TSE:WJX Wajax Q1 2026 Earnings Report C$29.53 +0.23 (+0.78%) As of 10:34 AM Eastern ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Wajax EPS ResultsActual EPSC$0.65Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/AWajax Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$502.07 millionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/AWajax Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/4/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, May 5, 2026Conference Call Time2:00PM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress ReleaseEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Wajax Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 5, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Negative Sentiment: Revenue fell 9.5% YoY to CAD 502.1m, driven by a 23% decline in equipment sales (fewer mining shovel deliveries and softness in construction/forestry). Positive Sentiment: Gross profit margin improved 150 basis points to 20.6% and adjusted EBITDA margin rose to 8.1%, reflecting margin initiatives and a more favorable sales mix despite slightly lower adjusted EBITDA and EPS. Positive Sentiment: Operating cash flow strengthened to CAD 46.8m and net leverage improved to 1.51x, with CAD 302.2m of available credit and a CAD 0.35/share Q2 dividend approved by the board. Neutral Sentiment: Backlog was stable quarter‑over‑quarter at CAD 521.7m but down year‑over‑year, with mining backlog reduced after multiple shovel deliveries and one large shovel remaining scheduled for delivery within the next four quarters. Negative Sentiment: Safety performance deteriorated (TRIF up 55% to 2.02), which management flagged as the top priority for improvement. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallWajax Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Our cast will be Mr. George McLean, President and Chief Executive Officer, Ms. Tania Casadinho, Chief Financial Officer. Please be advised that this webcast is being recorded. Please note that this webcast contains forward-looking statements. Actual future results may differ from expected results. I will now turn the call over to Tania Casadinho. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:00:25Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and thank you for participating in our first quarter results call. This afternoon, we will be following a webcast which includes a summary presentation of Wajax's Q1 2026 financial results. The presentation can be found on our website under Investor Relations, Events and Presentations. Again, I would like to draw your attention to our cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information on slide 2 and the non-GAAP and other financial measures on slide 3. Please turn to slide 4, and at this point, I'll turn the call over to George. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:01:00Tania. To start out, we'll provide highlights on our first quarter before turning it back to Tania for commentary on backlog, inventory, and the balance sheet. It provides an overview of Wajax. The corporation has more than 167 years of Canadian operating history and operates across 105 branches with a team of approximately 2,900 employees. During the quarter, our heavy equipment categories and revenue sources made up approximately 55% of our total revenue, while Industrial Parts and ERS generated approximately 45%. Turning to slide 5. This slide provides an overview of our purpose and values. Wajax's purpose statement is empowering people to build a better tomorrow, which we strive to achieve by living our values and delivering an exceptional experience for our shareholders, customers, suppliers, our people, and the communities we serve. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:01:51Our purpose and values guide our decision-making and allow us to execute on our strategic priorities. Turning to slide 6. Slide provides an overview of our strategic priorities, which were refined for 2026. During 2025, management focused on cost control, inventory optimization, and margin improvement to reduce leverage, enhance profitability, and increase cash flow from operations. These actions represented initial steps in an ongoing program of operational improvements. 2026, management continues to emphasize disciplined operational execution across these focus areas, supported by balance sheet strength and prudent capital allocation, which will enable the corporation to deliver sustainable long-term value. Turning to slide 7. First quarter of 2026, Wajax delivered improved margins, strong operating cash flow, and a further reduction in leverage despite lower year-over-year revenue. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:02:46Revenue of CAD 502.1 million decreased CAD 52.9 million or 9.5% in the quarter. The decrease resulted primarily from lower equipment volumes, including the delivery of one large mining shovel in the current quarter compared to two in the first quarter of the prior year, as well as continued customer uncertainty and increased caution across certain sectors. Gross profit margin of 20.6% increased 150 basis points compared to the same period of 2025, reflecting margin initiatives and sales mix. Increase was driven primarily by higher margins realized in Industrial Parts and ERS sales and a lower proportion of equipment sales from a sales mix perspective. These increases were partially offset by lower margins realized on Product Support revenue. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:03:36We remain focused on these margin improvement initiatives to strengthen our margin profile, mitigate ongoing market pressures, and drive continued earnings performance. Selling and administrative expenses as a percentage of revenue increased to 14.8% in the first quarter of 2026 from 14.3% in the same period of 2025, driven by the year-over-year decline in revenue. During the adjustments noted on the slide, adjusted selling and admins expenses decreased CAD 1.5 million in the first quarter of 2026 compared with the same period in the prior year, primarily due to ongoing discipline and cost control and operational efficiency. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:04:18Adjusted EBITDA margin of 8.1% in the first quarter of 2026 improved from 7.8% compared to the same period of 2025 and increased from 7.9% in the fourth quarter of 2025. Adjusted EBITDA of CAD 40.5 million decreased CAD 2.7 million or 6.3% from the first quarter of 2025, noting the adjustments recorded on this chart. Adjusted net earnings of CAD 0.67 per share decreased 2.4% or CAD 0.02 per share from the first quarter of 2025, noting the adjustments recorded on this chart. End of Q1, the TRIF rate was 2.02, an increase of 55% from the first quarter of 2025. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:05:02Safety continues to be Wajax's number one priority and management is committed to continuously improving our safety programs to improve on this result. We thank everyone on our team for their ongoing dedication to workplace safety. Turning to slide 8. Revenue decreases of 9.5% in the first quarter resulted from lower revenue in all regions. Western Canada sales of CAD 227 million decreased 14% in the quarter due primarily to lower construction forestry equipment volumes and lower mining volumes, reflecting the delivery of one large mining shovel in the first quarter of 2026 compared to two in the first quarter of the prior year. Central Canada sales of CAD 90 million decreased 9.5% in the quarter, due primarily to lower revenue in the material handling and Industrial Parts categories. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:05:54Eastern Canada sales of CAD 184 million decreased 3.3% in the quarter due primarily to equipment volumes in the construction and forestry segments and material handling categories and lower Industrial Parts sales. These decreases were partially offset by higher ERS revenue and higher equipment volumes in the Power Systems category. Please turn to slide 9. An update on equipment and product support sales and year-over-year variances are shown on this page. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:06:25Equipment sales of CAD 131 million decreased CAD 39.8 million, or 23.3% compared to last year, due primarily to lower construction and forestry sales in Western and Eastern Canada, lower material handling sales in all regions and lower mining sales in Western Canada, reflecting the delivery of one large mining shovel in the first quarter of 2026 compared to two in the first quarter of the prior year. Product Support sales of CAD 136 million decreased CAD 10.3 million, or 7% compared to last year, due primarily to lower mining revenue in Western Canada. Please turn to slide 10. An update on Industrial Parts and ERS and year-over-year variances are shown on this page. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:07:10Industrial Parts sales of approximately CAD 138 million decreased CAD 7 million, or 4.9% compared to last year, due primarily to lower sales in Central and Eastern Canada, driven by softer market conditions. ERS sales of approximately CAD 87 million increased CAD 5 million or 6% due primarily to higher sales in Eastern Canada, driven by timing of projects. Turning to slide 11. This slide summarizes sales at a category level for our company's overall groupings of heavy equipment and Industrial Parts and ERS. In the first quarter, the heavy equipment categories decreased CAD 50.9 million or 15.5% due to primarily lower construction and forestry equipment sales in all regions and lower mining equipment and Product Support sales in Western Canada. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:08:04In the first quarter, the Industrial Parts and ERS categories decreased CAD 2.2 million or 0.9%, driven by lower Industrial sales and Industrial Parts sales in Central and Eastern Canada, offset partially by higher ERS sales in Eastern Canada. I will now turn the call back to Tania for commentary on backlog, inventory, and the balance sheet. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:08:30Thank you, George. Please turn to slide 12 for my comments on backlog and inventory. Our Q1 backlog of CAD 521.7 million increased CAD 5.1 million compared to backlog of CAD 516.6 million at Q4 and decreased CAD 39.6 million on a year-over-year basis. The increase was due primarily to higher construction and forestry and material handling backlog, offset partially by lower mining backlog, driven largely by the delivery of a large mining shovel in the quarter, which was in backlog at December 31st, 2025. The year-over-year decrease was due primarily to lower mining backlog, driven largely by the delivery of five large mining shovels since March 31st, 2025 and lower material handling backlogs. These decreases were partially offset by an increase in power systems backlog driven by the subcontract with Irving Shipbuilding Inc. entered into during the fourth quarter of 2025 and higher ERS orders. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:09:33Backlog at March 31st, 2026 included one large mining shovel. Inventory increased CAD 44 million compared to Q4 of 2025. The increase in the first quarter of 2026 resulted primarily from targeted equipment inventory purchasing in the construction and forestry category to support anticipated seasonal demand. Inventory decreased CAD 64.5 million compared to Q1 of 2025. The year-over-year decrease resulted primarily from lower mining equipment and Industrial Parts and ERS inventory. Management believes that inventory levels are within a normal operating range at this point. Please turn to slide 13, where I will provide an update on cash flow, leverage, and working capital. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:10:21Cash flows generated from operating activities in the current quarter of CAD 46.8 million compared with cash generated of CAD 25.7 million in the same quarter of the prior year. The increase in cash generated of CAD 21.1 million was mainly attributable to an increase in accounts payable and accrued liabilities, offset partially by a targeted increase in inventory during the quarter to support anticipated seasonal demand and an increase in trade and other. Our Q1 leverage ratio improved to 1.51x from 1.62x in Q4, primarily to the lower debt level driven by cash generated from operating activities during the quarter. The corporation's leverage ratio is currently within our target range of 1.5x-2x at the end of Q1. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:11:10Our available credit capacity at the end of Q1 was CAD 302.2 million, which is sufficient to meet short-term normal course working capital and maintenance capital requirements and fund our planned strategic initiatives. We continue to focus on working capital efficiency, which is a key component in managing our overall leverage targets. Q1 working capital efficiency was 24.6%, an improvement in efficiency of 50 basis points from 25.4% at December 31st, 2025, due to the lower trailing four-quarter average working capital. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:11:45Inventory turns have remained the same from Q4 of 2025 and improved to 2.5x from 2.2x in Q1 of 2025 and 2x in Q4 of 2024, due primarily to lower average inventory levels, offset partially by lower sales. The optimization of inventory improvement in working capital efficiency and meaningful reduction in leverage reflect management's disciplined execution and strong balance sheet as we look ahead to the balance of 2026. Finally, the board has approved our 2nd quarter 2026 dividend of CAD 0.35 per share payable on July 3rd, 2026 to shareholders of record on June 15th, 2026. Turn to slide 14. At this point, I will now turn the call back to George. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:12:40Thanks, Tania. Our outlook is summarized on slide 14. In the first quarter of 2026, Wajax delivered revenue of CAD 502.1 million compared to CAD 555 million in 2025. Gross profit margin of 20.6% compared to 19.1% in 2025. Adjusted basic earnings per share of CAD 0.67 versus CAD 0.69 in 2025, and cash flow from operating activities of CAD 46.8 million compared to CAD 25.7 million in 2025. Working capital efficiency improved to 24.6% from 25.1% at December 31st, 2025, despite a targeted increase in inventory to support anticipated demand. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:13:29Leverage improved to 1.51x from 1.62x at December 31st, 2025 and remains within the corporation's target range of 1.5x-2x. 2026, management continues to emphasize disciplined execution across these priorities, supported by prudent capital allocation. Ahead, Wajax continues to see solid customer demand in the mining and energy sectors. Mining demand is supported by a backlog that includes one large mining shovel scheduled for delivery within the next four quarters. Market conditions in other sectors remain mixed across regions, with ongoing macroeconomic softness and uncertainty related to Canada, U.S. tariff and trade dynamics. Wajax continues to maintain a strong balance sheet and a solid backlog. Inventory levels are within a normal operating range, while margin improvement and cost control remain key focus areas. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:14:24Although demand visibility varies across end markets, corporation's diversified exposure, focused execution position it to manage current market conditions effectively. Management believes the continued execution of its strategic priorities, supported by balance sheet strength and prudent capital allocation, will enable the corporation to deliver sustainable long-term value. I will now turn it back to the operator and open the line for questions. Thank you very much for your continued interest in Wajax. Operator00:14:52Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question-and-answer session. To join the question queue, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. You will hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then the number two. Our first question comes from the line of Devin Dodge from BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open. Devin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:15:24Yeah, thanks. Good afternoon. George, I wanted to start with a question for you. You've officially been in the CEO seat for two months now. Just wondering if you can share some early perspectives on Wajax and where you see the biggest opportunities for the company. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:15:42Hello, Devin. Thanks for the question. Yes, I started on March third and about nine weeks into my term here at Wajax. I'm spending 150 days crossing the country on a look, listen, learn tour. Been to about a third of the locations, all of our distribution centers, and met with many of the team. In terms of early observations, I see a lot of good, hardworking people across the country who are really focused on customers, needs of our customers, our product segments, and our industry. Really good people working hard, good focus on safety. Obviously, lots more that we can do, but I'm seeing good potential in the business across the country. Devin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:16:24Okay, excellent. Okay. The EBITDA commentary suggested customer caution may have escalated a bit in early 2026. I'm assuming this may be coming from some end markets that had already been weak, but just wondering if you could provide a bit more color on which end markets that you're seeing this. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:16:41Yes, exactly. It is mainly around construction and forestry, where we see the softness or the perhaps concern in the market. Overall, I think pretty steady and stable with that caution that we are seeing in the same sectors and same customer segments over the last few quarters. Devin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:17:03Okay, that makes sense. Then one last one for me. mtu, it's one of the brands in your portfolio, but I believe the OEM often sells directly to larger customers, and that's, we'll say, limited Wajax's presence in the data center sector. Just wondering if there's an opportunity to work for Wajax to work with mtu on some of these potential data center projects, you know, even if it's only on a Product Support basis. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:17:30Yes, understood for sure. Rolls-Royce mtu is a great company with great products, and we're pleased to represent them. There is a lot of opportunity, as you said, all across the country in stationary applications and mobile applications, including, power generation backup systems, really innovative products. I think their direct sales are fairly limited, but certainly, as you said, in some of the bigger projects. We're definitely the supplier of choice when it comes down the road. We look forward to participating in that as well and growing that relationship. Devin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:18:05Okay, great. Thanks for that. I'll turn it over. Operator00:18:10Our next question is from Patrick Sullivan from TD Cowen. Your line is open. Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:18:18Okay, great. Thank you for taking my question. I guess, was there anything unique about Q1 this year? You know, understanding that orders and deliveries can be a bit lumpy in any quarter, but Q1 can also be kind of at most risk for variability in terms of seasonality as well. Was there anything kind of that stuck out this quarter? Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:18:41Hi. I'm sorry, this is Pat, right? Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:18:45Yes, it is. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:18:48From a Q1 perspective, yeah, you're correct in terms of it can be a bit bumpy due to seasonality. We are coming up on a comparison to a pretty strong Q1 in 2025, where we did see a bit of what we believe was pull-forward demand in equipment in the first quarter of last year, and we didn't necessarily see that pull forward this quarter. In addition to that, last quarter or last year, same quarter, we had two mining shovels. This quarter we only had one. There's some lumpiness in there for sure. Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:19:27Okay. Understood. You noted the inventory build ahead of expected seasonal demands. I guess, can you talk about the areas where you're stocking up for and I guess your confidence in that demand coming to fruition? Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:19:41Yeah. We did stock up specifically in the construction and forestry areas because Q1 end of Q1 and Q2 typically are seasonally a bit higher for us. We are stocking up in advance of that or that expected demand. Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:20:01Okay. Got it. Maybe one last one before I turn it back over. The backlog was relatively stable quarter-over-quarter. I'm wondering if you can talk about the quoting activity you're seeing out in the market. Is I guess, like, how is the quoting environment? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:20:22Yes. This is George. This backlog is solid for us, which is great. In terms of quoting, we don't see any concerns or any major upsurge, and it lines up with what we see in the market generally around oil and gas mining, and then a little bit of uncertainty in construction, forestry, et cetera. We do see some upturn, as Tania said, in terms of the need for inventory and we'll continue to quote on that basis. Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:20:50Okay, great. Thank you. Operator00:20:54Our next question is from Maxim Sytchev from National Bank Capital Markets. Your line is open. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:21:02Hi. Good afternoon. Is it possible to get a bit more color around what exactly happened with Product Support in Q1? You know, how much of that is, you know, seasonality? How much of that is tougher comps? I guess, yeah, any greater color. More importantly, I guess, how we should be thinking about the rest of the year on sort of, you know, sequential basis, or should we expect a recovery in that category? Thanks. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:21:35Max, from a Product Support perspective, I'll address your portion around the comps. We did have a strong comp as well in Q1 of last year. We had some larger deals in mining, which also impacted the comparison on the margin as well, and hence the call-out. In terms of what we expect, it comes back to the caution as well. Really, Q2 tends to be seasonally better, but we are cautioned with. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:22:12Just to drill down a little bit, I mean, like the install base is already there. So in terms of like the delays or the caution around Product Support, what is it really being driven by? Is it services? Is it parts? I mean, like, what exactly is happening there? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:22:35Yeah. It's, George, I think, there's nothing we can point to directly. It's, more about just making sure we're performing in the field and, that we meet the demand. There is definitely softness, but we think there's more we can do to meet the market in that area and, nothing more really in detail we can point to at this stage till we see the trend play out. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:22:58Okay. Then, I just when we look forward, I mean, obviously where WTI, WCS is at the moment, I mean, what are your conversations with mining clients and specifically, I understand that you have one struggling backlog, but what about the visibility to potentially add more on a going-forward basis? What is the pipeline looking from that perspective? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:23:23Sorry, we missed the first part. Adding more what? I apologize. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:23:28Shovels. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:23:31Yeah. I think that's. I think we have good demand over time, but nothing unexpected or inordinate in that area. We continue to work that market, and we do believe we have an excellent product, but nothing more to disclose. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:23:46Okay. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:23:47Active quotes remain strong. Sorry. Active quotes remain strong for us and we're hopeful and optimistic. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:23:57Right. I guess, I mean, the bottom line, but from mining clients specifically, I mean, has it gotten better on the back of oil pricing spike, or is it more sort of steady relative to Because I mean, people, I guess, it's in some sort of normalization from a pricing perspective. What are you feeling kind of on the ground? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:24:17It's a mix of steady and maybe some optimism about growth going forward, but it still hasn't played out yet. I think solid with hope for some upside going forward as this trend in prices. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:24:30Okay. maybe a question for Tania then. In terms of accounts payable, obviously, it, you know, helped Q1. How should we think about that line item on a sort of the remainder of the year basis, just from a modeling perspective? Or if you want to maybe address working capital in general, because I'm like, I guess AP is only part of it. yeah, anything to help us from a kind of a free cash flow perspective. Thank you. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:24:57The way we look at working capital, it's a holistic view. Inventory is really the biggest driver, and in accounts payable, it's the timing of the payables associated with inventory for the most part. If we think about inventory, as we've been saying for a while, we are focused on optimizing our inventory, which means having the right inventory at the right time. As we make our way through this build of the inventory, you'll see that go through AP eventually as well. We are still very keenly focused on optimizing our working capital, and by default. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:25:38Okay. Do you mind maybe providing anything sort of numeric in terms of the optimization levels that you think are appropriate? I don't know, like as a percent of revenue or anything tangible from that perspective? Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:25:52Sorry, your line's breaking up a little bit. What was the first part of your question? Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:25:54Sorry, I apologize. I'm just wondering, in terms of the working capital sort of efficiency, is it possible to maybe provide any sort of quantitative measure, like as a percentage of revenue or something like that we should be thinking of on a prospective basis in terms of kind of like we're starting from point A and point B is gonna be, I don't know, like 10% improvement? Any color there would be super helpful. Thank you. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:26:19Yeah. A little bit difficult to give it to you on a working capital efficiency perspective. Like I said, inventory is the biggest driver. We're looking at it from a turns perspective, and we feel quite good with where the turns are at this moment. I think we're at 2.5, and have been there for two quarters now. That will drive the level of inventory that we'll have on hand versus the expected sales. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:26:46Okay, thank you very much. Operator00:26:52Our next question is from Jonathan Goldman from Scotiabank. Your line is open. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:26:59Hey, good afternoon, team, and thanks for taking my questions. I just want to circle back to the conversation on Product Support. I was wondering if we could, there is one line in your disclosures, if we could drill down on a bit more. I think in the revenue section, you talked about Product Support sales down 7% year-on-year. The explanation was lower mining revenue in Western Canada. I was wondering if you can explain the dynamics there because it seems like the outlook in the end markets are pretty good in mining. I just wanted to know if there is anything specific in the quarter in the region that is happening in Western Canada. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:27:34Yeah, it's a good question. We don't have a great line of sight in that area, but there is this ebb and flow between the work that is outsourced to the market or to us, and then self-performance of the Product Support work in-house by some of our customers. There's always a dynamic there, depending on their current situation, their needs, and their cash flows. We don't, as I said, have a great line of sight in terms of all those details, but that is the balance. It may be that there's some more self-performance of work in the market, but we know that our service offer is very good and we expect it to continue to be solid through the rest of the year. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:28:15Okay, that's helpful. I guess relatedly, a separate line in the disclosure is about some pressure on Product Support margins. Maybe you could just walk us through if there's been any change in the competitive dynamics in the marketplace, whether, you know, it's competing against customers themselves and self-perform, other competitors, and if there's any dynamic with the oil price and kind of demand levels that would change sort of margin expectations going forward. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:28:40Yeah. Nothing in the market or any concern. It's really just a strong comp, that we're lapping now from the mining sec-. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:28:49Okay. Maybe one for Tania and a housekeeping one. How should we think about the cadence or I guess level of SG&A CAD going through the year off of Q1? Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:29:02Great question. Yes, our SG&A as a percentage of revenue this quarter is a little higher than we've been seeing it over the last several quarters now. That is still an area of focus for us. It continues to be. Our three key areas that we were talking about last year, margins, costs, and inventory continue to be top of mind, and costs is no different. In terms of how we're thinking about it, we think about SG&A or the costs on a full year basis. We still feel good about the ranges that we've provided historically. We're looking at it from a midterm to long-term. We're not going to be managing it quarter-over-quarter, and we expect ebbs and flows depending on the volume. It is still of a key focus for us, if that helps. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:29:50No, that's helpful. Maybe just one more if I can squeeze it in. You know, I realize, George, it's early days, but the balance sheet is probably in the best shape it's been in for, you know, a considerably long time. You're at the low end of your target range. How are you thinking about capital allocation going forward from where you sit today? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:30:09Hi, it's George. Thanks for the question. I'm 90 days in and running this 150-day look, listen, learn tour, and we're also engaging in a strategic planning process among the executive leadership. That's really to be determined. We think there's lots of potential and lots of possibilities, but that will be part of the discussion in terms of market needs, what we can provide, how much expenditure we'll need to support that and invest. We'll be back with more details when we're ready, but that will take some time, at least six months to play out in terms of our planning. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:30:41Okay. Looking forward to it. Thanks for taking my questions. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:30:44Thank you. Operator00:30:49There are no questions at this time. Mr. McClean, please continue. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:30:56Thank you, operator. Much appreciated. Thank you everyone for joining, and thank you for your questions. We appreciate it. Thanks again for your support and interest, and hope everyone has a great day. Thanks. Bye. Operator00:31:08This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesGeorge McCleanPresident and CEOTania CasadinhoCFOAnalystsDevin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital MarketsJonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at ScotiabankMaxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital MarketsPatrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD CowenPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release Wajax Earnings HeadlinesWhat is Scotiabank's Forecast for Wajax FY2027 Earnings?May 4 at 1:34 AM | americanbankingnews.com3 Canadian stocks for investors who want income now and growth laterMarch 30, 2026 | msn.comElon’s Biggest Launch Ever: 15x Bigger Than SpaceXThe Man Who Called Nvidia Before It Soared 1,000% Issues New Elon Musk BUY Alert Luke Lango was ranked America's #1 stock picker in 2020. He was mentored by two hedge fund billionaires from the Soros network and trained at Caltech. His readers have had the chance to see gains as high as AMD +8,500%... Nvidia +5,000%... Tesla +3,500%... Palantir +1,000%... and Apple +890%.May 6 at 1:00 AM | InvestorPlace (Ad)Wajax Corporation Earnings Call Highlights Margin-Fueled UpswingMarch 8, 2026 | tipranks.comWajax Boosts Earnings, Cash Flow as Inventory Cuts Restore Target LeverageMarch 7, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comWajax Corporation (WJX:CA) Q4 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptMarch 4, 2026 | seekingalpha.comSee More Wajax Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Wajax? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Wajax and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About WajaxWajax (TSE:WJX) Corp is a Canadian distributor of industrial components. The company's core business is the sale of parts and service support of equipment, power systems, and industrial components through a network of branches in Canada. Most of its revenue is generated from the sale of equipment which includes machinery and components used for construction purposes and its industrial components find utility in businesses like mining, forestry, and material handling for other industrial purposes. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Our cast will be Mr. George McLean, President and Chief Executive Officer, Ms. Tania Casadinho, Chief Financial Officer. Please be advised that this webcast is being recorded. Please note that this webcast contains forward-looking statements. Actual future results may differ from expected results. I will now turn the call over to Tania Casadinho. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:00:25Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, and thank you for participating in our first quarter results call. This afternoon, we will be following a webcast which includes a summary presentation of Wajax's Q1 2026 financial results. The presentation can be found on our website under Investor Relations, Events and Presentations. Again, I would like to draw your attention to our cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information on slide 2 and the non-GAAP and other financial measures on slide 3. Please turn to slide 4, and at this point, I'll turn the call over to George. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:01:00Tania. To start out, we'll provide highlights on our first quarter before turning it back to Tania for commentary on backlog, inventory, and the balance sheet. It provides an overview of Wajax. The corporation has more than 167 years of Canadian operating history and operates across 105 branches with a team of approximately 2,900 employees. During the quarter, our heavy equipment categories and revenue sources made up approximately 55% of our total revenue, while Industrial Parts and ERS generated approximately 45%. Turning to slide 5. This slide provides an overview of our purpose and values. Wajax's purpose statement is empowering people to build a better tomorrow, which we strive to achieve by living our values and delivering an exceptional experience for our shareholders, customers, suppliers, our people, and the communities we serve. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:01:51Our purpose and values guide our decision-making and allow us to execute on our strategic priorities. Turning to slide 6. Slide provides an overview of our strategic priorities, which were refined for 2026. During 2025, management focused on cost control, inventory optimization, and margin improvement to reduce leverage, enhance profitability, and increase cash flow from operations. These actions represented initial steps in an ongoing program of operational improvements. 2026, management continues to emphasize disciplined operational execution across these focus areas, supported by balance sheet strength and prudent capital allocation, which will enable the corporation to deliver sustainable long-term value. Turning to slide 7. First quarter of 2026, Wajax delivered improved margins, strong operating cash flow, and a further reduction in leverage despite lower year-over-year revenue. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:02:46Revenue of CAD 502.1 million decreased CAD 52.9 million or 9.5% in the quarter. The decrease resulted primarily from lower equipment volumes, including the delivery of one large mining shovel in the current quarter compared to two in the first quarter of the prior year, as well as continued customer uncertainty and increased caution across certain sectors. Gross profit margin of 20.6% increased 150 basis points compared to the same period of 2025, reflecting margin initiatives and sales mix. Increase was driven primarily by higher margins realized in Industrial Parts and ERS sales and a lower proportion of equipment sales from a sales mix perspective. These increases were partially offset by lower margins realized on Product Support revenue. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:03:36We remain focused on these margin improvement initiatives to strengthen our margin profile, mitigate ongoing market pressures, and drive continued earnings performance. Selling and administrative expenses as a percentage of revenue increased to 14.8% in the first quarter of 2026 from 14.3% in the same period of 2025, driven by the year-over-year decline in revenue. During the adjustments noted on the slide, adjusted selling and admins expenses decreased CAD 1.5 million in the first quarter of 2026 compared with the same period in the prior year, primarily due to ongoing discipline and cost control and operational efficiency. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:04:18Adjusted EBITDA margin of 8.1% in the first quarter of 2026 improved from 7.8% compared to the same period of 2025 and increased from 7.9% in the fourth quarter of 2025. Adjusted EBITDA of CAD 40.5 million decreased CAD 2.7 million or 6.3% from the first quarter of 2025, noting the adjustments recorded on this chart. Adjusted net earnings of CAD 0.67 per share decreased 2.4% or CAD 0.02 per share from the first quarter of 2025, noting the adjustments recorded on this chart. End of Q1, the TRIF rate was 2.02, an increase of 55% from the first quarter of 2025. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:05:02Safety continues to be Wajax's number one priority and management is committed to continuously improving our safety programs to improve on this result. We thank everyone on our team for their ongoing dedication to workplace safety. Turning to slide 8. Revenue decreases of 9.5% in the first quarter resulted from lower revenue in all regions. Western Canada sales of CAD 227 million decreased 14% in the quarter due primarily to lower construction forestry equipment volumes and lower mining volumes, reflecting the delivery of one large mining shovel in the first quarter of 2026 compared to two in the first quarter of the prior year. Central Canada sales of CAD 90 million decreased 9.5% in the quarter, due primarily to lower revenue in the material handling and Industrial Parts categories. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:05:54Eastern Canada sales of CAD 184 million decreased 3.3% in the quarter due primarily to equipment volumes in the construction and forestry segments and material handling categories and lower Industrial Parts sales. These decreases were partially offset by higher ERS revenue and higher equipment volumes in the Power Systems category. Please turn to slide 9. An update on equipment and product support sales and year-over-year variances are shown on this page. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:06:25Equipment sales of CAD 131 million decreased CAD 39.8 million, or 23.3% compared to last year, due primarily to lower construction and forestry sales in Western and Eastern Canada, lower material handling sales in all regions and lower mining sales in Western Canada, reflecting the delivery of one large mining shovel in the first quarter of 2026 compared to two in the first quarter of the prior year. Product Support sales of CAD 136 million decreased CAD 10.3 million, or 7% compared to last year, due primarily to lower mining revenue in Western Canada. Please turn to slide 10. An update on Industrial Parts and ERS and year-over-year variances are shown on this page. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:07:10Industrial Parts sales of approximately CAD 138 million decreased CAD 7 million, or 4.9% compared to last year, due primarily to lower sales in Central and Eastern Canada, driven by softer market conditions. ERS sales of approximately CAD 87 million increased CAD 5 million or 6% due primarily to higher sales in Eastern Canada, driven by timing of projects. Turning to slide 11. This slide summarizes sales at a category level for our company's overall groupings of heavy equipment and Industrial Parts and ERS. In the first quarter, the heavy equipment categories decreased CAD 50.9 million or 15.5% due to primarily lower construction and forestry equipment sales in all regions and lower mining equipment and Product Support sales in Western Canada. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:08:04In the first quarter, the Industrial Parts and ERS categories decreased CAD 2.2 million or 0.9%, driven by lower Industrial sales and Industrial Parts sales in Central and Eastern Canada, offset partially by higher ERS sales in Eastern Canada. I will now turn the call back to Tania for commentary on backlog, inventory, and the balance sheet. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:08:30Thank you, George. Please turn to slide 12 for my comments on backlog and inventory. Our Q1 backlog of CAD 521.7 million increased CAD 5.1 million compared to backlog of CAD 516.6 million at Q4 and decreased CAD 39.6 million on a year-over-year basis. The increase was due primarily to higher construction and forestry and material handling backlog, offset partially by lower mining backlog, driven largely by the delivery of a large mining shovel in the quarter, which was in backlog at December 31st, 2025. The year-over-year decrease was due primarily to lower mining backlog, driven largely by the delivery of five large mining shovels since March 31st, 2025 and lower material handling backlogs. These decreases were partially offset by an increase in power systems backlog driven by the subcontract with Irving Shipbuilding Inc. entered into during the fourth quarter of 2025 and higher ERS orders. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:09:33Backlog at March 31st, 2026 included one large mining shovel. Inventory increased CAD 44 million compared to Q4 of 2025. The increase in the first quarter of 2026 resulted primarily from targeted equipment inventory purchasing in the construction and forestry category to support anticipated seasonal demand. Inventory decreased CAD 64.5 million compared to Q1 of 2025. The year-over-year decrease resulted primarily from lower mining equipment and Industrial Parts and ERS inventory. Management believes that inventory levels are within a normal operating range at this point. Please turn to slide 13, where I will provide an update on cash flow, leverage, and working capital. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:10:21Cash flows generated from operating activities in the current quarter of CAD 46.8 million compared with cash generated of CAD 25.7 million in the same quarter of the prior year. The increase in cash generated of CAD 21.1 million was mainly attributable to an increase in accounts payable and accrued liabilities, offset partially by a targeted increase in inventory during the quarter to support anticipated seasonal demand and an increase in trade and other. Our Q1 leverage ratio improved to 1.51x from 1.62x in Q4, primarily to the lower debt level driven by cash generated from operating activities during the quarter. The corporation's leverage ratio is currently within our target range of 1.5x-2x at the end of Q1. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:11:10Our available credit capacity at the end of Q1 was CAD 302.2 million, which is sufficient to meet short-term normal course working capital and maintenance capital requirements and fund our planned strategic initiatives. We continue to focus on working capital efficiency, which is a key component in managing our overall leverage targets. Q1 working capital efficiency was 24.6%, an improvement in efficiency of 50 basis points from 25.4% at December 31st, 2025, due to the lower trailing four-quarter average working capital. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:11:45Inventory turns have remained the same from Q4 of 2025 and improved to 2.5x from 2.2x in Q1 of 2025 and 2x in Q4 of 2024, due primarily to lower average inventory levels, offset partially by lower sales. The optimization of inventory improvement in working capital efficiency and meaningful reduction in leverage reflect management's disciplined execution and strong balance sheet as we look ahead to the balance of 2026. Finally, the board has approved our 2nd quarter 2026 dividend of CAD 0.35 per share payable on July 3rd, 2026 to shareholders of record on June 15th, 2026. Turn to slide 14. At this point, I will now turn the call back to George. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:12:40Thanks, Tania. Our outlook is summarized on slide 14. In the first quarter of 2026, Wajax delivered revenue of CAD 502.1 million compared to CAD 555 million in 2025. Gross profit margin of 20.6% compared to 19.1% in 2025. Adjusted basic earnings per share of CAD 0.67 versus CAD 0.69 in 2025, and cash flow from operating activities of CAD 46.8 million compared to CAD 25.7 million in 2025. Working capital efficiency improved to 24.6% from 25.1% at December 31st, 2025, despite a targeted increase in inventory to support anticipated demand. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:13:29Leverage improved to 1.51x from 1.62x at December 31st, 2025 and remains within the corporation's target range of 1.5x-2x. 2026, management continues to emphasize disciplined execution across these priorities, supported by prudent capital allocation. Ahead, Wajax continues to see solid customer demand in the mining and energy sectors. Mining demand is supported by a backlog that includes one large mining shovel scheduled for delivery within the next four quarters. Market conditions in other sectors remain mixed across regions, with ongoing macroeconomic softness and uncertainty related to Canada, U.S. tariff and trade dynamics. Wajax continues to maintain a strong balance sheet and a solid backlog. Inventory levels are within a normal operating range, while margin improvement and cost control remain key focus areas. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:14:24Although demand visibility varies across end markets, corporation's diversified exposure, focused execution position it to manage current market conditions effectively. Management believes the continued execution of its strategic priorities, supported by balance sheet strength and prudent capital allocation, will enable the corporation to deliver sustainable long-term value. I will now turn it back to the operator and open the line for questions. Thank you very much for your continued interest in Wajax. Operator00:14:52Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question-and-answer session. To join the question queue, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. You will hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then the number two. Our first question comes from the line of Devin Dodge from BMO Capital Markets. Your line is open. Devin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:15:24Yeah, thanks. Good afternoon. George, I wanted to start with a question for you. You've officially been in the CEO seat for two months now. Just wondering if you can share some early perspectives on Wajax and where you see the biggest opportunities for the company. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:15:42Hello, Devin. Thanks for the question. Yes, I started on March third and about nine weeks into my term here at Wajax. I'm spending 150 days crossing the country on a look, listen, learn tour. Been to about a third of the locations, all of our distribution centers, and met with many of the team. In terms of early observations, I see a lot of good, hardworking people across the country who are really focused on customers, needs of our customers, our product segments, and our industry. Really good people working hard, good focus on safety. Obviously, lots more that we can do, but I'm seeing good potential in the business across the country. Devin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:16:24Okay, excellent. Okay. The EBITDA commentary suggested customer caution may have escalated a bit in early 2026. I'm assuming this may be coming from some end markets that had already been weak, but just wondering if you could provide a bit more color on which end markets that you're seeing this. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:16:41Yes, exactly. It is mainly around construction and forestry, where we see the softness or the perhaps concern in the market. Overall, I think pretty steady and stable with that caution that we are seeing in the same sectors and same customer segments over the last few quarters. Devin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:17:03Okay, that makes sense. Then one last one for me. mtu, it's one of the brands in your portfolio, but I believe the OEM often sells directly to larger customers, and that's, we'll say, limited Wajax's presence in the data center sector. Just wondering if there's an opportunity to work for Wajax to work with mtu on some of these potential data center projects, you know, even if it's only on a Product Support basis. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:17:30Yes, understood for sure. Rolls-Royce mtu is a great company with great products, and we're pleased to represent them. There is a lot of opportunity, as you said, all across the country in stationary applications and mobile applications, including, power generation backup systems, really innovative products. I think their direct sales are fairly limited, but certainly, as you said, in some of the bigger projects. We're definitely the supplier of choice when it comes down the road. We look forward to participating in that as well and growing that relationship. Devin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital Markets00:18:05Okay, great. Thanks for that. I'll turn it over. Operator00:18:10Our next question is from Patrick Sullivan from TD Cowen. Your line is open. Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:18:18Okay, great. Thank you for taking my question. I guess, was there anything unique about Q1 this year? You know, understanding that orders and deliveries can be a bit lumpy in any quarter, but Q1 can also be kind of at most risk for variability in terms of seasonality as well. Was there anything kind of that stuck out this quarter? Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:18:41Hi. I'm sorry, this is Pat, right? Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:18:45Yes, it is. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:18:48From a Q1 perspective, yeah, you're correct in terms of it can be a bit bumpy due to seasonality. We are coming up on a comparison to a pretty strong Q1 in 2025, where we did see a bit of what we believe was pull-forward demand in equipment in the first quarter of last year, and we didn't necessarily see that pull forward this quarter. In addition to that, last quarter or last year, same quarter, we had two mining shovels. This quarter we only had one. There's some lumpiness in there for sure. Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:19:27Okay. Understood. You noted the inventory build ahead of expected seasonal demands. I guess, can you talk about the areas where you're stocking up for and I guess your confidence in that demand coming to fruition? Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:19:41Yeah. We did stock up specifically in the construction and forestry areas because Q1 end of Q1 and Q2 typically are seasonally a bit higher for us. We are stocking up in advance of that or that expected demand. Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:20:01Okay. Got it. Maybe one last one before I turn it back over. The backlog was relatively stable quarter-over-quarter. I'm wondering if you can talk about the quoting activity you're seeing out in the market. Is I guess, like, how is the quoting environment? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:20:22Yes. This is George. This backlog is solid for us, which is great. In terms of quoting, we don't see any concerns or any major upsurge, and it lines up with what we see in the market generally around oil and gas mining, and then a little bit of uncertainty in construction, forestry, et cetera. We do see some upturn, as Tania said, in terms of the need for inventory and we'll continue to quote on that basis. Patrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD Cowen00:20:50Okay, great. Thank you. Operator00:20:54Our next question is from Maxim Sytchev from National Bank Capital Markets. Your line is open. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:21:02Hi. Good afternoon. Is it possible to get a bit more color around what exactly happened with Product Support in Q1? You know, how much of that is, you know, seasonality? How much of that is tougher comps? I guess, yeah, any greater color. More importantly, I guess, how we should be thinking about the rest of the year on sort of, you know, sequential basis, or should we expect a recovery in that category? Thanks. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:21:35Max, from a Product Support perspective, I'll address your portion around the comps. We did have a strong comp as well in Q1 of last year. We had some larger deals in mining, which also impacted the comparison on the margin as well, and hence the call-out. In terms of what we expect, it comes back to the caution as well. Really, Q2 tends to be seasonally better, but we are cautioned with. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:22:12Just to drill down a little bit, I mean, like the install base is already there. So in terms of like the delays or the caution around Product Support, what is it really being driven by? Is it services? Is it parts? I mean, like, what exactly is happening there? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:22:35Yeah. It's, George, I think, there's nothing we can point to directly. It's, more about just making sure we're performing in the field and, that we meet the demand. There is definitely softness, but we think there's more we can do to meet the market in that area and, nothing more really in detail we can point to at this stage till we see the trend play out. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:22:58Okay. Then, I just when we look forward, I mean, obviously where WTI, WCS is at the moment, I mean, what are your conversations with mining clients and specifically, I understand that you have one struggling backlog, but what about the visibility to potentially add more on a going-forward basis? What is the pipeline looking from that perspective? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:23:23Sorry, we missed the first part. Adding more what? I apologize. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:23:28Shovels. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:23:31Yeah. I think that's. I think we have good demand over time, but nothing unexpected or inordinate in that area. We continue to work that market, and we do believe we have an excellent product, but nothing more to disclose. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:23:46Okay. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:23:47Active quotes remain strong. Sorry. Active quotes remain strong for us and we're hopeful and optimistic. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:23:57Right. I guess, I mean, the bottom line, but from mining clients specifically, I mean, has it gotten better on the back of oil pricing spike, or is it more sort of steady relative to Because I mean, people, I guess, it's in some sort of normalization from a pricing perspective. What are you feeling kind of on the ground? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:24:17It's a mix of steady and maybe some optimism about growth going forward, but it still hasn't played out yet. I think solid with hope for some upside going forward as this trend in prices. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:24:30Okay. maybe a question for Tania then. In terms of accounts payable, obviously, it, you know, helped Q1. How should we think about that line item on a sort of the remainder of the year basis, just from a modeling perspective? Or if you want to maybe address working capital in general, because I'm like, I guess AP is only part of it. yeah, anything to help us from a kind of a free cash flow perspective. Thank you. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:24:57The way we look at working capital, it's a holistic view. Inventory is really the biggest driver, and in accounts payable, it's the timing of the payables associated with inventory for the most part. If we think about inventory, as we've been saying for a while, we are focused on optimizing our inventory, which means having the right inventory at the right time. As we make our way through this build of the inventory, you'll see that go through AP eventually as well. We are still very keenly focused on optimizing our working capital, and by default. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:25:38Okay. Do you mind maybe providing anything sort of numeric in terms of the optimization levels that you think are appropriate? I don't know, like as a percent of revenue or anything tangible from that perspective? Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:25:52Sorry, your line's breaking up a little bit. What was the first part of your question? Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:25:54Sorry, I apologize. I'm just wondering, in terms of the working capital sort of efficiency, is it possible to maybe provide any sort of quantitative measure, like as a percentage of revenue or something like that we should be thinking of on a prospective basis in terms of kind of like we're starting from point A and point B is gonna be, I don't know, like 10% improvement? Any color there would be super helpful. Thank you. Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:26:19Yeah. A little bit difficult to give it to you on a working capital efficiency perspective. Like I said, inventory is the biggest driver. We're looking at it from a turns perspective, and we feel quite good with where the turns are at this moment. I think we're at 2.5, and have been there for two quarters now. That will drive the level of inventory that we'll have on hand versus the expected sales. Maxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital Markets00:26:46Okay, thank you very much. Operator00:26:52Our next question is from Jonathan Goldman from Scotiabank. Your line is open. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:26:59Hey, good afternoon, team, and thanks for taking my questions. I just want to circle back to the conversation on Product Support. I was wondering if we could, there is one line in your disclosures, if we could drill down on a bit more. I think in the revenue section, you talked about Product Support sales down 7% year-on-year. The explanation was lower mining revenue in Western Canada. I was wondering if you can explain the dynamics there because it seems like the outlook in the end markets are pretty good in mining. I just wanted to know if there is anything specific in the quarter in the region that is happening in Western Canada. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:27:34Yeah, it's a good question. We don't have a great line of sight in that area, but there is this ebb and flow between the work that is outsourced to the market or to us, and then self-performance of the Product Support work in-house by some of our customers. There's always a dynamic there, depending on their current situation, their needs, and their cash flows. We don't, as I said, have a great line of sight in terms of all those details, but that is the balance. It may be that there's some more self-performance of work in the market, but we know that our service offer is very good and we expect it to continue to be solid through the rest of the year. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:28:15Okay, that's helpful. I guess relatedly, a separate line in the disclosure is about some pressure on Product Support margins. Maybe you could just walk us through if there's been any change in the competitive dynamics in the marketplace, whether, you know, it's competing against customers themselves and self-perform, other competitors, and if there's any dynamic with the oil price and kind of demand levels that would change sort of margin expectations going forward. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:28:40Yeah. Nothing in the market or any concern. It's really just a strong comp, that we're lapping now from the mining sec-. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:28:49Okay. Maybe one for Tania and a housekeeping one. How should we think about the cadence or I guess level of SG&A CAD going through the year off of Q1? Tania CasadinhoCFO at Wajax00:29:02Great question. Yes, our SG&A as a percentage of revenue this quarter is a little higher than we've been seeing it over the last several quarters now. That is still an area of focus for us. It continues to be. Our three key areas that we were talking about last year, margins, costs, and inventory continue to be top of mind, and costs is no different. In terms of how we're thinking about it, we think about SG&A or the costs on a full year basis. We still feel good about the ranges that we've provided historically. We're looking at it from a midterm to long-term. We're not going to be managing it quarter-over-quarter, and we expect ebbs and flows depending on the volume. It is still of a key focus for us, if that helps. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:29:50No, that's helpful. Maybe just one more if I can squeeze it in. You know, I realize, George, it's early days, but the balance sheet is probably in the best shape it's been in for, you know, a considerably long time. You're at the low end of your target range. How are you thinking about capital allocation going forward from where you sit today? George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:30:09Hi, it's George. Thanks for the question. I'm 90 days in and running this 150-day look, listen, learn tour, and we're also engaging in a strategic planning process among the executive leadership. That's really to be determined. We think there's lots of potential and lots of possibilities, but that will be part of the discussion in terms of market needs, what we can provide, how much expenditure we'll need to support that and invest. We'll be back with more details when we're ready, but that will take some time, at least six months to play out in terms of our planning. Jonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at Scotiabank00:30:41Okay. Looking forward to it. Thanks for taking my questions. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:30:44Thank you. Operator00:30:49There are no questions at this time. Mr. McClean, please continue. George McCleanPresident and CEO at Wajax00:30:56Thank you, operator. Much appreciated. Thank you everyone for joining, and thank you for your questions. We appreciate it. Thanks again for your support and interest, and hope everyone has a great day. Thanks. Bye. Operator00:31:08This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesGeorge McCleanPresident and CEOTania CasadinhoCFOAnalystsDevin DodgeDirector of Equity Research at BMO Capital MarketsJonathan GoldmanEquity Research Analyst at ScotiabankMaxim SytchevManaging Director of Industrial Products Research at National Bank Capital MarketsPatrick SullivanVP of Equity Research at TD CowenPowered by