NASDAQ:KE Kimball Electronics Q2 2026 Earnings Report $24.34 +0.03 (+0.12%) As of 03:27 PM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Kimball Electronics EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.28Consensus EPS $0.28Beat/MissMet ExpectationsOne Year Ago EPSN/AKimball Electronics Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$341.28 millionExpected Revenue$339.34 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$1.94 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AKimball Electronics Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2026Date2/4/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, February 5, 2026Conference Call Time10:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Kimball Electronics Q2 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 5, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Strong momentum in the medical vertical — Q2 medical sales were $96M (+15% YoY), the fourth consecutive quarter of growth, and the new Indianapolis CMO facility (grand opening) plus the planned rebrand to Kimball Solutions position the company to capture higher‑value, long‑life medical programs. Positive Sentiment: Management raised fiscal‑2026 guidance to $1.40–$1.46B in net sales and adjusted operating income of 4.2%–4.5%, citing medical strength and European automotive program ramps as the drivers. Negative Sentiment: Overall revenue weakness remains a concern — consolidated Q2 sales fell 5% YoY to $341.3M as automotive (-13%) and industrial (-5%) declines, plus continued softness in China, offset medical gains. Negative Sentiment: Near‑term margin pressure from investments — the Indianapolis plant opening, higher S&A for transformation/IT, and Q2’s elevated effective tax rate (47.9% due to one‑time items) will weigh on near‑term profitability despite long‑term upside. Positive Sentiment: Balance sheet and cash flow trends are supportive: eight consecutive quarters of positive operating cash flow, $77.9M cash, borrowings down ~25% YoY, $363M in short‑term liquidity, and ongoing share repurchases. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallKimball Electronics Q2 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Kimball Electronics second quarter fiscal 2026 earnings conference call. My name is Alicia, and I'll be your facilitator for today's call. All lines have been placed in a listen-only mode to prevent any background noise. After the completion of the prepared remarks from the Kimball Electronics leadership team, there will be a question-and-answer period. To ask a question, simply press star and the number one on your telephone keypad. Today's call, February 5, 2026, is being recorded. A replay of the call will be available on the Investor Relations page of the Kimball Electronics website. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Andy Regrut, Vice President Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer. Mr. Regrut, you may begin. Andy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer at Kimball Electronics00:00:52Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to our second quarter conference call. With us today is Ric Phillips, Chief Executive Officer, and Jana Croom, Chief Financial Officer. We issued a press release yesterday afternoon with our results for the second quarter of fiscal 2026 ending December 31, 2025. To accompany today's call, a presentation has been posted to the Investor Relations page on our company website. Before we get started, I'd like to remind you that we will be making forward-looking statements that involve risk and uncertainty and are subject to our safe harbor provisions as stated in our press release and SEC filings, and that actual results can differ materially from the forward-looking statements. Andy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer at Kimball Electronics00:01:38Our commentary today will be focused on adjusted non-GAAP results. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP amounts are available in our press release. This morning, Ric will start the call with a few opening comments. Andy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer at Kimball Electronics00:01:51Jana will review the financial results for the quarter and guidance for fiscal 2026, and Ric will complete our prepared remarks before taking your questions. I'll now turn the call over to Ric. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:02:04Thank you, Andy, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased with the results for the second quarter and our updated guidance for fiscal 2026. Sales in Q2 were in line with expectations, highlighted by another quarter of strong double-digit year-over-year growth in the medical vertical. Margins improved compared to the same period last year, and cash from operations was positive for the eighth consecutive quarter. Our focus as a medical CMO continues to gain momentum as we leverage our unique capabilities in the industry. We expect top-line growth in medical to outpace our other two verticals as we balance our portfolio across the markets we serve. Our recent announcement to rebrand as Kimball Solutions and the grand opening of the new medical manufacturing facility in Indianapolis reflects this strategy and our expanded offering of capabilities and services. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:03:03Turning to the second quarter, net sales for the company were $341 million, a 5% decline compared to Q2 last year. From an end-market perspective, the strong results in medical were offset by declines in North American automotive and industrial and continued softness in China. Starting with medical, sales in the second quarter were $96 million, up 15% compared to the same period last year and 28% of total company sales. This represents our fourth consecutive quarter of year-over-year revenue growth in this vertical. Approximately half of our medical business is in North America. The other half is roughly split between Asia and Europe. The increase in Q2 was driven by growth in Poland and Thailand. North America was flattish in the quarter. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:03:59We continue to view the medical vertical as a compelling opportunity to diversify our top-line and leverage our core strengths as a trusted partner in a complex and highly regulated industry. Megatrends such as an aging population, increasing access and affordability to healthcare, and smaller medical devices requiring higher levels of precision and accuracy are expected to fuel future growth. Our strategy is to align with new and existing blue-chip customers in need of manufacturing capacity for products with long life cycles and high degrees of visibility. A great example of this strategy coming to light is our new facility in Indianapolis. Tomorrow, we will be celebrating the grand opening with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and plant tour showcasing our state-of-the-art facility that adds capacity to our U.S. footprint for manufacturing medical products, single-use surgical instruments, and drug delivery devices such as auto-injectors. Indianapolis, however, is not the only example. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:05:07Thailand, Poland, Mexico, and Jasper also serve the medical market with HLAs and finished medical products. To complement our organic growth, we're actively pursuing disciplined acquisitions that could bring new customers, increase exposure to faster-growing end markets, expand our geographic reach, and add manufacturing capabilities, including opportunities for vertical integration. Together, these strategies strengthen our global platform and position the company for a sustainable return to profitable growth. Next is automotive, with sales of $162 million, down 13% compared to the second quarter of last year and 48% of the total company. The decline in Q2 was driven by lower sales in North America, the result of the electronic braking program transferred out of Reynosa in mid-fiscal 2025, and recent pressure in the U.S. related to tariffs. The combined impact represented the majority of the decrease in the quarter, although automotive sales were also down in China. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:06:18This was partially offset by strong growth in both Poland and Romania, with programs in steering and braking, respectively. Our company has supported the automotive market since the mid-'80s and has become a very good business for us, generating strong cash flow when production volumes are at or above planned levels. Electronic steering and braking applications continue to be our sweet spot, with advances such as steer-by-wire and brake-by-wire, or electromechanical braking, increasing the electronic content on vehicles. We are also seeing early stages of growth from the full assembly of an EPP, or electronic power pack, a steering system HLA that integrates the motor and the ECU. In addition, OEMs are starting to design in a second steering system in vehicles, this one in the rear of certain higher-end cars and trucks. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:07:16Finally, sales in industrial totaled $83 million, a 5% decrease compared to Q2 last year and 24% of total company sales. Our industrial business is heavily concentrated in North America, where the majority of the decline occurred, with lower demand for HVAC systems. This was partially offset by higher sales in Europe, a result of a rebound of the smart meter business for us in that region. I'll now turn the call over to Jana for more detail on Q2 and our updated outlook with raised guidance for fiscal 2026. Jana? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:07:55Thank you, and good morning, everyone. As Ric highlighted, net sales in the second quarter were $341.3 million, a 5% decrease year-over-year. Foreign exchange had a 2% favorable impact on consolidated sales in the quarter. On a sequential basis, sales were down just over 6% compared to Q1, with the decline primarily occurring in the industrial vertical market driven by reduced sales in the North American climate control submarket. The gross margin rate in the second quarter was 8.2%, a 160 basis point improvement compared to 6.6% in the same period of fiscal 2025, with the increase resulting from favorable mix, the closure of our Tampa facility, favorable FX rates, and our global restructuring efforts. Adjusted selling and administrative expenses in the second quarter were $12.6 million, a $2.5 million increase year-over-year. When measured as a percentage of sales, the rate was 3.7% this year compared to 2.9% last year. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:09:12As we previously indicated, expense will be higher in FY26 as we make strategic investments in business transformation, IT solutions, and business development for the future. Adjusted operating income in Q2 was $15.3 million, or 4.5% of net sales, which compares to last year's adjusted results of $13.3 million, or 3.7% of net sales. Our improved guidance for adjusted income reflects the impact of higher sales, as well as the S&A investments I just spoke about, and the grand opening of our new CMO facility in Indianapolis, where we will incur higher depreciation and other expenses related to the plant opening. We have worked hard to balance the needs of the business against the backdrop of declining sales. We will continue our restructuring efforts in FY26 and beyond as we align our cost structure to end-market demand. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:10:18Other income and expense was expense of $3.8 million compared to $4.8 million of expense last year. Once again, this quarter, interest expense drove the decrease, down 50% year-over-year. The effective tax rate in Q2 was 47.9% compared to 1.2% last year, with a higher rate driven by the impact of a provision-to-tax-return adjustment and valuation allowance adjustment associated with the expected sale of the Tampa facility. For the full year of fiscal 2026, we continue to expect an effective tax rate in the high 20s to low 30s. Adjusted net income in the first quarter was $6.9 million, or $0.28 per diluted share, compared to last year's adjusted results of $7.4 million, or $0.29 per diluted share. Turning now to the balance sheet. Cash and cash equivalents at December 31, 2025, were $77.9 million. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:11:30Cash generated by operating activities in the quarter was $6.9 million, our eighth consecutive quarter of positive cash flow. Cash conversion days were 91 days, an 8-day increase compared to last quarter, but a 16-day improvement compared to Q2 of fiscal 2025. We are continuing to focus on improving cash conversion days by actively managing the components and are pleased by our progress thus far. Inventory ended the quarter at $281.7 million, marginally higher than Q1 but down $24.5 million, or 8%, from a year ago. Capital expenditures in Q2 were $18.2 million, with much of the spend, once again this quarter, on leasehold improvements in the new facility in Indianapolis. Borrowings at December 31, 2025, were $154 million, up $16 million from the first quarter but down $51 million, or roughly 25%, from a year ago. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:12:46Short-term liquidity available, represented as cash and cash equivalents plus the unused portion of our credit facilities, totaled $363 million at the end of the second quarter. We invested $4.3 million in Q2 to repurchase 149,000 shares. Since October 2015, under our board-authorized share repurchase program, a total of $109.5 million has been returned to our shareholders by purchasing 6.8 million shares of common stock. We have $10.5 million remaining on the repurchase program. As Ric mentioned, we are raising our guidance for fiscal 2026 with net sales expected to be in the range of $1.4-$1.46 billion, which compares to our previous guidance of $1.35-$1.45 billion. The improvement is driven by strength in the medical vertical as well as the ramp-up automotive programs at both European facilities. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:13:55Adjusted operating income now estimated to be 4.2%-4.5% of net sales versus our prior estimate of 4.0%-4.25%, with the improvement driven by higher sales balanced against investments in our Indianapolis CMO facility, business development needs, and business transformation and IT solutions to further innovations and enhance our capabilities. The guidance for capital expenditures did not change, with a range of $50-$60 million for the fiscal year. I'll now turn the call back over to Ric. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:14:33Thanks, Jana. Before we open the lines for questions, I'd like to share a few thoughts in closing. As Jana detailed, we are pleased to raise the outlook for the fiscal year driven by strength in the medical vertical. We continue to monitor the outlook for FY27, particularly in the North America automotive and industrial verticals, as the consumer continues to respond to tariff impacts, changes in U.S. tax subsidies, and economic concerns. We'll provide more color on our outlook as the year progresses. 2026 is a year of milestones for our company, with our facility in Romania celebrating 10 years of operations, China 20 years, and it's the 65th anniversary for the enterprise. As we previously announced, we are celebrating this anniversary and embracing our future with a new company name, Kimball Solutions. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:15:29This rebrand is a strategic move that reflects our evolution beyond traditional electronics manufacturing services, with an expanded portfolio of capabilities that includes design and engineering support, supply chain management, precision plastics for medical applications, and high-level and final product assemblies for the verticals we serve. It also embodies our customer-centric approach to long-lasting partnerships, providing end-to-end solutions from design and prototyping to new product introduction, manufacturing, and aftermarket support. The rebrand will occur in a phased rollout at locations across the global footprint beginning in July of 2026 and will be completed when the company officially changes its name a year later pending shareholders' approval. This change, along with the recent investments in Indianapolis, demonstrates our commitment to innovation and the vision to deliver comprehensive solutions worldwide. While the name of the company is changing, our core values of integrity, quality, and continuous improvement remain steadfast. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:16:43These steps are a celebration of our heritage and a move toward the future, building tomorrow together. I've never been more excited about the company, and thank you for your support. Operator, we would now like to open the lines for questions. Operator00:17:01Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, analysts may ask a question at this time by simply pressing star one on your dial pad. You can remove yourself from the queue by pressing star two. We ask that if you are using a speakerphone, you can pick up your handset before asking the question. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Mike Crawford with B. Riley Securities. Please proceed. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:17:36Thank you. Just starting with... hello? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:17:40Good morning. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:17:42Good morning. Jana, starting with automotive, and I believe it's primarily Nexteer driving. Your steer-by-wire growth. They remain your largest customer. It was a 19% customer in the September quarter. What percent was Nexteer in December? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:18:0820. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:18:1020%? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:18:12Yes. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:18:14Thank you. And then are your other customers also expanding that, or is it more braking that's driving some of the recovery there? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:18:29So we are seeing steering and braking with our largest automotive customers, and that would be Nexteer, ZF, and HL Mando. So it's not exclusive to Nexteer, but obviously, globally, Nexteer is our largest customer. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:18:50Okay. Yeah, well, it's great to see that flattening out. And then on the growth side, can you remind us what the capacity is and ramp expectations are for this new facility in Indianapolis? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:19:10Yeah. So the new facility in Indianapolis is 300,000 sq ft under roof, and so considerably larger than our current footprint. It depends on the makeup of the volume of work that you've got to be able to tell you exactly what that's going to equate to in terms of revenue dollars, but significant opportunity for growth there. And we needed to demonstrate that for the types of business that we are courting for that facility. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:19:49And then, I mean, I think Philips remains your largest medical customer to date, but I imagine much of the work that you're doing in Indianapolis would be with some of your emerging growing medical customers, or do I have that wrong? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:20:11No, you have that correct. And as an example, if you look at the growth in Q2 and the year-to-date growth, it was split fairly evenly amongst North America, Europe, and Asia, and fairly evenly in the subverticals within medical, meaning it was not driven by respiratory care. And so medical for Kimball is growing. And you're right, that CMO space would likely not have Philips content just because that's not the makeup of the business that we perform for them. It would be new customers and expanded opportunities there. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:20:53Okay. Thank you. And just final question, is it more plastic injection molding, or what are some of the value-added CMO applications that are your fastest-growing parts of the business? Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:21:14Yeah, Mike, it's Ric. Good morning. Great question. Yeah, so we expect that facility, and again, as Jana said, we'll be working with customers. We're excited about our funnel and some of the discussions that we're having. But we could imagine think of single-use surgical instruments, drug delivery devices such as auto-injectors. Certainly, as you said, plastic injection molding, we expect to be very significant, and we'll have significant capacity there. So all of those are expected to be housed at least partially in that CMO facility in Indy. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:21:53Great. Thank you very much. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:21:55Thank you. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:21:55Thanks, Mike. Operator00:21:56Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Derek Soderberg with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed. Derek SoderbergDirector, Senior Equity Research Analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald00:22:11Hey, thanks for taking the questions. Hey, Jana. So wanted to start with automotive. So a little bit of softness in China and North America. Just given that you guys won't be comping against quarters in the past with the braking program in North America, just going forward, how should we think about sort of growth in the automotive piece for Q3 and Q4, sort of flattish declines year-over-year, sort of down single-digit percentages? What's sort of the right way to think about automotive for the rest of the year? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:22:47Yeah, so great question. We will finally anniversary the end of the EB100 program in Q3. And so what we would expect is Q3 automotive to be flat to potentially up just a little bit because we've finally worked that through the system. And we've got the two new programs in Europe, and Europe has been rebounding nicely for us. And so in terms of automotive and the sluggishness, the worst of it is past us in Q1 and Q2. Derek SoderbergDirector, Senior Equity Research Analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald00:23:26Got it. That's helpful. And then, Ric, just if you could comment on some of the win rates you're seeing across the business, any sort of change in the size of the wins? What sort of gets you excited for what you're seeing in the portfolio as we sort of kind of look forward here? Thanks. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:23:46Yeah, we're really excited, Derek, looking forward and appreciate the question. We're seeing pretty consistent win rates. I mean, not that it's not very competitive out there. There are certainly situations where we have program bidding situations where we decide we're not willing to accept a level of margin that's not for us. So certainly, I wouldn't characterize it as anything but very competitive. However, we feel the strengths that we have in those long-term customer relationships, our capabilities, our flexibility and quality and operations record, all of those things that we've talked about in the past continue to serve us very well. In terms of programs going forward, particularly in medical but also in industrial, there's maybe a couple of things that are worth note. One is that we've always been open to and seeking what we call lift and shift opportunities. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:24:48Where we're working with a customer who's currently doing their own manufacturing and has a desire to exit that for whatever reason, to focus on R&D or marketing or sales or whatever is appropriate for them, and have us take that over in our existing facility network. We're seeing that activity in terms of those conversations increase, and those tend to be large programs because this would be an example of a customer potentially shutting down an entire plant and moving that all into our footprint. Those are larger to the extent that we close those, and we're excited about those discussions. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:25:26And then the CMO discussions that we're having also, those programs tend to be significantly larger than our typical average medical program just because of the nature of that business, the growth in that business, and the scope and scale of what those customers are doing. But great question. Derek SoderbergDirector, Senior Equity Research Analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald00:25:47Got it. That sounds great. Thanks. Operator00:25:54Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Anja Soderstrom with Sidoti. Oh, and if anyone would like to ask a question, please press star 1. Anja SoderstromSenior Equity Research Analyst at Sidoti00:26:06Hi. Thank you for taking my question. So I'm just curious, with this new facility that you're opening, as you ramped up, how should we think about that having an impact on the margin? Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:26:26We certainly think over time that the CMO space has an opportunity for margins accretive to what you've seen from us historically. That's going to depend program by program and customer by customer and, again, all competitive situations. But we think that that space and our capabilities lend itself for that to be accretive in the long term. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:26:50But Anja, I will tell you, in the near term, it's going to drag, right, because we have all the depreciation expense, all of the additional expense associated with the opening of that facility. We're currently running both facilities, right, because we've got to move everything over, and then we'll have to close the facility. So for the next 6-9 months or 2-3 quarters, it's going to be a drag. And the reason that I want to point that out is the operating income margin that we produced in Q2, considering the fact that we had $16 million less sales and the impact of the grand opening of the Indy facility and other investments that we made, I think is a testament to our commitment as a leadership team to deliver value to the organization and to our shareholders. It was a lot of work. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:27:50While we feel very confident in the strategy for the future, we're working hard to offset that drag in other areas of the business. Anja SoderstromSenior Equity Research Analyst at Sidoti00:28:01Okay. Thank you. And then how do you see the cash cycle days play out in the coming quarters? It was quite elevated for the quarter. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:28:11Yeah. So for the last two years, we've really been after cash conversion, cash cycling. We've got a pretty aggressive PDSOH goal. We saw it tick up from 85 days to 90 days, primarily driven by North America and the impact of autos and industrials. We saw inventory tick up a little bit. That remains a key focus of the organization. We worked really, really hard to get working capital solid and inventory reductions and corresponding impact and debt on the balance sheet. You can expect that to continue to be a laser focus of us as the leadership team. So said more plainly, I would expect Q3 to come back down from where it was in Q2. Anja SoderstromSenior Equity Research Analyst at Sidoti00:29:08Okay. Thank you. That was all from me. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:29:11I would like to, and I know no one asked, but I think it would just be helpful to give a little bit more color specifically on the remainder of the year. So if you take the midpoint of our revenue guide at $1,430 and you strip out the full year or what we've done so far at $707, that leaves you with $723 million roughly to go. What that would insinuate is that Q3 and 4 are going to be roughly in line with Q1 in terms of revenue growth. And we already talked about autos and the fact that we've anniversaried EB100. From a medical perspective, I would like to remind everyone that we had the consigned inventory sale in Q3 of FY2025 of $24 million. So when we report Q3, we're going to give you the results. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:30:09We will tell you what growth was in medical, including the inventory sales and excluding the inventory sales. So we won't make you do that math, but I just wanted to remind everybody of that. Then it's industrial, North America. That's where our focus is going to continue to be in terms of seeing how that's going to shake out. So just as everybody's fine-tuning their models, some additional color I thought might be helpful for you. Operator00:30:47Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Max Michaelis with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please proceed. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:30:56Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Thanks for the color on the model too. If we look at automotive, I was just hoping if you could provide some more color on maybe the opportunity with the EPP, the electronic power pack program, and then kind of some of the opportunities around the OEMs with the steer-by-wire. I mean, can these become similar in size to the old EMB or the old braking program that ended up going away? Or kind of just help me out with where the potential is with these two programs. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:31:36So we were really excited about the EPP program because it's our first high-level assembly in automotive where you're combining the motor and the printed circuit board assembly. And so that's really exciting. In terms of size of the program, the EPP is not as big as the braking program was. It's probably about two-thirds of that size. But from a future strategic focus in automotive, it's really exciting. The other thing that I'll say is, as you think about the continuum of opportunity in automotive, particularly as it relates to ADAS, right? So you've got steering programs now. You've got braking programs now. Steer-by-wire, brake-by-wire, that's all really exciting. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:32:26But you also have ADAS where it's, "Hey, there's going to be a central brain functioning in the car that's going to be controlling all of the electronics in there." And that's something that Kimball is also interested in pursuing in the future. We would expect, as EPP becomes more common in vehicles, as second steering column becomes more common in vehicles and ADAS, that those are strategic areas that we would want to participate in, right? So I remember when autonomous driving lane departure features were only available in very, very high-end cars. Now they're everywhere, right? A Nissan Sentra's got it. So everybody everywhere is offering that feature. And it's exciting in terms of the strategic opportunities for automotive. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:33:26Awesome. Thank you. Next one, if we look at the medical space, you talked about inorganic opportunities last quarter. I don't think you had in the prepared remarks in this call. But we look at some of the things you guys provide with the auto-injectors, sleep therapy, drug delivery. I mean, when you're looking at acquisitions, I mean, what are some of the other some of the other spaces or what's called subverticals that you guys are looking at where you're seeing some great opportunities? Andy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer at Kimball Electronics00:34:00Hey, Max. It's Andy. We have done a fairly deep dive in market exposures. And in vitro diagnostics is really interesting to us. Cardiology is really interesting to us. So we would certainly consider opportunities or adjacencies to expand into those areas, especially if it provided a chance to either expand a relationship with an existing customer or add a new customer. And the same for manufacturing capabilities. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:34:36All righty. I'll take the rest of mine offline. Thanks, guys. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:34:40Thank you. Operator00:34:45Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. A replay of this call will be available beginning later today and will remain available through February 19th, 2026. To access the replay, please dial 877-660-6853 and enter the access ID 13757544. With that, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you, everyone, for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAndy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and TreasurerJana CroomCFORic PhillipsCEOAnalystsAnja SoderstromSenior Equity Research Analyst at SidotiDerek SoderbergDirector, Senior Equity Research Analyst at Cantor FitzgeraldMax MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital MarketsMike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley SecuritiesPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Kimball Electronics Earnings Headlines1 cash-producing stock for long-term investors and 2 we ignoreMay 21 at 9:49 AM | msn.comKimball Electronics to Participate at the 26th Annual B. Riley Securities Institutional Investor ConferenceMay 19 at 4:05 PM | businesswire.com$30 stock to buy before Starlink goes public (WATCH NOW!)In the next 3 minutes… James Altucher – legendary investor and venture capitalist… And someone who’s known for playing his cards “close to the vest”… Is going to give you the name and ticker symbol of a company he believes will skyrocket thanks to the coming Starlink IPO…May 21 at 1:00 AM | Paradigm Press (Ad)5 Revealing Analyst Questions From Kimball Electronics’s Q1 Earnings CallMay 15, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comAnalysts’ Opinions Are Mixed on These Industrial Goods Stocks: Mueller Water Products (MWA), Kimball Electronics (KE) and Arlo Technologies (ARLO)May 10, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comKimball Electronics, Inc. (KE) Q3 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 7, 2026 | seekingalpha.comSee More Kimball Electronics Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Kimball Electronics? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Kimball Electronics and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Kimball ElectronicsKimball Electronics (NASDAQ:KE) is a global electronic manufacturing services (EMS) provider headquartered in Jasper, Tennessee. The company offers end-to-end product design and manufacturing solutions, serving original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) across a range of industries. With a focus on precision electronics and complex assemblies, Kimball Electronics leverages advanced engineering capabilities, quality systems and lean production methods to support customers from product concept through full-scale production. The company’s core offerings include printed circuit board assembly (PCBA), system integration, tooling and test fixture development, and aftermarket services. Kimball Electronics specializes in delivering mission-critical components for the automotive, medical, industrial and consumer markets. Its portfolio encompasses electronic control units, LED lighting systems, sensors, actuators and electromechanical assemblies designed to meet stringent industry and regulatory standards. Kimball Electronics operates manufacturing facilities and design centers across North America, Europe and Asia, enabling close collaboration with customers and efficient supply-chain management. Key production sites are located in the United States and Mexico, while additional facilities in Malaysia, China and the Czech Republic support global volume requirements. This geographic footprint allows the company to offer flexible, region-specific solutions and rapid time-to-market for new product introductions. Tracing its origins to the 1960s as a manufacturing division of Kimball International, the company became an independent, publicly traded entity in 2001. Over more than five decades, Kimball Electronics has built a reputation for technical expertise, operational excellence and customer-focused innovation. The leadership team, composed of seasoned executives in engineering, operations and finance, continues to guide the company’s strategic growth in high-value electronics markets.View Kimball Electronics 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 NVIDIA Price Pullback? Don’t Count on It, Business Is AcceleratingMeta Platforms 10% Layoff Raises a Bigger Question About AI SpendingTarget Shows Strengths, But Analysts Want to See MoreFreight Boom: The Hormuz Blockade PaydayTJX Companies Fires on All Cylinders With 9% Revenue GrowthAnalog Devices Provides Much-Needed Pullback: How Low Can It Go?USA Rare Earth Posts Strong Q1 2026 as Massive Serra Vera Deal Looms Upcoming Earnings AutoZone (5/26/2026)Marvell Technology (5/27/2026)PDD (5/27/2026)Synopsys (5/27/2026)Bank Of Montreal (5/27/2026)Bank of Nova Scotia (5/27/2026)Salesforce (5/27/2026)Snowflake (5/27/2026)Autodesk (5/28/2026)Costco Wholesale (5/28/2026) 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 morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Kimball Electronics second quarter fiscal 2026 earnings conference call. My name is Alicia, and I'll be your facilitator for today's call. All lines have been placed in a listen-only mode to prevent any background noise. After the completion of the prepared remarks from the Kimball Electronics leadership team, there will be a question-and-answer period. To ask a question, simply press star and the number one on your telephone keypad. Today's call, February 5, 2026, is being recorded. A replay of the call will be available on the Investor Relations page of the Kimball Electronics website. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Andy Regrut, Vice President Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer. Mr. Regrut, you may begin. Andy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer at Kimball Electronics00:00:52Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to our second quarter conference call. With us today is Ric Phillips, Chief Executive Officer, and Jana Croom, Chief Financial Officer. We issued a press release yesterday afternoon with our results for the second quarter of fiscal 2026 ending December 31, 2025. To accompany today's call, a presentation has been posted to the Investor Relations page on our company website. Before we get started, I'd like to remind you that we will be making forward-looking statements that involve risk and uncertainty and are subject to our safe harbor provisions as stated in our press release and SEC filings, and that actual results can differ materially from the forward-looking statements. Andy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer at Kimball Electronics00:01:38Our commentary today will be focused on adjusted non-GAAP results. Reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP amounts are available in our press release. This morning, Ric will start the call with a few opening comments. Andy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer at Kimball Electronics00:01:51Jana will review the financial results for the quarter and guidance for fiscal 2026, and Ric will complete our prepared remarks before taking your questions. I'll now turn the call over to Ric. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:02:04Thank you, Andy, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased with the results for the second quarter and our updated guidance for fiscal 2026. Sales in Q2 were in line with expectations, highlighted by another quarter of strong double-digit year-over-year growth in the medical vertical. Margins improved compared to the same period last year, and cash from operations was positive for the eighth consecutive quarter. Our focus as a medical CMO continues to gain momentum as we leverage our unique capabilities in the industry. We expect top-line growth in medical to outpace our other two verticals as we balance our portfolio across the markets we serve. Our recent announcement to rebrand as Kimball Solutions and the grand opening of the new medical manufacturing facility in Indianapolis reflects this strategy and our expanded offering of capabilities and services. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:03:03Turning to the second quarter, net sales for the company were $341 million, a 5% decline compared to Q2 last year. From an end-market perspective, the strong results in medical were offset by declines in North American automotive and industrial and continued softness in China. Starting with medical, sales in the second quarter were $96 million, up 15% compared to the same period last year and 28% of total company sales. This represents our fourth consecutive quarter of year-over-year revenue growth in this vertical. Approximately half of our medical business is in North America. The other half is roughly split between Asia and Europe. The increase in Q2 was driven by growth in Poland and Thailand. North America was flattish in the quarter. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:03:59We continue to view the medical vertical as a compelling opportunity to diversify our top-line and leverage our core strengths as a trusted partner in a complex and highly regulated industry. Megatrends such as an aging population, increasing access and affordability to healthcare, and smaller medical devices requiring higher levels of precision and accuracy are expected to fuel future growth. Our strategy is to align with new and existing blue-chip customers in need of manufacturing capacity for products with long life cycles and high degrees of visibility. A great example of this strategy coming to light is our new facility in Indianapolis. Tomorrow, we will be celebrating the grand opening with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and plant tour showcasing our state-of-the-art facility that adds capacity to our U.S. footprint for manufacturing medical products, single-use surgical instruments, and drug delivery devices such as auto-injectors. Indianapolis, however, is not the only example. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:05:07Thailand, Poland, Mexico, and Jasper also serve the medical market with HLAs and finished medical products. To complement our organic growth, we're actively pursuing disciplined acquisitions that could bring new customers, increase exposure to faster-growing end markets, expand our geographic reach, and add manufacturing capabilities, including opportunities for vertical integration. Together, these strategies strengthen our global platform and position the company for a sustainable return to profitable growth. Next is automotive, with sales of $162 million, down 13% compared to the second quarter of last year and 48% of the total company. The decline in Q2 was driven by lower sales in North America, the result of the electronic braking program transferred out of Reynosa in mid-fiscal 2025, and recent pressure in the U.S. related to tariffs. The combined impact represented the majority of the decrease in the quarter, although automotive sales were also down in China. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:06:18This was partially offset by strong growth in both Poland and Romania, with programs in steering and braking, respectively. Our company has supported the automotive market since the mid-'80s and has become a very good business for us, generating strong cash flow when production volumes are at or above planned levels. Electronic steering and braking applications continue to be our sweet spot, with advances such as steer-by-wire and brake-by-wire, or electromechanical braking, increasing the electronic content on vehicles. We are also seeing early stages of growth from the full assembly of an EPP, or electronic power pack, a steering system HLA that integrates the motor and the ECU. In addition, OEMs are starting to design in a second steering system in vehicles, this one in the rear of certain higher-end cars and trucks. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:07:16Finally, sales in industrial totaled $83 million, a 5% decrease compared to Q2 last year and 24% of total company sales. Our industrial business is heavily concentrated in North America, where the majority of the decline occurred, with lower demand for HVAC systems. This was partially offset by higher sales in Europe, a result of a rebound of the smart meter business for us in that region. I'll now turn the call over to Jana for more detail on Q2 and our updated outlook with raised guidance for fiscal 2026. Jana? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:07:55Thank you, and good morning, everyone. As Ric highlighted, net sales in the second quarter were $341.3 million, a 5% decrease year-over-year. Foreign exchange had a 2% favorable impact on consolidated sales in the quarter. On a sequential basis, sales were down just over 6% compared to Q1, with the decline primarily occurring in the industrial vertical market driven by reduced sales in the North American climate control submarket. The gross margin rate in the second quarter was 8.2%, a 160 basis point improvement compared to 6.6% in the same period of fiscal 2025, with the increase resulting from favorable mix, the closure of our Tampa facility, favorable FX rates, and our global restructuring efforts. Adjusted selling and administrative expenses in the second quarter were $12.6 million, a $2.5 million increase year-over-year. When measured as a percentage of sales, the rate was 3.7% this year compared to 2.9% last year. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:09:12As we previously indicated, expense will be higher in FY26 as we make strategic investments in business transformation, IT solutions, and business development for the future. Adjusted operating income in Q2 was $15.3 million, or 4.5% of net sales, which compares to last year's adjusted results of $13.3 million, or 3.7% of net sales. Our improved guidance for adjusted income reflects the impact of higher sales, as well as the S&A investments I just spoke about, and the grand opening of our new CMO facility in Indianapolis, where we will incur higher depreciation and other expenses related to the plant opening. We have worked hard to balance the needs of the business against the backdrop of declining sales. We will continue our restructuring efforts in FY26 and beyond as we align our cost structure to end-market demand. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:10:18Other income and expense was expense of $3.8 million compared to $4.8 million of expense last year. Once again, this quarter, interest expense drove the decrease, down 50% year-over-year. The effective tax rate in Q2 was 47.9% compared to 1.2% last year, with a higher rate driven by the impact of a provision-to-tax-return adjustment and valuation allowance adjustment associated with the expected sale of the Tampa facility. For the full year of fiscal 2026, we continue to expect an effective tax rate in the high 20s to low 30s. Adjusted net income in the first quarter was $6.9 million, or $0.28 per diluted share, compared to last year's adjusted results of $7.4 million, or $0.29 per diluted share. Turning now to the balance sheet. Cash and cash equivalents at December 31, 2025, were $77.9 million. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:11:30Cash generated by operating activities in the quarter was $6.9 million, our eighth consecutive quarter of positive cash flow. Cash conversion days were 91 days, an 8-day increase compared to last quarter, but a 16-day improvement compared to Q2 of fiscal 2025. We are continuing to focus on improving cash conversion days by actively managing the components and are pleased by our progress thus far. Inventory ended the quarter at $281.7 million, marginally higher than Q1 but down $24.5 million, or 8%, from a year ago. Capital expenditures in Q2 were $18.2 million, with much of the spend, once again this quarter, on leasehold improvements in the new facility in Indianapolis. Borrowings at December 31, 2025, were $154 million, up $16 million from the first quarter but down $51 million, or roughly 25%, from a year ago. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:12:46Short-term liquidity available, represented as cash and cash equivalents plus the unused portion of our credit facilities, totaled $363 million at the end of the second quarter. We invested $4.3 million in Q2 to repurchase 149,000 shares. Since October 2015, under our board-authorized share repurchase program, a total of $109.5 million has been returned to our shareholders by purchasing 6.8 million shares of common stock. We have $10.5 million remaining on the repurchase program. As Ric mentioned, we are raising our guidance for fiscal 2026 with net sales expected to be in the range of $1.4-$1.46 billion, which compares to our previous guidance of $1.35-$1.45 billion. The improvement is driven by strength in the medical vertical as well as the ramp-up automotive programs at both European facilities. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:13:55Adjusted operating income now estimated to be 4.2%-4.5% of net sales versus our prior estimate of 4.0%-4.25%, with the improvement driven by higher sales balanced against investments in our Indianapolis CMO facility, business development needs, and business transformation and IT solutions to further innovations and enhance our capabilities. The guidance for capital expenditures did not change, with a range of $50-$60 million for the fiscal year. I'll now turn the call back over to Ric. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:14:33Thanks, Jana. Before we open the lines for questions, I'd like to share a few thoughts in closing. As Jana detailed, we are pleased to raise the outlook for the fiscal year driven by strength in the medical vertical. We continue to monitor the outlook for FY27, particularly in the North America automotive and industrial verticals, as the consumer continues to respond to tariff impacts, changes in U.S. tax subsidies, and economic concerns. We'll provide more color on our outlook as the year progresses. 2026 is a year of milestones for our company, with our facility in Romania celebrating 10 years of operations, China 20 years, and it's the 65th anniversary for the enterprise. As we previously announced, we are celebrating this anniversary and embracing our future with a new company name, Kimball Solutions. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:15:29This rebrand is a strategic move that reflects our evolution beyond traditional electronics manufacturing services, with an expanded portfolio of capabilities that includes design and engineering support, supply chain management, precision plastics for medical applications, and high-level and final product assemblies for the verticals we serve. It also embodies our customer-centric approach to long-lasting partnerships, providing end-to-end solutions from design and prototyping to new product introduction, manufacturing, and aftermarket support. The rebrand will occur in a phased rollout at locations across the global footprint beginning in July of 2026 and will be completed when the company officially changes its name a year later pending shareholders' approval. This change, along with the recent investments in Indianapolis, demonstrates our commitment to innovation and the vision to deliver comprehensive solutions worldwide. While the name of the company is changing, our core values of integrity, quality, and continuous improvement remain steadfast. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:16:43These steps are a celebration of our heritage and a move toward the future, building tomorrow together. I've never been more excited about the company, and thank you for your support. Operator, we would now like to open the lines for questions. Operator00:17:01Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, analysts may ask a question at this time by simply pressing star one on your dial pad. You can remove yourself from the queue by pressing star two. We ask that if you are using a speakerphone, you can pick up your handset before asking the question. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Mike Crawford with B. Riley Securities. Please proceed. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:17:36Thank you. Just starting with... hello? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:17:40Good morning. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:17:42Good morning. Jana, starting with automotive, and I believe it's primarily Nexteer driving. Your steer-by-wire growth. They remain your largest customer. It was a 19% customer in the September quarter. What percent was Nexteer in December? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:18:0820. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:18:1020%? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:18:12Yes. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:18:14Thank you. And then are your other customers also expanding that, or is it more braking that's driving some of the recovery there? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:18:29So we are seeing steering and braking with our largest automotive customers, and that would be Nexteer, ZF, and HL Mando. So it's not exclusive to Nexteer, but obviously, globally, Nexteer is our largest customer. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:18:50Okay. Yeah, well, it's great to see that flattening out. And then on the growth side, can you remind us what the capacity is and ramp expectations are for this new facility in Indianapolis? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:19:10Yeah. So the new facility in Indianapolis is 300,000 sq ft under roof, and so considerably larger than our current footprint. It depends on the makeup of the volume of work that you've got to be able to tell you exactly what that's going to equate to in terms of revenue dollars, but significant opportunity for growth there. And we needed to demonstrate that for the types of business that we are courting for that facility. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:19:49And then, I mean, I think Philips remains your largest medical customer to date, but I imagine much of the work that you're doing in Indianapolis would be with some of your emerging growing medical customers, or do I have that wrong? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:20:11No, you have that correct. And as an example, if you look at the growth in Q2 and the year-to-date growth, it was split fairly evenly amongst North America, Europe, and Asia, and fairly evenly in the subverticals within medical, meaning it was not driven by respiratory care. And so medical for Kimball is growing. And you're right, that CMO space would likely not have Philips content just because that's not the makeup of the business that we perform for them. It would be new customers and expanded opportunities there. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:20:53Okay. Thank you. And just final question, is it more plastic injection molding, or what are some of the value-added CMO applications that are your fastest-growing parts of the business? Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:21:14Yeah, Mike, it's Ric. Good morning. Great question. Yeah, so we expect that facility, and again, as Jana said, we'll be working with customers. We're excited about our funnel and some of the discussions that we're having. But we could imagine think of single-use surgical instruments, drug delivery devices such as auto-injectors. Certainly, as you said, plastic injection molding, we expect to be very significant, and we'll have significant capacity there. So all of those are expected to be housed at least partially in that CMO facility in Indy. Mike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley Securities00:21:53Great. Thank you very much. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:21:55Thank you. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:21:55Thanks, Mike. Operator00:21:56Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Derek Soderberg with Cantor Fitzgerald. Please proceed. Derek SoderbergDirector, Senior Equity Research Analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald00:22:11Hey, thanks for taking the questions. Hey, Jana. So wanted to start with automotive. So a little bit of softness in China and North America. Just given that you guys won't be comping against quarters in the past with the braking program in North America, just going forward, how should we think about sort of growth in the automotive piece for Q3 and Q4, sort of flattish declines year-over-year, sort of down single-digit percentages? What's sort of the right way to think about automotive for the rest of the year? Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:22:47Yeah, so great question. We will finally anniversary the end of the EB100 program in Q3. And so what we would expect is Q3 automotive to be flat to potentially up just a little bit because we've finally worked that through the system. And we've got the two new programs in Europe, and Europe has been rebounding nicely for us. And so in terms of automotive and the sluggishness, the worst of it is past us in Q1 and Q2. Derek SoderbergDirector, Senior Equity Research Analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald00:23:26Got it. That's helpful. And then, Ric, just if you could comment on some of the win rates you're seeing across the business, any sort of change in the size of the wins? What sort of gets you excited for what you're seeing in the portfolio as we sort of kind of look forward here? Thanks. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:23:46Yeah, we're really excited, Derek, looking forward and appreciate the question. We're seeing pretty consistent win rates. I mean, not that it's not very competitive out there. There are certainly situations where we have program bidding situations where we decide we're not willing to accept a level of margin that's not for us. So certainly, I wouldn't characterize it as anything but very competitive. However, we feel the strengths that we have in those long-term customer relationships, our capabilities, our flexibility and quality and operations record, all of those things that we've talked about in the past continue to serve us very well. In terms of programs going forward, particularly in medical but also in industrial, there's maybe a couple of things that are worth note. One is that we've always been open to and seeking what we call lift and shift opportunities. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:24:48Where we're working with a customer who's currently doing their own manufacturing and has a desire to exit that for whatever reason, to focus on R&D or marketing or sales or whatever is appropriate for them, and have us take that over in our existing facility network. We're seeing that activity in terms of those conversations increase, and those tend to be large programs because this would be an example of a customer potentially shutting down an entire plant and moving that all into our footprint. Those are larger to the extent that we close those, and we're excited about those discussions. Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:25:26And then the CMO discussions that we're having also, those programs tend to be significantly larger than our typical average medical program just because of the nature of that business, the growth in that business, and the scope and scale of what those customers are doing. But great question. Derek SoderbergDirector, Senior Equity Research Analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald00:25:47Got it. That sounds great. Thanks. Operator00:25:54Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Anja Soderstrom with Sidoti. Oh, and if anyone would like to ask a question, please press star 1. Anja SoderstromSenior Equity Research Analyst at Sidoti00:26:06Hi. Thank you for taking my question. So I'm just curious, with this new facility that you're opening, as you ramped up, how should we think about that having an impact on the margin? Ric PhillipsCEO at Kimball Electronics00:26:26We certainly think over time that the CMO space has an opportunity for margins accretive to what you've seen from us historically. That's going to depend program by program and customer by customer and, again, all competitive situations. But we think that that space and our capabilities lend itself for that to be accretive in the long term. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:26:50But Anja, I will tell you, in the near term, it's going to drag, right, because we have all the depreciation expense, all of the additional expense associated with the opening of that facility. We're currently running both facilities, right, because we've got to move everything over, and then we'll have to close the facility. So for the next 6-9 months or 2-3 quarters, it's going to be a drag. And the reason that I want to point that out is the operating income margin that we produced in Q2, considering the fact that we had $16 million less sales and the impact of the grand opening of the Indy facility and other investments that we made, I think is a testament to our commitment as a leadership team to deliver value to the organization and to our shareholders. It was a lot of work. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:27:50While we feel very confident in the strategy for the future, we're working hard to offset that drag in other areas of the business. Anja SoderstromSenior Equity Research Analyst at Sidoti00:28:01Okay. Thank you. And then how do you see the cash cycle days play out in the coming quarters? It was quite elevated for the quarter. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:28:11Yeah. So for the last two years, we've really been after cash conversion, cash cycling. We've got a pretty aggressive PDSOH goal. We saw it tick up from 85 days to 90 days, primarily driven by North America and the impact of autos and industrials. We saw inventory tick up a little bit. That remains a key focus of the organization. We worked really, really hard to get working capital solid and inventory reductions and corresponding impact and debt on the balance sheet. You can expect that to continue to be a laser focus of us as the leadership team. So said more plainly, I would expect Q3 to come back down from where it was in Q2. Anja SoderstromSenior Equity Research Analyst at Sidoti00:29:08Okay. Thank you. That was all from me. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:29:11I would like to, and I know no one asked, but I think it would just be helpful to give a little bit more color specifically on the remainder of the year. So if you take the midpoint of our revenue guide at $1,430 and you strip out the full year or what we've done so far at $707, that leaves you with $723 million roughly to go. What that would insinuate is that Q3 and 4 are going to be roughly in line with Q1 in terms of revenue growth. And we already talked about autos and the fact that we've anniversaried EB100. From a medical perspective, I would like to remind everyone that we had the consigned inventory sale in Q3 of FY2025 of $24 million. So when we report Q3, we're going to give you the results. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:30:09We will tell you what growth was in medical, including the inventory sales and excluding the inventory sales. So we won't make you do that math, but I just wanted to remind everybody of that. Then it's industrial, North America. That's where our focus is going to continue to be in terms of seeing how that's going to shake out. So just as everybody's fine-tuning their models, some additional color I thought might be helpful for you. Operator00:30:47Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Max Michaelis with Lake Street Capital Markets. Please proceed. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:30:56Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Thanks for the color on the model too. If we look at automotive, I was just hoping if you could provide some more color on maybe the opportunity with the EPP, the electronic power pack program, and then kind of some of the opportunities around the OEMs with the steer-by-wire. I mean, can these become similar in size to the old EMB or the old braking program that ended up going away? Or kind of just help me out with where the potential is with these two programs. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:31:36So we were really excited about the EPP program because it's our first high-level assembly in automotive where you're combining the motor and the printed circuit board assembly. And so that's really exciting. In terms of size of the program, the EPP is not as big as the braking program was. It's probably about two-thirds of that size. But from a future strategic focus in automotive, it's really exciting. The other thing that I'll say is, as you think about the continuum of opportunity in automotive, particularly as it relates to ADAS, right? So you've got steering programs now. You've got braking programs now. Steer-by-wire, brake-by-wire, that's all really exciting. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:32:26But you also have ADAS where it's, "Hey, there's going to be a central brain functioning in the car that's going to be controlling all of the electronics in there." And that's something that Kimball is also interested in pursuing in the future. We would expect, as EPP becomes more common in vehicles, as second steering column becomes more common in vehicles and ADAS, that those are strategic areas that we would want to participate in, right? So I remember when autonomous driving lane departure features were only available in very, very high-end cars. Now they're everywhere, right? A Nissan Sentra's got it. So everybody everywhere is offering that feature. And it's exciting in terms of the strategic opportunities for automotive. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:33:26Awesome. Thank you. Next one, if we look at the medical space, you talked about inorganic opportunities last quarter. I don't think you had in the prepared remarks in this call. But we look at some of the things you guys provide with the auto-injectors, sleep therapy, drug delivery. I mean, when you're looking at acquisitions, I mean, what are some of the other some of the other spaces or what's called subverticals that you guys are looking at where you're seeing some great opportunities? Andy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and Treasurer at Kimball Electronics00:34:00Hey, Max. It's Andy. We have done a fairly deep dive in market exposures. And in vitro diagnostics is really interesting to us. Cardiology is really interesting to us. So we would certainly consider opportunities or adjacencies to expand into those areas, especially if it provided a chance to either expand a relationship with an existing customer or add a new customer. And the same for manufacturing capabilities. Max MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital Markets00:34:36All righty. I'll take the rest of mine offline. Thanks, guys. Jana CroomCFO at Kimball Electronics00:34:40Thank you. Operator00:34:45Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. A replay of this call will be available beginning later today and will remain available through February 19th, 2026. To access the replay, please dial 877-660-6853 and enter the access ID 13757544. With that, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you, everyone, for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAndy RegrutVP of Investor Relations, Strategic Development, and TreasurerJana CroomCFORic PhillipsCEOAnalystsAnja SoderstromSenior Equity Research Analyst at SidotiDerek SoderbergDirector, Senior Equity Research Analyst at Cantor FitzgeraldMax MichaelisEquity Research Analyst at Lake Street Capital MarketsMike CrawfordSenior Managing Director and Head, Discovery Group at B. Riley SecuritiesPowered by