NYSE:ALH Alliance Laundry Q1 2026 Earnings Report $25.64 +0.24 (+0.96%) As of 11:44 AM Eastern This is a fair market value price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Alliance Laundry EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.31Consensus EPS $0.27Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPS$0.20Alliance Laundry Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$426.89 millionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue Growth+9.60%Alliance Laundry Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/12/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, May 12, 2026Conference Call Time8:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Alliance Laundry Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 12, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Alliance Laundry posted a strong Q1 2026, with revenue up 10% year over year to $427 million, adjusted EBITDA up 9% to $109 million, and adjusted net income nearly doubling. Positive Sentiment: The company raised full-year guidance, now expecting 6%-7% revenue growth and 7%-8% adjusted EBITDA growth, citing broad-based demand, pricing, and better visibility for the rest of the year. Positive Sentiment: Management said its pricing actions have covered inflation and tariff-related costs, and its local-for-local manufacturing footprint remains a competitive advantage in navigating trade volatility. Positive Sentiment: The company highlighted accelerating digital adoption, with the connected installed base topping 250,000 machines and Scan-Pay-Wash transactions doubling Q4 levels, though monetization is still early-stage. Positive Sentiment: Alliance continued to strengthen its balance sheet, paying down $65 million of debt in the quarter and reducing net leverage to 2.6x adjusted EBITDA, while reaffirming a path toward the low-2x range by year-end. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAlliance Laundry Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 11 speakers on the call. Speaker 700:00:00Good morning. Welcome to Alliance Laundry's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. With us today are Mike Shady, Chief Executive Officer, Craig Nolden, Chief Financial Officer, and Bob Koufer, Vice President of Investor Relations. After the speakers' prepared remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star, then 1 on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star 2. We ask that you please limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up, then return to the queue if needed. With that, it is my pleasure to turn the program over to the team. Bob, please go ahead. Operator00:00:45Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Along with today's call, you can find our earnings press release and presentation on our investor relations website at ir.alliancelaundry.com. The replay will also be available on our website following the call. As a reminder, today's earnings release, presentation, and statements made during the call include forward-looking statements under federal securities laws. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. Such risks and uncertainties include factors set forth in the earnings release and in our filings with the SEC, including the Risk Factors section of our Form 10-K filing and subsequent Form 10-Q filings. We assume no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements except as required by law. Additionally, during today's call, we'll discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures outlined in our earnings presentation. Operator00:01:43We believe these measures are important indicators of our operations as they exclude items that may not be indicative of ongoing business performance. Reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in our earnings release and presentation appendix. I'll now turn over to Mike. Speaker 600:02:02Thanks, Bob Koufer, thank you all for joining our earnings call. Building on a strong 2025, Q1 demonstrated what we've been talking about since becoming a public company that a resilient, replacement driven, essential industry, a market-leading position and disciplined operational excellence delivers strong, sustainable outcomes. In Q1, revenue grew 10% year-over-year with adjusted EBITDA growth of 9%, adjusted net income almost doubling. This growth was broad-based, driven by both volume and price. The strength and breadth of this performance, combined with our growing visibility into the balance of the year, supports our confidence to raise the low end of our full year revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance today to 6%-7% revenue growth and 7%-8% adjusted EBITDA growth. Craig Nolden will take you through the detail shortly. Speaker 600:03:07I'd like to highlight that this strong performance was achieved in what we all know has been a very volatile macro environment. Remember, every day is laundry day. Commercial laundry is a vibrant, growing and essential part of modern life. Our diversified geographies and end markets, serving non-discretionary applications, have performed across all economic cycles, providing a level of growth, consistency and downside protection that is hard to find. We see this period as no different. We saw solid performance from our commercial and home market, where replacement driven demand means we are not exposed to new home construction trends, and consumers everywhere are searching for reliable and durable products in their homes. Europe also performed extremely well across all end markets. Speaker 600:04:10On tariffs, which I know is top of mind for many, our local for local manufacturing strategy continues to be a real competitive advantage, not only in the U.S., but around the world. Our local for local manufacturing footprint puts us in a stronger position relative to competitors who have more import dependent and complex supply chains. Digital innovation also continues to see strong adoption, I wanna be clear about our strategy. Our priority is building an extensive connected installed base and driving adoption by delivering technology, innovation and tools that our customers love. The more connected our equipment is, the more value we can deliver through better uptime, smarter servicing, lower costs and higher revenue. Ultimately, all of this delivers a better end co-consumer experience, which further strengthens our relationships and stickiness with our customers. Speaker 600:05:20Our connected equipment base continues to grow month-on-month, now standing at more than 250,000 connected machines. Scan-Pay-Wash, our first of its kind cashless payment solution requiring no app download, processed over 100,000 transactions in the month of March alone, but total transactions in Q1 double the entirety of Q4 2025. We're still in the early innings of the value this technology can unlock, and we look forward to sharing more as this platform scales. So far, the adoption trends are encouraging, and we continue to see strong progress on our multi-year product pipeline. As we touched in our last earnings update, we were excited to complete a distributor acquisition in New York during Q1, which marks our second acquisition in one of the most vibrant commercial laundry markets in the U.S. Speaker 600:06:28This tuck-in also brings the Speed Queen, UniMac, and Huebsch brands together under one highly talented team and provides us with the opportunity to realize its full potential. We've also continued to strengthen our balance sheet, having made debt payments of $65 million in the quarter and a reduced net leverage of 0.2 turns to 2.6x adjusted EBITDA, and we remain on track for our full-year deleveraging target. Taken together, the strengths we demonstrated in Q1, broad-based demand, pricing discipline, a local-for-local manufacturing footprint, and a strengthened balance sheet are what we expect to carry us through the balance of 2026. We remain confident in our ability to deliver on our raised guidance for the full year and equally confident in the long-term value we are creating for shareholders. Speaker 600:07:30Finally, before Dean takes over, I wanna thank all of the investors and analysts we have met over the past few months. The level of engagement has been fantastic, and I look forward to continuing the dialogue as we work hard to continue demonstrating our best-in-class industrial, financial, and operational profile. On that note, I will hand it over to Dean to provide details on our Q1 performance and increased guidance. Speaker 100:08:04Thank you, Mike. Starting on slide 4, I'll walk through our strong results and strengthening balance sheet. First quarter net revenue grew 10% to $427 million versus the prior year. We saw real unit volume increases contributing roughly 3%, consistent with our full-year outlook, with the balance coming from pricing and roughly 1% benefit from foreign currency. This reinforces what Mike said earlier. Alliance is fundamentally a volume-led growth story enhanced by rational pricing, and our results remain consistent with the balanced growth pattern that has long characterized us and our industry over time. Gross profit grew 8% to $157 million, representing a gross margin of 37%. Speaker 100:09:06On the cost environment and tariffs specifically, pricing actions already in place continue to offset our approximately $20 million annualized exposure. Our domestic manufacturing footprint provides a meaningful structural advantage relative to peers. We are monitoring the evolving trade landscape closely. We believe we are well-equipped to manage through new developments or changes in the tariff environment. Operating expenses were $73 million or 17% of revenue, consistent with our expectations reflecting the full quarter impact of public company costs as well as our continued investments in our digital engineering and commercial capabilities at scale versus the competition. Taken altogether, these dynamics translated into adjusted EBITDA of $109 million, up 9% versus prior year, an adjusted EBITDA margin of 25.5%. Speaker 100:10:17Volume leverage, operational excellence, and supply chain efficiency would have driven margin expansion higher in the quarter but were offset by the incremental costs of operating as a public company. Adjusted net income was up 85% year-over-year to $63 million, a result that reflects both our strong operating performance and the meaningful benefit of significantly lower interest expense as our debt reduction over the past 12 months continues to flow through the P&L. Moving to cash and the balance sheet, operating cash flow in the quarter was $80 million, reflecting strong operating cash conversion and continued working capital discipline consistent with what we've delivered historically. We paid down $65 million in debt in Q1, ending the quarter with total debt of $1.3 billion and net debt of $1.2 billion. Speaker 100:11:23That puts net leverage at 2.6x adjusted EBITDA, down 0.2 turns in the quarter, squarely on track for our full-year leverage guidance. Drilling into the segments, North America delivered a strong quarter with revenue up 9% to $320 million and adjusted EBITDA up 8% to $87 million and an adjusted EBITDA margin of 27.2%. Growth in the quarter was broad-based across our end markets with some mix impacting margin modestly in the quarter. We saw strong growth in our vended markets, both retail laundromats and communal laundry in multi-housing locations, driven by new store development and existing operators continuing to modernize their fleets with higher capacity, digitally connected equipment. Alliance remains well-positioned to capitalize on this continuing growth driver. On-premise delivered solid results driven by predictable replacement demand that defines that end market. Speaker 100:12:37As Mike Shady talked about earlier, commercial and home continued to outpace the industry. Internationally, revenue grew 10% to $107 million, with adjusted EBITDA up 13% to $33 million in margin of 30.4%. Europe continues its strong momentum with our total cost of ownership value proposition resonating with an operator base that is actively investing in fleet upgrades and energy efficiency. Across our other international markets, we continue to see strong growth in Asia-Pacific, especially in the nascent vended markets. Our Middle East and Africa region, which represents roughly 2% of total revenue, consistent with its historical size and split broadly between the Middle East and Africa, also grew in the quarter. We'll turn to our full year guidance on slide 6. Speaker 100:13:42While it's still early in the year, the strength of our Q1 performance and our growing visibility into the rest of 2026 gives us confidence in raising our full year 2026 guidance today. We are increasing our full year revenue guidance, with growth now expected to be in the range of 6%-7%, an increase of 1 percentage point to the low end of our prior range, with equal contribution expected from volume and price. We also continue to anticipate adjusted EBITDA margin expansion for the full year and are updating our adjusted EBITDA growth to be in the 7%-8% range as we realize price and volume increases and the benefit of continued cost down initiatives. Speaker 100:14:33In addition, subsequent to our first quarter deleveraging, we remain confident in our ability to continue to generate free cash flow and are reaffirming our expectation to reduce leverage by approximately three-quarters of the term in 2026, bringing us to the low 2 times net debt leverage range by year-end. Our other guidance items remain unchanged. Before I wrap up, I want to reaffirm our capital allocation framework to highlight the strong position this business is in today and the compelling opportunities we have ahead. We are generating strong, consistent free cash flow and putting it to work strategically and deliberately. Deleveraging remains a priority, and as you've seen, we are executing against that commitment. Each quarter of paydown strengthens our balance sheet and expands our financial flexibility. Speaker 100:15:33As we move through the year and leverage continues to decline, that flexibility grows, and with it, our ability to act on additional opportunities to drive shareholder value. Organic investment in high return growth remains a core use of our capital, and we also continue to monitor the landscape for potential tuck-in acquisitions that could support and enhance our long-term growth. At the same time, we expect to maintain the flexibility to return capital to shareholders when appropriate. Potential buybacks in the near term and dividends as a longer-term consideration as the balance sheet continues to strengthen. With that, let me turn it back to Mike. Speaker 600:16:22Thanks, Craig. Before we open it up for Q&A, I want to close with 4 key messages. First, commercial laundry is a vibrant, growing, and essential industry. Second, we hold a leading market position as the only scaled pure-play operator, 2 times the size of the number 2 competitor. Third, we have an experienced, hungry, and proven team that has long delivered results through every economic cycle, that gives us confidence to raise our outlook for the year. Finally, there are systemic tailwinds of magnitude that we believe will continue to power this company over the long term. I'll close by thanking our employees, our distribution partners, customers, and shareholders for your continued support. We appreciate it and look forward to continuing to create long-term value for Alliance's stakeholders. With that, let's open the line for questions. Speaker 700:17:30We will now begin the question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, press star 1 on your keypad. As a reminder, we ask that you please limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up, then return to the queue if needed. Our first question today will come from Kyle Menges with Citigroup. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:17:52Great. Thank you, guys. Maybe to start off, I'm curious just any notable changes in how you're thinking about the growth in any of the verticals in North America for the rest of the year. Maybe piggybacking on that, I think you mentioned commercial and home outgrew the industry in the quarter. I'm curious if that growth was still positive and just how you're thinking about commercial and home for the rest of the year. Speaker 600:18:17Yeah. Hey, Kyle, it's Mike. Look, I don't think anything's changed, we still feel very optimistic in terms of all verticals in the business having continued growth. You know, momentum is positive. Sentiment is positive. commercial and home in particular has been, as you know, been doing quite well for a number of years. We see no change in demand. At the moment, everything is green. Speaker 400:18:53That's helpful. I'd love to just hear more about the Scan-Pay-Wash technology that you've rolled out, and just, curious how unique this is to Alliance. Then just how are you thinking about monetizing it? Is it more of a, I guess, market share gain, play that you think you can get with this technology? Speaker 600:19:16Yeah. Remember, we're really the only 1 player in the industry who has a, you know, truly integrated platform with software and hardware together. The payment is a part of that. The Scan-Pay-Wash has been very popular just because people don't like to download apps. I think it's just convenient, it's easy, it provides some benefits to the store owners, but ultimately it's a convenience for the end user. In terms of monetization, you know, as I said in the opening remarks, I think we're more focused today on, hey, let's just get adoption. We believe, again, that stickiness, the value that we can bring sort of by the digital platform in general is gonna continue to be very strong. We will monetize that as it goes through. Speaker 600:20:07We do clip, a little bit of a fee on the Scan-Pay-Wash, but it is not really meaningful, Kyle. That we think is the right strategy for now. Speaker 400:20:20Makes sense. Thank you, guys. Speaker 700:20:25Thank you. Our next question comes from Michael Halloran with Baird. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:20:31Hey, morning, gentlemen. Speaker 600:20:33Hey, Mike. Speaker 500:20:34So first just on the vended side of things, North America, maybe just talk about the dynamics you're seeing in the marketplace. Any sensitivity to the volatility right now when it comes to the refurbishment cycle or even build-out cycle? What are the customers saying about the current dynamics? Speaker 600:20:58Yeah. Mike, I will tell you at the store level, not really any major impact of note. At the investor level, so those who are hoping to get new stores or retrofit their existing stores that they have, there is no change in demand. The continual challenge has been more on the permitting and then just finding labor in particular. And to a lesser extent, still, you know, when you're putting a store together, you've got a lot of different components and parts and pieces, and so some of that is subject to supply chain where, you know, you can't get a front door that closes or a boiler or whatever it happens to be. In general, it's really just permitting, labor, and then as we've talked about on past calls, site selection. Speaker 600:21:57But more the drag is just it just takes more time and you're pushing through the funnel. Demand, the pipeline is still very robust. Speaker 500:22:09Thanks for that. On the price cost side of things, maybe just talk through the inflationary backdrop, how you think the price cost manages through the year, do you foresee any incremental pricing actions on your side? Speaker 100:22:26Yeah. Hi, Mike. This is Craig. Good morning. I think from the standpoint of price and cost, as we've disclosed in our release and talked about previously, we've really covered our cost increases from inflation as well as tariff with the price increases we took in middle to late 2025 and then some in early 2026 internationally. We're well positioned to manage as pricing evolves, as tariff environment evolves, to adjust accordingly. We feel good with where we're at today in our guidance for covering our costs with price for the rest of the year. Speaker 500:23:11Thank you. Appreciate it, guys. Speaker 700:23:15Thank you. Our next question comes from Andrew Obin with Bank of America. Your line is now open. Speaker 200:23:23Morning. This is David Ridley-Lane on for Andrew Obin. Am I right in thinking that this is probably the, on a year-over-year basis, the most meaningful one for tariff pressure, just given the timing of all the things? Also on the topic, could you discuss, there were changes to Section 232 tariff on steel and aluminum. Can you discuss whether that was a net benefit or a drag for you and also maybe your competitors? Thank you. Speaker 100:24:00I think, from the standpoint of tariffs, yes. I think the first quarter is really the toughest comp quarter given the ramp-up and the activity in tariffs in 2025. We have about $4.5 million-$5 million of headwind in the first quarter from tariffs that are consistent with prior year. Again, consistent with the prior question, we've covered those costs with price. Also on the other side of some of our commodities, as you know, we've locked in the most important commodities in terms of our cost of materials, in terms of steel and stainless steel for the year. We feel good with where we're at. We have good visibility on those costs as it relates to our prices. Speaker 600:24:50I will say on the change in the Section 232, I would say it's slightly favorable, but pretty close to what it was before. Speaker 200:25:03Got it. Thank you. Just on the, it sounds like you are in a good position from your own costs. It would seem that, you know, broadly this concept that electricity prices are going higher is out there in the public mainstream now. That would seem to me to be an impetus maybe since utility costs are so meaningful for your customer base, that it seems to be on the margin, maybe an impetus for refreshing. Is your energy efficiency more of a selling point today than in the past, and how do you think about that? Thank you. Speaker 600:25:51Yeah. Oh, sorry, go ahead. Speaker 200:25:54No, that was it. Thank you. Speaker 600:25:56Okay. Yeah. Again, it would depend on the age of the equipment you currently have. An older generation, let's say, you know, approaching the 7 to 10 year, again, these units, as you know, get worn and ridden pretty hard. Everything kind of loosens up. Efficiency generally degrades over time, particularly if it's not well-maintained, which, you know, is the reality. Very few people really maintain their product as well as they should. It's just like a car or anything else, like nobody really does what the manufacturer's asking you to do. There is a value proposition there. I think it would take probably several quarters of when you really see that show up, and it materially impacts, you know, your results month after month. Speaker 600:26:48I think that gets people off of sort of dead center. I think it helps. I think more important is sort of the innovation and the digital connectivity that allows people, again, to not only reduce energy, but gives you potentially an uplift in terms of the revenue side of the equation. I think it'll come, but I don't think it's a quick one, and we need, we need it to be, you know, pretty consistent out there for a number of quarters. Speaker 200:27:21Thank you very much. Speaker 600:27:23Yep. Thank you. Speaker 700:27:26Thank you. Our next question comes from Toshiyuki Sano with JP Morgan. Your line is now open. Speaker 900:27:32Hi. Good morning, everyone. Speaker 600:27:35Morning. Speaker 100:27:35Morning. Speaker 900:27:37Europe and APAC was strong, and could you talk about where exactly is the growth coming from countries, channels, and if you could talk about what are the key risks, including geopolitics and competition, please? Speaker 600:27:53For Europe, very strong across the board, all parts of the business. Vended was up pretty significantly. Our on-premise business was up significantly. The majority of that has come where we have direct offices, so Italy, Spain in particular, and France. We see no change in that. I will say, having just been in that region a week or two ago, you know, sentiment is people are a little bit, wouldn't say nervous, but they're thinking, they're pausing, and they're kind of waiting. I would expect that, you know, given energy prices in particular, given again, the uncertainty around the war, we'll see some pullback, I would suspect. Speaker 600:28:55Nothing material at the moment, nothing that we could sort of point our fingers at, General sentiment in that part of the world is slightly negative. I would characterize it that way. In APAC, you know, it's been a continual story. We are getting more growth from on-premise. It is one of the areas that we have, as I've talked about in prior calls, sort of lost a little bit of focus on. They're getting more there. In particular, you know, Thailand has really had a very, very strong start to the year, and most of that has been on the vended side of the business. Speaker 900:29:37Thank you, Mike. One follow-up. International margins are now 30.4% versus North America, 27.2%. What structurally drives the gap, and how should we think about it going forward, please? Speaker 100:29:53I would say first, Tomo, as we've talked about in the past, as we grow internationally and as different regions of the international segment, and mix impact those regions, especially Europe in particular that Mike talked about, we will see stronger EBITDA margins as a result. It is a little bit lumpy, but consistently growing, trending up and to the right. Parity with North America will continue to Increase or to get closer together. One thing I would say is that about a third of the top line and a third of the bottom line is FX related in the quarter. If you take away the FX impacts in internationally, we'd be up 7% in revenue and 9% in EBITDA. Still margin expansion. Speaker 100:30:47We're benefiting from the natural hedge that we have on our local for local manufacturing strategy. We feel really good about the margin trajectory internationally. Again, it's somewhat episodic or lumpy in terms of which regions and which end markets are the strongest in a quarter. Again, up into the right over time. Speaker 900:31:08Thank you, Dave, and congrats on the quarter. Speaker 600:31:11Thank you. Speaker 700:31:14Thank you. Our next question comes from Susan Maklari with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:31:20Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Speaker 600:31:22Morning. Speaker 800:31:24My first question is on the adoption rates that you're seeing with Scan-Pay-Wash. It sounds like you're getting some really nice traction there. As we think about the next several quarters and this continuing to gain some momentum, can you talk about how we should think about what that means in terms of the overall growth? How you're also thinking about investing in the next wave of innovation and other strategic initiatives that you have in the pipeline. Speaker 600:31:52Yeah. Just on Scan-Pay-Wash, again, it's part of our digital platform, there are a lot of other sort of features that you would get with that. Again, as I mentioned, it's not really material at the moment in terms of showing up in the financials in any way. I think in terms of our innovation, you know, it is really across the board. You know, it's something that we have invested pretty significantly in, right? I talked about almost doubling our testing capacity that we have in the U.S., in Thailand, as well as in Czech Republic to really get that 24/7 turn. Speaker 600:32:37The physical product, again, Susan, will be a little bit slower because what we don't wanna do is launch a product before it's tried and tested and true. Those labs are very, very important to helping us accelerate the physical product and, you know, simulating all kinds of things from brownouts to dirty water to vibration to all kinds of things and run life testing to make sure that product is durable, reliable, and long-lasting. The digital side, again, much, much quicker to innovate faster to roll out. We see again, that sort of one-two punch. We've got a very significant development team. Speaker 600:33:23As I said, we believe we are the only fully integrated company in the space and got some great team members in a development center, again, primarily in our Asian market. It is gonna be pretty healthy, I think, in terms of how we feel about it, how we look at it, and what you will continue to see from the company. Speaker 800:33:52Okay. That's great color. You also mentioned that you completed your second acquisition of a distributor in New York. Can you just talk a bit about the M&A pipeline? Has there been any changes given the recent uncertainty in the macro and moves in inflation? Speaker 600:34:12Yeah. I mean, again, I think you should think of us as very capable of acquisitions. We're always looking. That pipeline is not, you know, infinite. It's a small number. We have largely accomplished what we said we would do, setting out our strategy a number of years ago in terms of the acquisitions of distribution in the U.S. market. That's not to say we aren't engaging, continuing to dialogue with people, but it will be a part of our story. You should not think of us that way. On the manufacturing side, again, we're always in active discussion. I would say more than anything, we've got everything we need to continue to grow at a pace above market. Speaker 600:35:04We view all of these as complementary, nice to have, but none of it is a need to have, and that's kind of how we look at it. Where we can find value, again, I would emphasize we are very disciplined, in terms of, any of these targets that we're looking at. Where we see it, you know, you'll see us act, but it is, more on the margin is what I would say. Speaker 800:35:35Yeah. Okay. I appreciate that. Thank you for the color. Good luck with the quarter. Speaker 600:35:39Thank you. Speaker 700:35:42Thank you. Once again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star and 1 on your keypad now. Our next question will come from Amit Mehrotra with UBS. Speaker 1000:35:56Thank you. This is Zach Walsh, around from Amit. Just my first question, can we just talk about the phasing of the pricing actions? I was trying to understand, like, the natural carryover pricing from last year versus the incremental pricing from tariffs. Just my second question is just around, can you just elaborate? The question is called out, like, a negative impact from the North America margins. Just based on guidance, it seems like the negative mix should reverse in the balance of the year. Just any color there would be helpful. Thank you. Speaker 100:36:25Yeah. Thanks. I'll start on the second question first. The impact on margins, gross margin in particular, in the quarter was pretty much mix related product and region. Nothing fundamental to the gross margin for the quarter. We still expect gross margin expansion and EBITDA expansion built into our guidance for the full year. I think your point is accurate that we will start to see that pick up as we comp our price increases year-over-year in our public company costs. With regard to pricing, as we said in the previous quarter and consistent with this quarter, is that pricing will be a bigger benefit to our top line in the first half of the year, given the timing of price increases in 2025 due to tariffs and otherwise. Speaker 100:37:20We pulled forward our 2026 North America price increases into November, announced them in November of 2025, so those could be started and realized at the beginning of 2026. As the year progresses, you'll see less impact in the second half from price because of that timing, but we're also very confident that quarter-over-quarter consistently for the year, you're gonna see volume increases consistent each quarter on a comparable basis quarter-over-quarter, such that for the full year, we still expect to be about 50% price on average, and 50% volume in terms of our guidance for the full year. Speaker 1000:38:04Great. Thank you so much. Speaker 700:38:09Thank you. We'll go next to Ketan Mamtora with BMO Capital Markets. Speaker 300:38:16Good morning, congrats on a strong start to the year. Speaker 100:38:20Thank you. Speaker 300:38:21Maybe to start with, can you talk a little bit about, and we discussed M&A, but I'm just curious, as you start to approach your target of 2 times leverage, can you talk about how you are thinking about sort of capital allocation, and if you can just rank order your priorities, please? Speaker 100:38:42Yeah. Thanks for the question. I think consistent is the theme, I think, here in terms of our communication on capital allocation strategy. We're fortunate, given our business model and our strong free cash flow profile that's consistent throughout the year to have multiple opportunities to pull multiple levers at the same time in order to return capital to shareholders and be balanced. Still our number one priority currently is deleveraging. Having said that, we are able to deleverage. At the same time, we are going to continue to invest in our business, in terms of capital, and new product and innovation at scale compared to our competition. As Mike referred to earlier, M&A is really not a big portion of our story. It's not something that's gonna take a lot of capital as we foresee it today. Speaker 100:39:37Then we will still have the opportunity, as we said in our prepared remarks, to return cash to shareholders over the longer term, medium term, in terms of, you know, when it's available, when it's opportunistic to buy back shares, and or over the long term, consider a dividend. The good news is we have a lot of opportunity at our discretion given our strong free cash flow profile. Deleveraging is our number one priority, but able to pull on multiple levers at the same time given our strong free cash flow profile. Speaker 300:40:13Got it. That's helpful. Then just, as a follow-on question, Mike, can you talk a little bit about, sort of competitive dynamics, both here in North America and in Europe? Speaker 600:40:27Yeah. I mean, again, where we can find the information, as you know, our number 2 competitor is publicly traded, so you guys who follow them can find the information. You know, I think in general, the competitive situation is unchanged. You know, we do see at times. Again, these are great companies. At times there are decisions they make that we don't fully follow, and we're not clear on. I would say in general it is the same that it has been. Again, you know, the international player is struggling a little bit more here in the U.S., particularly given the tariff dynamic. You know, we're starting to see some of those pricing actions begin to come in. Speaker 600:41:25They are not anywhere close to what we know their costs are going up, but they are beginning to pass those on. As we talked about, we felt that that would really begin to manifest itself in the back half of the year. We still think that is the situation. You know, the competitive dynamics from our position, we feel that we are in a stronger position, certainly. Again, I've been here almost two decades. I've really never seen the opportunities that we have at the moment in terms of our value proposition, our products, our team. What we have coming down the pike in terms of the innovation and value for end users is incredibly strong. I'd probably just leave it at that. Speaker 600:42:20I feel we're executing very well and in a tremendous position. Speaker 300:42:27I know that's helpful perspective. I'll turn it over. Good luck. Speaker 600:42:32Thank you. Speaker 700:42:36Thank you. This does conclude today's question and answer session, as well as Alliance Laundry's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. You may now disconnect your lines, and have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Alliance Laundry Earnings HeadlinesAlliance Reports First Quarter 2026 Results4 hours ago | prnewswire.comAlliance Laundry Holdings Inc (ALH) Q1 2026 Earnings Report Preview: What To Look ForMay 11 at 5:21 PM | finance.yahoo.comTrump is positioned. Elon lights the fuse.On Thursday, the Senate Banking Committee votes on the CLARITY Act. A bill that would create the first real legal framework for digital assets in the United States. Every time Washington moves in crypto's favor, prices surge fast. When Bitcoin ETFs got approved in January 2024, BTC rallied 57% over the next two months. When the national crypto stockpile was announced, Solana jumped 15% in a single week. Right now, the market is quiet. Sentiment is neutral. Most people aren't paying attention. That's exactly when the biggest moves begin.May 12 at 1:00 AM | Crypto 101 Media (Ad)Alliance Laundry Holdings Inc (ALH)May 8, 2026 | investing.comIs Alliance Laundry Holdings Inc. (ALH) A Good Stock To Buy Now?May 3, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comAlliance Laundry Announces First Quarter 2026 Earnings Release and Conference Call DateApril 29, 2026 | prnewswire.comSee More Alliance Laundry Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Alliance Laundry? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Alliance Laundry and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Alliance LaundryAlliance Laundry (NYSE:ALH) Systems (NYSE: ALH) is a manufacturer and distributor of commercial and residential laundry equipment and related services. The company designs, produces and sells a range of coin-operated and vended machines, on-premises washers and dryers, and allied equipment for laundromats, multi-housing, hospitality, healthcare and other institutional customers. Alliance’s product strategy emphasizes durable, high-throughput machines for professional laundry operators as well as appliances geared to self-service and multi-dwelling applications. Its product portfolio includes coin-operated and card-operated washers and dryers, stacked and single-pocket models, industrial-grade on-premises equipment, and parts and accessories. Alliance also offers aftermarket support such as parts supply, warranty and repair services, and software and controls for payment and fleet management. The company markets products under brands that target both commercial operators and end consumers, and supports customers through distribution networks, service technicians and dealer partners. Alliance Laundry serves a broad set of geographic markets through manufacturing, distribution centers and dealer channels, with a presence across North America and in international markets. The company is publicly listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker ALH. Alliance positions itself as an end-to-end partner for laundry operators by combining equipment manufacturing with parts, service and technology solutions to support uptime and operational efficiency. 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Speaker 700:00:00Good morning. Welcome to Alliance Laundry's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. With us today are Mike Shady, Chief Executive Officer, Craig Nolden, Chief Financial Officer, and Bob Koufer, Vice President of Investor Relations. After the speakers' prepared remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star, then 1 on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star 2. We ask that you please limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up, then return to the queue if needed. With that, it is my pleasure to turn the program over to the team. Bob, please go ahead. Operator00:00:45Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Along with today's call, you can find our earnings press release and presentation on our investor relations website at ir.alliancelaundry.com. The replay will also be available on our website following the call. As a reminder, today's earnings release, presentation, and statements made during the call include forward-looking statements under federal securities laws. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations and projections. Such risks and uncertainties include factors set forth in the earnings release and in our filings with the SEC, including the Risk Factors section of our Form 10-K filing and subsequent Form 10-Q filings. We assume no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements except as required by law. Additionally, during today's call, we'll discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures outlined in our earnings presentation. Operator00:01:43We believe these measures are important indicators of our operations as they exclude items that may not be indicative of ongoing business performance. Reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in our earnings release and presentation appendix. I'll now turn over to Mike. Speaker 600:02:02Thanks, Bob Koufer, thank you all for joining our earnings call. Building on a strong 2025, Q1 demonstrated what we've been talking about since becoming a public company that a resilient, replacement driven, essential industry, a market-leading position and disciplined operational excellence delivers strong, sustainable outcomes. In Q1, revenue grew 10% year-over-year with adjusted EBITDA growth of 9%, adjusted net income almost doubling. This growth was broad-based, driven by both volume and price. The strength and breadth of this performance, combined with our growing visibility into the balance of the year, supports our confidence to raise the low end of our full year revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance today to 6%-7% revenue growth and 7%-8% adjusted EBITDA growth. Craig Nolden will take you through the detail shortly. Speaker 600:03:07I'd like to highlight that this strong performance was achieved in what we all know has been a very volatile macro environment. Remember, every day is laundry day. Commercial laundry is a vibrant, growing and essential part of modern life. Our diversified geographies and end markets, serving non-discretionary applications, have performed across all economic cycles, providing a level of growth, consistency and downside protection that is hard to find. We see this period as no different. We saw solid performance from our commercial and home market, where replacement driven demand means we are not exposed to new home construction trends, and consumers everywhere are searching for reliable and durable products in their homes. Europe also performed extremely well across all end markets. Speaker 600:04:10On tariffs, which I know is top of mind for many, our local for local manufacturing strategy continues to be a real competitive advantage, not only in the U.S., but around the world. Our local for local manufacturing footprint puts us in a stronger position relative to competitors who have more import dependent and complex supply chains. Digital innovation also continues to see strong adoption, I wanna be clear about our strategy. Our priority is building an extensive connected installed base and driving adoption by delivering technology, innovation and tools that our customers love. The more connected our equipment is, the more value we can deliver through better uptime, smarter servicing, lower costs and higher revenue. Ultimately, all of this delivers a better end co-consumer experience, which further strengthens our relationships and stickiness with our customers. Speaker 600:05:20Our connected equipment base continues to grow month-on-month, now standing at more than 250,000 connected machines. Scan-Pay-Wash, our first of its kind cashless payment solution requiring no app download, processed over 100,000 transactions in the month of March alone, but total transactions in Q1 double the entirety of Q4 2025. We're still in the early innings of the value this technology can unlock, and we look forward to sharing more as this platform scales. So far, the adoption trends are encouraging, and we continue to see strong progress on our multi-year product pipeline. As we touched in our last earnings update, we were excited to complete a distributor acquisition in New York during Q1, which marks our second acquisition in one of the most vibrant commercial laundry markets in the U.S. Speaker 600:06:28This tuck-in also brings the Speed Queen, UniMac, and Huebsch brands together under one highly talented team and provides us with the opportunity to realize its full potential. We've also continued to strengthen our balance sheet, having made debt payments of $65 million in the quarter and a reduced net leverage of 0.2 turns to 2.6x adjusted EBITDA, and we remain on track for our full-year deleveraging target. Taken together, the strengths we demonstrated in Q1, broad-based demand, pricing discipline, a local-for-local manufacturing footprint, and a strengthened balance sheet are what we expect to carry us through the balance of 2026. We remain confident in our ability to deliver on our raised guidance for the full year and equally confident in the long-term value we are creating for shareholders. Speaker 600:07:30Finally, before Dean takes over, I wanna thank all of the investors and analysts we have met over the past few months. The level of engagement has been fantastic, and I look forward to continuing the dialogue as we work hard to continue demonstrating our best-in-class industrial, financial, and operational profile. On that note, I will hand it over to Dean to provide details on our Q1 performance and increased guidance. Speaker 100:08:04Thank you, Mike. Starting on slide 4, I'll walk through our strong results and strengthening balance sheet. First quarter net revenue grew 10% to $427 million versus the prior year. We saw real unit volume increases contributing roughly 3%, consistent with our full-year outlook, with the balance coming from pricing and roughly 1% benefit from foreign currency. This reinforces what Mike said earlier. Alliance is fundamentally a volume-led growth story enhanced by rational pricing, and our results remain consistent with the balanced growth pattern that has long characterized us and our industry over time. Gross profit grew 8% to $157 million, representing a gross margin of 37%. Speaker 100:09:06On the cost environment and tariffs specifically, pricing actions already in place continue to offset our approximately $20 million annualized exposure. Our domestic manufacturing footprint provides a meaningful structural advantage relative to peers. We are monitoring the evolving trade landscape closely. We believe we are well-equipped to manage through new developments or changes in the tariff environment. Operating expenses were $73 million or 17% of revenue, consistent with our expectations reflecting the full quarter impact of public company costs as well as our continued investments in our digital engineering and commercial capabilities at scale versus the competition. Taken altogether, these dynamics translated into adjusted EBITDA of $109 million, up 9% versus prior year, an adjusted EBITDA margin of 25.5%. Speaker 100:10:17Volume leverage, operational excellence, and supply chain efficiency would have driven margin expansion higher in the quarter but were offset by the incremental costs of operating as a public company. Adjusted net income was up 85% year-over-year to $63 million, a result that reflects both our strong operating performance and the meaningful benefit of significantly lower interest expense as our debt reduction over the past 12 months continues to flow through the P&L. Moving to cash and the balance sheet, operating cash flow in the quarter was $80 million, reflecting strong operating cash conversion and continued working capital discipline consistent with what we've delivered historically. We paid down $65 million in debt in Q1, ending the quarter with total debt of $1.3 billion and net debt of $1.2 billion. Speaker 100:11:23That puts net leverage at 2.6x adjusted EBITDA, down 0.2 turns in the quarter, squarely on track for our full-year leverage guidance. Drilling into the segments, North America delivered a strong quarter with revenue up 9% to $320 million and adjusted EBITDA up 8% to $87 million and an adjusted EBITDA margin of 27.2%. Growth in the quarter was broad-based across our end markets with some mix impacting margin modestly in the quarter. We saw strong growth in our vended markets, both retail laundromats and communal laundry in multi-housing locations, driven by new store development and existing operators continuing to modernize their fleets with higher capacity, digitally connected equipment. Alliance remains well-positioned to capitalize on this continuing growth driver. On-premise delivered solid results driven by predictable replacement demand that defines that end market. Speaker 100:12:37As Mike Shady talked about earlier, commercial and home continued to outpace the industry. Internationally, revenue grew 10% to $107 million, with adjusted EBITDA up 13% to $33 million in margin of 30.4%. Europe continues its strong momentum with our total cost of ownership value proposition resonating with an operator base that is actively investing in fleet upgrades and energy efficiency. Across our other international markets, we continue to see strong growth in Asia-Pacific, especially in the nascent vended markets. Our Middle East and Africa region, which represents roughly 2% of total revenue, consistent with its historical size and split broadly between the Middle East and Africa, also grew in the quarter. We'll turn to our full year guidance on slide 6. Speaker 100:13:42While it's still early in the year, the strength of our Q1 performance and our growing visibility into the rest of 2026 gives us confidence in raising our full year 2026 guidance today. We are increasing our full year revenue guidance, with growth now expected to be in the range of 6%-7%, an increase of 1 percentage point to the low end of our prior range, with equal contribution expected from volume and price. We also continue to anticipate adjusted EBITDA margin expansion for the full year and are updating our adjusted EBITDA growth to be in the 7%-8% range as we realize price and volume increases and the benefit of continued cost down initiatives. Speaker 100:14:33In addition, subsequent to our first quarter deleveraging, we remain confident in our ability to continue to generate free cash flow and are reaffirming our expectation to reduce leverage by approximately three-quarters of the term in 2026, bringing us to the low 2 times net debt leverage range by year-end. Our other guidance items remain unchanged. Before I wrap up, I want to reaffirm our capital allocation framework to highlight the strong position this business is in today and the compelling opportunities we have ahead. We are generating strong, consistent free cash flow and putting it to work strategically and deliberately. Deleveraging remains a priority, and as you've seen, we are executing against that commitment. Each quarter of paydown strengthens our balance sheet and expands our financial flexibility. Speaker 100:15:33As we move through the year and leverage continues to decline, that flexibility grows, and with it, our ability to act on additional opportunities to drive shareholder value. Organic investment in high return growth remains a core use of our capital, and we also continue to monitor the landscape for potential tuck-in acquisitions that could support and enhance our long-term growth. At the same time, we expect to maintain the flexibility to return capital to shareholders when appropriate. Potential buybacks in the near term and dividends as a longer-term consideration as the balance sheet continues to strengthen. With that, let me turn it back to Mike. Speaker 600:16:22Thanks, Craig. Before we open it up for Q&A, I want to close with 4 key messages. First, commercial laundry is a vibrant, growing, and essential industry. Second, we hold a leading market position as the only scaled pure-play operator, 2 times the size of the number 2 competitor. Third, we have an experienced, hungry, and proven team that has long delivered results through every economic cycle, that gives us confidence to raise our outlook for the year. Finally, there are systemic tailwinds of magnitude that we believe will continue to power this company over the long term. I'll close by thanking our employees, our distribution partners, customers, and shareholders for your continued support. We appreciate it and look forward to continuing to create long-term value for Alliance's stakeholders. With that, let's open the line for questions. Speaker 700:17:30We will now begin the question and answer session. If you'd like to ask a question, press star 1 on your keypad. As a reminder, we ask that you please limit yourself to 1 question and 1 follow-up, then return to the queue if needed. Our first question today will come from Kyle Menges with Citigroup. Your line is now open. Speaker 400:17:52Great. Thank you, guys. Maybe to start off, I'm curious just any notable changes in how you're thinking about the growth in any of the verticals in North America for the rest of the year. Maybe piggybacking on that, I think you mentioned commercial and home outgrew the industry in the quarter. I'm curious if that growth was still positive and just how you're thinking about commercial and home for the rest of the year. Speaker 600:18:17Yeah. Hey, Kyle, it's Mike. Look, I don't think anything's changed, we still feel very optimistic in terms of all verticals in the business having continued growth. You know, momentum is positive. Sentiment is positive. commercial and home in particular has been, as you know, been doing quite well for a number of years. We see no change in demand. At the moment, everything is green. Speaker 400:18:53That's helpful. I'd love to just hear more about the Scan-Pay-Wash technology that you've rolled out, and just, curious how unique this is to Alliance. Then just how are you thinking about monetizing it? Is it more of a, I guess, market share gain, play that you think you can get with this technology? Speaker 600:19:16Yeah. Remember, we're really the only 1 player in the industry who has a, you know, truly integrated platform with software and hardware together. The payment is a part of that. The Scan-Pay-Wash has been very popular just because people don't like to download apps. I think it's just convenient, it's easy, it provides some benefits to the store owners, but ultimately it's a convenience for the end user. In terms of monetization, you know, as I said in the opening remarks, I think we're more focused today on, hey, let's just get adoption. We believe, again, that stickiness, the value that we can bring sort of by the digital platform in general is gonna continue to be very strong. We will monetize that as it goes through. Speaker 600:20:07We do clip, a little bit of a fee on the Scan-Pay-Wash, but it is not really meaningful, Kyle. That we think is the right strategy for now. Speaker 400:20:20Makes sense. Thank you, guys. Speaker 700:20:25Thank you. Our next question comes from Michael Halloran with Baird. Your line is now open. Speaker 500:20:31Hey, morning, gentlemen. Speaker 600:20:33Hey, Mike. Speaker 500:20:34So first just on the vended side of things, North America, maybe just talk about the dynamics you're seeing in the marketplace. Any sensitivity to the volatility right now when it comes to the refurbishment cycle or even build-out cycle? What are the customers saying about the current dynamics? Speaker 600:20:58Yeah. Mike, I will tell you at the store level, not really any major impact of note. At the investor level, so those who are hoping to get new stores or retrofit their existing stores that they have, there is no change in demand. The continual challenge has been more on the permitting and then just finding labor in particular. And to a lesser extent, still, you know, when you're putting a store together, you've got a lot of different components and parts and pieces, and so some of that is subject to supply chain where, you know, you can't get a front door that closes or a boiler or whatever it happens to be. In general, it's really just permitting, labor, and then as we've talked about on past calls, site selection. Speaker 600:21:57But more the drag is just it just takes more time and you're pushing through the funnel. Demand, the pipeline is still very robust. Speaker 500:22:09Thanks for that. On the price cost side of things, maybe just talk through the inflationary backdrop, how you think the price cost manages through the year, do you foresee any incremental pricing actions on your side? Speaker 100:22:26Yeah. Hi, Mike. This is Craig. Good morning. I think from the standpoint of price and cost, as we've disclosed in our release and talked about previously, we've really covered our cost increases from inflation as well as tariff with the price increases we took in middle to late 2025 and then some in early 2026 internationally. We're well positioned to manage as pricing evolves, as tariff environment evolves, to adjust accordingly. We feel good with where we're at today in our guidance for covering our costs with price for the rest of the year. Speaker 500:23:11Thank you. Appreciate it, guys. Speaker 700:23:15Thank you. Our next question comes from Andrew Obin with Bank of America. Your line is now open. Speaker 200:23:23Morning. This is David Ridley-Lane on for Andrew Obin. Am I right in thinking that this is probably the, on a year-over-year basis, the most meaningful one for tariff pressure, just given the timing of all the things? Also on the topic, could you discuss, there were changes to Section 232 tariff on steel and aluminum. Can you discuss whether that was a net benefit or a drag for you and also maybe your competitors? Thank you. Speaker 100:24:00I think, from the standpoint of tariffs, yes. I think the first quarter is really the toughest comp quarter given the ramp-up and the activity in tariffs in 2025. We have about $4.5 million-$5 million of headwind in the first quarter from tariffs that are consistent with prior year. Again, consistent with the prior question, we've covered those costs with price. Also on the other side of some of our commodities, as you know, we've locked in the most important commodities in terms of our cost of materials, in terms of steel and stainless steel for the year. We feel good with where we're at. We have good visibility on those costs as it relates to our prices. Speaker 600:24:50I will say on the change in the Section 232, I would say it's slightly favorable, but pretty close to what it was before. Speaker 200:25:03Got it. Thank you. Just on the, it sounds like you are in a good position from your own costs. It would seem that, you know, broadly this concept that electricity prices are going higher is out there in the public mainstream now. That would seem to me to be an impetus maybe since utility costs are so meaningful for your customer base, that it seems to be on the margin, maybe an impetus for refreshing. Is your energy efficiency more of a selling point today than in the past, and how do you think about that? Thank you. Speaker 600:25:51Yeah. Oh, sorry, go ahead. Speaker 200:25:54No, that was it. Thank you. Speaker 600:25:56Okay. Yeah. Again, it would depend on the age of the equipment you currently have. An older generation, let's say, you know, approaching the 7 to 10 year, again, these units, as you know, get worn and ridden pretty hard. Everything kind of loosens up. Efficiency generally degrades over time, particularly if it's not well-maintained, which, you know, is the reality. Very few people really maintain their product as well as they should. It's just like a car or anything else, like nobody really does what the manufacturer's asking you to do. There is a value proposition there. I think it would take probably several quarters of when you really see that show up, and it materially impacts, you know, your results month after month. Speaker 600:26:48I think that gets people off of sort of dead center. I think it helps. I think more important is sort of the innovation and the digital connectivity that allows people, again, to not only reduce energy, but gives you potentially an uplift in terms of the revenue side of the equation. I think it'll come, but I don't think it's a quick one, and we need, we need it to be, you know, pretty consistent out there for a number of quarters. Speaker 200:27:21Thank you very much. Speaker 600:27:23Yep. Thank you. Speaker 700:27:26Thank you. Our next question comes from Toshiyuki Sano with JP Morgan. Your line is now open. Speaker 900:27:32Hi. Good morning, everyone. Speaker 600:27:35Morning. Speaker 100:27:35Morning. Speaker 900:27:37Europe and APAC was strong, and could you talk about where exactly is the growth coming from countries, channels, and if you could talk about what are the key risks, including geopolitics and competition, please? Speaker 600:27:53For Europe, very strong across the board, all parts of the business. Vended was up pretty significantly. Our on-premise business was up significantly. The majority of that has come where we have direct offices, so Italy, Spain in particular, and France. We see no change in that. I will say, having just been in that region a week or two ago, you know, sentiment is people are a little bit, wouldn't say nervous, but they're thinking, they're pausing, and they're kind of waiting. I would expect that, you know, given energy prices in particular, given again, the uncertainty around the war, we'll see some pullback, I would suspect. Speaker 600:28:55Nothing material at the moment, nothing that we could sort of point our fingers at, General sentiment in that part of the world is slightly negative. I would characterize it that way. In APAC, you know, it's been a continual story. We are getting more growth from on-premise. It is one of the areas that we have, as I've talked about in prior calls, sort of lost a little bit of focus on. They're getting more there. In particular, you know, Thailand has really had a very, very strong start to the year, and most of that has been on the vended side of the business. Speaker 900:29:37Thank you, Mike. One follow-up. International margins are now 30.4% versus North America, 27.2%. What structurally drives the gap, and how should we think about it going forward, please? Speaker 100:29:53I would say first, Tomo, as we've talked about in the past, as we grow internationally and as different regions of the international segment, and mix impact those regions, especially Europe in particular that Mike talked about, we will see stronger EBITDA margins as a result. It is a little bit lumpy, but consistently growing, trending up and to the right. Parity with North America will continue to Increase or to get closer together. One thing I would say is that about a third of the top line and a third of the bottom line is FX related in the quarter. If you take away the FX impacts in internationally, we'd be up 7% in revenue and 9% in EBITDA. Still margin expansion. Speaker 100:30:47We're benefiting from the natural hedge that we have on our local for local manufacturing strategy. We feel really good about the margin trajectory internationally. Again, it's somewhat episodic or lumpy in terms of which regions and which end markets are the strongest in a quarter. Again, up into the right over time. Speaker 900:31:08Thank you, Dave, and congrats on the quarter. Speaker 600:31:11Thank you. Speaker 700:31:14Thank you. Our next question comes from Susan Maklari with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open. Speaker 800:31:20Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Speaker 600:31:22Morning. Speaker 800:31:24My first question is on the adoption rates that you're seeing with Scan-Pay-Wash. It sounds like you're getting some really nice traction there. As we think about the next several quarters and this continuing to gain some momentum, can you talk about how we should think about what that means in terms of the overall growth? How you're also thinking about investing in the next wave of innovation and other strategic initiatives that you have in the pipeline. Speaker 600:31:52Yeah. Just on Scan-Pay-Wash, again, it's part of our digital platform, there are a lot of other sort of features that you would get with that. Again, as I mentioned, it's not really material at the moment in terms of showing up in the financials in any way. I think in terms of our innovation, you know, it is really across the board. You know, it's something that we have invested pretty significantly in, right? I talked about almost doubling our testing capacity that we have in the U.S., in Thailand, as well as in Czech Republic to really get that 24/7 turn. Speaker 600:32:37The physical product, again, Susan, will be a little bit slower because what we don't wanna do is launch a product before it's tried and tested and true. Those labs are very, very important to helping us accelerate the physical product and, you know, simulating all kinds of things from brownouts to dirty water to vibration to all kinds of things and run life testing to make sure that product is durable, reliable, and long-lasting. The digital side, again, much, much quicker to innovate faster to roll out. We see again, that sort of one-two punch. We've got a very significant development team. Speaker 600:33:23As I said, we believe we are the only fully integrated company in the space and got some great team members in a development center, again, primarily in our Asian market. It is gonna be pretty healthy, I think, in terms of how we feel about it, how we look at it, and what you will continue to see from the company. Speaker 800:33:52Okay. That's great color. You also mentioned that you completed your second acquisition of a distributor in New York. Can you just talk a bit about the M&A pipeline? Has there been any changes given the recent uncertainty in the macro and moves in inflation? Speaker 600:34:12Yeah. I mean, again, I think you should think of us as very capable of acquisitions. We're always looking. That pipeline is not, you know, infinite. It's a small number. We have largely accomplished what we said we would do, setting out our strategy a number of years ago in terms of the acquisitions of distribution in the U.S. market. That's not to say we aren't engaging, continuing to dialogue with people, but it will be a part of our story. You should not think of us that way. On the manufacturing side, again, we're always in active discussion. I would say more than anything, we've got everything we need to continue to grow at a pace above market. Speaker 600:35:04We view all of these as complementary, nice to have, but none of it is a need to have, and that's kind of how we look at it. Where we can find value, again, I would emphasize we are very disciplined, in terms of, any of these targets that we're looking at. Where we see it, you know, you'll see us act, but it is, more on the margin is what I would say. Speaker 800:35:35Yeah. Okay. I appreciate that. Thank you for the color. Good luck with the quarter. Speaker 600:35:39Thank you. Speaker 700:35:42Thank you. Once again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star and 1 on your keypad now. Our next question will come from Amit Mehrotra with UBS. Speaker 1000:35:56Thank you. This is Zach Walsh, around from Amit. Just my first question, can we just talk about the phasing of the pricing actions? I was trying to understand, like, the natural carryover pricing from last year versus the incremental pricing from tariffs. Just my second question is just around, can you just elaborate? The question is called out, like, a negative impact from the North America margins. Just based on guidance, it seems like the negative mix should reverse in the balance of the year. Just any color there would be helpful. Thank you. Speaker 100:36:25Yeah. Thanks. I'll start on the second question first. The impact on margins, gross margin in particular, in the quarter was pretty much mix related product and region. Nothing fundamental to the gross margin for the quarter. We still expect gross margin expansion and EBITDA expansion built into our guidance for the full year. I think your point is accurate that we will start to see that pick up as we comp our price increases year-over-year in our public company costs. With regard to pricing, as we said in the previous quarter and consistent with this quarter, is that pricing will be a bigger benefit to our top line in the first half of the year, given the timing of price increases in 2025 due to tariffs and otherwise. Speaker 100:37:20We pulled forward our 2026 North America price increases into November, announced them in November of 2025, so those could be started and realized at the beginning of 2026. As the year progresses, you'll see less impact in the second half from price because of that timing, but we're also very confident that quarter-over-quarter consistently for the year, you're gonna see volume increases consistent each quarter on a comparable basis quarter-over-quarter, such that for the full year, we still expect to be about 50% price on average, and 50% volume in terms of our guidance for the full year. Speaker 1000:38:04Great. Thank you so much. Speaker 700:38:09Thank you. We'll go next to Ketan Mamtora with BMO Capital Markets. Speaker 300:38:16Good morning, congrats on a strong start to the year. Speaker 100:38:20Thank you. Speaker 300:38:21Maybe to start with, can you talk a little bit about, and we discussed M&A, but I'm just curious, as you start to approach your target of 2 times leverage, can you talk about how you are thinking about sort of capital allocation, and if you can just rank order your priorities, please? Speaker 100:38:42Yeah. Thanks for the question. I think consistent is the theme, I think, here in terms of our communication on capital allocation strategy. We're fortunate, given our business model and our strong free cash flow profile that's consistent throughout the year to have multiple opportunities to pull multiple levers at the same time in order to return capital to shareholders and be balanced. Still our number one priority currently is deleveraging. Having said that, we are able to deleverage. At the same time, we are going to continue to invest in our business, in terms of capital, and new product and innovation at scale compared to our competition. As Mike referred to earlier, M&A is really not a big portion of our story. It's not something that's gonna take a lot of capital as we foresee it today. Speaker 100:39:37Then we will still have the opportunity, as we said in our prepared remarks, to return cash to shareholders over the longer term, medium term, in terms of, you know, when it's available, when it's opportunistic to buy back shares, and or over the long term, consider a dividend. The good news is we have a lot of opportunity at our discretion given our strong free cash flow profile. Deleveraging is our number one priority, but able to pull on multiple levers at the same time given our strong free cash flow profile. Speaker 300:40:13Got it. That's helpful. Then just, as a follow-on question, Mike, can you talk a little bit about, sort of competitive dynamics, both here in North America and in Europe? Speaker 600:40:27Yeah. I mean, again, where we can find the information, as you know, our number 2 competitor is publicly traded, so you guys who follow them can find the information. You know, I think in general, the competitive situation is unchanged. You know, we do see at times. Again, these are great companies. At times there are decisions they make that we don't fully follow, and we're not clear on. I would say in general it is the same that it has been. Again, you know, the international player is struggling a little bit more here in the U.S., particularly given the tariff dynamic. You know, we're starting to see some of those pricing actions begin to come in. Speaker 600:41:25They are not anywhere close to what we know their costs are going up, but they are beginning to pass those on. As we talked about, we felt that that would really begin to manifest itself in the back half of the year. We still think that is the situation. You know, the competitive dynamics from our position, we feel that we are in a stronger position, certainly. Again, I've been here almost two decades. I've really never seen the opportunities that we have at the moment in terms of our value proposition, our products, our team. What we have coming down the pike in terms of the innovation and value for end users is incredibly strong. I'd probably just leave it at that. Speaker 600:42:20I feel we're executing very well and in a tremendous position. Speaker 300:42:27I know that's helpful perspective. I'll turn it over. Good luck. Speaker 600:42:32Thank you. Speaker 700:42:36Thank you. This does conclude today's question and answer session, as well as Alliance Laundry's first quarter 2026 earnings conference call. You may now disconnect your lines, and have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by