the patients. You know, it'll be packaged and ready to go from our facility. That one has launched in La Romana, in our new building number five. That is set up and going, you know, just the launches are slow, you know, but we are making parts, but they'll go through a rigorous process of vetting those parts, and they'll slowly ramp up. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:20:22Yes, the third program is not, robotic surgery. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:20:28Okay, that's helpful context. I know you're limited in what you're able to say in terms of the contract, but I think the release included noting that you added volume-based pricing matrix, matrices and some cost-sharing provisions. I just want to clarify, are those net new, and, you know, is there anything to read into layering those in and how that maybe portends for sort of the long-term nature and maybe not needing to amend or adjust the contract as much going forward because you have some of these kind of features in place in the existing language? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:21:06Yeah. The contract, the key to the contract for us is when we make a long-term commitment to a customer, we want to make a long-term contract with a vendor at the same time. Part and parcel to this is if we make promises to the customer that relate to cost downs, very often they're being financed by our vendor or together with our vendor. When we come up with cost saving initiatives, they're typically shared with our customer. I think the customer wins, and we win in this process. I don't think there's any negative to look forward to going other than increased volume. There is, when they hit certain milestones, whatever those are, there is cost-sharing opportunities that is born between the three of us, or enjoyed between the three of us. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:21:49Okay. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:21:49I should say, the vendor, ourselves, and the customer. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:21:53I didn't mean to imply a negative. Sorry if that came across differently. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:21:56Yeah. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:21:56That's helpful. Lastly, maybe just the AJR business. I mean, I think you talked about $8 million of backlog at the last update. Just curious, did that work down at all in the quarter? If not, how should we think about the pacing of that starting to happen? Then just any updates on knowing you have this third program moving, starting to move to Dominican Republic, you know, on kind of completion of and, when we should expect kind of pacing of the shift to start flowing through the P&L more? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:22:33Ron, I'll let you tackle the backlog, and then I'll switch over and tackle the second question, which relates to program three. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:22:42Our customer specifically asked us not to speak of backlog. The $8 million you referred to, Andrew, was the quarter, not the full amount. I can tell you that the backlog going into 2026 is higher than that, but I can't disclose the number. We do expect to work it down gradually throughout 2026. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:23:06Okay. With respect to program number three, these were all phased 1, then the next, and the next. Program number one was completely transferred, up and running, and running at rate. Program two has now been transferred. It's up and running, but not running at rate, as we go through the process. Program three is scheduled to transfer when program two is complete. We're taking possession of a new building, I believe in April also, and we'll get that fit up and set up. That'll be sort of the second half of the year assignment. The key is that we have full capabilities already in Illinois to do these programs. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:23:40These are redundant capabilities, and when they move over, our customer enjoys some cost saves, and we enjoy the opportunity to make additional profits when we get to our run-at-rate levels. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:23:52Okay, I'll stop there. Thanks, everybody. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:23:55You're welcome. Operator00:23:57This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Jeff Bailly for any closing remarks. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:24:06Thank you, operator. Thank you all for participating on the call. We are super excited about the future. The long-term contract hopefully dispels some of the concerns some people might have had. You know, we have really positioned ourselves with our top three or four customers for the next 4 years or 5 years of really understanding what our growth trajectory is, and we have the vendors aligned right beside us. I think we've done an excellent job in the transition plan for our new CEO. He is super fired up. He's been with us for 25+ years. He was integral in helping develop the strategy. He's been integral in executing the strategy. We've had a development plan that has given him exposure to all different parts of the business, including to some of our investors of late. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:24:46It has all gone super well. I think that's something for everybody to be excited about. I can tell you he is fired up. He's well qualified and a super smart guy. We appreciate your interest. We're excited about the future, I'll end it there. Operator00:25:02The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesJeff BaillyChairman and CEORon LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFOAnalystsAndrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond JamesJustin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS SecuritiesMax MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital MarketsAnalyst at KeyBank Capital MarketsPowered by Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K)Annual report UFP Technologies Earnings HeadlinesUFP Technologies Signals Growth Momentum Amid Short-Term DragsMay 5 at 8:30 PM | tipranks.comShould UFPT’s MedTech-Led Q1 2026 Earnings Growth Shift How Investors View Its Core Strategy?May 5 at 9:00 AM | finance.yahoo.comTrump and Elon are BACK15X Bigger Than SpaceX: Elon's New Launch While the rest of the market goes crazy for "the mother of all IPOs", a new Elon Musk innovation is quietly being rolled out nationwide. It's been 27 years in the making, and it could have a radical impact on how millions of people manage their money… and even collect Social Security.May 6 at 1:00 AM | InvestorPlace (Ad)UFP Technologies (NASDAQ:UFPT) posts Q1 CY2026 sales in line with estimatesMay 4 at 12:13 AM | msn.comUFP Technologies (UFPT) Releases Q1 2026 Earnings: Revenue Slightly Below Estimates, EPS Marginally MissesMay 4 at 5:31 PM | quiverquant.comQUFP Technologies Announces Strong Q1 ResultsMay 4 at 4:43 PM | businesswire.comSee More UFP Technologies Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like UFP Technologies? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on UFP Technologies and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About UFP TechnologiesUFP Technologies (NASDAQ:UFPT) (NASDAQ: UFPT) is a global designer and manufacturer of custom-engineered products using plastics, foams and adhesives. The company partners with customers to develop application-specific solutions through a range of in-house processes, including foam fabrication, die cutting, sheet processing, lamination, machining and assembly services. Its components find use in industries requiring precise material properties, such as medical devices, aerospace, defense, electronics and transportation. Building on its origins as a specialty foam converter, UFP Technologies has expanded its capabilities to include advanced material technologies, such as thermal management and electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding solutions. The company provides end-to-end support from concept and prototyping through high-volume production, leveraging vertical integration across its manufacturing footprint to manage quality, lead times and total cost of ownership for customers. Headquartered in Freeport, Maine, UFP Technologies operates multiple facilities across North America and Europe, serving a diverse base of domestic and international customers. Its management team combines deep industry expertise in engineered materials and contract manufacturing with a focus on operational excellence, research and development, and supply-chain optimization.View UFP 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 Latest Articles Years in the Making, AMD’s Upside Movement Has Just BegunPinterest Pins a Profit Play To Its Mood BoardJust How Big a Problem Could Amazon’s Cash Burn Rate Be?BlackBerry Rewrites Its Own Operating SystemGrab Holdings Faces Hurdles, But Upside Potential Is Hard to IgnorePalantir Drops After a Blowout Q1—What Investors Should KnowShopify’s Valuation Crisis Creates Opportunity in 2026 Upcoming Earnings Coinbase Global (5/7/2026)Airbnb (5/7/2026)Datadog (5/7/2026)Ferrovial (5/7/2026)Gilead Sciences (5/7/2026)Microchip Technology (5/7/2026)MercadoLibre (5/7/2026)Monster Beverage (5/7/2026)Canadian Natural Resources (5/7/2026)W.W. Grainger (5/7/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In Email Me a Login Link or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good day, welcome to the UFP Technologies fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ron Lataille, Vice President, Treasurer, and Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:00:42Thank you, operator. Good morning, and thank you for joining us on our 2025 year-end earnings conference call. With me on today's call is our CEO and Chairman, Jeff Bailly. Today, we will make some forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, the accuracy of which is subject to risks and uncertainties. Wherever possible, we will try to identify those forward-looking statements by using words such as believe, expect, anticipate, pursue, forecast, and similar expressions. Our forward-looking statements are based on our estimates and assumptions as of today and should not be relied upon as representing our estimates or views on any subsequent date. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:01:34Please refer to the cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information and the risk factors in our most recent 10-K and subsequent 10-Qs and 8-Ks, including disclosure of the factors that could cause results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. During this call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures, which include organic sales growth, adjusted gross margin, adjusted operating income, adjusted SG&A, adjusted EPS, and EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures discussed in this call is contained in the associated press release and is available in the Investor Relations section of our website. I'll now turn the call over to Jeff. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:02:26Thank you, Ron. I am pleased with our 2025 results and our progress on key strategic initiatives. Sales grew 19.5% for the full year, bringing our total revenue to $602.8 million. This is a significant revenue milestone and represents nearly a tripling of revenue since 2021. During that same four-year period, operating income grew 435%, and EPS grew 419%. We also made significant progress on several key strategic initiatives related to contract extensions, program launches, facility expansions and related moves, and adding and training of new direct labor talent in St. Charles, Illinois, related to our previously disclosed E-Verify attrition issues. 2025 EPS grew 15.4%, despite absorbing $6.3 million in labor inefficiencies at our Illinois AJR facility. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:03:37The AJR E-Verify labor inefficiency was $1.2 million in Q4, less than half of the $3 million Q3 impact, demonstrating the progress that is being made in onboarding and training new direct labor team members. We are continuing to make progress, expanding our capabilities and capacity in the Dominican Republic. In Santiago, we launched our second major program and have recently negotiated a lease for a third building, which will allow us to further expand our safe patient handling business and transfer a third major program. Each program transfer, when complete, saves our customers money and increases our profit potential. In La Romana, D.R., three significant new programs launched. Our fifth building and related move of equipment, materials, and personnel is now complete. It houses a new expanded product development center, a newly launched external capital program, and a centralized warehouse to support buildings one through four. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:04:46We plan to take possession of a sixth building in April, which will further expand our robotic surgery capacity to support anticipated growth. We have also expanded and extended our contract with our largest customer, materially increasing the volumes on existing programs and adding an additional program. We have also made exciting progress in other markets, funding a contract extension with our largest infection prevention customer that runs through 2030. In the orthopedic sterile packaging space, we have also won new business and added new capabilities in Ireland, which adds significant value to our global offerings. On the human resources front, our new director-level talent, one level below our corporate officers, is making significant contributions in the U.S., Ireland, and the D.R. This group runs our day-to-day operations and is doing a great job. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:05:47On the acquisition front, integrations of the four acquisitions completed in 2024 and the three completed in 2025 are all progressing well. We continue to search for additional strategic acquisitions that will increase our value to customers while maintaining our disciplined approach. Finally, our CEO transition planning with Mitch Rock is essentially complete, and he is well prepared to succeed me as CEO in June. I will continue for 1 year as executive chair to support him and provide assistance in vetting new acquisition opportunities and key strategic hires. With a robust pipeline of new growth opportunities, significant progress on our strategic initiatives, including multiple successful program launches, exciting new talent in our company, and a strong balance sheet to fund future growth, we remain very bullish about our future. I'll now hand it over to Ron to provide more color on our financials. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:06:45Thank you, Jeff. I am also pleased with our fourth quarter and year-end results as we delivered solid numbers despite working through the labor challenge at AJR, referred to by Jeff. Before I provide more color on our results, I want to spend a few minutes on the cybersecurity breach disclosed in an 8-K last evening. The attack was detected on the morning of Saturday, February 14th. By that evening, forensic incident response consultants were engaged, and by Sunday evening, they were on site in Newburyport. This was a classic ransomware attack that appears to have impacted many, but not all, of our IT systems. Data was taken and then destroyed. Fortunately, we had credible duplicate backups and a thorough contingency plan that allowed us to operate since the date of the incident. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:07:41At this point, the incident caused minimal interruptions to our operations, and we believe our primary information systems are being brought back online this week in all material respects. From a financial standpoint, we have cybersecurity insurance and do not expect a material impact to our operations, cash or liquidity, though our investigation is continuing. Moving to operations, overall sales were up nicely, largely fueled by growth in the safe patient handling, infection control, and orthopedic packaging medical submarkets. As anticipated, organic sales growth for the year was low single digits. This is largely due to abnormally high 2024 sales in robotic surgery, as well as backlog in our safe patient handling business due to the labor issue at AJR. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:08:34Gross profit as a percentage of sales or gross margin decreased in 2025 to 28.3%, largely due to the $6.3 million in extra labor costs incurred at AJR, which are all reflected in cost of sales. Absent these additional labor costs, gross margins would have increased to 29.3%. As Jeff mentioned, we improved efficiency levels in the fourth quarter and anticipate further ongoing improvement. Adjusted operating margin for the year was 17.1% of sales, within our target range of 17%-20%, despite the extra labor costs. Our effective tax rate of 17.2% for the full year of 2025 was down from a year ago, reflecting a continued shift in pre-tax income to the Dominican Republic, where we effectively pay no income taxes. 2025 was a strong year for cash generation. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:09:36We had approximately $92 million in cash from operations, despite $12.9 million in capital expenditures and funding three acquisitions, we paid down approximately $53.9 million in debt and ended the year with a leverage ratio of approximately 1.1 times. With that, I now turn it back to the operator for questions. Operator00:09:59We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. If at any time your question has been addressed and you would like to withdraw your question, please press star then two. Our first question comes from Brett Fishman with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Analyst at KeyBank Capital Markets00:10:26Hey, this is Will on for Brett. Good news around the contract extension. Could you just provide us any directional color on how we should think about volumes with your largest customer in 2026 and 2027, and maybe how we should think about the minimum volumes for 2028 and 2029? I have 1 more as a follow-up. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:10:46Sure. I mean, clearly the contract extension is great news for us. It extended two additional years, which we knew was coming, but it makes the rest of the world settle down, and it was expanded to add additional program, and the two programs in place, increased materially. Our customers, all of them now, have come to us and said, "Please do not give any information that could allow the outside world to protect our business and or put us at any competitive disadvantage." We are now unfortunately not able to give any commentary on how significantly it went up. You know, they agreed to the words, material, because it is a material increase of where we are now. The same applies, unfortunately, for giving guidance on 2026 and 2027. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:11:27You can kind of refer to the previous contract, and you know, there's minimums that they have to hit. I think it has to be in the low sevens the last couple of years. They have consistently been higher than those minimums. Under strict instructions from many of our customers, we're not going to be able to give specifics, unfortunately. Analyst at KeyBank Capital Markets00:11:48Okay. Yeah, I think that makes sense. Maybe, just going over to AJR, regarding the headwind, like you indicated a $1.2 million impact in 4Q. How are you thinking about this impact in 1Q and maybe just any impact in the rest of 2026? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:12:11Yeah, the team is making consistent progress, and there's a couple different objectives. One was to bring on new people because our team was way down. We have staffed up to the level that we needed to be. Some are still temps, some are permanent. When they get to a certain level of skill, they switch over. Two things happen then. The skill goes up, and the cost goes down. We are continuing to transition to temps, but we're not bringing in new people in general right now. Those two things are all forward progress we're going to look forward to. We're running overtime now, so we're at their level, so we can keep up with our existing team, and we're running overtime to knock down any backlog that exists. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:12:47We did, unfortunately, have backlog carry over into this year, which is, you know, good news for the revenue of this year, but it's bad news that we haven't completely caught up with our customer. When that backlog is worked down, we will get rid of the overtime as well. Everything going forward should be progress. We expect Q1 will have some impact. It will be less than the fourth quarter, and then it'll diminish after that. Yeah, there will be some carry on, but continued progress is expected in each consecutive quarter. Operator00:13:25Our next question comes from Justin Ages with CJS Securities. Please go ahead. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS Securities00:13:31Hi. Morning, all. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:13:34Morning. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:13:36Morning. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS Securities00:13:36Can you give us a little more color on the puts and takes of the flat med tech growth? I know you mentioned infection prevention, just trying to, you know, take a look into 2026 and kind of size what's going to be the main drivers of growth there in med tech. Thank you. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:13:56We're expecting continued robust growth in the patient services market, that is expanding on its own, and we're catching up from the prior year. I think that'll be a super strong year. We've also launched three new programs of late, one in infection prevention, two in robotic surgery, which are both positive influences going forward. There's some other markets that are coming along, that sort of represent growth in the future, that are in the development stages now. Those are a little more, wound care and/or diagnostics. I don't think those will hit 2026 revenue. Well, they hit the list of things we're excited about going forward. That's sort of the update on what we expect to be robust growth next year. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:14:38Justin, I'll let me elaborate, Ron. If you're talking about flat med tech growth, specifically for the Q4, just a reminder that we had some revenue pulled into Q3. Sales in Q3 were higher, if you recall, than we had anticipated. That's part of the reason why sales, specifically for the fourth quarter, were a bit softer. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS Securities00:15:05That's helpful. Thanks for that. Second, on the cybersecurity incident, you mentioned systems are back online, but is there any disruption in business that will impact growth rates? Operationally seems to be things are back in order, but in terms of, you know, performing for customers, is there any impact there, or is that still under investigation? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:15:31I mean, big picture, it's not good news, obviously, that somebody's able to get into our system. It was really good news, how our team responded and how robust our backup systems were. We were back in action literally day one, making parts, but we didn't have the ability, day one, to label everything properly and ship everything. There will be a delay in how things get shipped. I'll turn it over to Ron to give you some specifics, but the key is we were able to keep making everything we needed to make. There may be some delays in when some of these things actually ship. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:16:01Yeah, the event happened mid-quarter, we are back online in all of our ERP systems as we speak. The team, fortunately, we had the wherewithal years ago, our Senior Vice President of IT, in conjunction with our operations leadership, developed a pretty robust contingency plan to operate without systems for this exact reason, and we launched that contingency plan. Albeit inefficiently, we were able to make parts and ship to the customers with manual invoicing. I don't think there's going to be a material impact on Q1 in its entirety. It'll be soft within the month of February, within the quarter, but we'll make up for it in March. Justin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS Securities00:16:50That's super helpful. Thanks for taking the questions. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:16:54You're welcome. Operator00:16:54Our next question comes from Max Michaelis with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:17:01Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. A few here around the contract extension, just around the facility, I guess. That's sixth facility. Are you guys on the hook for that entire investment, or are you getting any help from your largest customer here? I should say, as well as what's sort of the timeline of completion of that facility, too? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:17:24Yeah. With all of our major contracts, there's co-investment, with really, without exception. Some of them, the customers are on the hook for literally all of the capital. Again, under confidentiality with the customer, we haven't been able to give out all those details. I can tell you our primary responsibility in this contract extension relates to leases and personnel. Capacity is ramping up, so capital will be purchased, and it will be installed, and we will be starting, I think we take possession of the sixth building in April. We will begin, first of all, we have to get the thing fit for use, which is put in clean rooms and get it all fit and set up. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:18:07It'll start this year, and we'll be adding that capacity, and, like I just mentioned, our primary responsibility is leases and personnel. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:18:17Perfect. Okay, you guys called out safe patient handling in the press release as well. Is there any way you can kind of size that opportunity for us? It seems like it's going to be solid opportunity here. You expect more growth in 2026. Just kind of give us, can you give us an idea of what the market size is there or just any way you can help us? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:18:39Yeah, I think that's a large and growing market. We've partnered with the market leader. You know, we're experiencing double-digit growth without making up for previous backlog additions. I think that you can look forward to robust growth in that market for multiple years. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:19:00All righty. Thanks, guys. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:19:03You're welcome. Operator00:19:04Our next question comes from Andrew Cooper with Raymond James. Please go ahead. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:19:11Hey, everybody. Thanks for the questions. Maybe first, just want to clarify some of the commentary around new programs. I think in the release you mentioned, we launched three new programs. It sounded like referring to the La Romana facility. Just curious, I know you had talked about two, and then you mentioned one new one in the extended contract. Are those the three, or is there an additional program that's sort of net new that we need to think about for that facility or that line of business? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:19:42Yeah. Two of the programs were the multimillion dollar programs we had referred to in the past that we're launching at the end of the year. They were both robotic surgery related. The 3rd one was actually not robotic surgery. We had three different plants sort of collaborate and come together with their materials expertise and process expertise to really design an infection prevention device, start to finish, that will ship directly to the patients. You know, it'll be packaged and ready to go from our facility. That one has launched in La Romana, in our new building number five. That is set up and going, you know, just the launches are slow, you know, but we are making parts, but they'll go through a rigorous process of vetting those parts, and they'll slowly ramp up. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:20:22Yes, the third program is not, robotic surgery. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:20:28Okay, that's helpful context. I know you're limited in what you're able to say in terms of the contract, but I think the release included noting that you added volume-based pricing matrix, matrices and some cost-sharing provisions. I just want to clarify, are those net new, and, you know, is there anything to read into layering those in and how that maybe portends for sort of the long-term nature and maybe not needing to amend or adjust the contract as much going forward because you have some of these kind of features in place in the existing language? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:21:06Yeah. The contract, the key to the contract for us is when we make a long-term commitment to a customer, we want to make a long-term contract with a vendor at the same time. Part and parcel to this is if we make promises to the customer that relate to cost downs, very often they're being financed by our vendor or together with our vendor. When we come up with cost saving initiatives, they're typically shared with our customer. I think the customer wins, and we win in this process. I don't think there's any negative to look forward to going other than increased volume. There is, when they hit certain milestones, whatever those are, there is cost-sharing opportunities that is born between the three of us, or enjoyed between the three of us. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:21:49Okay. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:21:49I should say, the vendor, ourselves, and the customer. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:21:53I didn't mean to imply a negative. Sorry if that came across differently. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:21:56Yeah. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:21:56That's helpful. Lastly, maybe just the AJR business. I mean, I think you talked about $8 million of backlog at the last update. Just curious, did that work down at all in the quarter? If not, how should we think about the pacing of that starting to happen? Then just any updates on knowing you have this third program moving, starting to move to Dominican Republic, you know, on kind of completion of and, when we should expect kind of pacing of the shift to start flowing through the P&L more? Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:22:33Ron, I'll let you tackle the backlog, and then I'll switch over and tackle the second question, which relates to program three. Ron LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFO at UFP Technologies00:22:42Our customer specifically asked us not to speak of backlog. The $8 million you referred to, Andrew, was the quarter, not the full amount. I can tell you that the backlog going into 2026 is higher than that, but I can't disclose the number. We do expect to work it down gradually throughout 2026. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:23:06Okay. With respect to program number three, these were all phased 1, then the next, and the next. Program number one was completely transferred, up and running, and running at rate. Program two has now been transferred. It's up and running, but not running at rate, as we go through the process. Program three is scheduled to transfer when program two is complete. We're taking possession of a new building, I believe in April also, and we'll get that fit up and set up. That'll be sort of the second half of the year assignment. The key is that we have full capabilities already in Illinois to do these programs. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:23:40These are redundant capabilities, and when they move over, our customer enjoys some cost saves, and we enjoy the opportunity to make additional profits when we get to our run-at-rate levels. Andrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond James00:23:52Okay, I'll stop there. Thanks, everybody. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:23:55You're welcome. Operator00:23:57This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Jeff Bailly for any closing remarks. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:24:06Thank you, operator. Thank you all for participating on the call. We are super excited about the future. The long-term contract hopefully dispels some of the concerns some people might have had. You know, we have really positioned ourselves with our top three or four customers for the next 4 years or 5 years of really understanding what our growth trajectory is, and we have the vendors aligned right beside us. I think we've done an excellent job in the transition plan for our new CEO. He is super fired up. He's been with us for 25+ years. He was integral in helping develop the strategy. He's been integral in executing the strategy. We've had a development plan that has given him exposure to all different parts of the business, including to some of our investors of late. Jeff BaillyChairman and CEO at UFP Technologies00:24:46It has all gone super well. I think that's something for everybody to be excited about. I can tell you he is fired up. He's well qualified and a super smart guy. We appreciate your interest. We're excited about the future, I'll end it there. Operator00:25:02The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesJeff BaillyChairman and CEORon LatailleVP, Treasurer, and CFOAnalystsAndrew CooperDirector of Equity Research at Raymond JamesJustin AgesDirector of Equity Research at CJS SecuritiesMax MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital MarketsAnalyst at KeyBank Capital MarketsPowered by